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Issue 20 <previous< Issue
021 Volume 5 No 2 April 1999 >next>
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An Ethics Primer
A friend of mine once asked M.E. Dodd, pastor of
the First Baptist Church of Shreveport, Louisiana, "Dr. Dodd, what is the
secret of your great success?" Now, I am told, Dr. Dodd was not a personage
burdened with false modesty. He clearly did not find the question inappropriate
or the questioner undiscerning. On the contrary he responded with a ready
answer: "I prepare my sermons; I never touch the money; and I shake hands
with all the women." Ten
Things That Light My Fuse
In a recent issue of this journal my good friend, Foy Valentine, wrote a
delightful article entitled "Ten Things to Light Your Fire," in which
he described a number of homely human experiences that add greatly to our
personal enjoyment. I read his article with appreciation and sheer pleasure.
But, curmudgeon that I am, I was also inspired to write a balancing article in
which I could talk about the things that light, not my fire, but my fuse.
My fuse has grown noticeably shorter as the years have passed. I have
concluded, based on my own experience, that one symptom of aging is a steady
increase in the level of irritability. Things that I once could shrug off with
indifference now sometimes drive me to the point of distraction. It is perhaps
as a means of mild catharsis that I share some of them here. Actually, my list
could go on almost indefinitely, but I will restrain myself. Some of my
"flash points" have to do with inanimate objects, but most concern
people. Some are inconsequential; others are perhaps a bit more important. The Mess We're In
…In the twentieth century, the supply of people
has surged to unprecedented levels. The absolute number of people has nearly
quadrupled, from perhaps 1.6 billion at the beginning of the century to just
over 6 billion expected by its end. Since World War II, the growth rate of
global population has been, and remains, higher than ever before in history. Living in the New
Dispensation A few years ago a friend advised me that if I
wanted to know what was going on in the real world, I should read the business
pages. Although my lifelong interest has been in the study of religion, I am
always willing to expand my horizons; so I took the advice, vaguely fearful that
I would have to cope with a new and baffling vocabulary. Instead I was surprised
to discover that most of the concepts I ran across were quite familiar. It's Hard to be Humble Truth: Can We Do Without
It? "Truth in the Academy: Can We Really Do
Without It?" You might be surprised at the suggestion that we might do
without it. But while truth is featured on various buildings, public and
private, it is little honored in the academy. On my philosophy building at USC
is written, "The truth shall make you free." It is perhaps the single
most commonly inscribed saying on university buildings and it testifies to the
origins of the university enterprise. (Except, of course, for those things that
are written with spray paint cans.)
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If
It’s Right for You Is It Right for Me? By Gilbert C. Meilaender, Jr.
Continue Ethical Issues in Pastoral Counseling
Pastor, can I talk with you sometime this week? I need some help." "I am so torn up about what I need to do with my mother. Can you see me this week?" "I lost my job, and I need to talk." "Pastor, my wife told me that she wants a divorce and that she hasn't loved me for a long time. I don't know what to do. Can we get together?" "I think the Lord may be calling me into the ministry, but I'm not, sure. I just need to talk with you." "I've never felt anything like this before. Somebody told me I might be depressed. Can you help me?" Wellness Then and Now It is a long walk home. The road is dusty and the sun is hot. But more important matters. He hears the musical call of birds gliding overhead and the captivating rhythm of his sandals flapping against callused feet. The land around his pathway glows with a refreshing emerald green. Life-giving winter rains have resurrected a land parched from long days of intense Middle-eastern heat.
Can We Solve the Sunday
Dilemma?
Sporting events, like a greedy child wanting the
biggest part of the family's pie, have taken over the focus of Sunday. Watching the World Go By--- Perhaps the steam engine, which made the industrial revolution possible, is the most significant instrument for change in the millennium just closing. The Senility Prayer God, grant me the senility
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