This idea that we will forget our sins in heaven came up during the Sunday school today and I wasn't sure if this was something the American fundamentalist church held in common so I kept quiet so that I could look it up. Knowing that there's something wrong with that statement, just that I couldn't pin point what was wrong with it at the time.
After research, The PuritanBoard once again was helpful. John Calvin's too, on Isaiah 65:16-17.
I don't know why they would think that, as if being irresponsible is okay. No, we will remember our sins. What God meant was that we will not remember our sorrows, or the trouble of the past. Our eternal great joy in Heaven shall blot out the guilt, all negativity of our sins. The forgetfulness is the kind that by comparison it's like the Sun with its great light depriving the stars of their brightness, as Calvin puts it. Our memories of sins are not erased as if they were none existence to us. That is a kind of irresponsible thinking, and thus sinful.
Some from the PuritanBoard made useful comment on this:
If we praise Christ, the Lamb slain, how would we forget that slaying?
God has forgiven us completely and remembers not our debt. Meaning He does not call back the debt. Not that He has a blank in His memory about this.
We can all probably agree that procrastination isn’t wise. Some of us like to believe we work better under pressure. But pressure adds unnecessary stress. While most of us procrastinate from time to time, we often chalk it up to poor planning. When you understand what’s going on in your brain, though, a failure to plan isn’t the root cause.
“Procrastination is an emotion-focused coping strategy,” says Tim Pychyl, associate professor of psychology at Carleton University in Ottawa, and author of Solving the Procrastination Puzzle: a concise guide to strategies for change. “It’s not a time management problem.”
THE BRAIN OF A PROCRASTINATOR
Pychyl says researchers in Germany compared the brains of procrastinators to non-procrastinators using functional MRI. It found that the brains of procrastinators have a larger amygdala, which is part of the limbic system known for fight or flight.
“What’s happening is what we call the ‘amygdala hijack,'” says Pychyl. “The procrastinators are reacting emotionally, and the emotion-focused coping response is to escape. It’s saying, ‘I don’t want these negative emotions I’ll experience during the task,’ and so it avoids the task.”
Another important brain reaction is how it perceives the future. Research done by UCLA social psychologist Hal Hershfield found that the brain views our future self in the same way it views another person.
“[Hershfield] used a functional MRI to look at the brains of people when they were thinking of their present self, their future self, or the other,” says Pychyl. “When we think of future self, the same parts of the brain light up as when we think about the other.”
It’s also human nature to seek pleasure. “We want to feel good now,” says Pychyl. “It’s hedonistic over eudaimonic, which is the happiness we feel when we achieve meaningful goals.”
Putting it all together, when we face a task that presents boredom, frustration, or fear, the limbic system lights up, and the amygdala hijack overrides the prefrontal cortex, which is the home of executive function that includes things like impulse control, planning, and organization.
“All of a sudden, we’ve got all this input from the amygdala and we’re not able to recruit those higher order processes,” says Pychyl. “Even when we do, we think about our future self as a stranger. We’ll mistreat that stranger, and think, ‘I don’t want to do it; that person will.’ All those things come together to drive procrastination.”
Some of us are more prone to procrastination than others. Pychyl says this group often has high traits of neuroticism, such as worry, and depression, and self-consciousness. They have over-active, dominating amygdala.
People who are better at planning use another area of their brain. “You’re really talking about someone who’s high in executive functioning,” says Pychyl. “Instead of so much limbic system activity, they’re getting more prefrontal cortex activity, which reflects with planning and impulse control. Any down regulation of the prefrontal cortex, or executive function, leads to problems with following through on things.”
HOW TO GET CONTROL
If this sounds like you, you may think there’s no hope. Fortunately, there are things you can do. The key to getting control over procrastination is emotion regulation, and one method is practicing mindfulness.
Research out of the University of Pittsburgh found that people can learn to control their emotions through mindfulness. Participants practiced using nonjudgmental awareness over the course of eight weeks. The study found that their amygdala shrunk and the connections to the prefrontal cortex changed.
“When you’re freaking out over a task you need to do, your body and your mind are responding to your physiological arousal,” says Pychyl. “So, first and foremost, you have to stop that pattern of down regulation that it feeds off of.”
Pychyl suggests using breathing and muscle relaxation exercises. Then practice nonjudgmental awareness of the emotion. “Become aware,” he says. “Acknowledge your feelings. For example, you could say, ‘I’m really anxious about this report.’ And then look for the reasons for those emotions. Maybe you don’t want to disappoint. That makes sense. Your emotions are trying to teach you something. But you don’t need to freak out. My favorite saying is, ‘I can have anxiety. I don’t need to be my anxiety.'”
Once you are find a way to get control over your emotions, it’s time to move forward. Procrastination, whether it stems from fear or boredom, is resolved with action. It’s getting yourself to do something you don’t feel like doing. Pychyl suggests propelling yourself forward by breaking down a large goal or task into individual steps.
“What’s the next action you would take if you were going to start?” he asks. “Keep it as small as possible. Then you realize, ‘Well, I could do that action.’ Research has shown us that when you make progress, even a little bit on a goal, it fuels your wellbeing. Even if you just take the tiniest of steps, you’ll help yourself get started and then you’re on your way.”
Mindfulness + action: the one-two punch that can cure procrastination.
I should make a youtube video on this once I understood it. Need to boost my Youtube subscriber number for $. I noticed in Nov/Dec the Sunset time reverses sooner than the Sunrise time. Here's the answer.
Source: Steve Ford: If the Sun were to culminate every day at 12 you would be correct to assume that the times for sunrise and sunset should be symmetrical around noon. However, since the Earth is not moving around the Sun in a perfect circle the angular velocity over the sky as seen from a fixed observer on Earth varies through the year giving rise to what is called Equation of Time, meaning that the sun will not culminate at the same time of day through the year (our clock is based on what is called Mean Solar time which fits the average yearly angular speed of the Sun). During fall and early winter the sun will, due to equation of time, culminate later for each day totaling a difference of around 30 minutes from fall to early winter. In this period, the rate of increase in time for culmination almost cancels the rate of decrease in time for sunset, whereas it almost doubles the rate of increase in time for sunrise.
Source: Filip Larsen: If the Sun were to culminate every day at 12 you would be correct to assume that the times for sunrise and sunset should be symmetrical around noon. However, since the Earth is not moving around the Sun in a perfect circle the angular velocity over the sky as seen from a fixed observer on Earth varies through the year giving rise to what is called Equation of Time, meaning that the sun will not culminate at the same time of day through the year (our clock is based on what is called Mean Solar time which fits the average yearly angular speed of the Sun). During fall and early winter the sun will, due to equation of time, culminate later for each day totaling a difference of around 30 minutes from fall to early winter. In this period, the rate of increase in time for culmination almost cancels the rate of decrease in time for sunset, whereas it almost doubles the rate of increase in time for sunrise.
Why English Bibles say Jesus hung on a tree? Someone at church brought up this question and I looked it up. It has to do with the English word "tree". The Etymology of tree means wood, or wooden structure, in Old/Middle English. The archaic meaning also refers to gallows. And in Greek, the words used for Jesus' hanging tree is ξύλον xulon. The Greek word used for the living tree is δένδρον dendron. ξύλον means wood, the Chinese translation is correct. Modern English confuses people here. Greek word for cross is also different: σταυρός stauros.
I need to look into the validity of some claims. The conservatives maintained only the positive side of the history, that the Indians (Native Americans) and the English pilgrims were friends and Thanksgiving day is to remember that. While the opponents recounted the wars between the two.
Particularly, between the English settlers (King Philip's War) and the Wampanoag people.
On the conservative side, we have authors like Melanie Kirkpatrick. Who has written books about this. On the other side, we have David Silverman, who called all this festive joy a myth.
I'll try to keep an alphabetical order of these, based on phonetics. Some of these terms are well known by either the English speakers or Chinese speakers but new to me.
Abomination of Desolation (那行毁坏可憎的) (it seems that American Christians generally know this phrase): Described in Daniel, mentioned by Jesus in Matthew 24:15-16. Prophesying that the Greek King Antiochus IV Epiphanes in 2 B.C. offered pagan sacrifices in Jewish temple. Also alluded to the destruction of the temple in 70AD by the Romans in Luke 21:20-21, and also referred to Jesus' second coming in Mark 13:14.
I must say, I'm almost halfway listening to Tong's John series and I recall Rev. Lin's statement to me once about not wanting to use this series because Tong had criticized too many people. So far, I have heard none of that sort. The only criticisms he made were against the Charismatics mostly, and some testimonies of here and there, but they all were on point, nor were any of them personal despite sharing his personal experience. So I must conclude, Rev. Lin either secretly sympathize with the Charismatics or she is as Tong said in #68: @1:18:20: love to escape from reality.
So far I am pretty satisfied with finding Grace Community Church in Bridgewater. The pastor is young, younger, but thus far, shows more zeal for the community, for the church for any older pastors I've encountered in America. And more important, his zeal for God's word also exceeds the others. We are now vigorously doing Hebrews (Sunday services), did James and now doing Gospel of John (Bible study) and Revelation (morning Sunday School), all by the same pastor. It does make one wonder if he would ever have others teaching along side him, but it really is not a big deal for me. Pak Tong took years before he even considered elders in spite of oppositions from within. So we have a doctrinally reformed church here. The chief lack is the same as any American churches that's of the reformed persuasion: Evangelism. They usually replace that with mission trips or financial support for missionary organizations.
It looks like this will be a good church for both of us. So I am beginning to look into evangelical opportunity. Exploring the area of Bridgewater. There are several campuses but the main one is Rutgers (13 mins drive from the church). The others being: Raritan Valley Community College (9 mins), Pillar College (13 mins), Strayer College (17 mins). Student ministry is a good one to start. Other than that, I am not sure. Area is new to me. This will take time for me to survey first. My ministry will not completely depend on this church of course, in fact it's not really at all. The chief idea is that those who are preached to, can at least have a church that I know is good to go to. I cannot recommend other churches I have not truly known, nor the ones I knew no good. And that you will need a real pastor for things like baptism, etc.
Of all my experience in churches, I hope that I have learned enough to judge rightly. There are churches like CCCNY, which is good for gathering and getting care, but is an obstacle when it comes to TRUE evangelism.
top rating culinary in latin world (in Central & Maido)
Food: Lomo Saltado, Arroz con pato, Anticuchos, Rocoto Relleno, Aji de Gallina, Llama meat, Lucuma & Camucamu, Papas a la huancaina. Ceviche & Cuy-Roasted guinea pig (national dishes)
had Japanese as president: Alberto Fujimori
10-20% could have East Asian root.
Language: Spanish. Quechua + Aymara (modern descendants of Incans) = slower heart rate, 1/3 larger lung capacity, more blood volume, due to thin air and cold.
Atlas Obscura: Incans never had wheel, no iron, mainly built on fiber.
Incans: Quipus = knotted fiber for communication
Incans: Married women wear woven hats, single women wear knitted hats.
Catholicism but fusion with Pachamama (mother earth), 2nd largest of shamans in the world after India.
Music: Charango (like ukulele), Pan flute, Creole music, El Condor Pasta (famous song) - Simon & Garfunkel played it too (I noticed that the melody is similar also to their The Sound of Silence)
Leave a bit of beer to pour on soil to give back to mother Earth.
Paracas Skulls (Aliens conspiracy theories) - pushed and elongated over time = symbolizes nobility
Hates Senorita Laura, she's Mexico's problem now.
Guano (exported guano) Era under Ramon Castilla (also abolishes slavery)
Military dictatorship vs. democracy again and again
Falklands/Malvinas war = deported to Argentina
Cenepa War (War with Ecuador)
Soccer (Teofilo Cubillas)
War of the Pacific (with Frenemy Chile). All best restaurants in Chile are Peruvian; best stores in Peru are Chilean. Dispute on national drink = Pisco Sour
With Brazil = business relationship
Chinese & Japan. Lots of cheap Chinese labors when slavery was abolished. Largest Chinese community in Latin America. Longer history with Japan.