K-House eNews For The Week Of June 01, 2010
**TABLE OF CONTENTS**
This Week's 66/40 Radio Broadcast
Articles and Commentary
- Remember The Burmese Christians - (Read)
- Revelation: The Answers Are In The Back - (Read)
- Texas Social Studies Standards Bring Balance, Despite Critics - (Read)
Important News Headlines
Memory Verse of the Week
**THIS WEEK'S 66/40 RADIO BROADCAST**
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Ruth and Esther
The Romance of Redemption
Both of these books, filled with all the intrigue, romance, and action of any modern-day screen play, have been heralded for their literary value for centuries. But this is not their most rewarding feature. God's use of these two faithful women brings a new understanding of God's faithfulness and the importance of our faithful participation.
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**SPECIAL OFFER**
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Beyond Coincidence - DVD by Chuck Missler
The classic study Beyond Coincidence is now available on DVD. Chuck has recently re-recorded this favorite study.
- Is our universe some kind of cosmic accident, or is it the result of careful and skillful design?
- What do scientists mean by "The Anthropic Principal"?
When compiling the many physical and mathematical subtleties which make up our universe, scientist have discovered that a slight variation in any of them militates against the existence of life. Even at the atomic and sub-atomic level, the slightest variation in any of the primary constants of physics - some as sensitive as one part in over 1,000,000 - cause life to be impossible. Even secular science refers to these appearances of apparent design as the "anthropic principle," since they yield the impression that the universe was designed specifically for man.
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**ARTICLES AND COMMENTARY**
REMEMBER THE BURMESE CHRISTIANS -
(Print)
When the Irish Christian band Bluetree sneaked into Burma (Myanmar) to play music to the Karen Christians there, the band members believed they were doing something dangerous. They did not appreciate until they got back into Thailand that they had come very close to being slaughtered.
Four percent of Burma's 53.4 million people are Christians, according to the CIA World Factbook. (Voice of the Martyrs believes 8.7 percent are Christian.) The exact numbers are hard to know, however, since much of the Burmese church faces daily danger. Religious freedom is on the books in Burma, but it is no secret that Christians are targeted and killed in this country torn by civil war.
The band Bluetree had done some singing in Thailand and had even started a ministry to rescue people from the sex trade. Their time in Thailand inspired a song "God Of This City" that has since grown popular in America. Just recently, the musicians had the opportunity to go into Burma and sing for Christians there. They would have to sneak in by a dry river bed in the middle of the night and bring along food, clothing, Bibles - and whiskey to bribe the militia that would otherwise attack the villages.
The trip in was successful, and after bribing the Democratic Karen Buddhist Army with food and alcohol, they were allowed to enter a refugee camp and sing. They had just a short few hours to stay, though, because they could be executed if the Myanmar army showed up. Before Bluetree started back to Thailand, though, the DKBA general wanted the musicians to play for him. (There's a hunger for something better even with that general.) And before they could get a song started, soldiers from the Myanmar army spotted them and began screaming up at the white men on the general's balcony.
"We were told later their general said we're not even going to waste our bullets with them, we're just going to slice their throats," lead singer Aaron Boyd said from his home in Belfast, Northern Ireland. "Bottom line was our guy, whatever he did, whatever he said, managed to calm the whole thing down."
Bluetree drove straight back to Thailand after that, and soon gave a concert to 20,000 Karen refugees there. One little 8-year-old girl pleaded with Boyd, "Please don't ever forget about me. Don't forget me."
We know that we take our freedoms for granted in the West. We are free to spread the Gospel on the radio or do baptisms in the local lake if we choose. And people are free to tell us to jump in the lake if they choose. The freedom to criticize the government, to worship without harassment, to be different without being considered a threat to one's country – this is a wonderful blessing.
Bluetree spent a single day in Burma. Millions of Christians (4 percent of 53.4 million is 2.14 million; 4 percent of 8.7 percent is 4.6 million) call Burma their home, and face danger every day for not conforming to the Buddhist military government's desire for one language, one ethnicity and one religion. These precious people need to be remembered, along with that 8-year-old Karen child living in a Thai refugee camp. They are our brothers and sisters too, and they need prayer.
When we pray, God does great things, and He can continue to give safety to the missionaries – and occasional musical groups– that risk their lives to bring the Word of God into this suffering country.
Related Links:
Christian Band: We Were Spared Death By Myanmar General - CNN
Burma (Myanmar) - Voice Of The Martyrs
Burma - CIA
REVELATION: THE ANSWERS ARE IN THE BACK -
(Print)
The Book of Revelation is the only book of the Bible that promises a special blessing to the reader (Revelation 1:3; 22:7). (Many verses in the Bible encourage reading God's Word--in general--but only one book has the "audacity" to claim, in effect, "Read me, I'm special.")
What is surprising is that, even for many avid Bible readers, this book is overlooked or neglected. One would expect just the opposite.
There are many reasons why this book invariably results in a special blessing to the diligent inquirer. Perhaps the most basic blessing accrues from the fact that in order to understand the back ground of the many idioms and allusions, one will have to trace back into virtually every book of the Bible.
The Book of Revelation consists of 404 verses which contain over 800 allusions to the Old Testament alone! One reason the book appears so strange to the uninitiated is that most of us haven't developed enough familiarity with the Old Testament.
One of the keys to understanding the book is also to take it seriously,not to get distracted with fanciful allegories or speculations but to read it with care and diligence as part of the whole Word of God. The Bible consists of 66 books, penned by 40 authors over thousands of years, and yet we now discover that it is an integrated message: every detail, every word, every number, every place name is there by supernatural engineering. And no study makes this clearer than the study of the Book of Revelation.
(The Bible is like any textbook in school, the answers are all in the back!)
Organization of the Book
The Book of Revelation is the only book I know which also has a divinely inspired outline included! Jesus Himself has provided the key to the structure of the book (Rev. 1:19): He told John to write:
1.the things which thou hast seen, and
2.the things which are, and
3.the things which shall be hereafter.
The "things which thou hast seen" refers to the vision of our risen Lord just experienced previously in Chapter 1.
The "things which are" refers to the seven churches which were existing at that time in Chapters 2 and 3. Interestingly, the Lord's letters to the churches in these two chapters are the most relevant part of the book for you and me today.
The "things which shall be hereafter (meta tauta)" refers to the remainder of the book.
Joshua as a Model?
It is interesting to notice the parallels in design between the Book of Joshua in the Old Testament and the Book of Revelation. Joshua's name is in Hebrew; in Greek it could be rendered "Jesus." Joshua's mission is to dispossess the usurpers from the Land on behalf of God's people; in Revelation, Jesus' mission is to dispossess the Planet Earth of the usurpers.
Joshua initially sends ahead two witnesses (Josh 2; Rev 11). (We call them spies, but all they accomplished was getting a Gentile woman saved.) The two witnesses of Revelation Chapter 11 are a prominent element.
In the initial attack on the Amorite capital of Jericho, every rule of the Torah was violated: the Levites were exempt from military duties, yet they lead the procession. They were to do no work on Sabbath Day, yet here they march around Jericho once a day for six days, and then seven times on the seventh day! They are to keep silent until the final trumpet blast, etc. It is interesting that the Seven Trumpets in Revelation are introduced after a strange silence (Rev 8:1, et al).
The opposing kings align themselves under a leader who calls himself Adoni-Zedek ("The Lord of Righteousness"), who is ultimately defeated with signs in the sun and the moon at the battle of Beth Horon (Joshua 10). The defeated kings hide in caves, etc.
It seems that in Revelation we have the final "Joshua," dispossessing the Planet Earth of its usurpers on behalf of God's people in a manner that is remarkably parallel.
Related Links:
The Book Of Revelation - Koinonia House
66-40 Studies In Prophecy - Audio - Koinonia House
66-40 Revelation Introduction - Audio - Koinonia House
TEXAS SOCIAL STUDIES STANDARDS BRING BALANCE, DESPITE CRITICS -
(Print)
The brouhaha over the new Texas social studies standards has not died down. The Texas Board of Education may have passed the revised standards, but the debate continues around the country. In fact, the liberal backlash has already started encouraging other states to pull away from the Texas standards, which the press has spun for months as the nefarious work of Christian conservatives to force their right-wing agenda into Texas textbooks.
On May 16th, The Guardian's headline claimed, "Texas schools board rewrites US history with lessons promoting God and guns."
"Texas textbooks rewrite history" declared the student newspaper of DePaul University on May 31st.
Michael Bimbaum of The Washington Post offers some balance with his May 22 headline: "Texas board approves social studies standards that perceived liberal bias."
After months of media attention, including one solid month of receiving feedback from the public, the Texas State Board of Education (SBOE) on May 21st approved revisions to its state standards for social studies - revisions that focus on America's great documents and exceptional individuals and organizations.
After California, Texas purchases more textbooks than any other state, which means its standards could influence publishers who sell textbooks, not just to Texas, but to all states in the union. In response to Texas' controversial standards, the California Senate passed bill SB1451 on Friday May 28 requiring the California State Board of Education to review the content of textbooks and other instructional materials. The review will report any subject matter it considers influenced by the Texas standards and out of line with California's standards.
"Disturbing" New Standards?
According to the critics, the new social studies standards work to promote the ideologies of the Christian Right. According to the standards' supporters, however, the purpose of the revisions is to combat the liberal rewriting of history and give students a more balanced view of their American heritage.
"Liberal fringe efforts to complicate, obfuscate, and denigrate our heritage and history must be rejected," said Jonathan Saenz, director of legislative affairs at the Liberty Institute.
Answering Complaints:
"There is a battle for the soul of education," said Mavis Knight, a liberal member of the Texas education board. "They're trying to indoctrinate with American exceptionalism, the Christian founding of this country, the free enterprise system..."
Ms. Knight's statement reveals her bias. One hundred years ago teaching those things was not considered "indoctrination" but simply "general education."
One writer from The Washington Post lamented on May 22nd that the goal of the Texas SBOE was "to minimize the legitimate role of the brilliant Thomas Jefferson; improperly explain the meaning and importance to the country’s development of the phrase "separation of church and state"; incorrectly say that the McCarthyism of the 1950s was vindicated; require that that the United States be referred to as a "constitutional republic" rather than "democratic..."
Unfortunately, the author is not alone in her alarm, and the errors in her statement must be answered:
Thomas Jefferson:
In fact, the standards not only have retained Thomas Jefferson, but require students to study the Declaration of Independence, Jefferson's most important piece of work. Students will now be required to recite the first paragraph of the Declaration every year during the school's Freedom Week:
"We hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness--That to secure these Rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the Consent of the Governed."
Regarding "proper" explanations of the phrase "separation of church and state" - America has been battling over that one for decades. In the past, educators have felt obliged to avoid focusing on the religious faith that has permeated American history, sidestepping documents that sound too "Christian." The revised standards encourage students to read documents like The Mayflower Compact, the first governing document of Plymouth Colony. Critics of the revised standards see the inclusion of The Mayflower Compact as an underhanded way of forcing Christianity on students, but the hard reality is that the colonists were dedicated Christians, and this was their first governing document. The fact that certain people regard the Mayflower Compact as dangerous reading material reveals their bias against America's religious history.
McCarthyism:
Critics of the standards have consistently focused on a single sentence (among the multitudes of pages of standards) in which McCarthy is said to be vindicated. Here's what the standards actually say:
"...describe how McCarthyism, the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), the arms race, and the space race increased Cold War tensions and how the later release of the Venona Papers confirmed suspicions of communist infiltration in U.S. government "
The standards do not vindicate McCarthy's methods, but treat McCarthyism as one factor that increased Cold War tensions. The Venona Project, in which Soviet messages were obtained and decoded, did reveal spies in the US government working for the Soviets, in addition to Canadian, Australian, and British spies. Along with McCarthyism, the Venona Project is a part of US history.
Constitutional Republic:
The revised standards refer to America as a constitutional republic and not a democracy, because America is in fact a constitutional republic and not a democracy.
The Slave Trade:
An additional major complaint about the revised standards involves one line in the 8th Grade standards, in which the term "slave trade" is removed and is replaced with "Atlantic triangular trade" to the horror of critics. To hear this reported, it would seem the Texas SBOE members wanted to pretend slavery never existed and wanted to use "Atlantic triangular trade" as a euphemism for "slave trade."
Despite what half the country now thinks, students in Texas will be taught about the slave trade. In the context, the revised standards say, "explain reasons for the development of the plantation system, the Atlantic triangular trade, and the spread of slavery;" Historically, the slave trade was one prong of a bigger picture - the Atlantic triangular trade - and the expanded standards reflect the bigger picture.
Other Controversial Changes:
-"Capitalism" has been replaced with the term "free enterprise" throughout the standards to avoid the negative connotation of "capitalist." ("You know, 'capitalist pig!'" said Republican board member Terri Leo.) However, at the beginning of the standards for each affected grade there is a note, "Students identify the role of the U.S. free enterprise system within the parameters of this course and understand that this system may also be referenced as capitalism or the free market system."
-Students in the 8th grade will be required to analyze Abraham Lincoln's first and second inaugural address and his Gettysburg Address, including his "ideas about liberty, equality, union, and government", and contrast them with the ideas that Jefferson Davis presented in his inaugural address.
-Students will have to compare and contrast the phrase "separation of church and state" with the actual words of the Constitution.
-High school students in US History since 1877 will be encouraged to discuss the, "solvency of long term entitlements such as Social Security and Medicare."
While some may disagree with them, these standards cannot reasonably be considered "disturbing."
A Multitude Of Good Things:
Despite the criticisms, the revised standards do some excellent things. They require students to read The US Constitution and Bill of Rights, along with the Declaration of Independence. They encourage students to read primary documents, biographies, poetry and songs of great Americans rather than the legends, fictional stories, and even Roman myths that were previously in the standards. The standards have added the names of dozens of great Americans, some well known like Patrick Henry and others less well known, like Wentworth Cheswell, the Revolutionary War patriot who rode North to warn the colonists the night that Paul Revere rode West. Cheswell was a free-born black man and is considered the first African American elected to public office.
If It's Diversity You Want:
"They can just pretend this is a white America and Hispanics don’t exist," said Democrat Mary Helen Berlanga in March.
The new Texas standards absolutely do not promote only white males. The additional names in the standards include a wide variety of African Americans, Hispanics, and American Indians, both men and women. One major purpose of the new standards is to focus on heroes in American history who can inspire students and draw their admiration, and throughout the grades, those Americans come from a variety of genetic and cultural backgrounds.
For instance, first graders already were required to learn about Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas Edison. They will now also be taught about Garrett Augustus Morgan, a black inventor who holds the patent for the first traffic light. Morgan is famous for having used his respiratory protective hood invention (an early gas mask) to save the lives of people trapped in a tunnel filled with deadly fumes.
Along with Thurgood Marshall, John Hancock, and Theodore Roosevelt (these last two were also newly added) second graders now get to learn about Irma Rangel, the first female Mexican American legislator. Also in the second grade, Amelia Earhart and Robert Fulton are joined by great African Americans George Washington Carver and W. E. B. DuBois. Carver is renowned as an inventor and scientist who developed a multitude of products from peanuts. DuBois was the first African American graduate of Harvard and a civil rights activist. Note to the critics: DuBois was not particularly conservative in his politics.
Starting in the third grade, students will be required to study the Constitution, Bill of Rights, and Declaration of Independence every year during Freedom Week. According to the third grade standards, "The study of the Declaration of Independence must include the study of the relationship of the ideas expressed in that document to subsequent American history, including the relationship of its ideas to the rich diversity of our people as a nation of immigrants, the American Revolution, the formulation of the U.S. Constitution, and the abolitionist movement, which led to the Emancipation Proclamation and the women’s suffrage movement."
Third graders will also learn about Benjamin Banneker, a free African American astronomer, mathematician, farmer and surveyor who predicted solar and lunar eclipses and published a series of almanacs that ran for six years from 1792 through 1797.
Fourth graders among other things, will "summarize the significant contributions of individuals such as Texians William B. Travis, James Bowie, David Crockett, George Childress, and Sidney Sherman; Tejanos Juan N. Seguín, Plácido Benavides, and Francisco Ruiz; Mexicans Antonio López de Santa Anna and Vicente Filisola; and noncombatants Susanna Dickinson and Enrique Esparza."
From Kindergarten through High School, classrooms will honor significant Americans from all walks of life. Poets and artists, scientists and great thinkers, men and women of many skin shades are included.
Balance:
The Texas standards have become more balanced, despite the attacks of the critics. Yes, seventh graders will be required to learn about the evangelical movement of the late 20th century; they will also have to learn about the Populists, women's suffrage, agrarian groups, and labor unions. Ronald Reagan and President Barack Obama are both included, and the Cherokee Trail of Tears is there as well.
The new Texas standards do not ignore the troubled times in America's history or her struggles, but they still promote America as a great country filled with remarkable people. Anybody who has a true gripe with the standards should look through them carefully and not attack based on a few lines taken out of context by those with their own agendas.
The standards will be used in classrooms beginning in the 2011-2012 school year after teachers have had time to be trained.
Related Links:
SBOE Gives Final Okay to Social Studies Standards - Texas Education Agency
American History Preserved In Textbooks - Liberty Counsel
Texas Board Approves Social Studies Standards That Perceived Liberal Bias - The Washington Post
California Bill Takes Aim At New Texas Standards - The Washington Post
Texas Schools Board Rewrites US History With Lessons Promoting God and Guns - The Guardian
Don't Mess With Texas... Textbooks! - WorldNetDaily
Texas Textbooks Rewrite History - The DePaulia
Why The Texas Textbook Debate Matters - Fox News
Calif. Senate Passes Bill to Counter Texas Curriculum - Christian Post
SB 1451 - California Senate
**IMPORTANT NEWS HEADLINES**
Russian Navy To Maintain Global Presence - June 02, 2010
The Russian Navy considers intensive combat training and continuing its presence in the world's oceans a priority, a spokesman for the Defense Ministry said on Tuesday.
To accomplish these goals, Russian warships will take part in a number of large-scale naval drills, continue patrols of pirate-infested waters off the Somali coast and make about 50 port calls in foreign countries in the second half of 2010.
Ria Novosti
Japanese PM Resigns: Stocks Drop - June 02, 2010
Asian stocks fell, dragging the MSCI Asia Pacific Index lower for a second day amid concerns of political instability in Japan after the country's prime minister resigned. "It's hard to say that Japan's economy will do better on this change," said Ayako Sera, a strategist at Tokyo-based Sumitomo Trust & Banking Co., which manages the equivalent of $307 billion. "On a long-term view, there is still a sense of uncertainty."
Bloomberg
Gaza-Bound Turkish Flotilla Carried Possible Terrorists - June 01, 2010
Dozens of passengers who were aboard the Mavi Marmara Turkish passenger ship are suspected of having connections with global jihad-affiliated terrorist organizations, defense officials said on Tuesday, amid growing concerns that Turkish warships would accompany a future flotilla to the Gaza Strip.
According to the defense officials, the IDF has identified about 50 passengers on the ship who could have terrorist connections with global jihad-affiliated groups. Those with possible terror connections have refused to identify themselves and did not carry passports.
The Jerusalem Post
Robot Cuts Oil Pipe; Cap Coming Soon? - June 01, 2010
A new flow of oil emerged from BP's damaged undersea well in the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday evening after a remote-controlled submarine successfully cut into the well's riser pipe. BP used robots in its latest attempt to curtail the flow of crude from the largest spill in U.S. history, which spread to barrier islands off Alabama and Mississippi on Tuesday. When the robot submarines cut into the undersea well's riser pipe, a fresh spew of oil temporarily obscured the view of the mechanical arm. The cut was a first step toward placing a cap over the well that has spewed hundreds of thousands of gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico every day since late April.
CNN
The Chameleon Neutrino - June 01, 2010
After three years of monitoring multiple billions of "muon" neutrinos beamed to them through the earth from CERN 456 miles away, they had spotted one that had turned into a "tau" neutrino. Behind that scientific terminology lies the long-sought proof that the three varieties of neutrinos - sub-atomic particles that with others form the universe's basic elements - can switch appearance, like the chameleon lizard. According to physicists at Gran Sasso, after three years of monitoring multiple billions of "muon" neutrinos beamed to them through the earth from CERN 456 miles away, they had spotted one that had turned into a "tau" neutrino. Behind that scientific terminology lies the long-sought proof that the three varieties of neutrinos - sub-atomic particles that with others form the universe's basic elements - can switch appearance, like the chameleon lizard.
Fox News
'Ardi' Has Lost Her Human Glitter - June 01, 2010
Last fall "Ardi" came onto the missing link scene with a bang. The journal Science called her the "breakthrough of the year." So did Time Magazine. We covered a few lone dissenters to the Ardi hype here on ENV.
But now Time Magazine is starting to go over apex of the hype curve. In an article titled, "Ardi: The Human Ancestor Who Wasn't?," Time notes, "Two new articles being published by Science question some of the major conclusions of Ardi's researchers, including whether this small, strange-looking creature is even a human ancestor at all." Likewise, Nature reports, "Ardi may be more ape than human."
Evolution News and Views
Tourists Visit Babylon Despite Iraq's Troubles - May 21, 2010
Ongoing conflict has overshadowed Iraq's place as the "Cradle of Civilization," housing extraordinary sites like Babylon, just outside Baghdad. But, an improving, if fragile, security situation means that, after years of isolation intrepid travelers can now fly directly to Iraq from Austria, Germany, Greece, Norway, Sweden and the UK as well as numerous cities in the Middle East. Specialist tour operators are now stepping into the tourism void, catering to the smattering of tourists with an approach more Indiana Jones than package tour.
CNN
**MEMORY VERSE OF THE WEEK**
Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamour, and evil speaking, be put away from you, with all malice: And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you.
Ephesians 4:31-32 KJV
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