Interesting facts about the Bible

rodi's avataragnus dei - english + romanian blog

Bible worn pic

A great feature on the Gospel Coalition blogs is their regular column titles “9 things you should know”. In their latest post, Joe Carter writes about “9 Things You Should Know about the Bible. Here’s just 3, numbers 1, 6, and 9:

1. The English word Bible is derived from the Koine Greek τὰ βιβλία (ta biblia – “the books”). While Christian use of the term can be traced to around A.D. 223, the late biblical scholar F.F. Bruce noted that Chrysostom in his Homilies on Matthew (between A.D. 386 and 388) appears to be the first writer to use the Greek phrase ta biblia to describe both the Old and New Testaments together.

6. The Bible is not only the best-selling book of all-time, it is consistently the best-selling book of the the year, every year. (Even in 1907, the New York Times noted that the…

View original post 94 more words

Morning Reading: Acts 10.1-8 NLT – angel vision

Reading: Acts 10:1-8 NLT In Caesarea there lived a Roman army officer named Cornelius, who was a captain of the Italian Regiment. He was a devout, God-fearing man, as was everyone in his household. He gave generously to the poor and prayed regularly to God.

image
Vision of Cornelius the Centurion
Gerbrand van den Eeckhout (1621-1674)

One afternoon about three o’clock, he had a vision in which he saw an angel of God coming toward him. “Cornelius!” the angel said.

Cornelius stared at him in terror. “What is it, sir?” he asked the angel.

And the angel replied, “Your prayers and gifts to the poor have been received by God as an offering! Now send some men to Joppa, and summon a man named Simon Peter. He is staying with Simon, a tanner who lives near the seashore.”

As soon as the angel was gone, Cornelius called two of his household servants and a devout soldier, one of his personal attendants. He told them what had happened and sent them off to Joppa.

Prayer: Lord God – Give me a generous heart… and make me a God-fearing person of prayer. Help me to listen more than I speak… and give me a spirit of willing obedience. I ask it in Jesus’ name. Amen.

Spiritual Song: “I will run to you” – Hillsong _________________________

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UdWGLm4zxEA&feature=youtube_gdata_player

Ruling Class Without a Clue – American Thinker Re-Blog

By Christopher Chantrill / June 25, 2013 – American Thinker

The truth is that governments are always like pitchers trying to pitch out of a jam with all the bases loaded. We the people want a little free stuff. The ruling class wants to seize and hold political power. Promising free stuff is how you get elected.

image
Ben Bernanke

What are we to think about the market falling out of bed after Gentle Ben Bernanke’s hint last week that he might start tapering off the money printing operation at the Fed? Was it because the Fed is, in fact, following a dangerous deflationary policy, as Larry Kudlow writes? Given that gold and other metals are down 30 percent from their highs, Larry has a point.

Or was it nothing to do with the Fed, but instead renewed problems with the Euro? Or with the property implosion in China?

Probably the answer is: None of the above. The truth is probably the old one about Hollywood and how to produce a hit movie: Nobody knows nothing.

The truth is that governments are always like pitchers trying to pitch out of a jam with all the bases loaded. We the people want a little free stuff. The ruling class wants to seize and hold political power. Promising free stuff is how you get elected.

Usually, those vote-buying promises result in policies that damage the economy. President Obama has been worse than most. The result is that politicians and their officials are always involved in trying to band-aid over the distortions and the wounds they have inflicted on the economy in their crude bid for power.

That is the way to understand the global economic situation. It is governments trying to paper over their mistakes. In the U.S. the government is trying to paper over a credit system that is still badly holed from the mortgage meltdown.

There’s only one way that the ruling class knows how to deal with the inevitable consequence of gunning the housing market with mortgage subsidies. Print lots of money to float the underwater mortgages. The Fed wants to stop the presses, and it can, it will some day. But it doesn’t want to bring on another panic. The trouble is that even talk about ending its quantitative easing leads to a market swoon.

In Europe the ruling class is trying to deal with the consequence of its 50-year hubris. The people, they decided after World War II, were a bunch of crypto-Nazis. So the enlightened ruling class would federalize Europe to make sure that aggressive nationalism would never rear its ugly head again. That really worked well, so now that the national political leaders in southern Europe are getting themselves riled up into a nationalistic fervor accusing the Germans of being Nazis.

Think of the Chinese ruling class. The Chi-com rulers really want to bring China into the modern era, but they naturally feel that this is only possible under their wise leadership. So they get exactly the crony capitalism we enjoy here in the United States, as the ruling class dribbles subsidies out to its supporters out in the provinces to keep them on-side while they fundamentally transform China.

Now we have the Brazilians pouring into the streets. A couple of years ago the government started printing money to keep the cronies in the Brazilian export sector “competitive.”

What can we understand from all this news? It stands to reason. These ruling classes don’t have a clue what they are doing. That’s what we’ve been seeing here not just with the Fed but in the IRS and NSA scandals. As Angelo Codevilla writes, those NSA data mining efforts might really amount to something if the NSA had a clue what it was doing.

[T]he aftermath of 9/11, technology, inertia, and allergy to accountability gave the US government the capacity to capture and examine at will well nigh the whole electronic realm. It would very much like to do the protective job that President Obama and Karl Rove claim and may even believe it is doing. But there is no evidence that anyone has figured out how to sidestep the realities that prevent that.

In Codevilla’s view, the U.S. government is still doing what it decided to do in WWII. Collect everything and then decide what to do with it.The only thing the government knows to do is to keep doing it the same, only more so. Think Social Security, born 1935; Department of Defense, born 1947. Think Medicare, born 1965. Think Amnesty, born 1987. Think Education, born 1840.

But back to the burning question. Is the market pullback last week the beginning of the end or just a midsummer night’s dream? I’d say that the answer has to do with the basic question, is the Fed fighting recession or fighting inflation? My guess is that we are still years away from the Fed deciding that the economy is roaring away out of control and now it’s time to put on the brakes.

Christopher Chantrill (mailto:chrischantrill@gmail.com) is a frequent contributor to American Thinker. See his usgovernmentspending.com and also usgovernmentdebt.us. At americanmanifesto.org he is blogging and writing An American Manifesto: Life After Liberalism. Get his Road to the Middle Class.