Friday, June 10, 2011

WHY FORGIVE?

By: Tuesday Soriano

Words Told to Eileen on her 18th Year

(With excerpts from Philip Yancey's "What's So Amazing about Grace")


Forgiveness is achingly difficult. Long after you’ve forgiven, the wound lives on in memory. Forgiveness does not come naturally.


“Despite a hundred sermons on forgiveness, we do not forgive easily, nor find ourselves easily forgiven.” – Elizabeth O’Connor.


Helmut Thielicke, a German who lived through the horrors of Nazism said this:

This business of forgiving is by no means a simple thing… We say, “Very well, if the other fellow is sorry and begs my pardon, I will forgive him, then I’ll give in.” We make of forgiveness a law of reciprocity. And this never works. For then both of us say to ourselves, “The other fellow has to make the first move.” And then I watch like a hawk to see whether the other person will flash a signal to me with his eyes or whether I can detect some small hint between the lines of his letter which shows that he is sorry. I am always on the point of forgiving… but I never forgive. I am far too just.”

The only remedy, he concluded, was his realization that God had forgiven his sins and given him another chance.


So then, why forgive?

a) Because I am commanded to, as the child of a Father who forgives.


b) Because that is what God is like. When Jesus commanded us to, “Love your enemies,” he added this rationale, “…that you may be sons of your Father in heaven.” So if God forgave our sins, how can we not do the same to those who have wronged us?


c) Romans 12 goes on and on… hate evil, be joyful, live in harmony… do not take revenge but leave room for God’s wrath, for it is written: ‘It is mine to avenge; I will repay,’ says the Lord.


Forgiveness is an act of faith. By forgiving another, I am trusting that God is a better justice-maker than I am. By forgiving, I release my own right to get even and leave all issues of fairness for God to work out. It is never easy. Nagging injustices remain, and the wounds still cause pain. I have to approach God again and again, yielding to him what I thought I had committed to him long ago. Because forgiveness just does not come naturally.



d) Forgiveness alone can halt the cycle of blame and pain. Breaking that cycle means taking the initiative instead of waiting for the other person to make the first move.


e) Because not to forgive imprisons me in the past and locks out all potential for change. I thus yield control to another, my enemy, and doom myself to suffer the consequences of the wrong.


Why forgive?

f) When you forgive someone, you slice away the wrong from the person who did it. You disengage that person from his hurtful act. At one moment you identify him permanently as the person who did you wrong. You think of him now not as the person who hurt you, but a person who needs you. Once you branded him as a person powerful in evil, but now you see him as a person weak in his needs.


g) Forgiveness offers a way out. It does not settle all questions of blame and fairness—but it does allow a relationship to start over, to begin anew. If we do not forgive, we remain bound to the people we cannot forgive, held in their vise grip. Until I find it within myself to forgive, the wrong done keeps me an emotional prisoner. Even when one is wholly innocent and the other wholly to blame, for the innocent party will bear the wound until he or she can find a way to release it—and forgiveness is the only way.


Henri Nouwen defines forgiveness as “love practiced among people who love poorly.” He describes the process at work:

“God’s forgiveness is unconditional; it comes from a heart that does not demand anything for itself, a heart that is completely empty of self-seeking. It is this divine forgiveness that I have to practice in my daily life. It demands of me that I step over that wounded part of my heart that feels hurt and wronged and that wants to stay in control and put a few conditions between me and the one whom I am asked to forgive.”


I am a recipient of God’s unconditional forgiveness.


Sixteen years ago, I experienced what was to be one of the most painful days of my life. I was about to be married and found out that I was pregnant. On the 8th month of pregnancy, the man I loved, called to say very simply that he was confused, that he wanted out of the relationship, that it wasn’t me, it wasn’t another woman, it was him. To put it simply, he was abandoning me and my baby.


For a split second, I wanted to slice my bulging belly off. I thought, how can man, created by God, cause indescribable pain and heartache. The pain of childbirth seared through every fiber of my being, magnified by the hurt and emotional upheaval in my heart. The joy of childbirth seemed foreign, almost in a compartment of its own, distant from the pain that choked every breath and strength out of me.


God used that experience to bring me to my knees, draw me to him, and accept his offered gift of grace. Through the years, I learned the power of forgiveness. I struggled to move on but I couldn’t find it within me to forgive.


As you go through life, you will have your own share of hurts and pain. You’ll probably cook up a hundred reasons against forgiveness: 'He needs to learn a lesson. I don’t want to encourage irresponsible behavior. I’ll let her get mad for a while; it will do her good. She needs to learn that actions have consequences. I was the wronged party—it’s not up to me to make the first move. How can I forgive if he’s not even sorry?' etc., etc.


Remember to yield to God and choose the path of forgiveness for in it is your release and your freedom.


Happy 18th, Ei!

Monday, January 31, 2011

The Value of Personal Effort in Soul-Winning

by William Evans

Every Christian should consider it the highest honor, and the greatest privilege to assist in the growth of the kingdom of God, by personal effort in individual soul-winning. He should realize, too, that it is not only his privilege to thus work for God, but that a most solemn responsibility rests upon him to do so. The true Christian, having found Christ to be precious to his own soul, desires, or at once seeks, as did Andrew and Philip of old, to get someone else to taste and see that the Lord is good.

And what is true of the individual Christian should be true of the whole Church. What is the true position of the Church according to the teachings of Christ? Is she not to be the salt of the earth and the light of the world? Should she not be as the woman seeking the lost coin, the shepherd seeking the straying sheep, and the father on the constant lookout for the wayward son? That church, the members of which are not interested in, and putting forth personal effort in behalf of, a lost world, has in truth forfeited its credentials and its right to exist. In seeking to save its own soul, it has really lost it.

An anonymous clipping contains the following suggestive remarks along this particular line:
"'What man of you, having an hundred sheep, if he lose one of them, doth not leave the ninety and nine in the wilderness, and go after that which is lost, until he find it?' That is to say, the alpha and omega of Christianity is soul-winning, and every letter between the first and last should be permeated by the spirit which seeks the lost.

"It is not enough to be evangelical. We must be evangelistic. The evangelical church is a reservoir of pure water without a pipe running anywhere. If you will take the trouble to go to it and climb the embankment, you will get a good drink. The evangelistic church is a reservoir of pure water with a pipe to every heart in the community, and every nation in the world. Evangelical may mean truth on ice; evangelistic means truth on fire. Evangelical may be bomb-proof for defense; evangelistic means an army on the march with every face towards the enemy. Evangelical sings, 'Hold the fort, for I am coming'; evangelistic sings, 'Storm the fort, for God is leadin.' The need of the Church is not evangelicalism as a thing to fight for, but evangelism as a force to fight with. The evangelical creed merely held and defended becomes a fossil, only a thing of interest.
"Several miles above Milton, Pennsylvania, [United States], when the ice was breaking up, a farmer got into one of his boats, purposing to pull it out of the river. A floating mass of ice struck it, breaking it loose from the bank, and carrying it and him out into the current. A neighbor, seeing the danger, mounted a horse and with all speed rode down to Milton. The people of the town gathered all the ropes they could secure, went out on the bridge, and suspended a line of dangling ropes from the bridge across the river. They could not tell at just what point the boat with the farmer would pass under, so they put a rope down every two or three feet clear across. By and by the farmer was seen, wet and cold, standing in the boat half full of water, drifting down the rapid current. When he saw the ropes dangling within reach, he seized the nearest one, was drawn up and saved. Now, one rope might not have answered the purpose. The pastor hangs the rope of salvation from the pulpit, and sinners present do not seem to get near it; but if the business men will hang out ropes, and you young men and women, mothers and wives, hang out ropes, sinners will certainly be saved."

Greater stress is here laid upon winning men to Christ by individual effort rather than upon any other method of accomplishing the same purpose, revivals, for example. Not that we do not believe in revivals, for how can one be a believer in the Bible and not believe in revivals? But personal soul-winning is much greater than revivalism. Indeed, is not the purpose and end of a true revival to make the individual Christian worker more interested in souls? A revival that does not accomplish this end is not a success. Both evangelist and pastor agree on this.
Revivalism is fishing with a great net; personal soul-winning is fishing with a single hook. Both are right; but all Christians cannot handle the big net, while all can use the single hook. All Christians are to be fishers of men. That form of Christian activity, therefore, is most important, which excludes none from participation in it.

Much is said today about winning "the crowds" for Jesus Christ. Every such effort is to be encouraged; but we must not forget that men can enter into the kingdom of God only as individuals. Religion emphasizes personality. In what is a man better than a sheep? In this: that he is a personality, and must be dealt with as such, personally, individually. It is for this reason that the intelligent evangelist lays such emphasis upon a good corps of personal workers who shall deal with the crowds who come forward under the impulse of the invitation, individually and personally. Indeed, we do not consider that converts have been dealt with properly until they have been dealt with personally.

Religion emphasizes personality. Recently a photograph was left in my office. It was that of a converted convict. It had no name on it, only a number. Personality is lost in jail; it is a number that is there recognized. It is a number that paces up and down the cell, a number that walks out to work in the yards, a number that sits down to eat, a number that takes sick and dies, and a number that is buried in the potter's field. Personality, not numbers, counts in the kingdom of God; the Church is made up of that innumerable host which no man can number, but who carry upon their foreheads the name of Him whose they are and whom they serve. All talk about a social salvation, and a sweeping of men into the kingdom by crowds, is to be received with some apprehension, to say the least.

Jesus Christ Our Example

Jesus Christ won most, if not all, of His followers by personal effort. Do you recall a single instance of what we, in this day, would call a great revival taking place during Christ's ministry? He enlisted Matthew at the toll-booth, and Peter, James and John at their nets, by personal invitation: "Come, follow me!" One by one, man by man; that is how Christ's cause grew.
What is the great lesson taught in the first chapter of John, the chapter commonly called the "Eureka" or "I have found" chapter? Is it not that the Church of Christ grew and is to grow by personal effort? Does not the Holy Spirit set forth at the beginning of the Christian dispensation the divine method of extending Christianity, the law of the kingdom's growth, namely, the finding of one disciple by another?

The supreme business of the Christian is to individualize the Gospel. No distinction, such as clergy and laity, is here recognized. As followers of Christ we are all to be personal soul-winners. Every Christian layman is "ordained" to go and bring forth fruit, and is a "minister" in so far as every man who has received a gift — and every Christian has received one — is called upon to minister therewith (John 15:16; 1 Peter 4:10,11).

The Apostles' Example

How personal soul-winning is emphasized in the Acts of the Apostles! Pentecost is passed over with comparatively small mention; but the Church of Jesus Christ going out as individual personal workers — John here, Peter there, Philip yonder, the ordinary Christian layman going from house to house, seeking to extend the kingdom of the Christ — this is given in detail, and to its narration is devoted much space.

The church at Colosse began not with a great revival under Paul, but as the result of the faithful personal work of one man, Epaphras. The church at Rome was undoubtedly founded in the same way. Pastors acknowledge that the best additions to their churches are those won to Christ by personal effort. ...Dr. J. O. Peck is reported to have said, that if he had the certainty that he was to live only ten years, and as a condition of gaining heaven at the end thereof, he had to win a thousand or ten thousand souls for Christ, and he was given his choice of winning them either by preaching sermons or by individual effort, he would choose the latter method every time.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

World’s Biggest Flag in Cebu


The biggest Philippine flag was delivered yesterday to Liloan town in Cebu as a symbol of fostering unity in the country in ceremonies held at a vacant three-hectare lot.

The 330 feet by 660 feet flag occupied two hectares on the ground.

The huge banner made up of 14,900 yards of nylon taffeta will stay in Liloan until March 16.

It will be folded and later brought to Mactan Island, to coincide with the commemoration of the March 16, 1521 arrival of Spanish colonizers in the Philippines.

Grace Galindez Gupana, president and founder of the Hallelujah Kingdom of Jerusalem Global Foundation, told the crowd that gathered at the site that the flag symbolizes both unity and healing of the country's social ills.

The foundation spent for the flag that was registered as among the biggest in the world by the Guinness Book of World Records.

Transported via a passenger vessel, the 3.5-ton flag cost the organizers P25,000 to deliver it to Cebu.

The flag is the biggest compared to former record holders such as the US “Super Flag” which measures about 255 X 505 feet and Pakistan's 340 X 550 feet flag.

The Philippine flag, which cost about P5 million, was finished last Sept. 16 after about a month's work.

Grace Valdez, president of Livingston Christian School of Liloan, invited Gupana's group for the “unfurling and restoration” of the worn out flag.

The flag was spread by students and school employees while a Shuufar (an ancient Hebrew horn) was blown by a member of Gupana's group.

Gupana cited the book of Zachariah Chapter 5 which spoke of a giant scroll that would heal the land. In the case of the Philippines, Gupana said it is the flag.

About 500 helpers unfurled the flag and drew in a crowd of 3,000 students.

Others saw differently. A 61-year-old resident named Boning De Lima thought at first that it was part of a political rally by Liloan Mayor Duke Frasco.

He was told by some kids that it was a giant flag.

“What the children said was true. It is so amazing to see a huge flag like this. It is different from the ones found in the school,” De Lima told CEBU DAILY NEWS. Another unfurling activity will be done in Lapu-Lapu City.

By Dale G. Israel
Cebu Daily News
First Posted 07:51:00 03/10/2010

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Peer Pressure

A research work by Eileen Kristine S. Abarra


Peer pressure is when "friends" persuade you to doing something that you do not want to do. But maybe you want to do it, and you just don't have the courage to do it and your friends talk you into it. Peer Pressure can be broken down into two areas; good peer pressure and bad peer pressure.

Bad peer pressure is being coerced into doing something that you didn't want to do because your friends said that you should. Friends have a tendency to think that they know what is best for you, and if your friends are like some of ours, they always offer their opinion whether it is wanted or not Well, if friends are going to tell you what to do, what can you do about it? The most basic thing that you can do is to say "No, I don't wish to do that!" or if you want to do it, say "Yes, give me a try!"

For instance, if one of your friends offered you a cigarette, you might say "No, that just doesn't interest me." But being able to say no may not be the problem; the real problem arises when your friends repeatedly ask you to do something. This is where you have to be able to say to yourself, "I made a decision and I truly feel that my decision was the correct one", and then be able to express that repeatedly to all of your friends, and have enough respect for yourself to stand up and not give in. This seems like a difficult task, doesn't it? It takes a tremendous amount of will power to be able to stand up to the people that you know, trust, and respect ... your friends.

One of the major problems with peer pressure occurs when you get sucked into something that you really didn't want to do and subsequently, become addicted to it. Usually, people get backed into a situation to try illegal drugs, alcohol, and cigarettes and more times than not, these behaviors can become habit forming.

If and when someone comes up and offers you one of these substances, it is your decision whether you want to try or continue to use these substances. You should be prepared to make these decisions and to make a good decision you must be educated on that topic. For instance, say you were going to buy a stereo. You wouldn't just go out and pick the one that looked nice, you probably would go to the library and look into it. You might do some research in a few magazines, ask a few friends what they thought, go to the store and listen to each stereo through multiple speakers and finally make an educated decision. Before engaging in a specific situation, you should take the time to read about each one and the possible drawbacks before you decide to try or not to try anything.

Our reasoning behind not telling you what to do with each decision is because through out school, we were always told "Say NO to drugs, alcohol, and cigarettes." You see, we may have always been taught other people's opinions. We think that it is better that one finds out what will happen, how it will happen, and get whatever information that you need to make an educated decision. So, arm yourself with wisdom and knowledge and some decision making skills, so you can live your own life and finally accept the consequences of doing or not doing something.

Good peer pressure, on the other hand, is being pushed into something that you didn't have the courage to do or just didn't cross your mind to do. However, as you think about it, it seems like a good thing to do. Good peer pressure can also be a situation when your friends convince you not to do something you were going to do because it wasn't in your best interest. Some people say that good peer pressure is when you get pushed into something that you didn't want to do and it turned out well. Well, this may be nice, but ask yourself this question: how do you know "ahead of time" whether what you are doing will turn out good or bad? Can you? Most people can't, but if you can, your problems may be solved! When the time comes for you to make these big decisions, it is important to think before deciding. Take as long as you need just to think about whether you want to do it, think about whether you should, and finally think about the consequences. These are the important things that must be done before any big decision is made. Also, knowing who is asking you to do something helps you make the decision. If the person is not your friend, you should really consider what they want you to do, but if you know, trust and respect this person then you might seriously consider what they ask.

Why Do People Give in to Peer Pressure?

Some kids give in to peer pressure because they want to be liked, to fit in, or because they worry that other kids may make fun of them if they don't go along with the group. Others may go along because they are curious to try something new that others are doing. The idea that "everyone's doing it" may influence some kids to leave their better judgment, or their common sense, behind.

How to Walk Away From Peer Pressure

It is tough to be the only one who says "no" to peer pressure, but you can do it. Paying attention to your own feelings and beliefs about what is right and wrong can help you know the right thing to do. Inner strength and self-confidence can help you stand firm, walk away, and resist doing something when you know better.

It can really help to have at least one other peer, or friend, who is willing to say "no," too. This takes a lot of the power out of peer pressure and makes it much easier to resist. It's great to have friends with values similar to yours who will back you up when you don't want to do something.

You've probably had a parent or teacher advise you to "choose your friends wisely." Peer pressure is a big reason why they say this. If you choose friends who don't use drugs, cut class, smoke cigarettes, or lie to their parents, then you probably won't do these things either, even if other kids do. Try to help a friend who's having trouble resisting peer pressure. It can be powerful for one kid to join another by simply saying, "I'm with you - let's go."

Even if you're faced with peer pressure while you're alone, there are still things you can do. You can simply stay away from peers who pressure you to do stuff you know is wrong. You can tell them "no" and walk away. Better yet, find other friends and classmates to pal around with.

If you continue to face peer pressure and you're finding it difficult to handle, talk to someone you trust. Don't feel guilty if you've made a mistake or two. Talking to a parent, teacher, or school counselor can help you feel much better and prepare you for the next time you face peer pressure.

Peer Influence Isn't All Bad

You already know that the teen years can be tough. You're figuring out who you are, what you believe, what you're good at, what your responsibilities are, and what your place in the world is going to be.

It's comforting to face those challenges with friends who are into the same things that you are. But you probably hear adults — parents, teachers, guidance counselors, etc. — talk about peer pressure more than the benefits of belonging to a peer group.
You might not hear a lot about it, but peers have a profoundly positive influence on each other and play important roles in each other's lives:

•Friendship. Among peers you can find friendship and acceptance, and share experiences that can build lasting bonds.

•Positive Examples. Peers set plenty of good examples for each other. Having peers who are committed to doing well in school or to doing their best in a sport can influence you to be more goal-oriented, too. Peers who are kind and loyal influence you to build these qualities in yourself. Even peers you've never met can be role models! For example, watching someone your age compete in the Olympics, give a piano concert, or spearhead a community project might inspire you to go after a dream of your own.

•Feedback and Advice. Your friends listen and give you feedback as you try out new ideas, explore belief, and discuss problems. Peers can help you make decisions, too: what courses to take; whether to get your hair cut, let it grow, or dye it; how to handle a family argument. You might turn to your peers for all sorts of advice — even about intimate or potentially risky decisions like whether to have sex or try drugs.

•Socializing. Your peer group gives you opportunities to try out new social skills. Getting to know lots of different people — such as classmates or teammates — gives you a chance to learn how to expand your circle of friends, build relationships, and work out differences. You may have peers you agree or disagree with, compete with, or team with, peers you admire, and peers you don't want to be like.

•Encouragement. Peers encourage you to work hard to get the solo in the concert, help you study, listen and support you when you're upset or troubled, and empathize with you when they've experienced similar difficulties.

•New Experiences. Your peers might get you involved in clubs, sports, or religious groups. Your world would be far less rich without peers to encourage you try sushi for the first time, listen to a CD you've never heard before, or to offer moral support when you audition for the school play.

•Good Advice. Peers often give each other good advice. Your friends will be quick to tell you when they think you're making a mistake or doing something risky.

When the Pressure's On

Sometimes, though, the stresses in your life can actually come from your peers. They may pressure you into doing something you're uncomfortable with, such as shoplifting, doing drugs or drinking, taking dangerous risks when driving a car, or having sex before you feel ready.

This pressure may be expressed openly ("Oh, come on — it's just one beer, and everyone else is having one") or more indirectly — simply making beer available at a party, for instance.

Most peer pressure is less easy to define. Sometimes a group can make subtle signals without saying anything at all — letting you know that you must dress or talk a certain way or adopt particular attitudes toward school, other students, parents, and teachers in order to win acceptance and approval.

The pressure to conform (to do what others are doing) can be powerful and hard to resist. A person might feel pressure to do something just because others are doing it (or say they are). Peer pressure can influence a person to do something that is relatively harmless — or something that has more serious consequences. Giving in to the pressure to dress a certain way is one thing — going along with the crowd to drink or smoke is another.

People may feel pressure to conform so they fit in or are accepted, or so they don't feel awkward or uncomfortable. When people are unsure of what to do in a social situation, they naturally look to others for cues about what is and isn't acceptable.
The people who are most easily influenced will follow someone else's lead first. Then others may go along, too — so it can be easy to think, "It must be OK. Everyone else is doing it. They must know what they're doing." Before you know it, many people are going along with the crowd — perhaps on something they might not otherwise do.

Responding to peer pressure is part of human nature — but some people are more likely to give in, and others are better able to resist and stand their ground. People who are low on confidence and those who tend to follow rather than lead could be more likely to seek their peers' approval by giving in to a risky challenge or suggestion. People who are unsure of themselves, new to the group, or inexperienced with peer pressure may also be more likely to give in.

Using alcohol or drugs increases anyone's chances of giving in to peer pressure. Substance use impairs judgment and interferes with the ability to make good decisions.

Pressure Pointers

Nearly everyone ends up in a sticky peer pressure situation at some point. No matter how wisely you choose your friends, or how well you think you know them, sooner or later you'll have to make decisions that are difficult and could be unpopular. It may be something as simple as resisting the pressure to spend your hard-earned babysitting money on the latest MP3 player that "everybody" has. Or it may mean deciding to take a stand that makes you look uncool to your group.

But these situations can be opportunities to figure out what is right for you. There's no magic to standing up to peer pressure, but it does take courage — yours:

•Listen to your gut. If you feel uncomfortable, even if your friends seem to be OK with what's going on, it means that something about the situation is wrong for you. This kind of decision-making is part of becoming self-reliant and learning more about who you are.

•Plan for possible pressure situations. If you'd like to go to a party but you believe you may be offered alcohol or drugs there, think ahead about how you'll handle this challenge. Decide ahead of time — and even rehearse — what you'll say and do. Learn a few tricks. If you're holding a bottle of water or a can of soda, for instance, you're less likely to be offered a drink you don't want.

•Arrange a "bail-out" code phrase you can use with your parents without losing face with your peers. You might call home from a party at which you're feeling pressured to drink alcohol and say, for instance, "Can you come and drive me home? I have a terrible earache."

•Learn to feel comfortable saying "no." With good friends you should never have to offer an explanation or apology. But if you feel you need an excuse for, say, turning down a drink or smoke, think up a few lines you can use casually. You can always say, "No, thanks, I've got a belt test in karate next week and I'm in training," or "No way — my uncle just died of cirrhosis and I'm not even looking at any booze."

•Hang with people who feel the same way you do. Choose friends who will speak up with you when you're in need of moral support, and be quick to speak up for a friend in the same way. If you're hearing that little voice telling you a situation's not right, chances are others hear it, too. Just having one other person stand with you against peer pressure makes it much easier for both people to resist.

•Blame your parents: "Are you kidding? If my mom found out, she'd kill me, and her spies are everywhere."

•If a situation seems dangerous, don't hesitate to get an adult's help.
It's not always easy to resist negative peer pressure, but when you do, it is easy to feel good about it afterwards. And you may even be a positive influence on your peers who feel the same way — often it just takes one person to speak out or take a different action to change a situation. Your friends may follow if you have the courage to do something different or refuse to go along with the group. Consider yourself a leader, and know that you have the potential to make a difference.

Community Service in Biasong, Tabogon


The community service in Biasong Tabogon was one of the most exciting and memorable events that happened this year. Since the class seldom bond, it was also a chance for us to spend time with each other. I felt very blessed and fulfilled to be a part of the community service and be able to help our brothers and sisters in the Lord. I never imagined that there are still people living in that kind of place – the road was narrow, the place was far, and the access to needs are difficult.

About the walking, although it was uphill and was raining, it did not stop me from moving on. Even though the path was very slippery and I slipped, I still pressed on. Patience and control of emotions were the lessons I learned during the long walk. There are times in our life that we would blowup because of the circumstances that we are into but it is us who will decide on how we will react on things. It is either we will take it positively or the other way around.

Johnny Murphy Memorial Church is the evidence that the people living in that vicinity had known Jesus for a very long time already. The said church had to be repaired so that it will look attractive and it would be preserved. The painting segment was also enjoyable. The whole class had a great time beautifying the church. The class had one goal of making the church look beautiful, attractive and preserving the church as well.

The people in the said area were very hospitable. They were very receptive, welcomed us, and helped us with our needs too. Likewise, they prepared a very tasty lunch and snacks which we shared with one another. The experience regarding their traditional “galingan” was also unforgettable. It was an old milling equipment used to mill corn grits. In as much as these tools are obsolete, it was the reason why I wanted to try using it.

Overall, the Tabogon community service was very productive and worthwhile. It was an expedition that I would not forget, an experience worth remembering and reminiscing. As I continue to explore life, I will truthfully keep this memory in my heart so that when time comes that I would look back my past, I will be able to see how this event helped and changed my perspective in life. Glory to God for all these things!

God is Awesome in My Life

I am blessed to be born in a Christian home and with Christian parents. Since I was a child, they had been teaching me about God, what He did for me, and other Christian values. Whenever they are going to church, I am with them and always offer a special presentation too. Then they sent me to Christian school where I can have more knowledge about Jesus but I was not yet a Christian until I was in Grade 4. It was because of a teacher who thoroughly discussed about salvation and made me realize that merely going to church could not save me. So I came on my knees, repented, acknowledged I am nothing without Jesus in my life, and accepted Jesus Christ as my personal Lord and Savior. I surrendered my life to the Lord and gradually He has been changing me from glory to glory.

My family had been transferring churches searching for one which can really draw us more closely to Jesus until we find one and it is where I am starting my ministry now. I want to serve Jesus with all the talents He has given to me. I know He has entrusted me these talents so that I can give glory to His name. In the ministry that I am in right now, it is not plainly playing music but it is serving the King of kings and the Lord of lords.

I am a Christian because I have accepted Jesus as my personal Lord and Savior. He is the one who controls and manages my life. I lay my everything to the one who loves me most. I will not exchange Him for other things in this world for His goodness and faithfulness in my life can never be paid. He is matchless. Indeed, He is true to His promises. He has conquered the grave because of His great love for me and no one has done that for me. He is a Father who truly loves His children.

“I have got one audience to please and it is Jesus Christ!”

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

HOW GREAT THOU ART

O Lord my God, When I in awesome wonder,
Consider all the worlds Thy Hands have made;
I see the stars, I hear the rolling thunder,
Thy power throughout the universe displayed.

Then sings my soul, My Saviour God, to Thee,
How great Thou art, How great Thou art.
Then sings my soul, My Saviour God, to Thee,
How great Thou art, How great Thou art!

When through the woods, and forest glades I wander,
And hear the birds sing sweetly in the trees.
When I look down, from lofty mountain grandeur
And see the brook, and feel the gentle breeze.

Then sings my soul, My Saviour God, to Thee,
How great Thou art, How great Thou art.
Then sings my soul, My Saviour God, to Thee,
How great Thou art, How great Thou art!

And when I think, that God, His Son not sparing;
Sent Him to die, I scarce can take it in;
That on the Cross, my burden gladly bearing,
He bled and died to take away my sin.

Then sings my soul, My Saviour God, to Thee,
How great Thou art, How great Thou art.
Then sings my soul, My Saviour God, to Thee,
How great Thou art, How great Thou art!

When Christ shall come, with shout of acclamation,
And take me home, what joy shall fill my heart.
Then I shall bow, in humble adoration,
And then proclaim: "My God, how great Thou art!"

Then sings my soul, My Saviour God, to Thee,
How great Thou art, How great Thou art.
Then sings my soul, My Saviour God, to Thee,
How great Thou art, How great Thou art!