Caffeinated Thoughts |
| Posted: 28 Jun 2012 02:18 AM PDT A colleague of mine is fond of sharing memories about his good-natured mother, Mrs. Moore, who passed away a few years ago. She never lost her sense of humor even in the later years of her life, while living in a nursing home. Though I never met Robert Moore’s mother, I dedicate this to her. As it happens, strangers often make wrong assumptions about residents in nursing homes. This can range from underestimating a person's ability to hear or see, to falsely believing some other myth about old age. Sometimes even friends and relatives who have been away for a while can superimpose notions about people that just aren't true. They assume the worst. In the case of Mrs. Moore, a distant relative who came to visit one day would be in for quite a shock. Thinking that Mrs. Moore was not in control of all of her faculties, the relative asked with a somber face: "Do you know who this is?" Quickly she added, as if to make sure the old woman understood, "Do you know who I am?" Mrs. Moore stared at the younger woman for a few seconds and then, with an inquisitive but ornery look, squinted her eyes, slowly shook her head and posed this unforgettable quip: "You don't know who you are?" On another occasion, her adult daughter came to visit her at the home and did what she had been doing her entire life: she told her mother, with an announcing tone, the fact that she had to "go to the bathroom". For probably 50 years, Mrs. Moore had been gently mocking these regular proclamations with such witticisms as "Thank you for that announcement", or "Perhaps you want me to call in the reporters from the evening news?" This time no such jest would be heard, for Mrs. Moore was no longer able to speak. But she was not done. No, no. She gathered her strength, then three times softly placed one hand against the other, and quietly applauded. You are applauded today, Mrs. Moore. Though I never knew ye. You have reminded us that old people are people. Sometimes very, very, delightful people. _____________________________ First posted at All Assisted Living Homes
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| Posted: 27 Jun 2012 06:46 AM PDT The Dove Foundation provides movie recommendations for families. The group’s ratings are somewhat elastic. Movies receiving their seal of approval include Summer popcorn movies such as “Thor” and “The Avengers.” However, some films don’t quite make the grade, including five of the six Rocky movies. Their commentary on Rocky IV showed how the film just missed their approval:
The one use of God’s name as a swear word was enough to make the film unworthy of recommendation. At first, this seems a little odd in our culture. By the standard of secular culture, that phrase can be used as much as the producer would like and end up PG. It’s the F-word and barnyard expletives that can push a film’s rating towards PG-13 and R Ratings. And we tend to be offended more by these words and other coarsening aspects of our culture. However, we may be missing what matters to God. Barnyard expletives were not something so serious that God prohibited their use in the Ten Commandments. The Third Commandment says, “Thou shalt not take the name of the LORD thy God in vain: for the LORD will not hold [him] guiltless that taketh his name in vain.”-Deut. 5: 11 and we rarely take notice of it. This is usually disregarded in the movies. One exception was in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (not recommended by Dove) where Indiana Jones’ misuse of the name of the Christ was meant with a slap and a rebuke from his father (played by Sean Connery), “That’s for blasphemy!” Sadly, most of us don’t quite feel that strongly about the misuse of God’s name. It may be that we don’t grasp the importance of the Third Commandment. When a society gets into the habit of using God’s name lightly, we take the rest of God’s commandments and ways lightly. The misuse of God’s name has (not surprisingly) because rampant in our disrespectful culture. “Oh my God!” or OMG has become a common saying that no one blinks an eye at. If we’re honest with ourselves, many of us have fallen into that cultural trap of taking God’s name in vain without even thinking about it. If we are to truly honor God in our culture, we must learn to honor God’s name again. Such a restoration must begin with us confessing along with Isaiah, “Woe is me! for I am undone; because I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips: for mine eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts.” (Isaiah 6:5) Link to this post! |
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