God does not call the qualified.........He qualifies the called!
strikefinder
read my profile
sign my guestbook

Visit strikefinder's Xanga Site!

Name: Bruce
Country: United States
State: Delaware
Metro: Milford
Birthday: 2/23/1984
Gender: Male


Interests: People, smart people, wise people, good peolple, ice, and candles.
Expertise: Nothing really....
Occupation: Aviation
Industry: Nonprofit


Message: message meEmail: email me
AIM: dittohead16


Member Since: 7/3/2005

SubscriptionsSites I Read
rettasue
Curtsellie
PiedCrow
kat250
anarbaptist
Lossfourwords
best_babe
protectress_of_the_sea
Enach20
Darrellwhitney
mobeach
KimberlyYoder
mnisly
crosstide
iloveyoulike
stereo8track
shedoggy
aLaBelleCiel
hxc_kyd
Yoder4Truth
Concerned_Follower
Karowe
chrometop
rubberduckies03
LOTR_fan19
BecauseISaidSo2
ritzcracka14
jomilmin
michelleroot
Yoderleiderhosen
daheat8503
jomirho
mrshl
Jemast

Blogrings
Pilots' Blogring
previous - random - next


Posting Calendar

|<< oldest | newest >>|
view all weblog archives

Get Involved!

Suggest a link

Recommend to friend

Create a site


Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Currently Listening
We Were Here
By Joshua Radin
see related
It is just too hard to keep up to blogs, so for right now the most current events in my life can be found at brucejyoder.blogspot.com 


Thursday, March 15, 2007

Today I stayed here at the apartment so that I could read and study while Steve had his King Air training.  Yesterday I took the CAA commercial written test and passed with an 85%.  At least I passed.  I guess tomorrow I start the sim training for my commercial checkride on Friday.  I can’t wait…

Yesterday Steve and I had a conversation about several observations we have made over the past several days.  Although apartheid is a thing of the past here in South Africa, it is obvious that the effects of this historical injustice still linger today.

We regularly go to a coffee shop called the Mugg and Bean where we often spend several hours on the Internet.  When we get there we are always greeted by a friendly host or hostess (most often black) whom we immediately are attracted to because of their friendly and hospitable behavior.  Yesterday when we got there, the manager of the store (who was white) happened to be present.  He gave both of us a warm greeting and welcomed us to sit wherever we wanted – of course we wanted to sit next to an outlet.  

We ordered our mugguccinos  and promptly began surfing the net.  Life was good!  Until I began to notice the interaction between the manager and his staff.  Although he was subtle, I kept noticing that he was constantly griping on his workers for what seemed to be petty issues.  It was obvious that the staff was doing their best to act indifferent to the criticisms but I could tell that they were unsettled.  Steve and I both agreed that we would not like to work for a man like that.  It was then that I realized what was truly going on.  This fellow was not only wielding his managerial authority over the staff but also his social superiority.  He was treating them more like servants than staff.

Here I sit in a sea of affluent white people being served by hardworking black people.  We are treated like royalty, they are they are treated like servants. Why were we treated so well by the manager?  Was it because we are valued customers or because we were white?  I would like to think the former but I am not sure that is the case.  I believe I was witnessing racial injustice right before my eyes.  And I was a part of it.  When a black customer walks through the door, does the manager great that person with the same enthusiasm that he greets all the rest of his customers?  I don’t see it.

This is only one example of many that seems to point to the present inequity.  Who are the ones that mow your lawns?  Who are the ones who serve your meals?  Who are the ones who clean your house?  Who are the ones manning the security gates?  Who are the ones who run the checkout lines at the grocery store?  Who are the ones walking along the side of the road?  Who are the ones living in shacks?  I would guess that nine out of ten are black.

One the other hand, who are the ones who can afford to dine out at nice restaurants?  Who are the ones who live in nice neighborhoods?  Who are the ones driving around in nice BMWs?  Who are the managers of the businesses?  The majority are white.

Being here in South Africa has given me a chance to step back in time and observe what might possibly parallel the situation in the U.S. after the Civil Rights movement.  Laws and behaviors are relatively easy to change but feelings that affect social acceptance are nearly impossible to alter.  I wonder if most people were blind to gross injustices because it was simply the status quo.  Since I was born in the eighties and grew up in the nineties, I was unaware of and oblivious to the ramifications of the Civil Rights movement.  Of course I always heard people talk about injustices but it was not clear for me to see.  It is amazing how much easier it is to form objective opinions (I know that is an oxymoron) through the lens of an outsider.  I truly cherish the opportunity!


Tuesday, January 02, 2007

Currently Reading
Blue Like Jazz: Nonreligious Thoughts on Christian Spirituality
By Donald Miller
see related
This book has been on my shelf for a long time now.  I have always liked what Donald Miller has to say but for some reason I had a hard time getting through his book, Blue Like Jazz.  His style is just a little different than my own.  However last night while reading the chapter, Belief: The Birth of Cool, I really resonated with some of his thoughts. 

"Tony asked me one time if there was anything I would die for. I had to think about it for a long time, and even after thinking about it for a couple of days I had a short list. In the end there weren't very many principles I would die for. I would die for Penny, for Laura and Tony. I would die for Rick. Andrew would say that dying for something is easy because it is associated with glory. Living for something, Andrew would say, is the hard thing. Living for something extends beyond fashion, flory, or recognition. We live for what we believe, Andrew would say."
    "If Andrew the Protester is right, if I live what I believe, then I don't believe very many noble things. My life testifies that the first thing I believe is that I am the most important person in the world. My life testifies to this because I care more about my food and shelter and happiness than about anybody else."
    "I am learning to believe better things. I am learning to believe that other people exist, that fashion is not truth; rather, Jesus is the most important figure in history, and the gospel is the most powerful force in the universe. I am learning not to be passionate about empty things, but to cultivate passion for justice, grace, truth, and communicate the idea that Jesus likes people and even loves them."


Saturday, December 30, 2006

I heard about a new "Christian" video game based on the Left Behind series that is supposed to be an alternative to the violent video games that are bombarding the entertainment market.  My initial reaction was to worry about the theological presuppositions that would be introduced to these kids at such a young age but then I became horrified when I realized the contents within the game.  Granted I have never played the game but I have reviewed some of the critiques put out by those who oppose Christianity and I am appalled at the testimony that the whole Left Behind movement has made for the cause of Christianity.  I was very pleased to here that Focus on the Family removed their support for this game.  What some Christians see as evangelism, others see as Christianity showing its real colors.  Here is a response to the game that I found when I googled it.

Imagine: you are a foot soldier in a paramilitary group whose purpose is to remake America as a Christian theocracy, and establish its worldly vision of the dominion of Christ over all aspects of life. You are issued high-tech military weaponry, and instructed to engage the infidel on the streets of New York City. You are on a mission -- both a religious mission and a military mission -- to convert or kill Catholics, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, gays, and anyone who advocates the separation of church and state -- especially moderate, mainstream Christians. Your mission is "to conduct physical and spiritual warfare"; all who resist must be taken out with extreme prejudice.

I am aware that these people may be exaggerating some of the intent of this game, but I do believe that they raise a valid point.  We feel that the radical Muslims are primitive, barbaric, and ruthless when they believe it is their responsibility to eliminate the "infidel" yet we have "Christian" video games that promote the elimination of nonbelievers?  Are we so far removed from the teachings of Jesus that we believe this is the correct attitude of followers of Christ?  This kind of thing saddens me.

In other news, I finally got all the pics off my camera and on to the computer.  Here are a few pics from the last several weekends...

 
A highschool friend of Andrew's, Kyle , Andrew, his brother, Cory, and myself posing in from of an armadillo cake..one of many wedding cakes.



got to play around with Picasa...



My siblings at the Christmas table (Evie getting a little carried away with the bottle)



And the traditional Yoder game of Scum


Monday, November 27, 2006

Currently Reading
The Scandal of the Evangelical Conscience: Why Are Christians Living Just Like the Rest of the World?
By Ronald J. Sider
see related

The Evangelical Conscience II

Good, a little feedback to soften my approach.  I will give Bush credit for the fact that he has for the most part held consistent to his original plan for Presidency.  Sure I disagreed with him in regards to his foreign policy, in particular the military action, but I still voted for him (shame on me) because that seemed insignificant in comparison to the benefits of having a bonified, born-again Christian in office.  Had I to vote again, I would probably vote for him if it were solely in regards to his domestic policies.  I believe that is why he is so popular among many Evangelicals.  Many, actually all of the good things that I have heard on behalf of Bush in the last few days pertain to his domestic policies.  In that regards I thank God that Bush has been able to preserve and promote some of the principles that I value as an evangelical Christian.  He has appointed judges that respect the rule of law and promote moral principles that we as Christians value.  Bush also acted to curb stem cell research and partial birth abortion, both issues that the religious right fight to abolish.  In addition, today in church Lamar said something to the affect that Bush signed a bill that provided a $10,000 incentive for those who want to adopt a child.  Finally, he has supported a Constitutional amendment protecting marriage (which Clinton did as well when he signed the Defense of Marriage Act)




Now lets think globally and look at how his foreign policy has affected the work of the Kingdom of God.  When we Christians vote in a president, shouldn’t we also consider how it will affect our brothers and sisters in other nations?  Very few Christians stop to consider the ramifications that our war on terror has had on the work of missionaries in other nations.  Our support of these policies is making it hell for our churches in Islamic nations.  Today after our invasion of Iraq, Assyrian Christians run the risk of annihilation.  Tony Campolo tells of a time when he was invited to participate in evangelical ministries in Iraq while it was still under the evil rule of Saddam Hussein, but he declined.  Had he known the turn of events in only a few short years, he would have dropped everything to participate in that ministry.  Today, under the newly erected democratic government, Christians are fleeing in droves.  Although things were not great before the war, they are much worse now.  I in no way support any of the evil regimes that have plagued the Middle East for hundreds of years.  However, I believe that the western world’s response in the form of our war on terror does not promote the work of the kingdom.

Christians once made up 15% of the Palestinian population but today they only make up 4%.  We must put ourselves in their shoes.  It took many years for Lebanon to rise from its third world state of poverty to sufficient prosperity – it took only a matter of days for Israel, in the name of defense, to bomb them back to third world status.  Today poverty once again pervades their region.  Much of the positive affect of the work that was done by the Palestinian church before, during and after the war was largely overshadowed by the western evangelical’s unwavering support of Israel and its military actions against Hezbollah and Hamas.  To make matters worse, after the war Hezbollah gave large amounts of money to rebuild war torn Lebanon while the western nations did very little.  Needless to say, Hezbollah gained credibility while the Christians lost credibility - they see Christianity in alliance with Israel and western domination.  These are just two small examples of the overreaching negative affect our policies have had on the Christian witness worldwide.


I am left to wonder whether voting solely in regards to domestic issues is a selfish move on behalf of the us Christians.   We are passionate about the affect that a Christian President will have on our immediate environment but we give little thought to the ramifications that his policy will have on our brothers and sisters across the sea.  Plus I have recently come to wonder what the church is try to do by forcing Christian ethics on a non-Christian society.  We are called to spread the good new of the gospel into all the world.  Where do we Christians get off thinking that we are called to be the moral police of the world??  Paul’s letters were not written to tell the non-Christians how to live but rather the Christians.  Jesus did not preach at those outside the faith but rather his harshest rebuke came to those who were the supposed righteous in the faith.  He called us to be the salt of the earth and the light of the world.  "In the same way let your light shine before men, that they may see your good deeds and praise your Father in heaven."  (Matt 5:16)  I feel that trying to force a moral agenda though the White House is an attempt to take the easy way out while we ignore these very same problems that plague our churches.  I believe that integrity and obedience within the body of Christ are the only means by which society will be compelled to turn from its evil ways.

I realize that this is a complex issue that cannot be fully addressed in a 1000 word essay.  I also only see a fraction of the whole picture from my comfortable chair here in Greenwood.  But don't you think that these are concerns that must be addressed as members of the global body of Christ?  I encourage you to not first ask, what will benefit America but rather what will benefit the Kingdom of God.  Again, what do you think?  I liked the feedback from my last post.



Next 5 >>