Sunday, March 15, 2009

open letter to Michael Phelps

Get your act together you spoiled rotton brat and take it seriously. You've been given the gift of financial security because you do what you love to do. You have no idea how lucky you are.

Stop being an idiot,

The management

Sunday, March 08, 2009

Today's News and other items of interest

Police: Pastor shot dead at church, others stabbed
By JIM SUHR (Associated Press Writer)
From Associated Press
March 08, 2009 4:46 PM EDT
MARYVILLE, Illinois - A gunman walked down the aisle of a church during a Sunday service and killed the pastor, then stabbed himself and slashed two other people as congregants wrestled him to the ground, authorities said.

The man walked into the sprawling red brick First Baptist Church shortly after 8 a.m. and briefly spoke with The Rev. Fred Winters before pulling out a .45-caliber handgun and shooting Winters once in the chest, said Illinois State Police Master Trooper Ralph Timmins.

The gun jammed before the man could fire again, Timmins said. The attacker then pulled out a knife and injured himself before churchgoers subdued him. Two parishioners involved in the struggle also suffered knife wounds, Timmins said.

Timmins said officials don't know whether Winters, a married father of two who had led the church for nearly 22 years, and the gunman knew each other. Officials did not know the suspect's name.


This is from the church website-- please keep them in prayer.

A Message About Today’s Loss
Today, a little after our 8:15 service began, a man entered First Baptist Church and fired several gunshots at our Senior Pastor, Dr Fred Winters.

Please pray for Dr. Winter’s family, our two brave members who were injured when they stopped the assailant, for the assailant himself and his family, and for our church members as they deal with this tragic loss.

In this day, where uncertainty seems to abound creating an environment in which people are vulnerable in doing things they might not do otherwise, one thing is certain, we, as human beings need a foundation upon which we can live our lives. We at First Baptist Maryville, along with other Christian believers, share this conviction: that foundation is God’s Word. In the pages of the Book we call the Bible, we find the pathway for peace, hope, and a quality of living life despite what circumstances we find ourselves in.


COMMENT:
I remember back in Connecticut when a friend and I were walking his beat around Foxwood Casino. He'd point out the cars shrouded in snow to belong to denizens who had been at the casino for more than 48 hours, just playing slots. That was in 1993. We have now upscaled to video slots which are more frightening. The computer is a beast we bear in the age we live in. We just have to accept it and work around its seduction. I come from a family that bore the burden of a few alcoholics, have attended AL-ANON myself, dealt with the multiple addictions of a family member that, if not doing harm to those around him, almost killed himself. I've dealt with the personal conviction to stay away from alcohol and gambling because of my propensities towards addiction in those areas, and by Christ alone I've avoided offense so far in these things. Needless to say, any breath of addiction aside from the basic illogic of giving ones virtue and mind over to dull stimulation by choice via a stationary object without intellect seems preposterous. But its done every hour of every day by mindful, intelligent people, even Christians who are to have the mind of Christ, are to foster a heart pliable to the Holy Spirit free from carnality and hypocritical activities, having no other Gods before them.

The Creator made our body and mind to glorify him. The passivity of any addiction is given strength by ones even minimal amount of aquiescence to the stimulii present. II Corinthians 10:5 speaks of bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ. It's already difficult in this day and age to do that, thus the reason scripture tells us to be thoughtful about what we involve ourselves in.
Some things are inconsequential and take no thought like making a bank deposit or shopping for tires for the car but it's the ability of choice, the thing we give ourselves over to that in the end may have power over us, and this is what we are told to remain on the alert for: strongholds. We need to stay alert. This is why the small things are insidious, never getting involved outside of ourselves and focusing on our online family, lighting our eyes on sexy movies or literature, soft porn, most tv, buying lotto tix, going to Vegas, nightclubbing, dismissing the basics like attending church ("gather with the brethren")prayer or scripture are just things that dampen the work of the Holy Spirit to conform us to the person of Christ, damage our fellowship with God, let alone become a gateway for things that are potentially strongholds.

When we choose those things over God continuously, they become idolatry and our heart, much like seared meat, gets hardened to the things of the spirit. They look like foolishness to us because we are fostering a worldly mind by willfully feeding our flesh, which is voracious and needs to be crucified in Christ each day by the basics of our walk with the Lord and the things that encourage the activity of the Spirit: prayer and basic study of the Word, things which take no time at all. We give hours over to things that are producing wood, hay and stubble, but forfeit fifteen minutes with the Lord early in the morning. Have you ever wondered why you feel so awake at an odd time in the morning? I believe (for myself ) that God desires time with me and I am to respond sweetly, in compliance even if it just slipping out of bed for ten minutes and kneeling to thank him for getting me through the night. If we continuously cut Him off, we will reap wind in our walk and I for one do not want to face Him with the ashes of my life and wasted time that he has given me here on earth. We are given gifts of friends and love and good things but He also requires something, and it's not much. Just ourselves, and our love. Unfortunately, what you love, you give yourself over to. Thats the thing we give our most precious asset to: our time. Time is not our creation. It belongs to God and we are to steward each minute as wisely as we possibly know how.

Idolatry becomes an addiction of sorts. It just becomes a "god". There is validity regarding the physical damage caused on the mind by continual driven involvement with insidious things like working 60 hours a week to keep up an unnecessary standard of living, being in perpetual debt because of hobbies or out of control spending, continual online gaming and gambling (be it stocks or slots), aside from the obvious like sexual or food addictions, is all an appetite/covetousness issue, idolatry, needs not being met and seeking something other than what God intended to satisfy the need, be it social, physical or emotional. Addictions and idolatry are not diseases but spiritual-root problems that create fruitless lives. We all have our own sins and struggles, but in the extreme cases we cannot think that 'it can never happen to me'. We need to be soldiers in Christ. The duty is to remain a watchman for Him and to be the best example we can be, even in our sinless state and not consciously give ourselves over to spiritless things that yield wind.
We already do that unwittingly. Doing that with intent is just being a bad steward of what God gives us with our mind and body.

I know my sin and propensities. If you know yourself and can admit to some stuff, it just ceases to waste time and allows God's reign and His grace to flow with our cooperation in tow. Otherwise it is blatant disobedience and we are in sin willingly, forfeiting grace because we're feeding the flesh.

The point is that: if you know its godless or has something questionable about it, just err on the side of wisdom and cease the activity. Its simple and extremely difficult, but in Christ we can do all things and He breaks bondage. Keep it together and know you are loved. But take the walk of this life seriously, because we really don't have lots of time left and each hour is His grace and mercy in effect.
Be wise and go forward.

Article following::

Glitzy video slots seen as particular addiction risk
Critics say video slots like these at Foxwoods are especially addictive to some. (JANET KNOTT/GLOBE STAFF/FILE 2003)

By Carey Goldberg
Globe Staff / March 7, 2009
Among addiction specialists, video slot machines have come to be known as the "crack cocaine" of the gambling industry.

Graphic Video slots a fast game
The mechanical wheels of spinning fruit used in the old one-armed bandits have gone the way of the typewriter. Modern-day slot machines are computerized sound-and-light shows so skillfully designed to keep players glued to their seats that some have been known to wear adult diapers to avoid bathroom breaks.

As state Treasurer Timothy P. Cahill promotes the idea of licensing three slot parlors in Massachusetts, some mental health and gambling specialists warn that the newer machines deliver such potent gambling highs that they can be particularly addictive.

The video slots allow players to gamble incredibly rapidly, winning or losing a game every several seconds without a break, to the point that their brains are undergoing the equivalent of an intravenous drip of an intoxicating drug, said Bob Breen, director of the Rhode Island Hospital Gambling Treatment Program.

"When you sit in front of the slots, especially if it's 24/7, there are no cues for you to quit," he said. "There's no time to stop and think. You're getting that constant drip, and people describe it as being in the zone," he said.

The gaming industry defends the computerized slots, saying their widespread use has not led to increased addiction problems.

But in 15 years of clinical experience, Breen has found that gambling descends into pathology much more quickly among slots players than among people who bet on sports, races, cards, or lotteries.

It tends to take just a year, as opposed to up to five for other types of gambling, said Breen, who has published two studies that analyzed more than 200 addicted patients.

It is not only the speed of the games that makes so addictive the playing of new-style electronic gaming machines, which include video lottery and electronic poker games along with high-tech versions of traditional slots. The machines produce a highly intense and continous experience for players, said Natasha Schull, an MIT professor who has studied the machines, their designers, and their players.

There is no waiting for the horses to run or the wheel to stop spinning, she said. And the machines have been cramming more and more betting possibilities into each wagering moment, so that a nickel machine might actually allow 100 bets of a nickel at one push of the button.

"It's like playing 100 machines at once," she said.

Brain studies have shown that gambling causes the release of dopamine, a feel-good chemical that spurs the desire to repeat a pleasurable behavior and that is involved in drug addiction. The pleasure comes not just from winning, but from the process of playing and anticipating a possible win." Continued playing causes damage to these synapses and the psychological effects in the long run can become equally damaged, along with compromising familial and personal relationships.

Saturday, March 07, 2009

Stupid mistake not far from the truth

I'd say "overcharged" sums it up. Making an asinine mistake is one thing but making America look ridiculous especially when Russia isn't exactly pro-USA is NOT what we need right now. Clinton(S) GO HOME.


Clinton's Gift to Russia Goes AwryBy Jill Dougherty, CNN

posted: 4 HOURS 9 MINUTES AGO
comments: (March 7) --
The Obama administration has been talking about "pressing the reset button" with Russia after relations "crashed" when Russia invaded Georgia last August.

When Secretary of State Hillary Clinton greeted Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in Geneva on Friday before sitting down to their working dinner, she presented him a small green box with a ribbon. Inside was a red button with the Russian word "peregruzka" printed on it.

Oops. Somewhere a translator is crying. That button being pushed Friday by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, right, and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov should say "reset." But the Russian label on the button reads "overcharged" instead. Click for more gaffes.(Note: Please disable your pop-up blocker)

"I would like to present you with a little gift that represents what President Obama and Vice President Biden and I have been saying and that is: 'We want to reset our relationship and so we will do it together.'"
Clinton, laughing, added, "We worked hard to get the right Russian word. Do you think we got it?" she asked Lavrov.
"You got it wrong," Lavrov said." Both diplomats laughed. "It should be "perezagruzka" (the Russian word for reset,) Lavrov said. "This says 'peregruzka,' which means 'overcharged.'"
The question came up at the news conference afterward.
"In a way, the word that's on the button turns out to be also true," Clinton said. "We are resetting, and because we are resetting, the minister and I have an overload of work."

U.S. Gift to Russia Lost in TranslationSecretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton gave Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov with a 'reset button,' however the Russian-language label had the wrong word, and read 'overcharged' instead of 'reset.' (March 6)
Asked by a Russian reporter whether he had pressed the button, Lavrov said that he and Clinton did, indeed.
"It is big and red and I hope that Russia and the United States, and other countries will never press on another button which used to be associated with a destructive war," he said.
The "overload," Clinton said, is a broad agenda of issues.
"We are going to systematically go through each and every one of them," she added.
Clinton said the two sides will get to work on re-negotiating a follow-up to the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty and nonproliferation. On other issues like Afghanistan, the Middle East and Iran, Clinton said, "We will work through them."
On issues where there is disagreement, Clinton said, "We are keeping those on the list because, we think through closer cooperation and building trust in each other, we can even tackle some of those differences."
Lavrov agreed the burden of the agenda for the two countries is "enormous," but added: "I don't think either Hillary or I have any desire to be freed from any burden."
Clinton called the encounter "a very productive meeting of the minds." She said both Lavrov and she are "very practical-minded" and will create a "specific set of objectives and responsibilities" to present to presidents Barack Obama and Dmitry Medvedev before the leaders' first face-to-face meeting in April at the G-20 meeting in London.
On the START treaty, she said Russia and the United States intend to have an agreement by the end of this year when the treaty expires and are "going to get to work immediately" on it.
Lavrov was asked about Russian intentions to install S-300 missiles in Iran. He said the decision "will be made exclusively on the basis of law in accordance with Russian law, and will be under expert control, which is one of the strictest in the world and of course in accordance with international agreements." Lavrov said the weapons Russia provides to its partners are "nondestabilizing, defensive weapons."

In an apparent reference to U.S. military supplies to Georgia, Lavrov said, "We want our partners to act the same way and show restraint in military supplies to those countries where, including very recently, those weapons have been used very close to our borders."

Senior U.S. officials who briefed reporters afterward, however, said they had not read Georgia into the minister's comments.
They said the discussion ranged broadly over a number of areas and "we now have a very substantive work agenda that they just outlined."
"It would have been easier and in a first meeting almost natural to be much more general but in this case it was very focused and very productive in laying out steps," one official said.
On the proposed missile defense system the United States is considering installing in Poland and the Czech Republic, one official said, "Minister Lavrov made it clear he had listened quite attentively to Secretary Clinton's comments about missile defense ... and I think it's got them thinking."

Monday, March 02, 2009

Dare to Be a Daniel

good reminders...love you j Vernon!
credit to Through The Bible Radio and Dr. J. Vernon McGee
Daniel: Choosing to Stand Alone
by Dr. J. Vernon McGee
Published and distributed by
Thru the Bible Radio Network
P.O. Box 7100
Pasadena, California 91109-7100
(800) 65-BIBLE
www.ttb.org
Scripture references are from the King James Version Bible.

We know more of the personal history and the private life of Daniel than we do of any of
the other prophets. He is introduced to us as a teenage boy, probably 15 to 17 years of age, when
he was carried away as a captive and transplanted from his home in Israel to a foreign country, a
heathen land. For over sixty years he lived in that dissolute court and pagan environment into
which he’d been taken with all of its spiritually deadening influences.
He walked with royalty, and he did so with dignity and with purpose amidst a licentious
and rakish court and society of that day. He became prime minister of two world governments,
that of Babylon and that of Media-Persia. He was lifted to the very highest position that any king
could offer any man.
Daniel was more famous and more respected in his day than the Prime Minister of
England or the Secretary of State of the United States. He was much more famous than any of
the men who have served in those offices. He won the friendship of kings, but he also had bitter
and cruel enemies who sought his life.
He was loyal and true to the pagan prince whom he served. This is one of the things that
characterized this man. He maintained an unblemished testimony. He kept himself unspotted
from the world. He walked so that no one, not even his enemies, could find any fault with him –
that is, anything they could prove. They brought many charges, but they never were able to make
anything stick against this man.
In the sixth chapter of the Book of Daniel we read:
Then the presidents and princes sought to find occasion against Daniel
concerning the kingdom; but they could find none occasion nor fault;
forasmuch as he was faithful, neither was there any error or fault found in him.
(Daniel 6:4)
May I say that this is a marvelous testimony for a man like Daniel to have in a foreign and very
wicked court of that day. He was faithful to God. He was an old man when a testimony came
from heaven by the mouth of an angel, “O Daniel, a man greatly beloved.” What a testimony
when you have reached a ripe old age, not to have men down here praise you, but to have a
testimony come from heaven, “A man greatly beloved!” That was God’s testimony. And the
writer to the Hebrews put him in the Westminster Hall of Fame and Faith, but not by name. It
wasn’t necessary to name Daniel, because it’s well known who the writer is speaking about when
he says in the Epistle to the Hebrews:
Who through faith subdued kingdoms, wrought righteousness, obtained
promises, stopped the mouths of lions. (Hebrews 11:33)
What a testimony for Daniel to have!
Then when we come to the end of this man’s life, we find in the very last verse of the
Book of Daniel this statement concerning him, “...Thou shalt rest” (Daniel 12:13). Having served
God and man so faithfully, now God says in effect, “You will now go to your rest.” And not only
that, He adds, “You’ll stand in your lot at the end of the days. When the time comes for the
resurrection of your people, you will be raised with them. And then you’ll receive the just reward
for the life that you have lived for God.” I cannot conceive of any man whose life stands out like
the life of Daniel.
Somebody asks the question, “What is the secret of this man’s life?” In our day when
success is the mark of greatness, it doesn’t make any difference what enterprise you are in – you

may be a gambler, you may be in the race-horse business – but if you make a success of it, the
world will give you a passing grade and say that you are all right. Today we have gone
overboard on this matter of success. May I say to you that Daniel was a success, not only by
God’s standards, but by the world’s standards.
We can turn back a few pages in our Bibles to the Book of Ezekiel. Ezekiel was a
howling failure according to the world’s standards. God called him to stand in a dark and hard
place. But this man Daniel didn’t stand in that kind of a place. Rather, he served in the glow and
publicity of a great court, and he stood yonder at the very top. May I say to you, our leading
periodicals would have sent their editors to get an article on Daniel and his success, because
that’s the way the world measures things today.
Now what was the secret of his success? What was the key to his life? If you should ask
me, I think that I would express it in one word, only one word: separation. Here is a man
separated to God. And I believe that separation is still the door to the understanding of prophecy.
One of the reasons that prophecy has fallen on evil days, and the reason it has lent itself to
fanaticism, and the reason that a great many people have turned from it is because of the lifestyle
of those who proclaim it. If there is anything in the Word of God that is made clear, it is that
prophecy, in order to be a blessing to our own hearts and lives, must lead to a separated life.
I want to give you a statement of G. H. Lang, a great expositor of the Word of God in
years gone by:
The qualification for being a prophet is the qualification for understanding
prophecy. The reader must be one with the prophet in this at least, the resolute
purpose to be holy. For the immediate end of all prophecy is practical, moral:
“Every one that hath this hope set on Christ purifieth himself, even as he is pure”
(1 John 3:3). Merely mental study of Scripture is idle, being idle, is mischievous,
“if any man intendeth to do God’s will, he shall know of the teaching, whether it
be of God” (John 7:17). Therefore, as we proceed to consider the visions and
messages of Daniel, let each ask himself, Am I a man of Daniel’s moral purpose
and resolve? If so, the Spirit of truth will open the meaning of what He showed
and said to Daniel; if not, Daniel’s book will remain to me a sealed book, even
when “the time of the end” may have come (Daniel 12:9).
May I say to you, that is the one great requirement today for the study of prophecy. And the
reason today it has dropped into so much fanaticism is because teachers and preachers of
prophecy have ignored the fact that the one prerequisite is a life that is dedicated to Almighty
God. Now that’s the thing that characterized Daniel: separation.
Now I know that the word separation is in disrepute. And it has been harmed today more
in the house of its friends than from the outside. Right now we have two extreme groups in our
midst. In one group are extreme separationists. They’re legalists, actually. They have adopted a
narrow and limited code of conduct. They have reduced the Christian life to their little
straitjacket, and if you don’t get in it, it’s going to be bad for you. They say that we’ve been
delivered from the Ten Commandments and from the Mosaic Law in order that we can get under
their law. And they haven’t settled for ten commandments – some of them have made a hundred!
And if you don’t follow them, you are not going to make it. They are our present-day Pharisees,
and they have adopted the policy of “touch not, taste not, handle not.” Many of these are unkind
and cruel in their conduct and in their judgment on others. And they happen to be the greatest
gossips you can meet in these days. As the young people say, they’ll chop you to pieces if you’re

not very careful. May I say to you, that’s legalism. It certainly does not manifest the spirit of our
Lord, and it certainly is not New Testament separation.
Then, my beloved, there is another group that goes to the opposite extreme. These folk
are anti-legalists. They follow, actually, one of the early heresies of the church called
“Antinomianism.” That is, they believe that since we’re saved by grace, we do as we please.
They like the principle of grace, but they do not like the precepts of grace. There’s no discipline
of grace, according to them, and one’s conduct does not count. You may live however you
please. Paul, in Romans 6: 12, answered them, “Shall we continue in sin...? God forbid.” Those
who have been saved and yet continue to sin are spiritual rebels today. They don’t follow any
man or anything. They do as they please.
May I say that both of these views have hurt the concept of Bible separation.
Let’s look now at the separation in Daniel’s life. I believe that in the Book of Daniel we
have true separation, certainly Bible separation. And if you can sing casually, “Dare to be a
Daniel, dare to stand alone,” then it might be well for you to understand what is implied, what it
means to dare to be a Daniel, what it means to stand alone for God in our day.
Notice now this man’s separation. Daniel was young when he was carried away as a
captive to Babylon. When Nebuchadnezzar first captured Jerusalem in 606 B.C., he had no notion
of actually destroying the city. He could have, but it was not until eighteen years later that he
destroyed Jerusalem. In the meantime there had been two rebellions against him that led him to
this extreme action. At his first invasion, Nebuchadnezzar deposed the king and set his brother
upon the throne of Jerusalem. Also he took into captivity at that time the choicest young men,
those who had the highest IQs. The devil has always gone after the best. And I’m personally
jealous, wanting the Lord to have the best. I don’t see why we can’t have more Christian workers
with high IQs. What’s wrong with dedicating brains to God occasionally? May I say to you, my
beloved, we need them these days. And this man Nebuchadnezzar was wise enough to take the
choicest, those with the highest mentality, those with the best personalities, those who were the
most physically attractive; and among those were Daniel and his three companions. These four
Hebrew children were the ones who went with the others into captivity at that time.
Now these four young men had been brought up under the Mosaic system. They had
available to them a large part of the Old Testament Scripture, in fact, through the Book of
Jeremiah. They found themselves in a foreign land with strange customs, pagan ways. They were
homesick. If you want to know how they felt, the captives recorded their experience in Psalm
137:
By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat down, yea, we wept, when we remembered
Zion. We hanged our harps upon the willows in the midst thereof. For there
they that carried us away captive required of us a song; and they that wasted us
required of us mirth, saying, Sing us one of the songs of Zion. How shall we
sing the LORD’s song in a strange land? If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my
right hand forget her cunning. If I do not remember thee, let my tongue cleave
to the roof of my mouth; if I prefer not Jerusalem above my chief joy. (Psalm
137:1-6)
Well, there were other captives, I’m sorry to report, who did forget Jerusalem. Many of them
never returned to their homeland.
But there was one young man who during his entire long life never forgot Jerusalem even
when it meant endangering his life. On one occasion it meant being thrown into a den of lions

because he had opened his window and prayed toward Jerusalem as was his custom. He never
forgot his God or his homeland. But as a teenager he was a homesick boy in a strange land.
Nebuchadnezzar’s plan was to brainwash these young men to prepare them for service
under his government. The idea was to take away from them everything that was in their
background, put new ideas, new philosophy into their thinking, and make them servants of this
great world government. He went so far as to change their names! We think of Daniel’s three
companions as Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego, but those are not their real names. The names
their parents gave them are Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah. We ought to remember those names
rather than the heathen and pagan names given to them. The name Daniel, meaning “God is my
judge,” was changed to Belteshazzar, named after a heathen idol, Bel. Not only did
Nebuchadnezzar actually change their names, he even changed their diet! You talk about
changing a person, my friend, he intended to change them thoroughly!
But Daniel purposed in his heart that he would not defile himself with the
portion of the king’s meat, nor with the wine which he drank: therefore he
requested of the prince of the eunuchs that he might not defile himself. (Daniel
1:8)
Now Daniel made a bold request. In fact, it was one that jeopardized his very life. For he
happened to be in the court of a man who was suffering from a form of insanity, well-known
today as a dangerous type of insanity. This man without a moment’s notice could have given
instruction to put these young upstarts to death for not wanting to eat what the king provided for
them; after all, he was providing for them Babylon’s best.
Now this passage here is the standard text for “Temperance Sunday.” It’s the stock in
trade. I can remember as a boy being in Sunday school and having the teacher go over this again
and again and again. May I say to you that there is more involved here than drinking. It has to do
with eating also. “Be temperate in all things,” the Scripture says.
Now what Daniel did was this: He respectfully requested for himself and his companions
that they be put on a special diet. Daniel did not know the old saying, “When in Rome do as the
Romans do.” After all, Rome wasn’t yet in existence. But he didn’t even know it as “When in
Babylon do as the Babylonians do.” And I want to say something else for him, he didn’t give a
lecture on the evils of alcohol. He could have. Believe me, Babylon needed it. Neither did he
make himself otherwise obnoxious. He just purposed in his heart that he would not eat that diet,
that he would be true to God. That’s all. Oh, how we need today men and women who will
purpose in their hearts to be true to God! That’s all.
God was with Daniel. Will you notice this,
Now God had brought Daniel into favour and tender love with the prince of the
eunuchs. (Daniel 1:9)
That Daniel was a favorite of the one in charge was no accident. God was working in behalf of
these young men through His providential dealings.
And the prince of the eunuchs said unto Daniel, I fear my lord the king, who
hath appointed your meat and your drink: for why should he see your faces
worse liking than the children which are of your sort? then shall ye make me
endanger my head to the king. (Daniel 1:10)

You can see that this official of Nebuchadnezzar’s really believed in that diet. He said in effect,
“Now Daniel, I like you, and I’d love to cooperate with you. But suppose I permit you to go on
this diet you want, and after three years the day comes when you are brought in before the king
and you and your companions are there with the rest of the trainees – all fine looking fellows,
because this is a great diet – and the four of you are little, old anemic things! You see what a
position it would put me in! It would jeopardize my life! I can’t do that.”
So Daniel makes a fair request.
Then said Daniel to Melzar whom the prince of the eunuchs had set over
Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah, Prove thy servants, I beseech thee,
ten days; and let them give us pulse to eat, and water to drink. (Daniel 1:11, 12)
It is a sensible, honest request. These young men are not juvenile delinquents who are rebelling
against the law of the land. I want to make that very clear. They’re not a gang from the east sides
of New York City or Los Angeles. They simply respectfully request that the diet might be tested
for ten days.
Now they asked for something that used to worry me a great deal. It was “pulse.” Has
that ever bothered you? Pulse to eat? Actually, the pulse to be eaten is some form of a cereal, it is
a grain. If I may bring it up to date, Daniel says, “I want my Wheaties!” Cereal is what he is
asking for.
Now the question arises, what was wrong with the meat in Babylon? Was it
contaminated? Was there something wrong with the meat? May I say to you, I think they
probably had the best filet mignon you could get anywhere in that day. There was nothing wrong
with the meat in Babylon. We get our key to the problem in this statement: “Daniel purposed in
his heart that he would not defile himself with the portion of the king’s meat,” and then in his
request to the prince of the eunuchs “that he might not defile himself.” That’s the key. This has
to do with religious and ceremonial defilement. Remember that this young man had been brought
up under the Mosaic system. He had been brought up to read the Word of God and to understand
Scriptures like Psalm 119:9, “Wherewithal shall a young man cleanse his way? by taking heed
thereto according to thy word.” In effect, Daniel said, “I’m following the Word of God at any
cost. This is not academic or forensic with me. This just happens to be reality with me, and I
intend to follow the Word of God.”
What was wrong with the meat, then? Well, several things. The first is that God had
given to His people a line of demarcation between that which was clean and that which was
unclean. Why? That men and women might know from the days of the Old Testament down to
the present hour, and especially in this day of latitude and Arianism, that there is such a thing as
black and white; such a thing as right and wrong; that there is such a thing as believing
something, standing for something, and paying a price for your stand.
Now God had said to His people:
For I am the LORD your God: ye shall therefore sanctify yourselves, and ye
shall be holy [set apart]; for I am holy: neither shall ye defile yourselves with
any manner of creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth. For I am the LORD
that bringeth you up out of the land of Egypt, to be your God: ye shall therefore
be holy, for I am holy. This is the law of the beasts, and of the fowl, and of every
living creature that moveth in the waters, and of every creature that creepeth
upon the earth: to make a difference between the unclean and the clean, and

between the beast that may be eaten and the beast that may not be eaten.
(Leviticus 11:44-47)
God said that there were certain meats that could be eaten and certain meats that could not be
eaten. That was the Old Testament legalistic system. It had to do with religious ritual, for God
had given it. That was true of that day, and He intended it to be followed to the very letter.
So Daniel said, “I can’t eat the meat of Babylon. God forbids me to eat it.” Oh, I have a
notion that one day they would bring him stew. Gracious, all kinds of meat could be in the stew.
I heard of a fellow who said, “I never eat stew away from home because I don’t know what’s in
it, and,” he continued, “I never eat it at home because I do know what’s in it!” Daniel said, “I’ll
eat no meat. I don’t eat this which is forbidden by God.”
Now another issue is involved here. It was a live issue in Paul’s day, and may be today in
some quarters: All meats available to these people had been first offered to idols. That was a
curse of idolatry. Every bit of the meat was offered to idols, and Daniel would not have any part
in that which had to do with idolatry. So he refused.
Daniel also said that he could not drink the wine. Many of us believe that all four of these
Hebrew young men were Nazarites. Back in the Book of Numbers, chapter 6, you’ll find
instructions for the Nazarite, a person separated wholly unto the Lord. One of the three things
that he was not to do was drink wine or even get near it. I think Daniel and his three companions
were Nazarites. They were separated unto God in this particular connection, and they did not
believe that they should defile themselves. They were being obedient unto God.
In Daniel’s day they had the Book of Isaiah, and they knew his admonition:
Depart ye, depart ye, go ye out from thence, touch no unclean thing; go ye out
of the midst of her; be ye clean, that bear the vessels of the LORD. (Isaiah 52:11)
They wanted to be clean in God’s sight.
Now somebody is going to ask, “Are you suggesting that today separation is a matter of
diet?” And the answer is no. Somebody else asks, “Are we not delivered from this very thing in
this age of grace?” The answer is yes, because Paul very clearly makes the statement that meat
today has nothing in the world to do with our separation to God:
Whatsoever is sold in the shambles, that eat, asking no question for conscience
sake: for the earth is the Lord’s, and the fulness thereof. If any of them that
believe not bid you to a feast, and ye be disposed to go; whatsoever is set before
you, eat, asking no question for conscience sake. (1 Corinthians 10:25-27)
Eat anything today that you want to eat. They package and sell rattlesnake meat in San Antonio,
Texas! If you want to eat it, you can eat it, but don’t invite me for dinner the day you serve it! It
is a matter of taste these days. It has nothing to do with our separation to God. And Paul again
enforced this:
But meat commendeth us not to God: for neither, f we eat, are we the better;
neither, if we eat not, are we the worse. (1 Corinthians 8:8)
Meat has nothing to do with our relationship with God in this age of grace in which we live.

Then what is true Bible separation in this age of grace? The tendency is to draw a line
down on questionable things and be dogmatic about debatable things. I have a letter here that is
quite revealing. It came to me several years ago from someone who started with us when we first
began our midweek service at the church I pastored in Los Angeles:
I’ve returned to California after a year of full-time Christian service in Ohio and
an extended trip east. But I’ve come back almost spiritually shipwrecked. Have
been a Christian for three and one-half years, and until recently was able to give a
glowing testimony about being saved out of Unity. But lately I’ve been so dead
that Christ seems way up there and I’m way down here. I have all the negative
virtues of a Christian. I don’t smoke, I don’t drink, I don’t play cards, I don’t
attend movies, I don’t use makeup. But those things do not make a happy
Christian. My friends tell me I’m becoming bitter, and oh, I don’t want that to
happen. Before becoming a Christian I was very ambitious, worked hard for
whatever I believed in, and incidentally, was listed in Who’s Who, but now I
wonder, what’s the use?
May I say to you, that was a sad state for this fine woman. Thank God, she came out of it, and
she is still a separated Christian. But I think she found out what true separation is.
Will you note this very carefully. In the early ages of the church, monasteries were built,
and the motive for them was good at first. Men were protesting against the licentiousness of the
Roman Empire and the awful sin of that day. They said, “We want to withdraw from this!” They
thought that by withdrawing they would solve their problems. But before long, it was worse on
the inside of the monastery than it was on the outside. Do you know why? Because they weren’t
truly separated.
Let me paraphrase what Christ said to the Pharisees, “The trouble with you Pharisees is
that you make the outside of the cup clean, but the inside of it is filled with corruption!” A great
many people think today, Well, if I just refrain from doing enough questionable things I’m a
separated Christian, although their hearts may be far from God. My beloved, separation is not
whitewashing the outside of a tomb. There must be life on the inside first of all.
Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy
he saved us, by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ghost.
(Titus 3:5)
Separation means that God has done a work first of all on the inside. We must be born from
above. We must receive new life from God. We can’t rub it on the outside.
Listen to this: “Daniel purposed in his heart that he would not defile himself.” He didn’t
try to isolate himself. In substance he said, “In my heart I’ll be loyal to God, and that will
regulate my conduct on the outside.”
Daniel’s separation back in the Old Testament is the same that Paul speaks of in the New
Testament:
I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God [God has been merciful
to you, and He has saved you! I beg of you, because He has been merciful to
you…], that ye present [This same word is translated “yield” in Romans 6:13.
That’s active. It is an act of the will.] your bodies [Present or yield your total

personalities, meaning all you have, my friend, all you are. If God doesn’t have
you, He doesn’t have anything. He doesn’t even want your pocketbook. He wants
you. I beseech you, I beg of you, that ye yield your total personalities…] a living
sacrifice [Maybe when the occasion calls for it we could work up our courage and
go out here to the Colosseum and die for Christ by being thrown to the lions. But
it’s this old humdrum living on Monday…Tuesday…Wednesday…Thursday…
that’s the hard thing.], holy [dedicated to God], acceptable unto God [God is
encouraging us. He says in effect, “I want you to do this. You are the lost sinner,
corrupt, ungodly, whom I have saved. And now it is acceptable for you to come
and offer yourself to Me if you so purpose in your heart.”], which is your
reasonable [rational, intelligent, spiritual] service. And be not conformed to this
world [this age]: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind. (Romans
12:1, 2)
Instead of being conformed, Daniel said, “I can’t eat of this. I’ve purposed in my heart that I will
not be conformed to the court of Nebuchadnezzar. I want to be yielded to God.” Daniel’s
experience is ours. We are captives in this world in our bodies. And we cannot serve both God
and mammon today, my friend.
There are two areas of Christian conduct. In one area the Bible is very clear, as we see in
Romans 12 and 13. The duty of the Christian to the state is submission. He is to obey the laws of
the land, he is to pay his taxes, and he is to show respect to those in authority. Also chapter 13 is
specific on a believer’s relationship to his neighbor: He is to pay his bills; he is not to commit
adultery, kill, steal, bear false witness, nor covet what another has. In fact, he is to love his
neighbor as himself. The believer is to be honest, and he is to avoid reveling, drunkenness, strife,
and jealousy. The Bible is very clear on these things.
However, there is another area of Christian conduct on which the Bible has no clear
word. It is not set out for us in black and white. For this grey area God has not laid down rules
for us; instead He has given us three great guidelines. Although I am not going into detail with
each one, I want to pass them on to you because they are so important.
Conviction
For example, He has said: “One man esteemeth one day above another: another
esteemeth every day alike. Let every man be fully persuaded in his own mind” (Romans 14:5). In
matters like this God has given us no rules, but He has given us principles, and the great
principle here is of conviction. Whatever a Christian does today he should first purpose in his
heart. And that’s the answer to all things that are questionable. If there’s any question in your
mind about it, then it is wrong for you to do. Be fully persuaded in your own mind and carry out
your conviction with enthusiasm.
Conscience
Then notice that the second principle concerning questionable conduct deals with doing
something for God: “Happy is he that condemneth not himself in that thing which he alloweth”
(Romans 14:22). There must be conscience. Anything that a Christian looks back upon and has
to say, “I wonder if I should have done that?” was wrong for him. It may not be wrong for the
next man, so don’t criticize the next man. But, my brother, it was wrong for you.

Consideration
Then the third principle: “We then that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the
weak, and not to please ourselves. Let every one of us please his neighbour for his good to
edification” (Romans 15:1, 2). That is consideration. You know, friend, there may be something
you can do that’s all right. Let’s not argue about what is right and what is wrong. The Bible is
clear on those points. But that’s not the basis we are looking at here. Instead, the question is, are
you driving somebody away from Christ by what you are doing? If so, it is wrong.
I have a friend who quit going to professional baseball. Oh, I hope you don’t
misunderstand me, I’m not saying baseball is wrong, I’m just saying that he found out that there
were a bunch of little boys following him, and he said, “In that stadium crowd I don’t think I can
win them for the Lord.” Now that may not be for you. That was for him. You see, consideration
of others is a principle, not a rule.
You see, my friend, when you believe and receive Jesus Christ, you come to the Lover of
your soul. You are wedded to Him, and you love Him, and you are now trying to please Him.
Can you imagine a fellow getting married and after the honeymoon is over he brings to his wife
ten commandments that she is to follow? He’d better not, because the honeymoon would really
be over! But suppose he comes into the kitchen and hangs on the wall the commandments: “You
shall not date any other fellows any more. You shall cook my meals, etc.” What if he did a thing
like that? To begin with, it would probably break her heart. I think she’d say, “I’m not going to
date anybody else. I married you. I’m going to cook your meals, not because I have to but
because I want to. I love you.”
My friend, today, Christian conduct is not how far you can go before you are wrong, it is
what you can do to please your Savior. That’s Christian conduct. And to be separated to Him
means to feel as Daniel felt when he “purposed in his heart that he would not defile himself”
(Daniel 1:8).