Justin Kim

Archive for 2011

The Secret of Silence

In Bible Study, Morality, Virtues on December 2, 2011 at 10:24 pm

Two patriarchs were beloved by God.

Two patriarchs were rich with crops and livestock galore.

Two patriarchs lived in the same region and in the same period of earth’s history.

Two patriarchs had deep, profound relationships with the Divine and heard His very voice.

Yet one was the father of many, who eventually became alone.  Another was a father of one, who would eventually become many.  One had a whole book ascribed to him.  The other was mentioned relatively shortly, but his descendants become the main characters of the Bible.  One was called perfect and made an example in front of the universe.  The other was called a friend of God and made a blessing before all the nations.

But in the end, both were asked to sacrifice and suffer.

Job

Job was a man that feared God, perfect, upright, and eschewed evil.  Yet when his children, household, goods, and health were taken away, he grieves and mourns for two chapters, seeking death.  His three friends come to argue incorrectly that Job had done something wrong, making false metaphysical and ethical statements about good and evil.  After rebuking each friend in a cycle of three debates, God finally spoke to him.

Between chapters 38 and 39, God conclusively proved that man could not understand everything and sought obedience from humanity.  There is no personal advantage in obedience.  There is no understandable rationale in obedience.  Reason and rationale have limitations.  Obedience does not.

Abraham

Abraham was a man that also feared God and called the friend of God.  He was to be the father of God’s people, protecting and guarding of the sacred law.  To him were promised more descendants that the night stars and the sands of the sea.  But in chapter 22 of Genesis, God also asked to take his child away.

Though one child, the wages were more circumstantial than the situation of Job.  Though Job had seven sons, three daughters, 7000 sheep, 300 camels, 500 oxen, 500 donkeys, and a large staff, more promises were encapsulated in the person of Isaac.  Isaac was the child of promise, the child of impossibilities, the progenitor of a people numbering more than the night stars and sands of the sea.  This child was birthed from his parents’ laughter, prematurely caused the birth of a rival nation, and the object of anxiety and hope for more than 20 tired and elderly years.

Taking the life of this child should have caused more mourning than Job’s loss.  This was an action that was highly un-understandable.  Abraham should have been asking questions, grieving, mourning, seeking death, escape, alternatives, and answers.

Silence

Yet what is so disturbing about chapter 22 is that there is no indication of these signs.  Whereas Job has more than thirty chapters devoted to complaining and discussion, there is not even one verse attributed for this avenue.  Rather, we see a methodical step-by-step journey to the top of Moriah, only to worship.  We hear a silent hike up the mountain.  We only smell the fire burning on top of the altar.  We do not see any rationalization, cursing God, hint of bitterness, seeking of alternatives, discussions, questionings of misunderstanding.  We see obedience.  This unrational (not irrational) obedience is so disturbing that the violence of a son’s murder by his father does not phase us.  Maybe Abraham knew something about faith that Job did not.

You see, Christians do not sacrifice and suffer.  We serve a Lord that owns all and does not know material loss.  Christians do not sacrifice and suffer; Christians merely obey.  We may either mourn for 30+ chapters or walk silently up a mountain, but the outcome is the same.  Obedience never needs to be understood, just done.  The world calls this foolishness, but there is no personal advantage in obedience.  Even though we may not understand ourselves, we must keep walking and say, “I will follow thee, my Savior.”  This is what Jesus did every hour of His life.

You see, there is a secret that every Christ-follower knows:  Christ Himself.  And when you know Him, you’ll love Him.  And when you love Him, you don’t think about obeying Him…you just do.

Original Post:  http://www.englishcompass.org/articles/the_secret_of_silence/

Time Tested Beauty Tips

In Poetry, Virtues on November 8, 2011 at 11:33 am

by Sam Levenson

(A favorite poem of Audrey Hepburn)

For attractive lips, speak words of kindness.

For lovely eyes, seek out the good in people.

For a slim figure, share your food with the hungry.

For beautiful hair, let a child run his fingers through it once a day.

For poise, walk with the knowledge you’ll never walk alone…

People, even more than things, have to be restored, renewed, revived,
reclaimed and redeemed and redeemed …

Never throw out anybody. Remember, if you ever need a
helping hand, you’ll find one at the end of your arm.

As you grow older you will discover that you have two hands.
One for helping yourself, the other for helping others.

The beauty of a woman is not in the clothes she wears,
the figure that she carries, or the way she combs her hair.

The beauty of a woman must be seen from in her eyes,
because that is the doorway to her heart,
the place where love resides.

The beauty of a woman is not in a facial mole,
but true beauty in a woman is reflected in her soul.

It is the caring that she lovingly gives,
the passion that she shows,
and the beauty of a woman with passing years only grows!

How to Survive a Church Split Part 1

In Korean Culture on November 6, 2011 at 5:42 pm

If you’ve been a part of the Korean Adventist community long enough, you are bound to have been a part of or have heard of a church split.  No, I’m not referring to a church plant where a smaller church is intentionally created.  If you are privileged, you have witnessed just one.  If you are “lucky,” you have witnessed more than one.  (If you have not, you are either the only Korean church in a radius of 100 miles or tell us your secret!)

A church split usually involves two (or sometimes more) groups emerging from one congregation.  Politicization occurs when each one of the groups has a vested interest at the expense of the other.  Sometimes this occurs out of cultural miscommunication within one generation; at other times, this occurs trans-generationally.  Other variants include socio-economic differences, geographic convenience issues, financial accountability dilemmas, and a myriad of hybrid breakouts.  Occasionally, loud shouting matches, mild violence, passive aggression, and/or walkouts can occur.

Now while I have been fortunate to have never witnessed one of these incidents in any of the churches I was attending, I have observed neighboring churches that split or have been part of a church that hosted the exodus of a nearby congregation.  While the adult congregation often resolves and seeks different forms of restitution, the collateral damage is primarily seen in the younger generations.  Spirituality is injured and bitterness, cynicism, and suspicion arise.  Once congenial youth fellowships become torn into half, often forcing children to choose friends based on “which side their family is on.”  While the adults learn to shrug off the “necessary nuisances” and continue with worship, witnessing, and fellowship, the youth are left in a daze without an explanation of their eroded religious world and community.

Combine these incidents with the natural sarcasm that materializes during adolescence, and one can produce a potent arrangement for misguided thinking and poisoned souls that potentially could have repercussions in their eternal destiny.  Some resort to some satirical theology (“well, we’re all sinners, right?  I guess we’ll just keep splitting churches until Jesus comes”).  Others might blame the Adventist denomination as being too myopic, strict, fundamentalist in interpretation, small, or provincial.  But the most common explanation is that church splits occur because of our Koreanness.

Blame it on the adrenaline effect of the Kimchee-laden capsaicin, the dramaholics addicted to watching all the emotional 23,098-part series (in one weekend), or the military training that all of our fathers have been brainwashed with (and their incessant stories).  When talking with our Presbyterian and Methodist brothers and sisters, we find that church splitting is insanely common in Korean congregations.  So this transcends Adventist congregations.

But take this one step further and you’ll find commonalities in Chinese and Japanese Protestant congregations.  The only reason one doesn’t hear more about them in America is because Japanese Protestants (let alone Christians) are quite rare and Christianity hasn’t taken root in the political atmosphere of mainland China yet.  So this transcends Korean congregations.

Take it one step further and you’ll find the same pattern in Romanian, Indian, Hispanic, Caribbean, and continental African churches.  This phenomenon is not an Asian problem, but a minority issue.  Being in a culture where you are not the majority lends itself to some sociological wonders.  So this transcends Asian congregations.

Extend the parameters throughout history and one will find that this is not just limited to minorities.  In American history, when the European nations immigrated to the United States, one witnessed numerous church splits, regardless of language, culture, or denomination.  So these church splits transcend minority congregations.

If the phenomenon were just limited to minorities, Asians, Koreans, or Adventists, then one would find the same activity happening back in the “mother lands” or throughout Adventism.  One does not.  But one does see them throughout immigrant congregations, even outside Christianity.  What is it about immigrants that result in these conflicts?  And what is the connection between the immigrant experience and the second-generation Korean-American Seventh-day Adventist living in North America?  This discussion and their corollary issues will be in part two.

Book Review: On This Day in Christian History

In Book Review on November 1, 2011 at 2:53 pm

After giving an account of the Mujahadeen destruction of Afghanistan’s National Museum, Robert J. Morgan writes in his preface, “With no history, there is no heritage.  And with no heritage from the past, there is no legacy for the future.”  Christianity faces similar threats if the wisdom, lessons, mistakes, and other treasures from church history are forgotten.  This book takes some of these rare accounts and makes them into a devotional format, one page per day of the year.  What is inspiring is that the accounts occurred on the same day of the devotion.

While some stories were familiar, there were plenty that were not.  Pending on your denominational background, some may be more recognizable that others.  The temptation was to keep reading, only to face the annoyance that the account is only a page long.  The easy English was a first a nuisance, but eventually it retained a practical attribute, good for family worships, sermon illustrations, or other religious anecdotes.  The book is convenient, well put-together, and recommended for busy armchair church historians.

What was particularly valuable was the creative brain-storms that spin off while reading it.  It is amazing how truly, there is nothing new under the sun.  Historical problems of the Christian church administration are the same problems of today.  The issues within a variety of denominations then are the same issues today.  And the Biblical virtues, Christian values, and the resolute commitment to morality and truth that inspired then, still inspires the same human heart today.

"On This Day in Christian History

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from the publisher through the BookSneeze®.com book review bloggers program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255 : “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”