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Showing posts with label flags. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flags. Show all posts

Sunday, March 17, 2013

3-leaved shamrock



The Reuters Religion Editor Tom Heneghan recently wrote on how the community of the world's second largest religion in Europe expressed their hope for a better relation with Roman Catholicism after the new pontiff took the name Francis. 

And in a meeting yesterday with an American missionary, again I heard on the growing muslim population in Europe - it just brought my mind back to where it all started; tracing back how His patient call to me on disciple-making and how His ever-accompanying guidance, grace had stood the test of time. 

Born and raised in a country with the world's largest muslim population I still find myself bemused every now and then at how evident the gap is between desperate me and my students -- there's always this invisible wall between us.  Christianity is seen as a 'religion' of 'the white people', westerners who are seen as infidels with their culture of drunkenness as alcohol has become a fundamental part of western culture, strong emphasis on being free and morally loose.  

What Piper wrote on the life of Saint Patrick, in particular his missional work, is to me encouraging and relevant to the ever-present differences between Islam that's close to my heart and Christianity.  He, too, in the fifth century had grasped the importance of understanding his audience, the pagan, unreached Irish, for an indigenous Celtic evangelism movement. 



http://www.desiringgod.org/blog/posts/the-mission-of-saint-patrick

The Mission of Saint Patrick

Don’t forget to wear your green tomorrow. It’s Saint Patrick’s Day.
Before thumbing your nose at all the carousing and empty revelry that much of the day has become, it’s worth taking at least a brief glance at the inspiring Christian origin of, and missional impulse behind, what we now mark as Saint Patty’s.
While the day has become a celebration of all things Irish, the original feast was about gospel advance. It was not about parades, but pioneering the church among an unreached people. It was not about lifting Lenten restrictions on eating and drinking, but bringing God’s amazing grace to a pagan nation.

The Gospel to the Irish

The March 17 feast day (declared in the early 17th century) remembers Patrick as the one who led the fifth-century Christian mission to Ireland. Unlike Britain, the Emerald Isle was beyond the bounds of the Roman Empire. The Irish were considered uncivilized barbarians, and many thought their illiteracy and volatile emotionalism put them outside the reach of the gospel.
But Patrick knew better. In a strange and beautiful turn of providence, he had spent six years among them as a captive, learned their language, and developed a heart for the Irish. Like Joseph sold into slavery to one day save Egypt and his brothers (Genesis 50:20), so God sent Patrick into slavery to ready Ireland for a coming salvation.

The Surprising Turn

Patrick was born in the late fourth century — the best speculations say around 385 — in what is now northeast England. He was born among the Celtic “Britons,” to a Romanized family of Christians. His father was a deacon, and his grandfather a priest. But his parents’ faith didn’t find a place in his heart early on. In his youth, according to George Hunter, “he lived toward the wild side” (The Celtic Way of Evangelism, page 13).
But God arrested him with severe mercy. He was kidnapped at age 16 by Irish raiders and taken back to Ireland, where he served as a slave for six years under a tribal chief, who was also a druid. While a slave in Ireland, God opened his eyes to the gospel of his childhood. It was as a captive that “he came to understand the Irish Celtic people, and their language and culture, with a kind of intuitive profundity that is usually possible only, as in Patrick’s case, from the ‘underside’” (14). When he eventually escaped from slavery, he was a changed man, now a Christian from the heart. He studied for the ministry, and led a parish in Britain for nearly 20 years.

Reclaiming Retirement

That could have been the end of the story. But at age 48 — as Hunter notes, “already past a man’s life expectancy in the fifth century” (15) — Patrick had a dream, which proved to be his own version of a Macedonian Call (Acts 16:9). An Irish accent pleaded, “We appeal to you, holy servant boy, to come and walk among us.”
Having known the language and the customs from his captivity, and long having strategized about how the gospel might come to the Irish, he now answered the call to return to the place of his pain with the message of joy. The slave returned to his captors with good news of true freedom.

Back in Saint Patrick’s Day

But this would be no ordinary mission. The Irish Celtics were considered “barbarians,” as the Romans were prone to consider anyone not Roman. The Irish may have had a few Christians among them, but they were an unreached people with no thriving church or gospel movement.
Patrick would take a different and controversial approach to the prevailing missionary efforts of the post-apostolic early church. Instead of Romanizing the people, and seeking to “civilize” them with respect to Roman customs, he wanted to see the gospel penetrate deeply into the Irish culture and produce an indigenous movement. He didn’t mean to colonize the Irish, but to truly evangelize them.

Understanding the People

Hunter tells the story in the first chapter of his book on Celtic evangelism.
The fact that Patrick understood the people and their language, their issues, and their ways, serves as the most strategically significant single insight that was to drive the wider expansion of Celtic Christianity, and stands as perhaps our greatest single learning from this movement. There is no shortcut to understanding the people. When you understand the people, you will often know what to say and do, and how. When the people know that the Christians understand them, they infer that maybe the High God understands them too. (19–20)
Patrick knew the Irish well enough to engage them where they were, and build authentic gospel bridges into their society and culture. He wanted to see the gospel grow in Irish soil, rather than pave it over with a Roman road.
Their belief that Ultimate Reality is complex, and their fascination with rhetorical triads and the number three opened them to Christianity’s Triune God. Christianity’s contrasting features of idealism and practicality engaged identical traits in the Irish character. No other religion could have engaged the Irish people’s love for heroism, stories, and legends like Christianity. Some of Christianity’s values and virtues essentially matched, or fulfilled, ideals in Irish piety and folklore. Irish Christianity was able to deeply affirm, and fulfill, the Irish love for nature and their belief in the closeness of the divine. (20)

A Group Approach to Ministry

A notable part of his strategy was that Patrick didn’t go solo to Ireland. He went with a team. Just as Jesus sent out his disciples together (Luke 10:1), and Paul and Barnabas went out together (Acts 13:3), so Patrick assembled a close-knit crew that would tackle the work together, in the same location, laboring for the founding of a church, before moving on together to the next tribe. It was, what Hunter calls, a “group approach to apostolic ministry.”
We don’t have record of the details of Patrick’s ministry teams and strategies, but Hunter says, “from a handful of ancient sources, we can piece together [an] outline of a typical approach, which undoubtedly varied from one time and setting to another.”
Patrick’s teams would have about a dozen members. They would approach a tribe’s leadership and seek conversion, or at least their clearance, and set up camp nearby. The team “would meet the people, engage them in conversation and in ministry, and look for people who appeared receptive” (21). In due course, “One band member or another would probably join with each responsive person to reach out to relatives and friends” (22). They would minister weeks and months among them, eventually pursuing baptisms and the founding of a church. They would leave behind a team member or two to provide leadership for the fledgling church and move, with a convert or two, to the next tribe.
With such an approach, “The church that emerged within the tribe would have been astonishingly indigenous” (22).

Priority Time with Pagans

While Patrick’s pioneering approach is often celebrated today — and perhaps a model in some respects of the kind of mission well-suited for an increasingly post-Christian society 1500 years later — most of his contemporaries weren’t impressed. “The British leaders were offended and angered that Patrick was spending priority time with ‘pagans,’ ‘sinners,’ and ‘barbarians’” (24).
But Patrick knew such an approach had good precedent. The one who saved him while a nominal Christian and an Irish captive was once called a “friend of tax collectors and sinners,” and said, “I came not to call the righteous, but sinners” (Mark 2:17).

Something Worth Remembering

Instead of acquiescing to the religious establishment, he took the gospel to the uncouth, unreached Irish. And instead of coasting to a cushy retirement, he gave 28 years to the nation-changing evangelization of Ireland.
According to tradition, Patrick died March 17 — many think the year was 461, but we don’t know for certain. While tomorrow’s celebrations will bring far too much to be forgotten, for those who love Jesus and the advance of his gospel, there are some good things to remember about Patrick.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Lanjutkan! -- You're Nothing But a Liar.

Thinking and writing about these following important, influential entities, I can't but feel disturbed of recalling the experience Syl had a few days ago. She was so angry that she furiously said how men are liars. Hhhmm... Not all of them are, I believe. Well, most of them are just... cowards. And many are simply... jerks. Yaayyy!!! Mr. Susilo & Mr. Boediono are ahead of the other candidates in the presidential election! TODAY (11-12 July 2009) wrote a special report about Mr. Boediono, SBY's running mate. Wow, I didn't know that he used to work at the BoA in Jakarta in 1968. And he attended Wharton School of U-Penn for his doctorate! *beams* Meanwhile, Mr. Obama visits Pope Benedict XVI for the very first time.
"Given the influence of the Catholic Church globally, as well in the United States , and frankly, given the influence of the Catholic Church and church social teaching on the president himself, he recognizes that this is much more than your typical state visit," McDonough said.
:-) It was reported that he explicitly promised the pontiff to limit/reduce abortions in the US. Hhhm... wondering how he's gonna do that since he supports abortion rights. When Obama left his room, the pope said, "I'll pray for you. I'll pray for your work." So sweet....

Saturday, December 20, 2008

aRt!!!

Being part of the Singapore education world, I was curious why my Singaporean colleagues keep on highlighting our school's strength in art -- as we have performing arts, visual arts classes... I slowly learned how the art is not appreciated in this science-engineering inclined country. Our Art teacher said that the art class is often being misused in government schools here. Its rigid system is... to me, devastating. It devastates the mindset and belief of Singaporeans, that they really have no future if they end up in polytechnic with a diploma; they feel embarassed if they are in the Normal-Technical stream (Singapore determines the path of children here: Express stream, Normal-Academic stream, and Normal-Technical stream). Our country is blessed with talented people. Poverty shouldn't be a barrier to soar up high... The Straits Times, 12 December 2008 MATA JELI: A PERSPECTIVE ON INDONESIAN AFFAIRS
Dazzling show of good governance
by Bruce Gale Senior Writer Indonesia often gets a bad press. In fact, almost every visitor to the country can cite some example of corruption, mismanagement and (some say) plain laziness. Indeed, the local and international media sometimes seem to delight in highlighting Indonesia's deficiencies. In the spirit of goodwill this Christmas, however, it is well to remember that not all Indonesians conform to these negative stereotypes. I was forcefully reminded of this recently when I participated in a brass band Christmas concert organised by current and former members of a Salvation Army Boys' Home in Medan. Boys' Home residents consist mainly of children whose poverty-stricken parents are unable to support them. The home's 30-strong band uses second-hand brass instruments, mostly purchased in Singapore. Band members range in age from 12 to 31, including several who have left the home and are now self-supporting. Most members, however, are teenagers attending government schools. The home as a dedicated staff, but it is unable to help the band financially. Instead, the band, throughout its 20-year history, has been financed and trained by volunteers from Singapore, Malaysia, Australia and Britain. But this story is not about the home, the Salvation Army or the generosity of a small number of foreigners. Rather, it is about the boys themselves and the way they have struggled against the odds to build a credible music ensemble while practising principles of good governance that would put many senior government officials to shame. The band members are no strangers to hard work. Normally, the band practises twice a week (Thursdays and Saturdays), with older members teaching the younger ones. But when a foreign trainer arrives -- usually for a long weekend every three months or so -- marathon afternoon and evening rehearsals are the norm, with some running up to five hours or more at a stretch. All this is done under the most trying conditions. There is no air-conditioning, and only a few fans. Medan's unreliable electricity supply also means that some rehearsals have to be carried out to the accompaniment of a noisy electric generator. The band has visited several parts of Indonesia. The most memorable was a 1989 trip to Bandung, when General Eva Burrows (the Salvation Army's international leader at the time) gave the band its official name: Brass Band Jenderal (The General's Band). It is a monicker generations of band members since have worn with pride. This year's concert was the result of months of careful planning. It wasn't simply a matter of choosing some suitable music and ensuring that it could be played well. Determined to make an impact on the local community but facing acute financial constraints, band members drew upon their entrepreneurial skills. With no previous experience in such matters, these young Indonesians managed to hire a concert venue, negotiate for the use of professional sound, lighting and recording equipment, and arrange for advertisements on local radio -- all at a mere fraction of market prices. Specific departments were also created within the band for advertising and promotions (such as fliers), programme design, logistics, transport, concert hall preparation and refreshments. All this occurred as members juggled school and work commitments. The 20-year-old principal trombonist, Mr Yohanes Mori, for example, left the full-dress rehearsal at 10pm the night before the concert to work as a labourer with a local vegetable wholesaler. Finishing work at 4am, he attended lectures at a local university from 7am to noon before joining the band at the concert venue for final sound and lighting checks at 6pm. On stage, band members looked impressive. However, few in the audience knew that most of the ties and neatly pressed white shirts were borrowed, or that band members wore ill-fitting black shoes purchased from a local second-hand store. Given the lack of regular professional coaching and access to live performances by top class musicians, musical standards are surprisingly high. Indeed, after years of hard work, the band is now worthy of comparison with some of the best secondary school bands in Singapore. I had the privilege of conducting the group for one of the highlights of the concert: a brass band arrangement of Handel's Hallelujah Chorus. The following evening, band members assembled to review the performance and consider a detailed financial report (including official receipts) by Bandmaster Danias Karosekali. Despite a last-minute donation from a local Methodist church, there was a significant deficit, with much of the shortfall being financed from the 31-year-old leader's meagre savings. Band members resolved to make up the difference through the sale of DVDs of the concert, currently in preparation. Hard work, good organisation and transparency -- they were all there. Now if only these Indonesians were running the country!
___________

Saturday, December 13, 2008

A goodbye

Terima kasih, Pak! I can't but agree with our President, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, that our former foreign minister Ali Alatas was a diplomat, a figure, an educator, a statesman that we love. Written in the yesterday's The Straits Times that Singapore's Foreign Minister for Foreign Affairs George Yeo and his wife were at the Jakarta wake. Died of a heart attack at the age of 76, he was said to had been undergoing medical treatment at Singapore's Mount Elizabeth Hospital since last month. Hhhmmm... I saw a man really looked like him at NUH about a year ago. I was there for my check-up appointment when I was wondering whether it was really him, the man on a wheelchair.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Singaporeans -- Colour-Blind? I don't think so!

It was personally challenging when I read an article in the Straits Times (15 November 2008), titled Are we ready to be COLOUR BLIND? written by Zakir Hussain. NOT JUST YET is his sub-title. It is a response to the president-elect Barack Obama's presidential win. In my opinion, generally Singaporeans are racists. It is supported by many friends of mine who are foreigners, living and working here. I have learned to adapt with the systems in SG that demand you to define your race. And they recognize 4 races: "Chinese", "Malay", "Indian" and "Others". This categorization is somehow strongly planted in the mind of most Singaporeans -- and thus you will confuse them if physically you do not represent the so-called physical-identities of each of the aforementioned race. And it just doesn't concur with Indonesia. With more than 13,000 islands and hundreds of ethnic groups, Indonesians would be in many cases undefinable to fall into any of these 4 categories. Mixed-race marriages are common in our country. As one of the children born from mixed-race parents, I had difficulty to define myself. I never really thought of what race I belong to. But then I learned that I am "Others" here, in SG. A real example is being a patient of one of the government-restructured hospitals in SG since 2004, I did have to tick the box "Others" as my race in all documentational papers. This is worsened by SG's physical geography as a small country. Wikipedia says that SG has reclaimed land with earth obtained from its own hills, the seabed, and neighbouring countries. As a result, Singapore's land area has grown from 581.5 square-km in 1960s to 699 square-km today... If you were born and grew up in such a city-state, traveling overseas was not a major thing happened in your life, and you were placed in a such condition that strongly planted a mindset in you that you were to define people in 4 racial categories, you came for the majority race -- plus a strong belief that you are one of the best nations in the world -- narrow-mindedness and racism would inevitably take place in you. The worst part is, I think, meritocracy. Here in SG, it is about a strong atmosphere that you are what you do, you are how-you-perform, and you are what you look. Being in the education "industry" over the past 3 months, knowing and learning more about SG's education world, I witness that meritocracy is strongly mirrored through its rigid education system. However, narrow-minded people are just everywhere in this world. I remembered Kak Pet's funny story that happened to him when he was in... Canada (?). Apparently, people around him at that time there didn't know about Singapore's existence and asked him funny questions, like whether Singapore had McDonald's, etc. LOL. My aunt who lives in California also hates narrow-minded Americans too. ^________^ One of the good impacts of the flowing stream of foreigners into the country, is I believe, so that Singaporeans would learn about multi-ethnicity... to learn for being color-blind... and to think out of the box from categorizing people (on the basis of race, skin color, or even merits). It has hurt me a lot, dealing and living with Singaporeans, I should admit. But on the other hand, I personally thank God for placing me here, a good training ground for me. And I continuously encourage myself to understand them... sympathize with them as I realize that they have lived a much stressful life since they were a child.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

The Presidential Candidates and a Death Sentence

They still talk about Mr. Obama's presidential win and the news evolve around his cabinet, the new chief of staff and how he interits an economy in peril. *sigh* DBS is to cut 900 jobs from its branches, mainly Singapore and Hong Kong.
And in the Straits Times, John McBeth wrote an article pertaining to Indonesia-US ties. There's a photograph of Indonesian students who are studying at Mr. Obama's former school in Jakarta. They are holding his picture. *cute* Mr. Obama went to school in Indonesia between 1967 and 1971. It is also written there that in July, Mr. Obama has told a reporter that he would like to give a speech in Indonesia within 100 days of his election. He's also expected to visit Singapore to attend the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) summit.
Thanks to Melanie for her notes on her Facebook, at least I can obtain some information there about our presidential candidates...
They are:
  • Governor of Yogyakarta Hamengkubuwono X
  • Current President of Indonesia Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
  • Freedom Institute Executive Director Rizal Mallarangeng
  • Chairwoman of Indonesian Justice and Unity Party Meutia Hatta Swasono
  • Former Indonesian president Megawati Soekarnoputri
  • Former Jakarta governor Sutiyoso
  • Former Indonesian State Secretary Yusril Ihza Mahendra
  • Former Indonesian president Abdurrahman Wahid (Gus Dur)
  • Former speaker of People's Representative Council Akbar Tandjung
  • Chairwoman of Akar Indonesia Ratna Sarumpaet
Hhmm... looking at the choices, I think I know how Mr. Douglas felt... "grumpy about the choices". Hahahahaha.
Former Jakarta governor Sutiyoso, Former Indonesian State Secretary Yusril Ihza Mahendra, Former President Abdurrahman Wahid, Former speaker of People's Representative Council Akbar Tanjung will be definitely out of my list...
During his administration as the governor of Jakarta, Mr Sutiyoso has successfully worked "hard" to change Jakarta's image to a city of massive flooding with his bills passing the developments of shopping malls without considering nature conservation. Mr. Yusril Ihza Mahendra is still under investigation, I suppose, for a corruption charge. Mel writes that he also supports the implementation of sharia Islam in Indonesia -- which is of course not suitable for our country's forefathers vision and spirit: being the biggest nation in the world with Muslim population, Indonesia is NOT an Islamic country.
With Mr. Abdurrahman Wahid's health condition, especially his sight impairment, I will not vote for him. I myself am a patient, so I do know that patients have limitations -- we have experienced his administration in 1999 - 2001, that due to this impairment, he had to rely on information from others, and they were people whom absolutely he believed in. Mr. Akbar Tanjung reputation as a corruptor makes me difficult to trust him in ruling Indonesia.
And now... the ladies. Hhhmm... I don't know. I personally believe that a woman would not be able to manage and to rule a big nation like Indonesia with its major problems in monetary crisis in the midst of global financial downturn, multiculturalism, political instability, and many others. Sorry, ladies. Not now =)
Meanwhile, I frowned when I read an article titled "Bali Bombers' execution delayed by 'bad weather'?". Well, apparently it was only a speculation; but signs point to imminent execution. Sigh. Hopefully it's gonna be over soon...

Friday, November 7, 2008

POWER

Apparently, some people make jokes about Mr. Obama winning the election. hhhmmm... *speechless* Mr. Zacharias's notes in his Facebook reminds me that Kingdom of God reigns in far different ways and systems with our fallen world... Since I lived in SG, I do understand more how most people in this country are highly thirsty of acknowledgement ^_____^ as meritocracy is applied in all aspects of life here. Manusia melihat apa yang di depan mata, tapi Tuhan melihat hati...
Parables of Power Wednesday, September 24, 2008 at 9:00am [Facebook]
In 1744 commissioners of the territory of Virginia were settling the terms of a treaty with the American Indians of the Six Nations. As part of the proposed treaty, the commissioners presented the tribes with the offer of education for six of its men at the college in Williamsburg. The elders of the tribes took an evening to consider the offer, politely declined the gift, and then proposed a counteroffer. Though grateful for the proposal, the tribal leaders had already experienced the kind of learning valued by these commissioners. When some of their own young men had returned after being educated in white colleges, they brought back new knowledge, but they also returned having lost knowledge vital to their communities. "They were instructed in all your sciences, but when they came back to us, they were bad runners, ignorant of every means of living in the woods, neither fit for hunters nor counselors, they were totally good for nothing.”(1) The tribal leaders then proposed a counteroffer: "To show our grateful sense of it, if the gentlemen of Virginia will send us a dozen of their sons, we will take care of their education, instruct them in all we know, and make men of them."(2) It is easy to read a story like this one from early American history and fail to see the dynamics of power. We might see an interplay between interesting characters or an exchange between cultures--two groups of men both convinced they have the best way, or maybe even a comical moment between two vastly different worlds. Many of the parables Jesus told in ancient Israel can be read similarly. We can be readily occupied with the interchange of the prodigal son and the loving father, the master of the great banquet and the guests that cruelly shunned him, or the owner of a vineyard and a group of disgruntled laborers. But in each of these stories, we are remiss not to consider the dynamic of power at work amidst the characters. That is to ask, who is in a position of superiority and who holds the status of inferiority? Which is the in-group and which is the out-group? In other words, who holds the power and who is considered more or less expendable? The tribal leaders had already experienced education in white colleges and were now offering a similar encounter for the sons of the Englishmen. Their counteroffer exuded a spirit of both hospitality and reciprocity. Yet sadly, there is no indication that the Virginian commissioners considered the offer of the tribes with any degree of sincerity. The offer was disregarded, indicating that the men of the northern territory had very little to learn from the tribes of the American Indians. This story, among many others, depicts the sad dynamic of power and superiority in our unfortunate relations with the American Indian. But this is also just one people-group in a world of stories of inclusion and exclusion, all of which call out for our attention to the storyteller who reforms our ideas of belonging. Jesus fashions many of his parables with dynamics that challenge our very notions of power, social order, status, and expendability. The parable of the landowner and the vineyard, for instance, sets before us the highest of the social classes of Israel and the very lowest. With a few bold strokes, Jesus sketches a wealthy landowner with a harvest so large that he must return repeatedly for more day-laborers--men who are in turn understood as the most expendable of society, the desperate and unemployed workforce of the surrounding villages. While this parable no doubt yields countless lessons with its intricate storyline, one dynamic of the story in particular plunges us further into a well of meaning and sets us up to drink deeply of what it might mean that this is what the “kingdom of heaven is like” (Matthew 20:1). In the society who first heard this story, it would have been altogether strange to hear of such a wealthy landowner going out among the day-laborers. There were stewards who typically did the visible work within the marketplace, hired by the elites so that they could avoid the type of hostility and resentment the parable describes over wages. Yet in Jesus’s parable, it is the landowner himself who converses all day long with the laborers. “Why are you standing here idle all day?” asks the owner of the vineyard. “Because no one has hired us,” they reply. So he says to them, “You also go into the vineyard” (20:6-7). As such, Jesus creates a confrontation between social extremes, the elites and the expendables, the first and the last, two groups who might never have encountered each other in real life. What might it mean that this describes the kingdom of God? The Greek word for parable literally means "a placing beside." It is a comparison of one thing beside another, an association of pictures that teaches, a story full of extremes and reversals of these extremes. In this parable, the dynamics of power and social status bid us to reexamine the ways in which we find ourselves superior, the arguments we use to justify our status over one group or another, and the very groups in which we place ourselves and subsequently displace others. The kingdom of God and the one who reigns within it are indeed at work among us reversing social hierarchies and turning status symbols upside down. The concluding remarks of Jesus remind us what will one day be so: “The last will be first, and the first will be last” (20:16). The question is whether we will fight it or fight for it. Jill Carattini is managing editor of A Slice of Infinity at Ravi Zacharias International Ministries in Atlanta, Georgia. (1) Unnamed Indian chief in Peter Nabokov, ed., Native American Testimony: A Chronicle of Indian-White Relations from Prophecy to the Present, 1492-1992 (New York: Viking, 1991), 214. (2) Ibid.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

2008 Election Day

I've seen t-shirt with the tagline "NOBAMA" since months ago, esp in Orchard area where you can find tourists from all around the world. Well... finally, election day is coming.

This afternoon at office during lunch time, Doug made me laugh reading his notes on his Facebook.

And just now, I just realized what he wrote under his "Political Views". It's "Very Pessimistic and Really-Really Grumpy About the Choices -- Uggh".

Hahahahahahahahaha. LOL.

Steph told me how she will be glad when the elections are over in the States. She and her husband have already voted by absentee ballot. And to my surprise, she agrees with the opinions that Mr. Obama is dangerous, as everything that he stands for is contrary to the Word of God. Nevertheless, I indeed agree with her that we should be thankful that God is the One that allows leaders to come into power...


... For there is no authority except from God, and the authorities that exist are appointed by God. -- Romans 13:1