This is Monday, and we all know what that’s like. I don’t know if a few funny pictures, comics, scriptures and quotes can help or not, but hey I’m just a blogger. This is about the best I can do.
Tag Archives: scripture
Happy Monday
It’s Monday morning, the break is over, the fireworks are gone, and now life goes on. Happy Monday is here for you.
Happy Monday
Is it rainy, wet or grey where you are this morning? I would rather go to work on a day like that than have to look out at beautiful blue skies all day long. At any rate, keep putting one foot in the front of the other and here’s to a Happy Monday.
Happy Monday
Colossal Coaster World leaders, you know what I’m talking about.
(hint) Continue reading
Happy Monday – Tuesday Edition
After a three or four day weekend, Tuesday can be worse than Monday when it comes to time to get back to the daily grind. So we bring you Happy Monday Tuesday Edition. Let’s get on the good foot.
Okay, that probably makes it worse. Let’s try again:
Happy Monday
That’s exactly what we’re trying to do here. We all have Monday’s but we seek to bear one another’s burdens and edify the body. It costs nothing to smile and most people smile back. We’re all in this together so chin up, chest out… have a Happy Monday! Continue reading
Happy Monday
Happy Monday
A Short Lesson About Reading the Bible
There’s an old saying about a little knowledge being a dangerous thing. The key to understanding scripture is context. If you quote half a verse to support any argument, the first thing I’m going to do is go find the whole verse, then read the whole paragraph. We need to know who is writing, to whom, and under what circumstances before applying any particular verse to our situation.
There are always critics of religion in general and of Christianity in particular that insist religion was invented or the Bible was written to control people. Roman emperors used religion to build an empire, Medieval kings used it to build wealth and add territory, and Christians today use scripture to justify everything from suppressing women to persecuting homosexuals. Sadly, to some extent, each of those arguments have some merit. Emperor Constantine made the switch from persecuting Christians to embracing Christianity in order to defeat the enemies of the Roman Empire. I think we should blame Rome for that, not Christ. The problem with the Middle Ages is that the vast majority of Europeans were illiterate. If the kings and knights of Medieval Europe could have read the Bible for themselves, they would not have been so easily manipulated. Thank God for Gutenberg, am I right? Which brings us to today. Continue reading
Things the Bible Doesn’t Say
I started listing well known sayings that people tend to think are in the Bible but actually aren’t. As the list got longer I began to realize they could all basically be grouped in three categories. This also helps to understand some of the confusion.
Misquotes – In this case the often quoted statement is similar to actual Bible verses, perhaps abbreviated.
The best example is “Money is the root of all evil.” What 1 Timothy 6:10 actually says is “The love (or lust) of money is a root of all kinds of evil.” While the wording is similar, the meaning is quite different. Money is neutral and the evil comes from our attitudes concerning it. Continue reading









