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But flee from these things, you man of God, and pursue righteousness,

godliness, faith, love, perseverance and gentleness. ~ 1 Timothy 6:11

Showing posts with label Joy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joy. Show all posts

Friday, January 3, 2014

Funny Thing About The Truth

Funny thing about the Truth,
It remains the Truth whether you like it or not,
And it remains the Truth whether you accept it or not.

The Truth is the Truth whether it is taboo or not,
And the Truth is the Truth whether it is legal or not.

The Truth remains True,
Whether it is popular,
Whether it is believed,
Or even if it is known.

Because we don't own the truth, thank goodness!
God shared it with his beloved to end our blindness.

We can embrace it and see with eyes enlightened,
Or turn our backs and fool ourselves in darkness.

But the Truth will remain,
Because the Truth is eternal,
The Truth is universal,
and the Truth is good.

So rather than deny, ignore, and pretend,
Is it not better to seek, pursue, and treasure?

In truth, the Truth is what makes things funny,
And in truth, what's funny is that the Truth is taboo,
Because if the Truth is taboo, and what's taboo is Truth,
Has not God made foolish the wisdom of this world?
Now that, is funny!



Keep Pursuing

Friday, September 27, 2013

Bible Cross Reference Infographic

Chris Harrison has created a series of info graphics on the Bible.  Here is my favorite:

"The bar graph that runs along the bottom represents all of the chapters in the Bible. Books alternate in color between white and light gray. The length of each bar denotes the number of verses in the chapter. Each of the 63,779 cross references found in the Bible is depicted by a single arc - the color corresponds to the distance between the two chapters, creating a rainbow-like effect." ~ Harrison
Isn't that gorgeous?!  But you know what is also pretty neat?  This only maps a fraction of the cross references in the Bible.  There are literally hundreds of thousands more!  What an amazing work the Word of God is!

Keep Pursuing,

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

The Gospel Spectrum Infographic

The Gospel Spectrum hosted by Thirteen Squares presents a unique view of every single verse in the Gospels in an interactive chart shown below.


  • Each of the bars (almost 250) represents a major event in life of Christ.  
  • The length of each segment indicates the number of verses dedicated to that life event.  
  • The color of each segment represents which Gospel the verses being counted came from.

That by itself would be cool.  But then it has tools to splice the data at the bottom!

  • The four colored boxes on the left let you toggle which Gospels are being displayed.  
  • The thirteen gray boxes in the middle group the near 250 life events into general categories.
  • The four blue boxes on the right show how many Gospel's versions are in harmony.

A summary of the creator's thoughts can be found in this PDF.  And an introduction to the tool can be found at this link.

Keep pursuing

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Eudaimonia

(This post is part of the ongoing Happiness Series.)

Some of the greatest minds in history have wrestled with the meaning of happiness.  One man who stands out amongst all the great thinkers, I believe, is Socrates.

Socrates tackled the meaning of happiness in a number of his famous dialogues.  And while he used his usual dizzying discussion methods.  One concept that really shines is the idea of Eudaimonia.


What is Eudaimonia?

Many modern texts translate the ancient Greek word “Eudaimonia” into “happiness”.  But this doesn't do it justice.  Eudaimonia is so much more than the ephemeral positive feelings that people today call happiness.

Ancient Greek was a very specific language.  Just as the Greeks had four different words for "love", they also had different words for various types of happiness.

Eudaimonia would be more closely translated as "flourishing".
("Are you happy?" "No, I'm flourishing!")

This "flourishing" meant thriving in the time you have been given in your life.  It meant growing as much as possible in every way possible.  It was about becoming the best version of yourself.  Only in this manner was the "good life" attained.  Only in this pursuit was real happiness achieved.


How does Eudaimonia work?

Eudaimonia operates on the principle that your are most fulfilled when achieving your potential.  That in growing physically, socially, mentally, and spiritually you increase your capacity for enjoying life and unlock the ability to enjoy higher forms of pleasure.

This definition of happiness is intriguing for many reasons.

First, and most powerfully, this definition makes happiness an act of the will.  Eudaimonia was a choice.  This sets it far apart from happiness (defined today) as a sensation that happens to you.

Second, in being a choice, Eudaimonia became a habit or pursuit that lasted your entire life.  Once again,
this is drastically different than modern definition of a fleeting pleasurable sensation.

Lastly, this definition is universally fair.  What I mean is that anyone and everyone can choose to make the most of what they have, whether it be a little or a lot.  In contrast, one could say that "modern happiness" (read pleasure) is unfairly imbalanced in favor of those born to affluent circumstances.


Why Does Eudaimonia Work?

It is no secret that the sense of fulfillment experienced from accomplishing a goal is incredibly rewarding.
  • The euphoria achieved after completing a marathon...
  • The edifying experience of helping your neighbor...
  • The thrill of learning something new...
  • The deep peace of prayer after a period of sacrifice...
And mature audiences know that as humans we can enjoy higher pleasures that are more fulfilling than the base pleasures we share with animals.
  • As an experiment, imagine the best food you ever had.  
  • Now imagine the best conversation you've ever had.  
  • If you could have only one tonight, which would you choose?
  • ...exactly
Lastly, I believe everyone has experienced the phenomenon that everything is richer and more vibrant when we are pushing ourselves.
  • Relaxation is so much better when we are exhausted
  • Faith is so much deeper when challenged
  • Imagination is so much richer after learning
  • All of these are fruits of the struggle to achieve one's potential.
A Eudaimon life is one spent in pursuit of true fulfillment.  In achieving our maximum potential physically, spiritually, mentally, and socially we also achieve our greatest capacity to enjoy life in each of these areas.  In addition we unlock access to higher forms of pleasure.


Application in Your Life

To be fair, this new understanding of happiness will not get rid of the low points in your life
...but neither will it evaporate like a giddy feeling during a low point.

Rather, Eudaimon pursuits lead to life at a higher level so that the highs are higher AND the lows are less low.

It seems obvious, won't you be happiest when you are the best you can be?

If you agree, I invite you to join me in pursuing the Eudaimon life.
Struggling to grow each day mentally, physically, spiritually, and socially.
It is a lot of work, but the result is a life well lived.


Keep Pursuing (Happiness)


Friday, July 26, 2013

Happiness

I am thrilled to be starting a new series on Happiness!

Like so many things in society today, happiness is one of the things we want most and understand the least.  This series hopes to rectify that!

Posts include:
Keep Pursuing (Happiness)



Monday, October 1, 2012

What is Happiness?

"Why aren't I happy?"

It is a question that plagues so many people.  You can't get on Facebook without seeing a status about someone being depressed, bored and/or dissatisfied with life.  You would think, being the second wealthiest generation in history and being in an age where we vaunt scientific progress that we would be the happiest people the world has ever seen!

But we aren't.  And we could create a long list of things that contribute to our being unhappy.  But I want to address the root cause...you've been lied to.

In fact, you've been lied to thousands of times about happiness.  "Buy this, you'll be happy."  "Achieve that and you'll be happy."  "Date someone and they'll make you happy."  "Get sexy and get happy."  "This drug fills you with joy."  "Relocate and you'll find bliss."  The lies echo around us every day.

The worst part is that these lies have confused us about what happiness is.  We are the first generation ever to think we deserve happiness and we are confused about what it is.  Is it pleasure?  Is it the absence of pain?  Is it feeling good?  Is it having what you want?

I believe happiness is a way of life.  A decision that you make.

In my next post I will explain how it works with a concept called "eudaimonia".