GO Solid

The God Debate - Rick Warren vs. Sam Harris - Is God Real?

At the Summit: On a cloudy California day, the atheist Sam Harris sat down with the Christian pastor Rick Warren to hash out Life's Biggest Question—Is God real? A NEWSWEEK exclusive.


Newsweek - April 9, 2007 issue - Rick Warren is as big as a bear, with a booming voice and easygoing charm. Sam Harris is compact, reserved and, despite the polemical tone of his books, friendly and mild. Warren, one of the best-known pastors in the world, started Saddleback in 1980; now 25,000 people attend the church each Sunday. Harris is softer-spoken; paragraphs pour out of him, complex and fact-filled—as befits a Ph.D. student in neuroscience. At NEWSWEEK's invitation, they met in Warren's office recently and chatted, mostly amiably, for four hours. Jon Meacham moderated. Excerpts follow.

JON MEACHAM: Rick, since you're the home team, we'll start with Sam. Sam, is there a God in the sense that most Americans think of him?

SAM HARRIS: There's no evidence for such a God, and it's instructive to notice that we're all atheists with respect to Zeus and the thousands of other dead gods whom now nobody worships.
Rick, what is the evidence of the existence of the God of Abraham?

RICK WARREN:
I see the fingerprints of God everywhere. I see them in culture. I see them in law. I see them in literature. I see them in nature. I see them in my own life. Trying to understand where God came from is like an ant trying to understand the Internet. Even the most brilliant scientist would agree that we only know a fraction of a percent of the knowledge of the universe.

HARRIS: Any scientist must concede that we don't fully understand the universe. But neither the Bible nor the Qur'an represents our best understanding of the universe. That is exquisitely clear.

WARREN:
To you.
HARRIS: There is so much about us that is not in the Bible. Every specific science from cosmology to psychology to economics has surpassed and superseded what the Bible tells us is true about our world.

Sam, does the Christian you address in your books have to believe that God wrote the Bible and that it is literally true?

HARRIS: Well, there's clearly a spectrum of confidence in the text. I mean, there's the "This is literally true, nothing even gets figuratively interpreted," and then there's the "This is just the best book we have, written by the smartest people who have ever lived, and it's still legitimate to organize our lives around it to the exclusion of other books." Anywhere on that spectrum I have a problem, because in my mind the Bible and the Qur'an are just books, written by human beings. There are sections of the Bible that I think are absolutely brilliant and poetically unrivaled, and there are sections of the Bible which are the sheerest barbarism, yet profess to prescribe a divinely mandated morality—where do I start? Books like Leviticus and Deuteronomy and Exodus and First and Second Kings and Second Samuel—half of the kings and prophets of Israel would be taken to The Hague and prosecuted for crimes against humanity if these events took place in our own time.

[To Warren] Is the Bible inerrant?

WARREN: I believe it's inerrant in what it claims to be. The Bible does not claim to be a scientific book in many areas.

Do you believe Creation happened in the way Genesis describes it?

WARREN:
If you're asking me do I believe in evolution, the answer is no, I don't. I believe that God, at a moment, created man. I do believe Genesis is literal, but I do also know metaphorical terms are used. Did God come down and blow in man's nose? If you believe in God, you don't have a problem accepting miracles. So if God wants to do it that way, it's fine with me.

HARRIS: I'm doing my Ph.D. in neuroscience; I'm very close to the literature on evolutionary biology. And the basic point is that evolution by natural selection is random genetic mutation over millions of years in the context of environmental pressure that selects for fitness.

WARREN: Who's doing the selecting?

HARRIS: The environment. You don't have to invoke an intelligent designer to explain the complexity we see.

WARREN: Sam makes all kinds of assertions based on his presuppositions. I'm willing to admit my presuppositions: there are clues to God. I talk to God every day. He talks to me.

HARRIS: What does that actually mean?

WARREN:
One of the great evidences of God is answered prayer. I have a friend, a Canadian friend, who has an immigration issue. He's an intern at this church, and so I said, "God, I need you to help me with this," as I went out for my evening walk. As I was walking I met a woman. She said, "I'm an immigration attorney; I'd be happy to take this case." Now, if that happened once in my life I'd say, "That is a coincidence." If it happened tens of thousands of times, that is not a coincidence.

There must have been times in your ministry when you've prayed for someone to be delivered from disease who is not—say, a little girl with cancer.

WARREN:
Oh, absolutely.
So, parse that. God gave you an immigration attorney, but God killed a little girl.

WARREN:
Well, I do believe in the goodness of God, and I do believe that he knows better than I do. God sometimes says yes, God sometimes says no and God sometimes says wait. I've had to learn the difference between no and not yet. The issue here really does come down to surrender. A lot of atheists hide behind rationalism; when you start probing, you find their reactions are quite emotional. In fact, I've never met an atheist who wasn't angry.

HARRIS: Let me be the first.

WARREN: I think your books are quite angry.

HARRIS: I would put it at impatient rather than angry. Let me respond to this notion of answered prayer, because this is a classic sampling error, to use a statistical phrase. We know that human beings have a terrible sense of probability. There are many things we believe that confirm our prejudices about the world, and we believe this only by noticing the confirmations, and not keeping track of the disconfirmations. You could prove to the satisfaction of every scientist that intercessory prayer works if you set up a simple experiment. Get a billion Christians to pray for a single amputee. Get them to pray that God regrow that missing limb. This happens to salamanders every day, presumably without prayer; this is within the capacity of God. [Warren is laughing.] I find it interesting that people of faith only tend to pray for conditions that are self-limiting.

WARREN:
That's a misstatement there.

HARRIS: Let's go back to the Bible. The reason you believe that Jesus is the son of God is because you believe that the Gospel is a valid account of the miracles of Jesus.

WARREN: It's one of the reasons.

HARRIS: Yeah. It's one of the reasons. Now, there are many testimonials about miracles, every bit as amazing as the miracles of Jesus, in other literature of the world's religions. Even contemporary miracles. There are millions of people who believe that Sathya Sai Baba, the south Indian guru, was born of a virgin, has raised the dead and materializes objects. I mean, you can watch some of his miracles on YouTube. Prepare to be underwhelmed. He's a stage magician. As a Christian, you can say Sathya Sai Baba's miracle stories are not interesting, let's not pay attention to them, but if you set them within the prescientific religious milieu of the first-century Roman Empire, suddenly miracle stories become especially compelling.

Sam, what are the secular sources of an acceptable moral code?

HARRIS:
Well, I don't think that the religious books are the source. We go to the Bible and we are the judge of what is good. We see the golden rule as the great distillation of ethical impulses, but the golden rule is not unique to the Bible or to Jesus; you see it in many, many cultures—and you see some form of it among nonhuman primates. I'm not at all a moral relativist. I think it's quite common among religious people to believe that atheism entails moral relativism. I think there is an absolute right and wrong. I think honor killing, for example, is unambiguously wrong—you can use the word evil. A society that kills women and girls for sexual indiscretion, even the indiscretion of being raped, is a society that has killed compassion, that has failed to teach men to value women and has eradicated empathy. Empathy and compassion are our most basic moral impulses, and we can even teach the golden rule without lying to ourselves or our children about the origin of certain books or the virgin birth of certain people.

Rick, Christianity has conducted itself in an abjectly evil manner from time to time. How do you square that with the Christian Gospel of love?

WARREN: I don't feel duty-bound to defend stuff that's done in the name of God which I don't think God approved or advocated. Have things been done wrong in the name of Christianity? Yes. Sam makes the statement in his book that religion is bad for the world, but far more people have been killed through atheists than through all the religious wars put together. Thousands died in the Inquisition; millions died under Mao, and under Stalin and Pol Pot. There is a home for atheists in the world today—it's called North Korea. I don't know any atheists who want to go there. I'd much rather live under Tony Blair, or even George Bush. The bottom line is that atheists, who accuse Christians of being intolerant, are as intolerant—

HARRIS: How am I being intolerant? I'm not advocating that we lock people up for their religious beliefs. You can get locked up in Western Europe for denying the Holocaust. I think that's a terrible way of addressing the problem. This really is one of the great canards of religious discourse, the idea that the greatest crimes of the 20th century were perpetrated because of atheism. The core problem for me is divisive dogmatism. There are many kinds of dogmatism. There's nationalism, there's tribalism, there's racism, there's chauvinism. And there's religion. Religion is the only sphere of discourse where dogma is actually a good word, where it is considered ennobling to believe something strongly based on faith.

WARREN: You don't feel atheists are dogmatic?

HARRIS: No, I don't.

WARREN: I'm sorry, I disagree with you. You're quite dogmatic.

HARRIS: OK, well, I'm happy to have you point out my dogmas, but first let me deal with Stalin. The killing fields and the gulag were not the product of people being too reluctant to believe things on insufficient evidence. They were not the product of people requiring too much evidence and too much argument in favor of their beliefs. We have people flying planes in our buildings because they have theological grievances against the West. I'm noticing Christians doing terrible things explicitly for religious reasons—for instance, not fund-ing [embryonic] stem-cell research. The motive is always paramount for me. No society in human history has ever suffered because it has become too reasonable.

WARREN: We're in exact agreement on that. I just happen to believe that Christianity saved reason. We would not have the Bill of Rights without Christianity.
HARRIS: That's certainly a disputable claim. The idea that somehow we are getting our morality out of the Judeo-Christian tradition is bad history and bad science.

WARREN: Where do you get your morality? If there is no God, if I am simply complicated ooze, then the truth is, your life doesn't matter, my life doesn't matter.

HARRIS: That is a total caricature of—

WARREN: No, let me finish. I let you caricature Christianity. If life is just random chance, then nothing really does matter and there is no morality—it's survival of the fittest. If survival of the fittest means me killing you to survive, so be it. For years, atheists have said there is no God, but they want to live like God exists. They want to live like their lives have meaning.

HARRIS: Our morality, the meaning we find in life, is a lived experience that I believe has, to use a loaded term, a spiritual component. I believe it is possible to radically transform our experience of the world for the better, very much the way someone like Jesus, or someone like Buddha, witnessed. There is wisdom in our spiritual, contemplative literature, and I am quite interested in understanding it. I think that meditation and prayer affect us for the better. The question is, what is reasonable to believe on the basis of those transformations?

WARREN: You will not admit that it is your experience that makes you an atheist, not rationality.

HARRIS: What in your experience is making you someone who is not a Muslim? I presume that you are not losing sleep every night wondering whether to convert to Islam. And if you're not, it is because when the Muslims say, "We have a book that's the perfect word of the creator of the universe, it's the Qur'an, it was dictated to Muhammad in his cave by the archangel Gabriel," you see a variety of claims there that aren't backed up by sufficient evidence. If the evidence were sufficient, you would be compelled to be Muslim.

WARREN: That's exactly right.

HARRIS: So you and I both stand in a relationship of atheism to Islam.

WARREN: We both stand in a relationship of faith. You have faith that there is no God. In 1974, I spent the better part of a year living in Japan, and I studied all the world religions. All of the religions basically point toward truth. Buddha made this famous statement at the end of his life: "I'm still searching for the truth." Muhammad said, "I am a prophet of the truth." The Veda says, "Truth is elusive, it's like a butterfly, you've got to search for it." Then Jesus Christ comes along and says, "I am the truth." All of a sudden, that forces a decision.

HARRIS: Many, many other prophets and gurus have said that.

WARREN: Here's the difference. Jesus says, "I am the only way to God. I am the way to the Father." He is either lying or he's not.

Sam, is Rick intellectually dishonest?

HARRIS: I wouldn't put it in such an invidious way, but—

Let's say Rick's not here and we're just hanging out in his office.

HARRIS:
It is intellectually dishonest, frankly, to say that you are sure that Jesus was born of a virgin.

WARREN: I say I accept that by faith. And I think it's intellectually dishonest for you to say you have proof that it didn't happen. Here's the difference between you and me. I am open to the possibility that I am wrong in certain areas, and you are not.

HARRIS: Oh, I am absolutely open to that.

WARREN: So you are open to the possibility that you might be wrong about Jesus?

HARRIS: And Zeus. Absolutely.

WARREN: And what are you doing to study that?

HARRIS: I consider it such a low-probability event that I—

WARREN: A low probability? When there are 96 percent believers in the world? So is everybody else an idiot?

HARRIS: It is quite possible for most people to be wrong—as are most Americans who think that evolution didn't occur.

WARREN: That's an arrogant statement.

HARRIS: It's an honest statement.

Rick, if you had been born in India or in Iran, would you have different religious beliefs?

WARREN:
There's no doubt where you're born influences your initial beliefs. Regardless of where you were born, there are some things you can know about God, even without the Bible. For instance, I look at the world and I say, "God likes variety." I say, "God likes beauty." I say, "God likes order," and the more we understand ecology, the more we understand how sensitive that order is.

HARRIS: Then God also likes smallpox and tuberculosis.

WARREN: I would attribute a lot of the sins in the world to myself.

HARRIS: Are you responsible for smallpox?

WARREN: I am responsible to do something about it. No doubt about it. I am responsible to do something about the 500 million who get malaria every year and the 40 million who have AIDS, because I will be held accountable for my life. And when I say, "God, why don't you do something about this?" God says, "Well, why don't you? You were the answer to your own prayer."

HARRIS: I totally agree with Rick: it is our responsibility to help bridge these inequities, but I think you become even more motivated, potentially, to help people when you realize there is no good reason, certainly not a supernatural good reason, for the fact that I have so much and my neighbor has so little.

Do you think that religiously motivated good works are actually harmful?

HARRIS: The thing that bothers me about faith-based altruism is that it is contaminated with religious ideas that have nothing to do with the relief of human suffering. So you have a Christian minister in Africa who's doing really good work, helping those who are hungry, healing the sick. And yet, as part of his job description, he feels he needs to preach the divinity of Jesus in communities where literally millions of people have been killed because of interreligious conflict between Christians and Muslims. It seems to me that that added piece causes unnecessary suffering. I would much rather have someone over there who simply wanted to feed the hungry and heal the sick.

WARREN: You'd much rather have somebody—an atheist—feeding the hungry than a person who believes in God? All of the great movements forward in Western civilization were by believers. It was pastors who led the abolition of slavery. It was pastors who led the woman's right to vote. It was pastors who led the civil-rights movement. Not atheists.

HARRIS: You bring up slavery—I think it's quite ironic. Slavery, on balance, is supported by the Bible, not condemned by it. It's supported with exquisite precision in the Old Testament, as you know, and Paul in First Timothy and Ephesians and Colossians supports it, and Peter—

WARREN: No, he doesn't. He allows it. He doesn't support it.

HARRIS: OK, he allows it. I would argue that we got rid of slavery not because we read the Bible more closely. We got rid of slavery despite the profound inadequacies of the Bible. We got rid of slavery because we realized it was manifestly evil to treat human beings as farm equipment. As it is.

Rick, what is your role as a pastor in encouraging reformation of other faiths?

WARREN: All of the great questions of the 21st century will be religious questions. Will Islam modernize peacefully? What's going to happen to the influx of Muslims into secular Europe, which has lost its faith in Christianity and has nothing to counteract this loss in religious terms? What will replace Marxism in China? In all likelihood it's going to be Christianity. Will America return to its historic roots—will there be a Third Great Awakening, or will America go the way of Europe?

HARRIS:
I think the answers, in spiritual and ethical terms, are going to be nondenominational. We are suffering the collision of denominations, specifically the collision with Islam. Whatever is true about us isn't Christian. And it isn't Muslim. Physics isn't Christian, though it was invented by Christians. Algebra isn't Muslim, even though it was invented by Muslims. Whenever we get at the truth, we transcend culture, we transcend our upbringing. The discourse of science is a good example of where we should hold out hope for transcending our tribalism.

WARREN: Why isn't atheism more appealing if it's supposedly the most intellectually honest?

HARRIS: Frankly, it has a terrible PR campaign.

WARREN: [Laughs] It's not a matter of PR.

HARRIS: It is right next to child molester as something you don't want to be. But that is a product, I would argue, of what religious people tell one another about atheism.

Sam, the one thing that I find really troubling in your arguments is that I am guilty, to quote "The End of Faith," of a "ludicrous obscenity" when I take my children to church. That is strong language, and it doesn't exactly encourage dialogue.

HARRIS: To some degree the stridence of my writing is an effort to get people's attention. But I can honestly defend the stridence because I think our situation is that urgent. I am terrified of what seems to me to be a bottleneck that civilization is passing through. On the one hand we have 21st-century disruptive technology proliferating, and on the other we have first-century superstition. A civilization is going to either pass through this bottleneck more or less intact or it won't. And perhaps that fear sounds grandiose, but civilizations end. On any number of occasions, some generation has witnessed the ruination of everything they and their ancestors had built. What especially terrifies me about religious thinking is the expectation on the part of many that civilization is bound to end based on prophecy and its ending is going to be glorious.

WARREN: I believe that history split into A.D. and B.C. because of the Resurrection. And the Resurrection is not only the resurrection of Jesus Christ, it is the hope of the world: it says there's more to this life than just here and now. That doesn't mean that I do less, it means that this life is a test, it's a trust and it's a temporary assignment. If death is the end, shoot, I'm not going to waste another minute being altruistic.

HARRIS: How do you account for my altruism?

WARREN: You have common grace. Even in people who don't believe in God, there is a spark God has put in you that says, "There's got to be more to life than just make money and die." I think that that spark does not come from evolution.

Sam wrote that without death, the influence of faith-based religion would be unthinkable.


WARREN: Because we were made in God's image, we were made to last forever. That means I'm going to spend more time on that side of eternity than on this side. If I did not believe that there is a Judgment, if I believed Hitler would actually get away with everything he did, that would be a reason for great despair. The fact is, I do believe there will be a Judgment Day. God is not just a God of love. He is a God of justice. So death is a factor. On the other hand, even if there were no such thing as heaven, I would put my trust in Christ because I have found it a meaningful, satisfactory, significant way to live.

HARRIS: How is it fair for God to have designed a world which gives such ambiguous testimony to his existence? How is it fair to have created a system where belief is the crucial piece, rather than being a good person? How is it fair to have created a world in which by mere accident of birth, someone who grew up Muslim can be confounded by the wrong religion? I don't see how the future of humanity is in good care with those competing orthodoxies.

Rick, let's be blunt. Is Sam's soul in jeopardy, in your view, because he has rejected Jesus?

WARREN: The politically incorrect answer is yes.

HARRIS: Is that the honest answer?

WARREN: The truth is, religion is mutually exclusive. The person who says, "Oh, I just believe them all," is an idiot because the religions flat-out contradict each other. You cannot believe in reincarnation and heaven at the same time.

Sam, let's be blunt as well. Has Rick, in your view, wasted much of his life on behalf of a Gospel that you think is a first-century superstition?

HARRIS: I wouldn't put it in those stark terms, because I don't have a rigid view how someone should spend their life so as not to waste it.

WARREN: What's your politically incorrect answer?

HARRIS: I think you could use your time and attention better than organizing your life around a belief that the Bible is the inerrant word of God and the best book we're ever going to have on every relevant subject.

How would the ideal world work, in the Sam Harris view?

HARRIS: Right now, we have to change the rules to talk about God and spiritual experience and ethics. And I'm denying that that is so. You can have your spirituality. You can go into a cave and practice meditation and transform yourself, and then we can talk about why that happened and how it could be replicated. We may even want, for perfectly rational reasons, to say we want a Sabbath in this country, a genuine Sabbath. Let's realize that there's a power in contemplating the mystery of the universe, and in reminding yourself how much you love the people closest to you, and how much more you could love the people you haven't met yet. There is nothing you have to believe on insufficient evidence in order to talk about that possibility.

WARREN: Sam, do you believe human beings have a spirit?

HARRIS: There are many reasons not to believe in a naive conception of a soul that kind of floats off the brain at death and goes somewhere else. But I do not know.

WARREN: Can you have spirituality without a spirit?

HARRIS: You can feel yourself to be one with the universe.

WARREN: OK, then why can't you just take the next step? Because right now you're talking in extremely nonrational terms.

HARRIS: There's nothing irrational about it. You can close your eyes in meditation and lose the sense of your physical body, totally. Many people draw from that the metaphysical conclusion that "I'm just spirit, and I can transcend the body." That's not the only conclusion you have to draw from that experience, and I don't think it's the best conclusion.

WARREN: You're more spiritual than you think. You just don't want a boss. You don't want a God who tells you what to do.

HARRIS:
I don't want to pretend to be certain about anything I'm not certain about.

Rick, last thoughts?

WARREN: I believe in both faith and reason. The more we learn about God, the more we understand how magnificent this universe is. There is no contradiction to it. When I look at history, I would disagree with Sam: Christianity has done far more good than bad. Altruism comes out of knowing there is more than this life, that there is a sovereign God, that I am not God. We're both betting. He's betting his life that he's right. I'm betting my life that Jesus was not a liar. When we die, if he's right, I've lost nothing. If I'm right, he's lost everything. I'm not willing to make that gamble.

How To Forgive (7%)

One day a while back, a man, his heart heavy with grief, was walking in the woods. As he thought about his life this day, he knew many things were not right. He thought about those who had lied about him back when he had a job.

His thoughts turned to those who had stolen his things and cheated him. He remembered family that had passed on. His mind turned to the illness he had that no one could cure. His very soul was filled with anger, resentment and frustration.

Standing there this day, searching for answers he could not find, knowing all else had failed him, he knelt at the base of an old oak tree to seek the one he knew would always be there. And with tears in his eyes, he prayed:

"Lord- You have done wonderful things for me in this life. You have told me to do many things for you, and I happily obeyed. Today, you have told me to forgive. I am sad, Lord, because I cannot. I don't know how. It is not fair Lord. I didn't deserve these wrongs that were done against me and I shouldn't have to forgive. As perfect as your way is Lord, this one thing I cannot do, for I don't know how to forgive. My anger is so deep Lord, I fear I may not hear you, but I pray that you teach me to do this one thing I cannot do - Teach me To Forgive."

As he knelt there in the quiet shade of that old oak tree, he felt something fall onto his shoulder. He opened his eyes. Out of the corner of one eye, he saw something red on his shirt. He could not turn to see what it was because where the oak tree had been was a large square piece of wood in the ground. He raised his head and saw two feet held to the wood with a large spike through them.

He raised his head more, and tears came to his eyes as he saw Jesus hanging on a cross. He saw spikes in His hands, a gash in His side, a torn and battered body, deep thorns sunk into His head. Finally he saw the suffering and pain on His precious face. As their eyes met, the man's tears turned to sobbing, and Jesus began to speak.

"Have you ever told a lie?" He asked? The man answered - "yes, Lord."

"Have you ever been given too much change and kept it?" The man answered - " yes. Lord." And the man sobbed more and more.

"Have you ever taken something from work that wasn't yours?" Jesus asked? And the man answered - "yes, Lord."

"Have you ever sworn, using my Father's name in vain?" The man, crying now, answered - "yes, Lord."

As Jesus asked many more times, "Have you ever"? The man's crying became uncontrollable, for he could only answer - "yes, Lord."

Then Jesus turned His head from one side to the other, and the man felt something fall on his other shoulder. He looked and saw that it was the blood of Jesus. When he looked back up, his eyes met those of Jesus, and there was a look of love the man had never seen or known before.

Jesus said, "I didn't deserve this either, but I forgive you." It may be hard to see how you're going to get through something, but when you look back in life, you realize how true this statement is.

Read the following first line slowly and let it sink in.

If God brings you to it - He will bring you through it.

Lord I love You and I need You, come into my heart, today. For without You I can do nothing.
When Jesus died on the cross, he was thinking of you!

If you are one of the 7% who will stand up for him, forward this with the Title 7%.
93% of people won't forward this.

Joey's Journal - September 12, 2006

Praise and honor be with You, Lord! Thank You for giving me another day here on earth to continue reflecting on Your Word. I thank You also for the protection, provision and guidance You have given us. May I put on Your grace of patience, humility, kindness, gentleness, forgiveness and love to the people I interact with today. Lord, may Your Holy Spirit be my reminder in times when I distance myself from You through sinful thoughts and desires. May I gain strength in You to combat and rebuke the enemy. I offer to You my thoughts, works, joys and sufferings of this day and may they be pleasing and acceptable to You.

As today is Worship Service, may Your Words through Senior Pastor Khong be the words that would soften and touch our hearts as we journey towards restoration to You. May the final message on the book of Colossian be the messsage that would empower us to be spreaders of God’s Word and ignite a revival of spiritual growth in Singapore. May Your Hand be on us as we do Your Will. And, finally may our day be more focused on You! All these I pray in the Mighty Name of Jesus. Amen.



My Reading - Psalm 37

The Lord destroys the wicked but saves and prospers the godly.

Don’t worry about the wicked. Don’t envy those who do wrong. For like grass, they soon fade away. Like springtime flowers, they soon wither. Trust in the Lord and do good. Then you will live safely in the land and prosper. Take delight in the Lord and he will give your heart’s desires. Commit everything you do to the Lord. Trust him, and he will help you. He will make your innocence as clear as the dawn, and the justice of your cause will shine like the noonday sun. Be still in the presence of the Lord, and wait patiently for him to act. Don’t worry about evil people who prosper or fret about their wicked schemes. Stop your anger! Turn from your rage! Do not envy others – it only leads to harm. For the wicked will be destroyed; but those who trust in the Lord will possess the land. In a little while, the wicked will disappear. Though you look for them, they will be gone. Those who are gentle and lowly will possess the land; they will live in prosperous security. The wicked plot against the godly; they snarl at them in defiance. But the Lord just laughs, for he sees their day of judgment coming. The wicked draw their swords and string their bows to kill the poor and the oppressed, to slaughter those who do right. But they will be stabbed through the heart with their own swords, and their bows will be broken.

It is better to be godly and have little than to be evil and possess much. For the strength of the wicked will be shattered, but the Lord takes care of the godly. Day by day the Lord takes care of the innocent, and they will receive a reward that lasts forever. They will survive through hard times; even in famine they will have more than enough. But the wicked will perish. The Lord’s enemies are like flowers in the field – they will disappear like smoke. The wicked borrow and never repay, but the godly are generous givers. Those blessed by the Lord will inherit the land, but those cursed by him will die. The steps of the godly are directed by the Lord. He delights in every detail of their lives. Though they stumble, they will not fall, for the Lord holds them by the hand.
Once I was young, and now I am old. Yet I have never seen the godly forsaken, nor seen their children begging for bread. The godly always give generous loans to others; and their children are a blessing. Turn from evil and do good, and you will live in the land forever. For the Lord loves justice, and he will never abandon the godly. He will keep them safe forever, but the children of the wicked will perish. The godly will inherit the land and will live there forever. The godly offer good counsel; they know what is right from wrong. They fill their hearts with God’s law, so they will never slip from his path. Those who are evil spy on the godly, waiting for an excuse to kill them. But the Lord will not let the wicked succeed or let the godly be condemned when they are brought before the judge. Don’t be impatient for the Lord to act! Travel steadily along his path. He will honor you, giving you the land. You will see the wicked destroyed.

I myself have seen it happen – proud and evil people thriving like mighty trees. But when I looked again, they are gone! Though I searched for them, I could not find them! Look at those who are honest and good, for a wonderful future lies before those who love peace. But the wicked will be destroyed; they have no future. The Lord saves the godly; he is their fortress in times of trouble. The Lord helps them, rescuing them from the wicked. He saves them, and they find shelter in him.

My Reflection – Through this psalm of David, we are again reassured that the Lord delights in those who live godly lives. The Lord never forsakes them but hears their cry for help and being a merciful Lord, He rescues them from turbulent times and famine and gives them the land to make them prosper forever. In contrast, the Lord will destroy the wicked; for they scheme and plot against the godly. He will shatter the wicked who has acquired much from evil ways and they will die of their own doing as they plot to kill the godly. The wicked will have no future but the Lord saves the godly and they find shelter in Him.

If you read this psalm over again, it will refresh you from your troubles. As you seek the path of righteousness, the Lord will lead the way because He is delighted with our decision. He holds our hand when we stumble to the plots and traps of Satan. It is an assuring reminder that if we seek the ways of the godly and obey God’s laws here on earth, He will not forsake us but even give us much blessing and prosperity. Let us believe in this and put our trust in the Lord’s ways.

My PrayerLord God, I pray that this reassuring psalm of David of the Lord’s goodness to those who are godly is taken to heart by the reader of the journal. God will surely bless and prosper those who are righteous. At the same time, let this psalm be also a warning to those who do evil and sinful ways of their destruction and God’s wrath toward them. It is scary Father that if we do wicked things, we will sow damnation however, if we follow a godly path, we will stand in Your presence. May I live the remaining days of my life more in line and full obedience in Your Will. All these I pray in Jesus’ Name. Amen.

By Joey B.

Joey's Journal - September 11, 2006

My Father in Heaven, I give You praise and honor for Your protection, provision and guidance. You are a faithful Father, rich in love and compassion for mankind. You offer everyone a chance to believe You, trust You and follow Your Ways. It is great to know that we have a faithful God that has given us hope and will rescue us from Satan’s traps. That even in our sinful nature, You offer us the chance to be restored back to You. Your outstretched Hand is ready to lift us from possible damnation.

Lord, I offer You, my thoughts, works, joys and sufferings of this day. May they be pleasing and acceptable to You. May I focus in You more and more in understanding Your Word. May Your Word bring us peace, hope and trust in Your plans. Please watch over my family and loved ones; may You manifest Your glory to them. Father, a special thank You for my niece, Marissa, whom You have positioned to live in Guam and find work there. May You continue to watch over her and humble her to make peace with her parents; and most especially, come back to You! All in Jesus’ Name I pray. Amen.



My Reading
- Psalm 36

Your unfailing love, O Lord, is as vast as the heavens; your faithfulness reaches beyond the clouds

Sin whispers to the wicked, deep within their hearts. They have no fear of God to restrain them. In their blind conceit, they cannot see how wicked they really are. Everything they say is crooked and deceitful. They refuse to act wisely or what is good. They lie awake at night hatching sinful plots. Their course of action is never good. They make no attempt to turn from evil.

Your unfailing love, O Lord, is as vast as the heavens; your faithfulness reaches beyond the clouds. Your righteousness is like the mighty mountains, your justice like the ocean depths. You care for people and animals alike, O Lord. How precious is your unfailing love, O God! All humanity finds shelter in the shadow of your wings. You feed them from the abundance of your own house, letting them drink from your rivers of delight. For you are the fountain of life, the light by which we see. Pour out your unfailing love on those who love you; give justice to those with honest hearts.

Don’t let the proud trample me; don’t let the wicked push me around. Look! They have fallen! They have been thrown down, never to rise again.

My Reflection – As I re-read the second paragraph over and over, David calls to God who is omnipotent, omnipresent and omniscient. I can not be more sure of God’s love and compassion for mankind. How can you even think of measuring God’s love when it is as vast as the heavens? A love that is both limitless and never ceases. His faithfulness goes beyond the clouds; how very reassuring to us believers because we have a God who is full of love and compassion and always faithful to us. We can always count on His help and protection in times of trials and tribulations we face daily. He sufficiently provides for our physical needs and draws from His truth the path of a godly life for us to follow. His unfailing love is poured out to those who love Him. How truly awesome is our God!

My PrayerHeavenly Father, I want to be like David who was after Your heart. I want to thank and praise Your Name always and demonstrate Your glory in my life. You are truly a Great God, slow to anger and quick to give mercy to my sinful ways. Lord, in times when I am weakened by the evil one’s material and physical traps, may Your Holy Spirit breathe Your strength to forge ahead and focus on You. May I be worthy and delight You of my rebuking the temptations of the enemy. Keep me in Your desired path.

Dear God, I remember and say a prayer today for those who perished during the 9-11 tragedy. May the souls of those who died be rested and may they look forward to Jesus’ Second Coming. Father, continue to comfort the loved ones who were left behind by these people and long for that heavenly reunion with them again.

All these I pray in Jesus’ Holy Name. Amen.


by Joey B.

Joey's Journal - September 10, 2006

Almighty Father, thank You for sending Your angels to watch my family as we slept. Thank You for giving us another day in this temporarily residence yet always longing for a more permanent residence with You, Lord. Thank You also for watching over my wife and bringing her safely home. I give thanks and praise to You for controlling Joshua’s sinus allergy and not get serious. May You continue to heal him and completely cure the allergy. Jesus, please be with Joel and watch over him and protect him from any mishaps or misbehavior in school. Make him more and more attentive to his teachers and his temper controlled.

Lord, may I understand Your Word better as I continue reflecting on the Book of Psalms. May You be beside me and breathe Your wisdom and truth so that I may impart Your instructions from the Word. Let me stay focused in You. Jesus, may You always be the center of my life. I pray all these in Jesus’ Holy and Precious Name. Amen.


My Reading - Psalm 35

Great is the Lord who enjoys helping his servant

O Lord, oppose those who oppose me. Declare war on those who are attacking me. Put your armor, and take up your shield. Prepare for battle, and come to my aid. Lift up your spear and javelin and block the way of my enemies. Let me hear you say, ‘I am your salvation!’ Humiliate and disgrace those trying to kill me; turn them back in confusion. Blow them away like chaff in the wind- a wind sent by an angel of the Lord. May their path be dark and slippery, with the angel of the Lord pursuing them. Although I did them no wrong, they dug a pit for me. So let sudden ruin overtake them! Let them be caught in the snare they set for me! Let them fall to destruction in the pit they dug for me.

Then I will rejoice in the Lord. I will be glad because he rescues me. I will praise him from the bottom of my heart. ‘Lord, who can compare with you? Who else rescues the weak and helpless from the strong? Who else protects the poor and needy from those who want to rob them?’ Malicious witnesses testify against me. They accuse me of things I don’t even know about. They repay me with evil for the good I do. I am sick with despair. Yet when they were ill, I grieved for them. I even fasted and prayed for them, but my prayers returned unanswered. I was sad, as though they were my friends or family, as if I were grieving for my own mother. Bur they are glad now that I am in trouble; they gleefully join together against me. I am attacked by people I don’t even know; they hurl slander at me continually. They mock me with the worst kind of profanity; and they snarl at me. How long, O Lord, will you look on and do nothing? Rescue me from their fierce attacks. Protect my life from these lions! Then I will thank you in front of the entire congregation. I will praise you before all the people. Don’t let my treacherous enemies rejoice over my defeat. Don’t let those who hate me without cause gloat over my sorrow. They don’t talk of peace; they plot against innocent people who are minding their own business. They shout that they have seen me doing wrong. ‘Aha,’ they say. ‘Aha! With our own eyes we saw him do it!’

O Lord, you know all about this. Do not stay silent. Don’t abandon me now, O Lord. Wake up! Rise to my defense! Take up my case, my God and my Lord. Declare me, ‘not guilty,’ O Lord my God, for you give justice. Don’t let enemies laugh at me in my troubles. Don’t let them say, ‘Look! We have what we wanted! Now we will eat him alive!’ May those who rejoice at my troubles be humiliated and disgraced. May those who triumph over me be covered with shame and dishonor. But give great joy to those who have stood with me in my defense. Let them continually say, ‘Great is the Lord, who enjoys helping his servant.’ Then I will tell everyone of your justice and goodness, and I will praise you all day long.

My Reflection – David calls on to the Lord to rescue him. He begs the Lord not to be silent as the Lord sees all that is happening to him; slander, false accusations, insults and gossips on the misery and troubles that engulfed him. He did not tire or lose hope but kept praising the Lord because of His justice and goodness and that his Lord would hear the call of a faithful servant. His Lord will not abandon him and would deliver him from his enemies that hunt him.

I am reminded of this story that an uncle used to tell about this man servant who worked for a prominent family during World War II in the Philippines. This servant was a faithful and honest man who was accused by the townsfolk of collaborating with the Japanese forces. Those days, collaborators were looked at as traitors to motherland and were harshly treated by the townsfolk, some even killed. The servant was kidnapped by a group of vigilantes and brought to their safe house, forced and beaten up to admit his wrong doings and confess to implicate the household he was working for as pro-enemy. The servant took on all the beatings, insults and hardships but never gave in. He was faithful to his master, who treated him with much dignity and even adopted him as part of the family while under their employ. The vigilantes fearing of the prominence and connections of this family with liberating forces decided to let him go. When the servant was back to the family, he told the master of the horrific ordeal he went through and showed the signs of the torture and beatings. But, he said ‘I always knew, sir, you will be here to accept me back because I have served you faithfully!’ The master broke down and carried him to the house and cared for his servant’s wounds. This servant was never called a servant after that, but carried the family name of the master.

The Lord, our God, allows all the bad things to happen to us in order for us to persevere during these hard times. God knew David was after His heart yet, He let him go from trial to trial so that he will learn and persevere. But most of all, God knew of David’s faithfulness, just like in the story, the master, who knew the servant’s undying faithfulness. This is why, we should be forever faithful to our Father, and during times of uncertainty and trials, we call on His help to rescue us and deliver us from this situation. Wouldn’t our perfect Lord and Father not stretch His Hand out to help us? I am sure He will! He is such an awesome Father!

My PrayerFather in Heaven, I thank You that You are a God slow to anger but quick to give mercy to us sinners. You have forgiven us time and time again for the hurts we hurl at You. We are not worthy to be called Your sons if we do not see Your justice and goodness. We must seek You and repent for our sins to be acceptable to You. Lord, I ask for Your forgiveness to those times I failed to obey You. Purify and cleanse my heart so that I may stand firm on earth and long to be in Your presence in Heaven. Amen.

by Joey B.

Read and Return



Each and everyone one of us are going through tough times right now, but God is getting ready to bless you in a way that only He can. Keep the faith.

This prayer is powerful, and prayer is one of the best gifts we receive.
There is no cost but a lot of rewards. Let's continue to pray for one another.



The prayer:

Father, I ask You to bless my friends, relatives and those that I care deeply for, who are reading this right now. Show them a new revelation of Your love and power. Holy Spirit, I ask You to minister to their spirit at this very moment. Where there is pain, give them Your peace and mercy. Where there is self-doubt, release a renewed confidence through Your grace. Where there is need, I ask you to fulfill their needs. Bless their homes, families, finances, their goings and their comings. In Jesus' precious name. Amen.



Joey's Journal - September 9, 2006 - 1 Thessalonians 4 (Part 2)

My Reading - 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18

Part 2 : The Coming of the Lord

(13)Brothers, we do not want you to be ignorant about those who fall asleep, or to grieve like the rest of men, who have no hope. (14)We believe that Jesus died and rose again and so we believe that God will bring with Jesus those who have fallen asleep in him. (15)According to the Lord's own word, we tell you that we who are still alive, who are left till the coming of the Lord, will certainly not precede those who have fallen asleep. (16)For the Lord himself will come down from heaven, with a loud command, with the voice of the archangel and with the trumpet call of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first. (17)After that, we who are still alive and are left will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air. And so we will be with the Lord forever. (18)Therefore encourage each other with these words.

My Reflection - In Paul’s letter to the Thessalonians, we see that the early Christians were wondering what would happen to many of their fellow believers who have died when Christ returned. Paul wanted them to know that death is not the end of the story. When Christ returns, all believers - dead and alive - will be reunited, never to suffer or die again. Paul confirms that during the Lord’s second coming, those believers who have died will rise up first and those believers who are still alive will be caught up together with the dead and meet the Lord. He speaks of these events to challenge believers to comfort and encourage one another when loved ones die. Therefore, we as believers need not despair when our loved ones die or world events take a tragic turn. God will turn our tragedies to triumphs, our poverty to riches, our pain to glory, and our defeat to victory. All believers throughout history will stand reunited in God’s presence, safe and secure. We as believers should comfort and reassure each other with this great hope as the Apostle Paul did to the Thessalonians.

My Prayer
- Father, thank You for Your impartation of Your Word through the Apostle Paul in 1 Thessalonians. We have read and understood Your call to live our lives to please You. Lord, sends us Your Holy Spirit to strengthen us to be godly and pure. Helps us to avoid the temptation of the devil with regard to sexual desires and actions. We long to have Your grace of self-control and rebuke the traps are set by the evil one. What we long for Father, is the hope to be standing in Your Mighty and Holy Presence when Jesus comes the second time. I pray these in Jesus’ Name. Amen.

This is the part 2 of 2.
See the part 1 of this Article here.

By Joey B.

Joey's Journal - September 8, 2006 - 1 Thessalonians 4 (Part 1)

Heavenly Father I thank You for the protection You have given to me and my family. Thank You for the provision to our needs and for the guidance You have given us to the right path. I give You all honor and glory for the blessings bestowed in my life. May I always remember to trust Your ways and to obey Your will for I long to be standing in Your Holy Presence. I give You my works, joys and sufferings of this day and hope that they will be of delight to You. All these I pray in Jesus’ Name. Amen.

My Reading - 1 Thessalonians 4:1-12

Part 1 : Live to Please God

(1)Finally, brothers, we instructed you how to live in order to please God, as in fact you are living. Now we ask you and urge you in the Lord Jesus to do this more and more. (2)For you know what instructions we gave you by the authority of the Lord Jesus.
(3)It is God's will that you should be sanctified: that you should avoid sexual immorality; (4)that each of you should learn to control his own body in a way that is holy and honorable, (5)not in passionate lust like the heathen, who do not know God; (6)and that in this matter no one should wrong his brother or take advantage of him. The Lord will punish men for all such sins, as we have already told you and warned you. (7)For God did not call us to be impure, but to live a holy life. (8)Therefore, he who rejects this instruction does not reject man but God, who gives you his Holy Spirit.
(9)Now about brotherly love we do not need to write to you, for you yourselves have been taught by God to love each other. (10)And in fact, you do love all the brothers throughout Macedonia. Yet we urge you, brothers, to do so more and more.
(11)Make it your ambition to lead a quiet life, to mind your own business and to work with your hands, just as we told you, (12)so that your daily life may win the respect of outsiders and so that you will not be dependent on anybody.

My Reflection - Why does Apostle Paul clearly identify for the church of Thessalonica ‘to keep clear of sexual sin’? In this way, he says ‘you will control your body and live in holiness and honor – not in lustful passion as non-believers do’. He wants them to be holy and pure, perfect and acceptable to God. Because God is holy and perfect, Paul wants the people to be holy and perfect when they stand in God’s presence. I can only guess that sexual sin was prevalent in Thessalonica during those times as it is in our times and that is why Paul zeros in on it. How can we be holy and pure in the eyes of the Lord? Avoid sexual sin and successfully control our bodies from these thoughts and desires. Also related to sexual sin, he warns of taking another brother’s wife, in v6’ and that in this matter no one should wrong his brother or take advantage of him’ I believe Paul’s message applies to the opposite gender too, ‘taking a Christian sister’s husband.’ This is another sexual sin that is so rampant nowadays. Most of us are not able to control our sinful desires. God created sex for procreation and pleasure, and as expression of love between a husband and wife. Sexual experience must be limited to the marriage relationship to avoid hurting ourselves, others and our relationship with God. And, if we reject this, he paints a warning that ‘the Lord will punish us for all such sins.’ Paul warns that taking another Christian’s wife or husband will be avenged by God.

There is more to Christian living than simply loving other Christians. We must be responsible in other areas of life. Paul probably saw that some of the Christians in Thessalonica had adopted a life of idleness, depending on others for handouts. He instructed them in this letter to work hard and live a quiet life. We, as Christians, can’t be effective in sharing our faith with others if they don’t respect you.

My Prayer - Sovereign Lord, thank You for Your wisdom to reflect on 1 Thessalonians and record Your imparted Word. May we receive the strength and the grace from You to love one another more and more and following the real meaning of love and not lustful love. May we grow more focused on how Jesus loved when He was on earth, without reservation or condition. Father, may You continue to remind us to be pure and holy in our walk with You. Grant all these prayers in Jesus’ Name. Amen.

This is the part 1 of 2.
See the part 2 of this Article here.

by Joey B.

Be Thankful NOW

Thank You



Dear GOD,

I want to thank You for what you have already done.

I am not going to wait until I see results or receive rewards; I am thanking you right now.

I am not going to wait until I feel better or things look better; I am thanking you right now.

I am not going to wait until people say they are sorry or until they stop talking about me; I am thanking you right now.

I am not going to wait until the pain in my body disappears; I am thanking you right now.

I am not going to wait until my financial situation improves; I am going to thank you right now.

I am not going to wait until the children are asleep and the house is quiet; I am going to thank you right now.

I am not going to wait until I get promoted at work or until I get the job; I am going to thank you right now.

I am not going to wait until I understand every experience in my life that has caused me pain or grief; I am thanking you right now.

I am not going to wait until the journey gets easier or the challenges are removed; I am thanking you right now.

I am thanking you because I am alive. I am thanking you because I made it through the day's difficulties. I am thanking you because I have walked around the obstacles.

I am thanking you because I have the ability and the opportunity to do more and do better.

I'm thanking You because FATHER, YOU haven't given up on me.

God is just so good, and he's good all the time. Send this message to 8 friends, and continue to THANK HIM

Joey's Journal - September 7, 2006

Heavenly Father, I give You all honor and praise for Your unfailing love and compassion. You are with us faithfully seeing us through trying days and enjoying our peaceful days. Thank You for Your protection, provision and guidance You have given my family. Thank You for giving us restful sleep last night even though Joshua had a runny nose that the doctors suspect as a start of sinus allergy and was waking up every so often. I asked for Your healing hand be upon him. Lord, I offer this day to You; all my works, joys and sufferings of today, may they be pleasing and acceptable to You. Give me Your guidance in my reading and reflecting on Your Word.

Today, I specially commit my mom to You on this her birthday; she would have been 92 today. I know that she has prepared herself to see You during the Second Coming of Jesus and she will be enjoying herself standing in Your presence. All these in Jesus Name I pray. Amen.


My Reading - Psalm 34 The eyes of the Lord watch over those who do right

Taste and see that the Lord is good. Oh, the joys of those who trust in him! Let the Lord’s people show him reverence, for those who honor him will have all they need. And those who trust in him will never lack any good thing.

Come, my children, and listen to me and I will teach you to fear the Lord. Do any of you want to live a life that is long and good? Then watch your tongue! Keep your lips from telling lies! Turn away from evil and do good. Work hard at living in peace with others.

The eyes of the Lord watch over those who do right; his ears are open to their cries for help. But the Lord turns his face against those who do evil; he will erase their memory from the earth. The Lord is close to the brokenhearted; he rescues those who are crushed in spirit. For the Lord protects them from harm – not one of their bones will be broken! The Lord will redeem those who serve him; everyone who trusts in him will be freely pardoned.

My Reflection - Have we ever felt that when we did the right things and obeyed our earthly father, we got our ways with him? We felt good and beaming with pride and anticipated the rewards from our father; maybe a new record album (nowadays, maybe a new DVD album) we always wanted, an increase in our allowance or being able to stay out late on a Saturday night. Yes, I am referring to those times when we were in our teens. Those were the times when we were closely watched by our fathers. Those were the days when we had to show good results in our studies, to obey house rules on our chores and curfew and to follow our parent’s instructions and discipline. When we did good and the right things, we were rewarded!

Isn’t this the same with our Heavenly Father? He watches us 24-7, 365 days a year, knows what we are thinking and planning before we even do them. Yet, He gives us the free will to decide on what course of action we will be taking; the right or the wrong thing. When we do right, He is happy and pleased with us. However, when we decide to do wrong and disobey Him, He is hurt dearly. God left us His commands to follow while we are on earth. He also provided a way back to Him through His Son, Jesus who died for all our sins and rescued us from the enemy. Are we doing the right thing for God? Are we keeping and following His Will? Our reward will be a permanent attendee to the Father’s Heavenly Banquet and kingdom. Isn’t this something to look forward to?

My Prayer - Father in Heaven, may I do right and pleasing things here on earth. May I follow Your commands and never grow weak in trusting Your Ways for my life. I know that You are a good God and Father, and want only the good things for me. Allow me to show that to You by living a godly life here on earth. There is no greater reward for me than standing in Your presence in Your heavenly kingdom. All in Jesus’ Precious Name. Amen.

by Joey B.

A Whale Story

A heart-warming tale of a whale!

Urban Legends ¨C true story


If you read the front page story of the SF Chronicle, you would have read about a female humpback whale who had become entangled in a spider web of crab traps and lines.


She was weighted down by hundreds of pounds of traps that caused her to struggle to stay afloat. She also had hundreds of yards of line rope wrapped around her body, her tail, her torso, a line tugging in her mouth.

A fisherman spotted her just east of the Farralone Islands (outside the Golden Gate) and radioed an environmental group for help. Within a few hours, the rescue team arrived and determined that she was so bad off, the only way to save her was to dive in and untangle her... a very dangerous proposition. One slap of the tail could kill a rescuer.


They worked for hours with curved knives and eventually freed her. When she was free, the divers say she swam in what seemed like joyous circles. She then came back to each and every diver, one at a time, and nudged them, pushed gently around-she thanked them. Some said it was the most incredibly beautiful experience of their lives.

The guy who cut the rope out of her mouth says her eye was following him the whole time, and he will never be the same. May you, and all those you love, be so blessed and fortunate.

to be surrounded by people who will help you get untangled from the things that are binding you. And, may you always know the joy of giving and receiving gratitude. I pass this on to you, my friend, in the same spirit.

Little Girl With Faith

A little girl went to her bedroom and pulled a glass jelly jar from its hiding place in the closet. She poured the change out on the floor and counted it carefully. Three times, even. The total had to be exactly perfect. No chance here for mistakes.

Carefully placing the coins back in the jar and twisting on the cap, she slipped out the back door and made her way 6 blocks to Rexall's Drug Store with the big red Indian Chief sign above the door.

She waited patiently for the pharmacist to give her some attention, but he was too busy at this moment. Tess twisted her feet to make a scuffing noise. Nothing. She cleared her throat with the most disgusting sound she could muster. No good. Finally she took a quarter from her jar and banged it on the glass counter. That did it!

"And what do you want?" the pharmacist asked in an annoyed tone of voice. I'm talking to my brother from Chicago whom I haven't seen in ages," he said without waiting for a reply to his question.
"Well, I want to talk to you about my brother," Tess answered back in the same annoyed tone. "He's really, really sick...and I want to buy a miracle."
"I beg your pardon?" said the pharmacist.
"His name is Andrew and he has something bad growing inside his head and my Daddy says only a miracle can save him now. So how much does a miracle cost?"
"We don't sell miracles here, little girl. I'm sorry but I can't help you," the pharmacist said, softening a little.
"Listen, I have the money to pay for it. If it isn't enough, I will get the rest. Just tell me how much it costs."

The pharmacist's brother was a well dressed man. He stooped down and asked the little girl, "What kind of a miracle does your brother need?"
" I don't know," Tess replied with her eyes welling up. I just know he's really sick and Mommy says he needs an operation. But my Daddy can't pay for it, so I want to use my money."
"How much do you have?" asked the man from Chicago .
"One dollar and eleven cents," Tess answered barely audibly.
"And it's all the money I have, but I can get some more if I need to."
"Well, what a coincidence," smiled the man. "A dollar and eleven cents---the exact price of a miracle for little brothers . "

He took her money in one hand and with the other hand he grasped her mitten and said "Take me to where you live. I want to see your brother and meet your parents. Let's see if I have the miracle you need."
That well dressed man was Dr. Carlton Armstrong, a surgeon, specializing in neuro-surgery. The operation was completed free of charge and it wasn't long until Andrew was home again and doing well.

Mom and Dad were happily talking about the chain of events that had led them to this place.
"That surgery," her Mom whispered. "was a real miracle. I wonder how much it would have cost?"
Tess smiled. She knew exactly how much a miracle cost...one dollar and eleven cents....plus the faith of a little child.

In our lives, we never know how many miracles we will need.
A miracle is not the suspension of natural law, but the operation of a higher law. I know you'll keep the ball moving!
Here it goes. Throw it back to someone who means something to you!

A ball is a circle, no beginning, no end. It keeps us together like our Circle of Friends. But the treasure inside for you to see is the treasure of friendship you've granted to me.
Today I pass the friendship ball to you.
Pass it on to someone who is a friend to you.

MY OATH TO YOU...
When you are sad....I will dry your tears.
When you are scared.....I will comfort your fears.
When you are worried.....I will give you hope.
When you are confused....I will help you cope.
And when you are lost....And can't see the light, I shall be your beacon.....Shining ever so bright.
This is my oath.....I pledge till the end.
Why you may ask?.....Because you're my friend.

Signed: GOD

 
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