Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Descartes' Ontological Argument.

Descartes’ Ontological Argument
by: Nick Davis

In Nolan’s article on “Descartes’ Ontological Argument,” the author provides an excellent breakdown of Descartes’ so-called proof for the existence of God. He diagnoses Descartes’ argument by breaking it down into three separate parts; the first part being the simplicity of Descartes’ argument, the second the distinction between essence and existence, and the third providing various objections and replies between skeptics and Descartes himself. This paper seeks to illustrate a fair account of Nolan’s deduction of Descartes argument as well as establish its own grounds for the validity of Descartes’ ontological argument.
First, let us begin this deduction by defining what ontological is. Ontological (or a priori) is to be defined as knowledge that can be known without any empirical evidence. Now, as for the subject of ontological arguments, Descartes’ is not the only one to formulate one. An earlier version of this type of argument existed with St. Anselm in the eleventh century and had long since died out; however, Descartes’ denies any ties to this traditional argument (p. 1). Descartes’ ontological argument holds that the existence of the concept of God entails the existence of God, and according to Descartes, to conceptualize something posits that this certain something must exist. Thus, most simply stated, because there is a clear and distinct idea or concept of a supremely perfect being (namely, God), God must exist. Descartes also suggests that his argument is not a formal proof at all but is a self-evident axiom obtained intuitively by a mind exempt from philosophical prejudice (p. 1)
In the first part, Nolan claims that Descartes’ version of the ontological argument is simplistic in that it compares the way we ordinarily establish basic truths while using arithmetic and geometry (p. 2). This holds that God’s existence can be fundamentally known through human intuition. We are capable of attaining knowledge of God’s existence by learning that the clear and distinct idea of a supremely perfect being is found in apprehending necessary existence, just as Nolan writes “if I am able to clearly and distinctly perceive that necessary existence pertains to the idea of a supremely perfect being, then such a being truly exists (p. 3).” However, the premise for necessary existence to be conceptually linked to God’s existence does not depend ontologically on anything, for He is omnipotent and exists by His own power, and if God did not exist on His own initiative then it would be impossible for God to be omnipotent (p. 4). On page 5, Nolan states that Descartes further develops his previous analogy between the ontological argument and arithmetic. In this section Descartes suggests that there is one group of “meditators for whom God’s existence is immediately manifest” through his demonstration of a triangle whereas the latter group of “meditators…require a proof to attain the requisite clear and distinct perception” through looking at the Pythagorean Theorem to see God as self-evident (or as having necessary existence contained in the idea of supremely perfect being) (p. 5). Nolan points out on page 6 that Thomas Aquinas rejected the claim that God’s existence is self-evident because what is self-evident cannot be denied without contradiction, but God’s existence can be denied. Quite frankly I would have to agree with Aquinas on this point as existence can be denied; however, merely denying that something exists doesn’t mean that that something doesn’t exist. Take a car on an empty tank of gasoline for example. Merely thinking or believing with your ability or willpower to deny that your car is not out of gasoline wont get you any closer to your destination. Denying the reality of having no more gas won’t put more gas into your tank, nor will it mean that gasoline doesn’t exist. Denial does not evoke non-existence; it only posits an opinion based upon your perspective. In Descartes’ defense, Nolan points out that he does not hold that God’s existence is immediately self-evident or self-evident to everyone, but only that it can become self-evident with meditatiors that free themselves of all philosophical prejudices (p. 6).
In the second part, Nolan shows Descartes traditional medieval perspective on the distinction between essence and existence. On this notion, it is held that Descartes believed in a version of the Theory of Rational Distinction, which articulates that “a mind is merely rationally distinct from its thinking and a body is merely rationally distinct from its extension” (p. 8) and that in the abstract essence and existence are distinctly different, but in reality they are completely identical (p. 9). From Descartes viewpoint, “God is merely rationally distinct from his necessary existence, while every finite created thing is merely rationally distinct from its possible or contingent existence” (p. 9). By holding God and created beings on these two separate grade levels, this perspective allows Descartes to account for the theological difference that God independently exists of Himself and that His creation is entirely dependent on Him for existence (p. 9). God is distinguishable because of His higher level of existence and independent being. The result of this principle leads to the belief that ontological arguments cannot be conjured up for created substances or beings but only for God (p. 10). A finite thing cannot have an ontological argument produced for it because a finite thing is dependent on God, whereas the whole idea of a supremely perfect being containing necessary existence rests upon an ontologically independent argument (p. 10).
In the third part, Nolan draws out two necessary and sufficient conditions for Descartes’ version to be held prestigiously superior to his predecessors. The first condition is the theory of innate ideas and the latter the doctrine of clear and distinct perception. These two conditions protect Descartes’ ontological argument from the charges that were made against Anselm as well as provide the tools for answering any other objections. These conditions safeguard Descartes’ argument from suffering the objection of fictional ideas by purporting that the idea of God is something innate to the human intellect (p. 10). Among the other objections, there is “the claim that even if we were to concede that necessary existence is inseparable from the idea of God, nothing follows from this about what does or does not exist in the actual world” (p. 11) of which Descartes’ responds with the principle of clear and distinct perception, which bridges the gap between mere thoughts and reality (p. 11). Another objection which is much more difficult to respond to is Immanuel Kant’s objection which states “Whenever we think of anything, we regard it as existing, even if the thing in question does not actually exist. Thus, existence does not add anything to the concept of a thing (p. 13).” This very same objection was later refined by Bertrand Russell, claiming that “the statement “God exists” is not ascribing existence to a subject, but asserting that a certain description (in single quotes) applies to something in reality (p. 13).” Nolan goes about responding to this fine objection by first, prior to mentioning how Descartes might defend himself, noting that the “question at issue is typically framed in non-Cartesian terms and thus often misses its target (p. 14),” or more plainly stated, the question (or objection) is irrelevant to Descartes’ intended framework because his argument was never meant to be picked apart by logical issues when the argument itself was constructed on subject-predicate logic inherited from Aristotle (p. 14). If Descartes were to answer the question, nonetheless, he would have defended it by conceding to certain aspects of the objection such as the point that existence does not add anything to the mere idea of something and the notion that a thing cannot have properties unless it exists (p. 14). Conceding to these aspects asserts that the distinction between a substance and its existence is limited explicitly to thought or reason, therefore rendering a substance as its existence in reality (p. 15). Nolan concludes his deduction of Descartes’ ontological argument not by demanding the verdict for the case as true but to show that Descartes had a sophisticated and systematic way of treating existence (p. 15).






Work Cited
Nolan, Lawrence. “Descartes’ Ontological Argument.” Stanford Encyclopedia of
Philosophy. 15 October 2006. Stanford University. 13 October 2008

Monday, December 8, 2008

Professors get lonely. Visit them if you can. It will affect them more than you know. - Dallas Willard

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Good Ol' Clive.

"To love at all is to be vulnerable. Love anything, and your heart will certainly be wrung and possibly be broken. If you want to make sure of keeping it intact, you must give your heart to no one, not even to an animal. Wrap it carefully round with hobbies and little luxuries; avoid all entanglements; lock it up safe in the casket or coffin of your selfishness. But in that casket — safe, dark, motionless, airless — it will change. It will not be broken; it will become unbreakable, impenetrable, irredeemable."
-C.S. Lewis

Thursday, October 16, 2008

True Love.

Love is not desire, as Professor Dallas Willard would say. Desire seeks to have it's way with what is desired. It wants to eat it. It craves it, but it does not love it. Desire does not want to serve the beloved, for the beloved is not a beloved at all but is rather the belusted; treated by the one desiring it's own way without any respect for her at all.

Love seeks the good of that which is loved.

True love is marked by giving, not getting. Just as Christ loved the Church and gave Himself up for us, so we too are to exemplify His love for one another by living for one another in an exceedingly sacrificial way. Go above and beyond in loving one another. Evoke the beloveds' beauty with your love. Bring out the best in the one whom you love. If you want to love as Christ loves, you must give your whole being to the practice of love, treating others as you would want to be treated. You cannot do this apart from God. You need His generous love abiding in you in order for you to truly love as Jesus has loved. The more time you spend in the presence of the One who is Love [God], the more readily you will become a loving being. Dwell with Him, love Him, and learn to love like Him.

-burton 261E

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

The University of Knowledge.

It brings me great grief to be amidst the presence of a handful of students and a professor fifteen years older than I all laughing at the pitiful and hopeless people who still hold some kind of belief in "God," equating this belief with the belief that Santa Claus or the Tooth Fairy actually exist. They laugh as though those people who place their belief in God do so with hardly any thought past "He just does.", and that the thought that those people do put into His existence contains little, if any, depth at all. The professor rips away any bit of potential evidence for God's existence, extracting a well constructed thesis out of context and picking bits and pieces out of history as though these small chunks contained the real remnant of truth. The very basis or starting point of most arguments that aim at destroying belief in God begin with false pretenses, and they do not give even remotely a fair representation of the biblical view of God in relation to humanity. To rebuke such false statements is difficult when the starting point of the statement claimed starts with a lack of the bigger picture. I want to so desperately present the whole picture in its entirety, but in order to do so requires an audience that is willing to listen. Thus far, I have found nothing but meaningless knowledge and questioning that leads herds of beautiful minds nowhere.

We all place our belief in something. It may not be God, but every human being believes in something as the ultimate cause or the primary source of all living things, and if he does not believe in an ultimate cause or a primary source then he believes in nothing, and to claim belief in nothing is still claiming belief in something. It is impossible to believe in nothing unless you also (along with that belief in nothing) don't believe in your own existence (or don't believe that you do exist), thus if you believe in your own existence you believe in something--namely, yourself. When I was religious, focusing on morality and obeying rules, I placed my trust in the law. When I was an Atheist, I put all of my trust in myself and it brought me much depression, purposelessness, and pain, for I knew that with all of the powers I could personally gather, those powers, in the end, matter very little at all in relation to everything else that has gone on over the progression of time. Now that I'm a follower of Jesus Christ, I put all of my trust in God and He has given me hope, joy, peace, and a great sense of purpose. Where are you putting your trust? Is it in yourself, humanity, material objects, rules, or people? Examine yourself and see what you believe in, what you hope in. Would you die for that belief? I will die for mine.


-burton 261E

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

My Apologies.

I do want to apologize for my lack of updating this blog. It's been quite some time now, and for many different reasons it makes complete sense to me as to why it has been so terribly long.
I have been on a wonderful quest of learning, and upon this quest I have begun to make numerous discoveries through which my eyes have seen a much larger horizon that is greatly beyond me. It's difficult for me to explain right now, but my time is going to be better spent gathering my thoughts and writing them in the form of a book for a while, and whence this book is filled with all of its pages (however many pages that may be), I will then, once again, continue to post regularly.
If I had all of the time in the world to write bits and pieces of my thought processes, I would, but life is such that I am forced to many other obligations as well as time commitments and must spend this short time that we call life as efficiently as possible.

Hope to return sooner, rather than later (or rather than never again),
burton

P.S. Please keep me in prayer.

Sunday, August 24, 2008

The Great Confirmation.

No feeling in the world is greater than when the Lord confirms His work in and through you. When the Lord God Almighty tells you firsthand that He is with you and that He has gone ahead of you to clear the way for His marvelous plans to be executed for His great glory. What a wonderful emotion, experience, and moment is this.

-burton 261e

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

A Wonderful Take on the Human Condition.

This quote is such a wonderful take on the human condition (Our condition :P) in relation to the absolute necessity of a life lived in full dependence on God and pure relationship with Him to live in a manner worthy of the calling in which we have been called:

"How slothful and unfit we are for this blessed work.
Only the Spirit of God can enable us to do right."
-Andrew Murray (Pg. 10, With Christ in the School of Prayer)

Sunday, July 13, 2008

The "knack that you never want to come back."

I believe that all of us, have at the very least 'jumped the gun' once on God. What I mean by that is we sometimes get so caught up in our own desire, that we tend to play God and go for that desire without waiting on Him long enough; without consulting Him properly through His own, perfect, God-like timing.

In 1 Samuel 14, King Saul, just after being anointed and appointed King over Israel, 'jumps the gun' on God and in turn, becomes His own God.

Saul's son, Johnathan, caused a great commotion North of the Israelites encampment where the Philistines had a garrison, and had slaughtered twenty men with only himself and his armor bearer. When the first twenty fell, the whole Philistine garrison trembled and the ground shook with panicky footsteps. When Saul's watchmen noticed the scattering of the Philistines, Saul quickly counted heads to see whom of the Israelites was missing. When the heads were counted, sure enough, Johnathan and his armor bearer were gone. In verse 18, Saul called for the Ark of God, which meant that His first reaction to what was happening around Him was to consult God. This is good. However, in verse 19, Saul tells the priest to remove his hand (or put the ark back where it was) because of the urgency of the moment and rushes straight into battle without God's permission. He decides that listening to the voice of God would have taken too long and it would have ruined his military advantage. The problem with Saul's actions is that he didn't obey the voice of God and didn't depend on Him. Yes, Saul's first thought was to seek God's advice, but he did not go any further than that initial thought. Instead, Saul acted on his own insight and broke his commitment to obey God, He broke his dependence with God and chose independence from God; Saul was not a man after God's own heart.

The point of me writing about Saul's disobedience is to provide a biblical example of how we, as humans, have a knack for determining what's right or what's wrong in our own eyes without first asking God what His verdict is. If you recognize the prideful tendencies in your own heart, and you repent and ask God to change them, then I pray that this will be one knack in your life that will never have to come back.

Stay humble, be obedient, ask God what He desires for your life, and pursue just that.


-burton 261E

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Once, For All.

God doesn't need us to do anything magnificent, unbelievable or miraculous; nor does he ask of us for such things. He only needs us to stand obedient to His calling, to perhaps plant a seed whenever given the opportunity, and allow for Him to work His inexplicably marvelous miracles in the middle of our lives.

There is never a day when I feel perfectly adequate or feel that I measure up, but I am continually renewed and forever reminded that God has never asked me to be adequate. He has asked me to be absolutely flawless, and His Son has already ever so flawlessly and perfectly carried out this requirement for me, by the tree at Calvary. I need to do, no more.

"Who needeth not daily, as those high priests, to offer up sacrifice, first for his own sins, and then for the people's: for this he did once, when he offered up himself." (Hebrews 7:27 with emphasis added)

Christ died, once, for all.


-burton 261E

Thursday, July 10, 2008

The Cause of Loneliness and a Cure for Change.

For the longest time I have been struggling with friendship. I'm not talking about that surface-leveled type of friendship, where news, sports and pointless facts or takes about so-and-so revolve around every facet of conversation. I'm talking about my struggle with an intimate form of friendship; the kind of friendship that reaches right into the core and center of who we are and allows for true relationship to occur through a long-suffering process of human engagements, honest experience, and convivial change.
My struggle has caused me to be in a state of proverbial loneliness. Nothing to the extreme of depression, no, I have God and He is sufficient, but loneliness in the sense of lacking forms of genuine companionship that make up community; the designated community that God experiences within Himself and desires for us to experience. As far as I can remember, I haven't truly experienced what its like to be in such a form of community, but only because I haven't allowed myself to be a part of this style of community. The reasons for this are quite obvious: Self-protection. I'm afraid of getting hurt, and I'm afraid of allowing others into this dark, grim, and disseminated mess that is my heart because I have convinced myself into believing that there is no other human being on this earth as unpleasant and horribly repugnant as I am; as my sin is.

But then it occurred to me:
Maybe you are feeling so alone because you never actually extend an invitation into your own life for others to enter into. You never give anyone the opportunity to love you. You just keep things at a distance and allow for others to let you into their hearts while concurrently locking the door of your own.

A voice spoke:
Open your arms, unlock your heart, and never fear, for God is here.

"Its not the nature of love to force a relationship but it is the nature of love to open the way." (Pg 192, The Shack)


-burton 261E

Sunday, July 6, 2008

No-God Desires to Mo-God Desire.

Sometimes we are so reluctant to just simply go to God. We duck and dodge, play hide and seek, and throw whatever we can in front of Him so that we don't have to look at Him. And when we see deep down in the bottom of our broken and messy hearts, we know that it's time to stop hiding, but we still persist in throwing more and more objects in front of us, avoiding Him at whatever cost. And when we are chasing after whatever our No-God desires may be, we happen to rather unexpectedly run right into Him, not realizing that He used one of those No-God desires that we decided to let into our lives and were aimlessly searching after to lead us back to Himself. And as we are kneeling down looking up at the face of God; we see our brokenness. We are allowed one more glance at the huge mess that we have secluded and locked inside of the deepest chamber of our hearts. For this moment our eyes are opened wide to look at this mess and we find out that this mess is the result of our own self-sufficiency, and our lack of God-dependency. At this time, we know that something must change. We cry out to Him and repent of our disobedience, our lack of faith, our lack of trust, our avoidance of His perfect relationship. We are then almost instantaneously stirred by the power of His love and shaken by His overwhelming presence. "Why have I avoided this for so long? Why have I been so reluctant, so set in my own ways, so right in my own eyes, and why, oh why have I neglected you?...My heart craves You, I was made for you." The three words "I love you" travel down into every part of our whole being and warm the center of our messy hearts; we know that we are loved. And then the moment has passed. We have experienced both our past and our present colliding into one another so that by moving into the rhythm of His grace we might together with Him bring about a most perfect, extravagant future.




-burton 261E

Saturday, June 21, 2008

Just A Thought, Nothing More Than That.

Truth is the only foundation for confidence, humility, and distinguishable open-mindedness.

Christ is the sole basis of this truth; for He is truth.

From Hearing to Mere Trust.

Some people might say that it's impossible to hear from God, especially in the sense of His voice communicating directly into your mind.

Being the logical and rational being that I am, I have always assumed this. Then, something, among many other recent things happened...

On Tuesday night, I heard a distinct voice.

It spoke to me in a gentle and reassuring spirit the words, "I have a plan for your life; it's not what you think, but it's good."

When I heard this statement, my initial reaction to it was one of disbelief. How can God say something to me without using scripture, an experience, or other human beings? How do I know it's not the devil trying to deceive me through the use of my thoughts? How do I know its not just my own thought, such as my flesh?
Then I thought it through a little bit, and came to the conclusion that it has to be God because right now, this statement doesn't make much sense to me. And when something doesn't make complete sense to you, you can trust that it's God because His thoughts are not our thoughts. When Satan puts a thought into my mind, or when a thought is explicitly from me [the flesh], it usually is phrased in such a way that allows me to still have control over my life, and it never has me trusting in its plan because the plan is always attained by my own means.
However, the sentence exclaimed above allows for me to have no control; It only contains trust. When something requires trust, it asks for faith. When faith is needed in something [such as your future], it must be God; for only He requires our belief. And that's how I know this voice was in fact the voice of God.
Thus, God still speaks, and yes, He's immensely personal.



-burton 261E

The Theory of Physical Touch.

A Scientific Approach [And by This I Mean an Experimental Approach] on How to Know You Are Wired for Relationship:

Have you ever tried to give yourself a massage? Have you ever attempted to tickle yourself? What do you find when you try both of these things by yourself?
Absolutely nothing.
No pleasurable sensation whatsoever occurs.
When you massage your own arm, you feel almost nothing and you are no more relaxed than you were when you started applying pressure.
Now, when another human being comes along and gives you a massage, you feel something don’t you? You certainly feel as the massaging progresses, and as their touch sooths your needs, relaxation occurs.
And as you probably have experienced, when another human being comes along and tickles you, much happens. Your body reacts in a rather spontaneous (but hilarious) way to that other person’s tickling action.
Two is always better than one, even in the realm of sensational touch.
There are many other instances where physical touch has wonderful sensations and reactions, but let’s save using those anatomical instances for your marriage with your current or future husband/wife.

We are undoubtedly wired for relationship; this study only demonstrates a few reasons for humans being externally wired for it.


-burton 261E

Sunday, June 15, 2008

God: good

God is the source of goodness. When present, we see what goodness actually looks like; apart from him there is no goodness. When absent, we are overwhelmed with evil and begin to lose sight of what goodness originally looked like. That's why when we are willingly away from Him, we begin with compromise and follow it down the seemingly harmless country road until we are caught speeding on the more dangerous freeway of regret. It is then that we understand that we cannot have goodness apart from the one that is truly good. Realizing this, we take the next exit, make a U-turn, and drive back into the arms of He who never wanted us to go in the first place, only to once again, find ourselves forcefully wiggling out of his arms, hopping into our car, and chasing after His absence until finally, through experiencing what His absence feels like and having this awful taste linger in our mouths for a while, we are craving for His goodness all over again.

-burton 261E

Saturday, June 14, 2008

The Decision of A Broken Soul


Date Written: Sometime around a week and a half ago.
Status: In bed fighting off a terribly long-winded cold with a fever, headache, sore throat with bloody mucus, and all kinds of symptoms and feelings that any number of people would deem as utterly evil; or at least agonizing to say the least.


I realize that my life, the deteriorating physical body that contains the contents of my eternal soul, is but a wisp of thin air, lasting no longer than the blink of an eye facing a swift, bursting wind. A mortal being am I. Now, sickness is quite an interesting circumstance. It comes about so unexpectedly, yet always appears to produce the expected results of which go by the names of Pain and Suffering; both of whom, after working their treacherous jobs for a while, ultimately resolve in death of the body. The actual job description of sickness, however, is not what makes it an interesting circumstance. What makes it such an interesting circumstance is that the products of sickness [Pain and Suffering] enter into our lives to accomplish one goal: To defer us long enough so that at the end of our lifetime we have fully forgotten who the God that has brought us this far is. Unfortunately for us, failing to notice that He is still there, regardless of how hard Pain and Suffering are working in our lives at that moment in time, will have us winding up in a different world full of unimaginable sickness; a world where Pain and Suffering never stop working, and the God who loves is not present. The worst part about such a place as horrifying as this is that we are given the opportunity, the freedom, and the ability not to choose it, and still, there are people who choose it.

“Ignorance is bliss?”
...I think not.

Make life count; it has potential to end rather abruptly.

-burton 261E

Saturday, May 24, 2008

Spilt Milk.

I often find myself wondering whether she still feels the same way I do. Although, if I knew the answer to this question it would make little or no change, so I don't know why I'm left wondering this silly question. A probable explanation is that I miss her and wish for a quicker remedy, one that includes her and dismisses any other possibility. Another explanation is that I miss her and want to know that I'm not alone in this painful form of agony, and that she's right there beside me in trying to press on to the future apart from one another. Maybe it's because in both explanations, she's still with me in some way. Unfortunately this hopeless romantic type of thinking winds up getting nobody anywhere. Don't cry over spilled milk. God's already sorting all of this out. Just wait. Wait for Dad to either clean up the milk that's been poured out on the counter or pick up the mess and replenish the glass with new milk entirely.


Romans 8:28
-burton 261E

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Personal Statement.

I don't have enough faith to be an Atheist and there's just too much evidence of God's existence for me to sit on the fence by being an Agnostic who remains utterly indecisive on such an important matter.

-burton 261E

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Note to Self:

Read, read, read, read, read, read, read...

And when you've finished reading, read more.

-burton 261E

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Proper Desire.

If we were able to rid ourselves of our desire for earthly things, we would then be able to fully attach ourselves to Christ with all of our heart, soul, mind, and strength. If we kill and do away with our earthy desires, we will have the absolute freedom to experience indefinite peace and joy on earth and have the capacity to concentrate a great amount of our thoughts on our innermost being. We might actually begin to truly renew our minds.

If only we weren't so preoccupied with gratifying our own desires and too concerned with a world full of passing things, then we would have more than just a piece of Godliness this side of heaven; perhaps multiple pieces, or even the whole puzzle!

What do you desire most? Will it pass away after you obtain it? Will you want something more after you have it? Will it satisfy?

Strive to have a proper desire for God; be content, and seek nothing else.


-burton 261E

Monday, April 28, 2008

Unreservedly Yours.

"Speak God. I'm your servant, ready to listen."

-burton 261E

Thursday, April 24, 2008

No-emo-tion.

Sometimes I tend to think that we would be better off if we didn't have emotion. If we didn't have to deal with the feelings that motivate us in positive and negative ways. If we didn't have to experience the pain of sorrow or the agony of depression, or go through trials and tribulations and feel what seems like inescapable sadness at times. And without emotion we would be able to think objectively, hopping over emotional attachment and using pure reason and logic to bring us to truth instead of wondering if we are truly being brought to truth by our feelings. Of course with the removal of these negative feelings come the taking away of the positive ones as well, but to me this wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing. We could truly base love off of being a choice rather than off of feelings which are the product of loving someone. Sure we would be emotionless beings, but then we wouldn't have this huge struggle of being whipped around on an emotional roller coaster on a daily basis. It's an interesting thought to say the least.


-burton 261E

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Godly Godlessness.

"But avoid worldly and empty chatter, for it will lead to further ungodliness" -2 Timothy 2:16

Gossiping about the present or boasting about your past does nothing good for the kingdom of God, nor for your own walk with Christ. It leads you down a dark and dangerous path, corrupting the godliness that has been brought upon you by His grace and covering you in a distasteful form of Godlessness. Instead, take every thought captive to the obedience of Christ, submitting every little thing to the One who cares for you; to the One who loves you. Abstain from wickedness.



-burton 261E

Monday, April 21, 2008

Adonai

My Lord.
My King.
My Rock.
My Fortress.
My Sanctuary.
My Redeemer.
My Savior.
My Friend.
My Father.
My Grace.
My Love.
My Life.
My God.

Amen.

-burton 261E

Thursday, April 17, 2008

True Brotherhood.

Imagine in your mind what it would look like for you to be surrounded by a group of men who are absolutely devoted to loving one another and who encourage one another to go above and beyond culture's standard of living and instead pursue the standards that Christ has placed for the role of men as spiritual leaders. Imagine a collective group of men, dissatisfied with the general status quo and striving to be set apart in every aspect of life so as to bring the most glory to God and the least glory to themselves. Picture a group of brothers who genuinely care for each other and will without hesitation lay down their lives for one another. Think of men who lift up the weaker brother, don't meddle with mediocrity, leave behind a life of complacency, stand for integrity, fight for accountability, live for serving opportunity, give themselves to loyalty, stop at nothing until they reach Christ-centrality, trust genuinely, and above all else love honestly. True brotherhood I have found.

Monday, April 14, 2008

The Authentic Meaning of Faith

I have constructed 'faith' into the three following meanings:

1) Faith is certain that God is authentic, true, and correct in every situation or circumstance, no matter what the condition may be.
2) Faith obediently receives whatever God may command, prohibit, or warn against, because it knows that God’s way is authentic, true, and correct.
3) Faith starts with the promise of God, lives in the promise of God, and ends with the promise of God, and without God’s divine intervention no promise can be inherited by the one to whom the graciousness is promised.

For faith in the living God seeks a life that is far beyond the boundaries that are in place to protect those who trust in God and seeks instead after a life centered on personal relationship and a response of wholehearted brokenness as the result of the gracious promise that has been mercifully offered by God through the work of Christ. Mercy is to be defined as not getting what one does deserve and grace is to be defined as getting what one doesn’t deserve, so that through both the mercy and grace of Christ the promises of God might be received by the one who believes as an undeserved and unearned gift, resulting in real, genuine, indestructible, and unmerited faith in the living God.



-burton 261E

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Too Few.

It’s amazing to me how few of leaders there are in both Christian and secular roles among the masses. Very few of the individuals in society are willing to step up to the challenges that face the leaders of this day in age. Why does this world have so few of the people that are required to lead it? In Matthew, Jesus states in a parable “Many are called, but few are chosen.” God appoints those who lead, and those who lead should be equipped with the predetermined desire to serve their Master with total reliance and trust in Him.


-burton 261E

Where am I?

I have been utterly broken and am at the point of seeing how self-obsessed I am, how selfish I am, and how little my life really has to do with the things of God. I have begun to realize how much my life and thoughts revolve around me, and how badly my walk with God is defined by my performance for Him. My relationship with God has been defined by my output for Him, and although doing things for God isn’t a bad thing, my heart behind the matter is. I have been trying to get closer to God by doing things for Him, but the fact of the matter is that nothing I do for God will ever bring me closer to Him. I have been caught in this trap of defining my relationship with God by who I am and what I do for Him, rather than by who God is and what He has done for me. My whole pattern of thinking has shifted off of what God has done and has shifted onto what I am doing. That’s self-obsession. I have been brought to a place of repentance, and am truly experiencing what it means to be in desperate need of the love and forgiveness of Christ.



-burton 261E

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Religious Laundry.

We live in a world full of description. Everything has a label, everything has a price. If something is in our world we have to define it in order to understand it. In order for something to exist it must have substance, and this substance of matter comes from the words used to describe what is seen. Everything must be known, and if something can't be known then it's automatically thrown into the religion basket. Now let's look at science. Science is a method used to understand our world through experimentation; trial and error, correlation, prediction with evidence. In order for a scientific hypothesis to become a reality it must be proven through the scientific method. Therefore, science avoids getting thrown into the religion basket because it's entire process is composed of description, which is understood as a reality to us because description can be seen. So the only reason science cannot be written off into the category of religion is because it is built upon a process that makes it appear as though it has substance. Science is quickly hidden under the blindness of description. If its very structure is masked in visible substance yet the result of a scientific proof is still described as a theory and cannot be known for certain, why is science not tossed into the religion basket? I think it's time for some scientists to wash their dirty laundry.


-burton 261E

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Future.

I think that those who don't know what they're going to do after college haven't found out what God has called them to do yet, and that's exactly why they have such a problem with planning out their career. These students ask the question "How much income will I earn with the least amount of effort put into the job and how can I be successful?" rather than "What can I do to change the world and how can I best use the time, talent, and resources that have been given to me?" God is trying to give them the opportunity to seek His will but they just haven't asked how to serve Him yet. They haven't asked Him what He created them for. Instead, they are looking at how they can best serve themselves. Whether that's by providing for their family or in buying a brand new sports car, they pursue the dream of being "financially secure", which is an unattainable and entrapping dream in itself. The love of money is the root of all evil. That love starts with a 'pursuit' and results in a life tainted with bitter emptiness.



-burton 261E

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Body to Soul.

Never think that the bodily position makes no difference to your prayers; we are human beings and whatever we do with our bodies directly affects the state of our souls. It would be a great lie to say that being tired or awake, hungry or full, or dead or alive have no impact on the state of our souls. These "small" things have too great of an influence. Get down on your knees and pray. You will soon understand in a physical, metal, and spiritual sense that praying on your knees makes all the difference.



Burton 261E

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Hungry? Chew on this.

If we are hungry and we deny ourselves the nutrition needed to sustain our bodies, it forces our souls to cry out and ask God to sustain us. The hunger is our bodily function and the denial of this hunger is our soul function. The denial of this hunger is our soul function because it does exactly the opposite of what our bodily organs are telling us to do, which is to depend on something other than mere matter and to depend on what is unseen. The soul functions to unite us with the living God, and when it cannot bring us into His presence it is because we have our bodily functions functioning on a level too high, overpowering the objective of the soul function. Turn down your bodily function or crank up that soul function!



Burton 261E

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Grand Desire.

One of God’s greatest desires is to fill the world with a vast amount of miniature duplicates of Himself. Miniature figures who model their Creator with their lives, not because they are required to model Him, but because in the depth of their hearts they freely want to conform to His will. Miniature figures who serve God not with the intention of looking full on the outside, but because they are so richly fulfilled from their relationship with Him on the inside. This is one grand desire.



Burton 261E

Sunday, March 23, 2008

My Acronym for Easter.

E ternal
A tonement
S urrounding
T he
E verlasting
R esurrection of Christ


How glorious for the world to have remembered this remarkable day!
Christianity and the faith of all of its followers primarily hinges upon the extravagant atoning work of the resurrected Christ. Without the resurrection we have no hope. And without hope, life is truly meaningless. Thank our God in heaven that He has given us hope, and more than just hope; a deep, unwavering, and intimate relationship with the hands that fabricated the entire cosmos! Amen.


Burton 261E

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Tears of Joy

Since the beginning of last Fall semester the fear of losing my Dad to cancer weighed very heavily on me. When my Dad told me about his condition I was forced on my knees to cry out to God. It's been a rough seven months since that day, but God has ALWAYS been faithful to me and my family. He has carried us through this, and has brought us out of all of this so much stronger. This morning my Mom left me a voicemail. She said that Dad's doctor's report was great! His doctor indicated his blood report was normal and his spleen was not enlarged. He will take the Rituxan next week and should be in remission for years. God is so good! I can't believe that I'm going to have my Dad around for more years to come! God I can't thank you enough! Thank you to all who prayed faithfully for my Dad, thank you! Thank you for this wonderful moment of bathing in these tears of joy.

PSALM 66:16-20
All believers, come here and listen,
let me tell you what God did for me.
I called out to him with my mouth,
my tongue shaped the sounds of music.
If I had been cozy with evil.
the Lord would never have listened.
But he most surely did listen,
he came on the double when he heard my prayer.
Blessed be God; he didn't turn a deaf ear,
he stayed with me, loyal in his love.


Amen.


-burton 261E

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Good. Bad. Both?

What makes up good theology? What makes up bad theology? How are we to know if theology is good or bad when one individual claims that God has led them through revelation to believing something and another person claims that God has led them through revelation to believing the exact opposite of the theology of the first person? In logic, it is impossible for both sides to be right and one of the two must be wrong. But what if by chance, both sides are wrong? It may be more profitable then to place higher emphasis on the reading of the holy scriptures above the theology of the next person to see what God has to reveal in your own understanding of theology.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Presence

It's encouraging to hear from God, to know that He is with you always, to know that He is speaking to you, to know that He is confident in you, to know that He will never depart from you, to know that He loves you.

I was reading in Joshua today and I want to put up something that absolutely stuck out to me. No real reason for this post other than that. Enjoy..

Joshua 1:5-9 (NASB)
5 "No man will {be able to} stand before you all the days of your life. Just as I have been with Moses, I will be with you; I will not fail you or forsake you.
6 "Be strong and courageous, for you shall give this people possession of the land which I swore to their fathers to give them.
7 "Only be strong and very courageous; be careful to do according to all the law which Moses My servant commanded you; do not turn from it to the right or to the left, so that you may have success wherever you go.
8 "This book of the law shall not depart from your mouth, but you shall meditate on it day and night, so that you may be careful to do according to all that is written in it; for then you will make your way prosperous, and then you will have success.
9 "Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous! Do not tremble or be dismayed, for the LORD your God is with you wherever you go."


Burton 261E

Sunday, March 9, 2008

Must God exist?

In logic:

1. The universe exists.
2. The universe cannot be infinitely old; because if it were infinitely old, it would have entered into a state of entropy a long time ago.
A. What is entropy? Entropy is the second Law of thermodynamics stating that all things are moving toward chaos and degradation. In other words, the universe is breaking down over a period of time and the energy in the universe is declining.
3. The universe is not in a state of entropy, it is in a state of constant expansion; therefore, it is not infinitely old.
4. Since the universe is not infinitely old, it had a beginning; it had to start somewhere.
5. The universe could not have created itself.
6. Something before the universe and greater than the universe had to bring the universe into existence, because without that something the universe would have no way of existing.
7. That something is and must be God.


Burton 261E

Thursday, March 6, 2008

The Reality of God.

God is real, and I truly believe that with all of my heart, soul, mind, and strength. However, when I say a statement as bold as this with such great confidence, I do not in any way just believe that God exists ever so blindly. My faith in God is legitimate, it is reasonable and immensely thought out. It requires more reason and less faith to actually believe in God than it does to believe that there is no God and that every living and non-living thing happened by accident, caused from nothing or was caused by an explosion of nothingness (Since when has any 'ka-boom!' ever created something in the history of the universe as we know it?). If you happen to think that there is no God, I would love to talk with you about why I believe in God, and hope that we can have both a well-educated and open discussion on the why's and the why not's of the existence of God. As for anyone else, I'm open to talk to you as well. I love God, and I would like to share my knowledge of Him with you, in the hope that you might see His glory the way that I see it, and experience His love in a similar way that I am experiencing it.


Burton 261E

Why I think you should use your brain.

-Because you have one.
-Because you have a 'working' one.
-Because other brains can and will learn from your brain.
-If you stop using your brain, your neurological pathways will eventually cut themselves off and the connections will be lost which results in you being unable to carry on with specific functions of your brain.
-If you learn something now, you can use it later. The more you know now, the more you will be able to accomplish later. Don't you want to accomplish something BIG?
-"Use it or lose it!" as Einstein once said. If you don't use your brain, you wont have a brain, so get on it! It's like playing a musical instrument or learning a sport. The more you practice, the better you get. The less time you spend practicing, the worse off you are. Use your brain!

I don't know why I am writing about this in my blog, but I think it's something important to keep in mind (no pun intended).


Burton 261E

Answer.

I've cried out, and heard nothing. I've cried out, and felt nothing. But I'll keep holding on because I know You're still there and I'm never going to be alone, no matter what I "feel". It's unexplainable and incomprehensible, but I trust You.

This experience shows me that much more that Love is not just a feeling, nor can it or should it be. If I were to base my relationship with God off of me 'feeling' His presence, our relationship would be totally and completely based off of that "feeling" that I am getting from God, and if God decides to cut off that feeling then hypothetically I would stop "loving" Him. Praise God that this is not how love works! Love is not selfish! It is NOT a feeling!
Love is a choice! It is a decision that every person must make. It should not be based off of a feeling because feelings are fleeting and constantly changing. A firm decision is meant to last. True love lasts. True love is a choice.


"I once was blind, but now I see."

-Burton 261E

Monday, March 3, 2008

not N-Sync

It's by far the worst feeling in the world to feel out of sync with God. To feel separated from Him in the midst of spending time with Him. Today has been one of those days. I just can't find that rhythm. I've tried every beat that I know, and still nothing sounds right. And at last, I am on my knees crying out in desperate need for His presence, waiting for the slightest bit of understanding from God as to why I have been feeling this way for such a long time. I'm in need... please help me. Meet me where I'm at. I just can't seem to make it any closer to You.


Burton 261E

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Psalm 101:3-4 (NASB)
"I will set no worthless thing before my eyes;
I hate the work of those who fall away;
It shall not fasten its grip on me.
A perverse heart shall depart from me;
I will know no evil."

Burton 261E

Sunday, February 10, 2008

"Christianity is the only major religion to have as its central event the humiliation of its God."
-Bruce L. Shelley

Its God in human form was punished by Roman capital punishment specifically for individuals considered to be the very worst criminals. He was most brutally scourged and crucified on the cross for all humanity.

Burton 261E

Feeling Empty? The Accuser: Sin

Sin is a beautiful deceiver. It tells you that you can have exactly what you want if you follow it. It makes promises to you that seem like such blessings; but when you choose to follow after sin it leaves you with a feeling of emptiness deeper than any other. As revelation of this condition is made known, you find yourself already trapped; unable to unravel the rope that's been choking your neck so tight. The knot is now tied. Your life is not your own.






Burton 261E

Saturday, February 9, 2008

The Devil and Me

If the devil throws at me all kinds of things to tempt me and wont stop at anything to distract me, God must have a really great plan in store for my life.

Think about it. The devil wouldn't be so diligent about distracting us if God had some boring plan for our lives.

In fact, if this were the case, here is what life would look like: If God's plan were boring, the devil would simply allow us to seek after God until we see that God is completely overrated. We would see that God is ten times worse than a retirement home and eventually tell God to screw off. Satan could relax and play around in Hell while all of mankind would join him after evaluating God's brilliantly boring plan.

As you probably know, this is not the life that we live. No, no, no, in fact,
Satan probably carries more stress on him than a single man going through a midlife crisis who just got fired from a job that he's had for over 30 years along with the responsibility of providing for 8 kids (2 in college, 3 in high school, 2 in jr. high, and 1 in kindergarten), 9 cats, 2 dogs, 4 horses, 3 pigs, 2 donkeys and a penguin. He also just found out that he's been diagnosed with cancer and has AIDS.
That's a lot of stress, and Satan is definitely not relaxing in Hell right now. He is working hard to get you to say no to God's incredible plan for your life. Don't fall into the devils trap. Say yes to God; it's without a doubt worth it.

Burton 261E