Archive for October, 2008

American Genesis Revised & Online

I neglected it for the last, oh, ten years.

One of the first book projects I worked on was in 1993. It was a Bible study text that did something completely unique. It examined various articles from 24 state constitutions and compared them with biblical principles of government. The book was called, American Genesis. The comparisons were made, not against modern constitutions, but the state constitutions written by the original founders more than 200 years ago.

For a few years I kept up a small website devoted to the book. It generated good traffic and a lot of people found the textbook useful with their homeschoolers—which I found very gratifying.

Since then thousands have downloaded the eBook of American Genesis (I always maintained a download location even after I dismantled the original site).

Since my recovery has been going well recently, I decided that the book needed a good going over. After a significant textual revision and a new layout design I new I needed to create a spiffy website too. So, just moments ago, AmericanGenesis.com went live.

The site not only profiles the book, but also contains the entire text of the book and study notes online for anyone to read, free. Though the site is now active, there is still a little minor housekeeping in the works. Pop by for a visit, but pardon my dust.

I hope you will pay a visit to AmericanGenesis.com—especially if you have kids in school or you might be looking for a truly challenging and unique Bible study that is more than the standard fare.

Before I go I should be honest and say I’m just a wee bit full of myself right now. I managed to crank out this websie in 15 consecutive hours from start to finish.

Vote Online at the End of this Post

The people you are about to read about were real leaders in history. Pay close attention. You will be asked to vote for one of them.

During his term the Incumbent has worked to accomplish three things: Strengthen the national defense, bring the economy under control, and promote faith in God. He is a family man with one wife. Most of his sons have served in the military. In fact, most died in defense of their country during a terrible war. The Incumbent reformed the tax code that included a tax raise. While this didn’t win him any friends on the economic front, he was known for his personal frugality, not taking great advantage of the system for his own financial benefit. On the religion and values front, the Incumbent worked to unify his nation around faith in God and even passed legislation against occult practices in his country.

The Challenger is a long-time military man. He’s been decorated for his service to the country and was elevated, for a time, as an adviser to the Incumbent. However, the two had a falling out and the Challenger is now up for election. The Challenger, though being a man honored by his country, is known widely for a variety of personal problems. He has trouble with the opposite sex, including a severed relationship with his first wife. His family members are not known for their character. Their attitudes of elitism and even rumors of an incestuous relationship among his children have marked the Challenger’s family. During multiple wars the Challenger was known for his extreme cruelty to his enemies, and questionable practices in combat. At one point in his military career his own men were on the verge of mutiny. To make matters worse, the challenger was charged by the government with treason prior to the election, but never brought to trial. For the last year and a half prior to the election he hasn’t even lived in the country.

It’s time to pull that lever. Will you vote for the Incumbent or the Challenger? Which man, at a cursory reading, seems to represent your values, your view on leadership?

Ready? Vote now.

If you voted for the Incumbent, congratulations. You’ve just award Saul, King of Israel, a second term in office, sending David, the man after God’s own heart, back to Philistine territory.

My trickery aside, there’s a point to this little exercise. Sometimes the man that God wants is not the man that we want. God looks at the heart. In David’s case his heart was given over to Christ. He was not mature or ready when God chose him. But God made him ready and matured him over many years of sacrifice. His life and family may have been a mess, but he had something that Saul never had—a repentant heart. David’s life often reads like a journal going from one sin and repentant episode to another. In fact, it was the repentant episodes that made David a man after God’s heart.

It was repentance that Saul lacked.

While we MUST seek someone who represents our values, we should not assume that someone who does not represent them will always oppose them, or be the same person years from now that they are today. Even Manasseh was given back his kingdom. And he reigned longer than any king of Israel or Judah. Repentance toward God is a powerful thing. Nor should we assume that a person who seems to represent our values now will be faithful to represent them once he assumes power.

Don’t try to match my points above to the lives of our two presidential candidates. Doing so would go far beyond my intent for this article. This is not a commentary about Obama or McCain. This a commentary about us. Before we concern ourselves about what we think may be “God’s preference,” why not concern ourselves with whether or not our spiritual, social, and political views are viewed through God’s eyes? In the process we may discover something we never expected: the God who transcends politics.

If there is group of people that might be described as “seekers,” then Buddhists must be high on the list. Buddhism, as a system, requires its adherent to be devoted to exploring a set of principles that will earn him or her an enlightened state that they hope will lead to the end of suffering—a noble and worthwhile goal. Those who explore the Buddhist path are taught concepts such as: The Middle Way, Samsara, The Four Noble Truths, and others.

Yet on a practical, day-to-day level, many Buddhists inwardly struggle. They feel spiritually empty, as if the practices they engage in provide some temporary satisfaction or guidance, but when over, the emptiness or futility remains. While they pursue the path they are taught the Buddha has lain out, they secretly wonder about the reality of the Buddha’s teachings. Being taught that they will experience many rebirths until finally reaching their objective, they cannot help but wonder, “Will this truly end my suffering? How can I know that what I am doing really works?

For the next few weeks I want to explore together some key ideas in Buddhism. I attempt to compare Buddhist principles to the teachings of the Bible and Jesus Christ in hopes of helping the Buddhist seeker, discover a different kind of enlightenment—one that can be fully experienced and realized in this life, right now, without the need for what may seem like a tumultuous cycle of rebirth.

For the next few weeks we will very consider the Buddhist and Christian teachings on:

  • The World Around Us
  • The Seen and the Unseen
  • The Middle Way and The High Way, and
  • Experiencing Truth

Then I will present a short presentation called: Four Higher Truths, which will contrast the Buddha’s Four Noble Truths with a meaningful presentation of the Gospel. So let’s begin with our first installment.

The World Around Us

What is the nature of reality? How can we tell that what we experience is primarily an experience that comes from our own perceptions or is a part of true existence? If our reality is defined by our perceptions, how can we know when our perceptions give us accurate information about the world around us or even our own existence? If our perceptions of reality are problematic, then how do we address the even more important issues involving eternity?

To its credit, Buddhism tries to address the questions of reality and perception. Many Buddhists have found meaning and solace in Buddhist teachings (or debate) about the nature of the world around us. At first a person who is unfamiliar with Buddhist concepts may struggle. In fact, many Buddhists themselves struggle with these ideas. Whole schools of competing Buddhist thought have arisen to address the nature of reality.

For our purposes together, let us address the core of Buddhist ideas about the world around us:

  • The evidence of reality presented to us by our senses is faulty. Human perception of the world is mistaken,(1)
  • “Everything is part of an ultimate, impersonal ground of existence which is neither good nor evil,”(2)
  • Good, evil, truth, and falsehood are mistaken perceptions (or conventions), which have no absolute meaning.

These ideas about reality are foundational to Buddhism’s attempt to address humanity’s ultimate problems. Let’s address these issues together and also discover how Jesus Christ addressed these issues in His teaching. First, let’s apply some common sense—and science—to the Buddhist teachings about reality and perception.

Sense & Senses

As I type these words I see them on my computer screen. By doing this I am making the assumption that you who are reading it are also seeing the same words that I typed. In fact I’m also assuming you have access to a computer, the Internet, can input a website address, find this page, and read this article. You are doing the same thing that thousands of people have done before you, and will after you. All of us share a common set of perceptions that allows us to have a certain degree of unity in our experience of writing and reading—or any other experience. Let’s call this our unity of perception.

Sight in an important part of our perceptive abilities. What we see can be pleasurable or frightening. It can foster longing or fear. What we see is also an important part of our learning process and contributes heavily to the assumptions we make together. And—together—is the point I’d like to make. If you sit in a group with a printed version and all read together from the page, you will all read the same thing. Your perception about what words are written, are the same. It is this unity of perception that encourages us that what we are reading really exists, and that by implication, it has a writer who also exists. The same may be said of the world. We have a unity of perception about the world around us. We do not all experience different realities generated by our minds like hallucinations—”self generated sensory experiences.”(3) Nor are our perceptions, illusions. “Cognitive illusions come about because the brain is full of prejudices: habits of thought, knee-jerk emotional reactions and automatic orders of perception.(4)

“Ah, but wait,” you might say. “Isn’t that part of what Buddhism refers to, cognitive prejudices, etc.?” In some ways, yes. But the idea that our perceptions create an illusion of what the nature of the world is like, must disregard the unity of perception that we all share. This leaves us with one of two choices: Humanity’s unity of perception is itself, illusionary, or our unity of perception provides evidence that our experiences and the world around us are real. Which is the case?

Saying that our perception of the shared unity of perception is illusionary is the same as saying our illusion is illusionary—i.e. our we do not experience illusion. It is self-defeating and leaves us only with our second option. Our perceptions are real. In fact, our perceptions are not only real, but our brains naturally anticipate the reality around us allowing us to experience it according to reality. Our brains know that what our senses deliver to it is real. “An act of perception is a lot more than capturing an act of incoming stimulus. It requires a form of expectation, of knowing what is about to confront us, and preparing for it. Without expectations, or constructs through which we perceive our world, our surroundings would be…confusion. Each experience would truly be a new one, rapidly overwhelming us.”(5) Where do those “constructs” come from? From the previous real-world experiences we have had!

This does not mean that we do not sometimes have faulty perceptions about the world around us, or our nature. In fact, the very thrust of the argument presented here is that Buddhism is a perceptive filter that presents an illusion about the nature of existence.

The Nature of Existence

If our perceptions about the world around us are faulty, and there is another truth underneath what we perceive, then, our perceptions about how to live in the world are also colored by our misperceptions. Could this be true? Let’s turn again to our unity of perception.

Everyone has some kind of concept of right and wrong, good and evil. We all share common perceptions, that there are certain things that are good, and certain things that are evil. Personal preference and culture permit varying degrees in our agreement over what is right and wrong. But the fact stands that there still remains the concept of good and evil, right and wrong.

According to Buddhist thought the issue of what is right and wrong is nothing more than a convention without absolute authority or substance. This teaching, in point of fact, leaves the adherent with the idea that what is good and evil cannot be ultimately defined since good and evil are illisionary. Let’s present it this way:

Is a belief in absolute good and evil, a right belief or a wrong belief?

If you are under the Buddhist way of thinking that last sentence is a trap in both its construct and its implication. For the Buddhist the question is unanswerable without causing a new set of philosophical problems. If you declare it a “wrong belief,” you are left with a moral dilemma. Under Buddhism, wrong beliefs or perceptions lead to suffering. If this wrong belief leads to suffering, then is not the belief itself evil (morally wrong and not just factually wrong)? Could it not be argued that Siddhartha perceptually recognized the existence of evil when he saw the sick man, poor man, beggar, and the corpse? He lamented the suffering of humanity because he recognized the evil of what he saw.

These arguments would seem to indicate the existence of evil, which would be a right belief, meaning that there is something more significantly wrong with humanity than perceptions, ignorance, and suffering.(6)

There is More Wrong with Us Than Our Ignorance

Buddhism has gotten something right about our existence. We do have a problem with perception. But according to Jesus Christ, our problem is not ignorance about the human condition. Our problem is denial.
Earlier I wrote about our “cognitive prejudices” that color our perceptions of the world around us, and our own nature. The earlier quote would seem to support the ideas of Buddhism, that our perceptions are a problem. If in fact we interpret everything around us through perceptual filters like greed, envy, jealousy, selfishness and so on, then we should ask the question: Where do these come from?

Jesus taught that such things come from within the human heart.

“The good man brings out of his good treasure what is good; and the evil man brings out of his evil treasure what is evil.”(7)

But who is an evil man? What constitutes a person who is evil?

During a conversation with a devoutly religious man, Jesus made a surprising statement. While asking about how to attain eternal life, a man called out to Jesus, calling him, “Good teacher.” Jesus responded:

“‘No one is good except God alone. You know the commandments, do not commit adultery, do not murder, do not steal, do not bear false witness, honor your father and mother.’
‘And he said, “All these things I have kept from my youth.”
‘When Jesus heard this, He said to him, “One thing you still lack; sell all that you possess and distribute it to the poor, and you shall have treasure in heaven; and come, follow Me.’”(8)

Jesus had two criteria for evil. First, a person who is evil is a person who obeys evil. He or she is a person who engages in morally wrong thoughts, feelings, and actions. The commandments Jesus referred to were Laws given to Israel by God. Engaging in these behaviors, like all behaviors, starts from the heart or mind, and ends with the actual doing of the evil. A person who obeys evil is evil.

Second, Jesus provided a criteria for evil that was highly personal and surprising to the man who heard it.

“…and come, follow Me.”

Jesus regarded the person who willfully rejected him as evil. Why would He do this? Why did Jesus’ criteria for right and wrong have to be so relational?

Unlike Buddhism, which presents everything as an “impersonal ground of existence, which is neither good nor evil,” Jesus Christ presented himself as the ultimate standard of personal existence that is, inherently, good. He recognized that in order for man to deal with suffering, he had to deal with his relationships. Notice the commandments that Jesus mentioned. All are committed in relationship with, or to, another person. In fact, all evil is committed within the context of relationship. The same is true about good. There can be no good and no evil without relationship.

Under Buddhism the adherent attempts to either remove himself from the world through monasticism, or minimize his attachments. In other words, the devout Buddhist must minimize relationships. Yet doing so will not mitigate evil, because love is only expressed in relationships and only love can conqueror evil. Suffering is therefore, not the real problem for Buddhism, denial is.

Because Buddhism is a philosophy of the impersonal, it is only natural that it would deny concepts of good and evil beyond their use as mere conventions. Yet Jesus Christ defined good and evil only in terms of relationship—relationship to others and relationship to Himself. In Buddhism one does not have a relationship with the reality around him since his reality is considered to be an illusion of mistaken perceptions. In comparison, the Bible teaches us that we have not only a relationship with the world around us, but also the people in it, and the God who created it.

Our perceptions are real, and given to us by God so that we might “seek him with all our heart.”(9) If God has enabled us to seek Him, then surely He has given us the perceptive ability to recognize His reality.


  1. Dalai Lama XIV, The Dalai Lama at Harvard, page 36.
  2. M. Tsering, Jesus in a New Age, Dalai Lama World, page 153.
  3. Rita Carter & Professor Christoper Frith, Mapping the Mind, page 127.
  4. Ibid, page 131.
  5. John J. Ratey, M.D., A User’s Guide to the Brain: Perception, Attention, and the Four Theaters of the Brain, page 56.
  6. What if you argue that the belief itself is not right or wrong? Doing so would imply the nonexistence of the belief, and perhaps even the question. For an argument against such a point, read two paragraphs above. If in doubt, read it with a friend using unity of perception.
  7. Matthew 12:35.
  8. Luke 18:19-22.
  9. Psalm 119:2.

Mongolia-Web Hacked

Mongolia-Web.com, one of the leading English sites about news in Mongolia, fell victim to Islamic hackers today.

Great Times

It can be very theraputic looking at old photos. Also old videos.

This is from our 2006 trip to Terelj with the Eagle TV staff for the annual retreat. One of the news editors put this together for us. It’s got a few hilarious moments: Our girls doing sumo, Whitney “taking down” my assistant. The last half of the video contains some great countryside footage by the video guy.

I was about 40-45 pounds heavier than I am now.

Enjoy.

Thanks Di, Thanks Eagle!

A big thank you to the staff at Eagle TV, and my wonderful bride, who all contributed to buy me a great birthday present this year. A fisheye lens for my Nikon. I could not be happier.

I have the best wife, and best staff. In. The. World.

Here’s one of the first images I shot with my new lens today. It’s posted on my Flickr page.

Nice to Meet you! Shake.

Tomorrow Diane and I are going to take a day and visit the Biosphere-2 and shoot some more pictures there.

Why NOT Obama

Hot Air posted a comprehensive piece filled with video evidences on why Barak Obama should NOT be president. It’s a great read (though long) and the evidences are compelling.

It doesn’t matter which side of the aisle you’re on, in this election. Take the time to go through this page. If you’re an evangelical, read this and watch the videos, and you are still for Obama…then maybe we need to have a little talk.

Click below. I command you.

The comprehensive argument against Barack Obama.

45, Going on 37

I turned 45 today.

I’m not one for birthdays. They haven’t really mattered to me for a long time. I guess the older in Christ I become (25 years last week), the more I realize that I have an eternity of days ahead of me. So why not enjoy growing older? In fact, I like getting older, I just don’t like what getting older sometimes does to me, or reveals in me, on this side of Heaven.

I expected to be celebrating this birthday back home in Mongolia. Instead, I’m still in Tucson, not scheduled to return until December 3rd—as long as my recovery goes well.

Recovery.

I’m in Tucson being treated for bipolar disorder. It is, apparently, something I’ve had for a long time, but the recent crash I experienced from my previous decades of constant mania (not to be confused with maniac) was what forced me to be diagnosed. Graciously, my Board in counsel with my pastor forced me to take some chill time in Tucson. So I’ve been meeting weekly with a doctor, getting some counseling, and riding an emotional roller coaster like none I’ve ever experienced before in my life.

So I’m 45 today and wondering how soon I can expect to get back to normal and, frankly, get home. I really want to go home. But I can’t. There’s that little thing of “getting balanced,” and meds, and getting refocused.

One place I’m refocusing is the scripture. Specifically, I’m spending my time in Psalm 37. Reading it. Absorbing it. Praying through its verses. Everything there just screams at me as so relevant, so helpful, so applicable to where I’ve been the last few years, and where I’m at, emotionally, right now.

If there’s one book in the scriptures that I confess I’ve never had much use for, it’s the Pslams. I’m not a poetry and prose guy—English or Hebrew. I like narrative, epistle, apologetic, exposition. That “Pslam stuff,” never seemed all that relevant to me.

Until now.

Then I realize, and wonder, how much more is there in the treasure of God’s word that I’ve been missing and didn’t realize it simply because of my preference for one kind of writing over another?

I think I’m about to find out. I guess that what part of “getting balanced” means.

I was doing a search on WebArchive for some material when I clicked on a link and bam, up popped this little treasure from the late 1990s.

CRiSP (Christian Radio Start Panel)

CRiSP (Christian Radio Start Panel)

All I can say is, “Wow.” You see, I created this little program shortly after I left my job with KLYT radio in Albuquerque. This was the first Internet radio tuner dedicated specifically to Christian radio. It even had it’s own little web browser window (back in the day when most of use were running 800×600 screens.

If I remember correctly CNET gave me a 3-1/2 star review on the program. But I lost half a star because of some little word reference in the install routine (“publication” instead of “program”) which they took me to task on. Still, it was a fairly popular little program and I remember it seemed to eat up some CPUs on my server back then. I really should have found a a company to buy it off me back then. Oh well. Lost opportunties.

I maintained CRiSP as a personal project all during my stay with Campus Crusade in Orlando. But I had to abandon it shortly before moving to Mongolia. There was just no way to keep up the maintenance.

Anyway, when I found this little personal memento on the archive I downloaded it, booted it up on Windows and ya know what? It still runs like a charm! Not bad for a 10 year old piece of software.

There’s no audio of course. The stream references are nearly 10 years old and most were dependent upon Real Audio. Does anyone even use that anymore? Still, it was kind of a cool little personal stroke. It makes me think about recreating it all over again.

Like I have the time.

One Down ;-)

There’s a whole of joy going round the Terry family right now. This week, Ben Griffin, formerly a PK from Mongolia, proposed to my second daughter, Rochele in a surprise, fly across the country, will you marry me moment.

Rochele was totally surprised.

We are so happy about this event, it’s beyond words.

Rochele is living in Tacoma, Washington and working with an event planning company. Ben is a student at Taylor University.

What is also cool is that Ben’s parents are workers in Mongolia just as we are. So it looks like our families will be joining hearts and hands on both sides of the globe for many years to come.

But I’d be a liar if I didn’t tell you how much I miss my gal.

Congratulations Ben and Rochele. Now, just one word of advice from the father of the bride…

Plan cheap.
;-)