Quote for the Day

The sexual encounters between a husband and wife find their deeper meaning not in the personal pleasure of the moment but in the way those encounters are intended to strengthen and reinforce the unique relationship that exists between the two partners, one shaped by a shared past and present and open to a shared future. Carl Trueman

Quote for the Day

After a few days off because of the weather, it was good to get out on the bike again. We had 42 mm of rain in 24 hours, equivalent to our average rainfall for the entire month. There is a lot of water on the roads, so I didn’t go as far as I intended.

The photo is a wattle tree, a generic term for a range of Australian acacia trees and bushes that all look very unremarkable until spring when they become covered in bright yellow flowers.

Reflection on Judges 17:1-17

Scripture

“Stay here with me,” Micah said,”and you can be a father and a priest to me.”

Observation

A man named Micah confesses to his mother that he stole 1000 pieces of silver from her. The mother then dedicates this silver to the Lord, and take some of it to a silversmith to create an image and an idol. These are placed in Micah’s house. Micah creates a shrine for the idol and installs one of his sons as his personal priest.

A young Levite from Bethlehem comes to the area, looking for a place to live. Micah appoints him as his own father and priest. The Levi agrees to this.

Application

It is good to have a spiritual father, someone who loves us and has authority over us. Every christian should be submitted to a father in the Spirit.

Micah first appoints his son to be his priest, and then the young Levite. From this short chapter, it seems that Micah has very little teaching or any sense of real commitment to the Lord.

Micah’s mother had an an idol made for Micah, who constructed a shrine for it. They blessed and cursed in the Name of the Lord and wanted priests of the Lord to minister on their behalf.

Most Christians would probably identify that there is so much confusion in this story. The characters clearly do not have a relationship with God.

To avoid this sort of confusion, we need to pray constantly, read God’s word, and walk in fellowship with other believers.

Prayer

Holy Spirit, you speak to us in many ways, and you lead us in the right path. Please give me a deeper knowledge of you. Amen

Reflection on Judges 16:23-31

Scripture

So he killed more people when he died than he had during his entire lifetime.

Observation

The Philistines hold a great festival, offering sacrifices to their god Dagon. They celebrate the great victory that Dagon had given them over Samson.

They bring out Samson to amuse them. Samson asks the servant who brought him out to place his hands on the pillars supporting the roof. Samson prays to the Lord to restore his strength one last time. Then he pushes against the pillars, and the roof of the temple comes crashing down.

Samson killed more people in his death than he had in his entire lifetime. His brothers and relatives come and bury him with his father.

Application

Samson was raised up by the Lord to rescue Israel from the Philistines. His lust for foreign women and his self-centeredness really made him far less effective than he otherwise might have been.

Samson with a man of great physical strength, but he lacked integrity, and this was his undoing.

In the end, he fulfilled God’s purposes for him, but in a tragic way. The epitaph on his life was that he killed more people in his death then he had in his entire lifetime.

I think of the summary of other people’s lives in the Old Testament that they died “full of years.” These people lived for God. They were not perfect, and some sinned quite spectacularly. Yet they remained faithful to the Lord.

In many ways, Samson’s life was wasted, or at least misdirected. It ended in unnecessary tragedy.

Prayer

Lord God, may my life fulfil all that you have for me. Please keep me on the right track with you. Amen

The Downside of Net Zero In 100% Green Canberra

From Jo Nova:

In “100%” Renewable Canberra people are queuing to hang out in warm libraries, and the air is more polluted

Kill trees, pollute the air, punish the poor and protect coal underground

Just another day in Green heaven.

Canberra Wood Smoke

Wood smoke over Canberra   |   Photo from Clean Air Canberra

The Australian capital city Canberra in midwinter is often minus 1 to 5 degrees C in the morning. Australian homes can get very cold and with heating bills rocketing, things are defacto becoming like life in Berlin, which is in a pre-War energy crisis. No one labeled Canberra public halls as “warm spaces” and they definitely aren’t open at night (it’s the public service!), but crowds are arriving at libraries just to escape the cold.

The ACT Government are a Labor-Green alliance, and are proudly, exuberantly “100% Renewable”, but won’t dare cut the cord to the coal plants that keep the lights on, making the claims of being 100% renewable a form of 100% false advertising. Even the ABC admits that the ACT itself only generates 5% of its own power, and 80% of the energy coming to the ACT through the wires is from fossil fuels. They pay off some distant wind farms to balance the theoretical gigawatt-hour tallies, and sponge off the states around for cheaper backup and stability that the coal plants provide.

But as electricity prices rises 14% of Canberran’s are heating their homes with wood. This has predictably increased actual air pollution. So now there is a movement to ban wood fires.

If only there was a 300 year supply of cheap fuel to burn at centralized clean power stations…

Like all Green policies putting fashion before facts, they get the opposite of what they aim for.

FLAT WHITE

Canberra: where electricity is a luxury the poor can’t afford

Tina Faulk, The Spectator

Public libraries in the National Capital are now considered, by staff and patrons alike, to be ‘community centres’ where people come to read, use the computers, charge their phones, and use the toilets. It’s where clients of the NDIS, escorted by carers, are brought and propped up in their wheelchairs in front of computers or seated in deep armchairs by the magazine stands. Some, abandoned by their carers, shout incoherently for attention. Newly arrived migrants – Somalis, Iraqis, Syrians – jostle for attention of the library staff, asking for translation assistance with various forms and declarations.

Our libraries, warm and welcoming, have a crowd at their doors before the 10 am opening.

Groups of women discuss where they go to get warm:

One [woman] who recently ‘VR-ed’ (Voluntary Retired) still goes back to her old workplace, usually late morning, when the security guard who remembers her gives a nod and a smile as she settles into one of the comfortable settees in the reception area.

How sad is that — going back to her old workplace foyer just to stay warm?

Wood heaters in the firing line as temps drop and pollution rises

Lottie Twyford, Riotact

A recent report showed woodfire heater smoke is the largest source of winter air pollution in Canberra. Currently, around 14 per cent of people in the ACT use a woodfire heater as their main source of heating.

Analysis of air quality shows the impacts of smoke are worse down south because the shape of the valley and temperature inversions hold pollutants closer to the ground. In 2020, there were 37 days in Tuggeranong when pollution levels were above acceptable levels; of those, 13 can be attributed to woodfire heater emissions, Mr Davis told the ACT Legislative Assembly.

The local newspaper is running stories about the “right temperature” to heat homes to. They suggest 18°C (colder than the public buildings in Germany which are now set down to 20°C). A few years ago I stayed with a friend in Canberra and the room was 11°C (and it was only May!).

Read the full article here