Sunday, December 22, 2019

Jana Riess: Feel Good About Tithing, and Here's Why

Jana Riess: Feel Good About Tithing, and Here's Why

I know you have a lot of concerns about how the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints practices its policies and administers its funds and duties, but let me inform you about a few things that might help you feel reassured that the money is in good Christian hands. And that your dollars and donations and good intentions through your charitable efforts are doing great things, both for you and God. And your fellow man, and woman and child.

Every local bishop and by default Relief Society President has access to fast offering funds to help most anyone that they meet to receive immediate food and other aid. This happens all the time.

This happens in your ward, your stake, your region and area, your country. This happens in well over a hundred nations around the earth and is growing every day, substantially.

Members of your faith do not, will not go hungry. Others receive of Latter-day Saint sustenance as well. Apart from government to government and other humanitarian aid groups roving the planet, which are arbitrary and often fleeting in their abilities, our Church is a tremendous resource across the globe.

This is a blessing, real and tangible. You, we, I, the community of faithful and willing make this happen, through appointed officers of the Church. Thanks for fasting and sharing those funds.

This is the beginning, or end, of the work of the Lord. The here and now.

But there's more!

Tithing goes to a multitude of the parts of the building of the  Kingdom of God, what believing members of the Church of Jesus Christ understand as chapels for refuge and worship and consecration and wholesome activities, temples for the holiest of holy ceremonies and the actions of covenants to redeem and link us to our kindred dead. The whole human race. Do tithing funds go into ancestral libraries? Do these have a benefit for peoples across the earth?

Is this not a worthy endeavor to invest in, to donate to?

If you do not believe in these acts through holy temples, redeeming billions upon billions of our ancestors, then maybe tithing does seem a bit more onerous.

Weddings, sealings, baptisms for the dead... Donations and charitable contributions for those who cannot afford these buildings, in lands where the economy of scale is not as fortuitous as in the United States or first world economies...

Temples are dotting the earth in places like Sierra Leone, Papua New Guinea, Cambodia, where people rarely drink clean water or have nice silver ware or toilet paper.

Do you believe the blessings offered from the holy temple can elevate these peoples, or should it all be converted to goods for their material wealth in the immediate temporal day?

Could one beget the other?

Food for thought...

But wait! There's more!

Latter-Day Saint charities directly donates to those who are hungry or suffering people around the world. The more members, the more offerings, the more relief.

Would you, Jana, Dr. Riess, feel better to know that your personal check went to a village of people, probably members of our faith, to a missionary that they are supporting, in Peru or Cambodia or Mozambique? A young man or lady who is able to serve as a full time representative of the faith?

Well, without you knowing it specifically, you are.

The chapel that they use? From your check. In many countries the church you helped build with those funds is the best building in town. Again, in place where their membership does not go hungry.

Too good to be true?

It isn't.

But it is too private to know that that is precisely what your tithing settlements are helping in.

In the United States, in Canada, Mexico, and much far beyond.

You do not have to believe me or feel good about it.

But you should.

And finally, you do receive U.S. tax breaks for much of the charitable donations that you proffer yearly, individually up to about 14,000 USD and as a married couple 24 thousand or so. We have a great government that allows us these privileges and freedoms.

If you are collectively making as a family 240,000 US dollars per year, then please do not be penurious with your mites. Please soak in the blessings of giving to a cause and many sub-causes so much bigger than ourselves.

I thank you, the Lord thanks you, your bishop thanks you, and thousands upon thousands around the world receive the direct benefits because of you and the millions of others like you.

I hope that you can feel better about your tithing and other donations! I realize that this message may not have all the facts that you require or desire, and a lot of it is by faith.

Faith, as Paul explained, requires a lot of believing of that which is not directly seen.

But the evidence is everywhere.





Thursday, December 19, 2019

Prayer at the Armory for Soldiers in the Holidays

Prayer at the Armory for Soldiers in the Holidays

Given 8 December 2019 in northern Virginia

Dear Lord,
As U.S. soldiers and citizens of all backgrounds, beliefs, creeds, and denominations, we give thanks for: 

Our country and freedoms and safety 

Our families, loved ones, friends, fellow soldiers 

This time of holidays to freely celebrate our beliefs, traditions, and customs 

Thank thee for:

Soldiers and other military and first responders who sacrifice and have sacrificed all for its country and its citizens

Those who love and support us while serving in our duties 

The bounty of food and health , specifically sustenance that we are about to partake of today, and those that prepared it

Continued safety and health of our unit and associated friends and loved ones

We say these thoughts and prayers in token of our thanks and gratefulness with respect for all beliefs and creeds, and we do so as soldiers in the Virginia National Guard

By virtue of the power or authorities in which we respectively believe,

Amen.

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

Real Life Vampires, Blood Suckers

Real Life Vampires, Blood Suckers

Insurance companies.

Sure, they provide services that we all depend on...

So they are not completely sucking us dry all the time. Because they provide relief and sustenance when we need it; I guess they spend a lot on fraudulent investigations and claims. 

So our public collective lack of integrity, as consumers, forces the insurance companies to spend more, thus charging us customers more. And in that sense are we sucking up our own blood? By blood I mean money.

But, these insurance companies are mostly administrating our monies, paid monthly and yearly, or semi-annually or quarterly, for things that we already own or are paying on.

For the threat of loss or theft, destruction or failing health...

Millions of people making livings, billions of dollars interacting between the customers and those paid by insurance, like doctors and mechanics, and monies additionally paid to those administrating these funds.

Insurance salespeople.

I took my family to a nice little tourist spot in northern Virginia, and we ate at a restaurant outdoors, and inside the restaurant there were piles of magazines from the 1960s, like Life, primarily dedicated to photographs. They were interesting to peruse, even the advertisements.

One whole page or two were dedicated to the insurance salesmen of a certain company in the Illinois area, or central mid-west of the United States. Pictures of guy after guy (usually men), making their living for being insurance brokers, gaining their livelihoods on the working classes, I can imagine thousands of corn and soy growers of the central U.S. There had to be everybody else in there: bankers, milkmen, police, lawyers.

Again, we need insurance. It is part of our regularly paid dues in order to function properly. It is a non-government tax, usually, that helps us survive or thrive. Other taxes help insure those who cannot otherwise afford health and protective insurance, like Medicare and Medicaid. We take care of those who cannot take care of themselves.

Those who are most protected by insurance are the wealthiest, because they stand to lose the most when stolen, lost, or destroyed items and properties. And, they are probably paying the least of their expendable incomes in order to be insured.

In certain ways the money that we earn is all being siphoned off each other, it is cynical or jaded to think that one type of worker or industry like insurance is the one sucking the blood of the rest of us.

We all provide services to each other; some earn more than others and some work more than others and some do less to make more and vice versa.

The extreme poor have little insurance, especially in poorer nations. Some neighborhoods in "rich" countries suffer the same.

We could argue that the more we pay in insurance monies, generally the better off we are as individuals and as societies.

The blood and money being sucked in by insurance agencies keep us better oiled, freer, and more prone to succeed.

Sure, that is what we can say as we write those monthly checks to keep afloat the insurance industry.

Keep working, keep paying.

Keep breathing, keep up on your insurance payments.

Build your wealth as life goes by, accrue the fortunes of your desires.

And: stay away from the vampires, who are probably not those insurance people, but a dozen other types we could name...


Saturday, December 14, 2019

Sometimes it Takes 50 Years. Or More.

Sometimes it Takes 50 Years. Or More.

*If you have never loved, or observed even casually, a baseball team struggle and toil through seasons of futility and some success but never achieve the ultimate goal of victory at the end of the season, you may not get this.

But I hope you can understand some of what this means.

 

 

The Nationals did something for the first time last week. It felt good to me for a few reasons. It made a few other million people feel good, too.

It took the franchise, the former Montreal Expos and the current Washington Nationals, 50 years, yea, a half century to bring a title, this title championship, home. One World Series victory, in the books, with its Curly "W" to Washington D.C. and the Delmarva Region. It meant something to Montreal fans, too.

I started writing this post around November 3rd, now it is December 12.

The Nats have re-signed their ace Stephen Strasburg (for a huge deal across 7 years) and lost the clutch 3rd baseman Anthony Rendon (similar seven year deal) to the Angels.

Time moves on.

Again, now on Saturday the 14th, I write to chronicle the 50 years of summation with the "Curly W" of D.C. in the books.

Champions of 2019.

They were talented enough back in 2012, and off and on have been picked to win it all ever since.

They faced 5 elimination games and won them all this fall in the playoffs, getting the 7 year-come-50 year monkey off their backs. And a great run to finish off this group of old and young, Zimmerman and Kendrick and Rodney, and Scherzer.

Way to go, Nationals! I watched your franchise struggle and pay their dues since 1981. I only waited some 38 years, not like the diehards at the end of the 1960s.

50 years is not bad; better than some. (See Mariners? Padres?)

I hope it does not take another fifty to achieve the same.

That would put me at age 98, and there are no guarantees at age 50, 90, or at any age.

Live long, and prosper.

Thanks Nats, for putting this together.

We enjoy the feeling of winning, after 49 other years of coming up short.

Really talented players and teams, but no dice till now.

Juan Soto, you and young Robles and journeymen Suzuki and Gomes and yes, the Baby Shark Parra did it for all the great Expos and a few Nats of the past. And us few million fans.

Play on, brave Nationals. We remember the good and bad, and we savor it all.



Thursday, December 12, 2019

Harold Bloom: Critic and Orphic Reader

Harold Bloom: Critic and Orphic Reader

He died at 89 not too long ago. He describes himself and the proclaimed poet Hart Crane as "orphic".

Orpheus was a hero of Greek mythology who was supposed to possess superhuman musical skills. With his legendary lyre, he was said to be able to make even the rocks and trees dance around. In fact, when his wife Eurydice died, he was nearly able to use his lyre to secure her return from the underworld. Later on, according to legend, he was killed at the bidding of Dionysus, and an oracle of Orpheus was established that came to rival the oracle of Apollo at Delphi. Because of the oracle of Orpheus, orphic can mean "oracular." Because of Orpheus' musical powers, orphic can mean "entrancing."
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/orphic

He loved poetry, he loved literature, which some of which he considered great.

Not too happy with J.K. Rowling and Stephen King.

Shakespeare, Cervantes, Melville, Hawthorne? And many others.

or·​phic | \ ˈȯr-fik
\

Definition of orphic


1 capitalized : of or relating to Orpheus or the rites or doctrines ascribed to him

I guess so, this Yalie.

Sunday, December 1, 2019

Regular Seasons End and Field Goals

Regular Seasons End, and Field Goals

If you have ever liked a college football program, you may share some of the feelings and thoughts that I am experiencing, or at least contemplating now. The day after the regular season has ended. Another year in the bag, time marches on. What does any of it mean? I don't know those deeper answers... I can analyze some of the superficial things, and this causes me some satisfaction.

The regular season has ended, mostly by the end of November, and either a bowl awaits next month or so, or not.

We reflect on the good and the bad.

Both my cherished teams have qualified for a bowl. Hurrah! 2019 finished better than normal.

In Indiana's case, it is their 12th bowl ever. I am 49 years old. They once went to the Rose Bowl (and lost) before I was born, the first year that my p. That makes 11 in my lifetime, where the Hoosiers are 3-7 so far.

Can Indiana get a 4th ever bowl win? We shall see around Christmas.

BYU, the vaunted school of Church affiliated fame, has qualified for a second year in a row, about 40 over all as far as bowls in its existence.

Things have generally been bowl-worthy since the late 1970s.

Brigham Young football is expected to go to a bowl every year. BYU is an expected winner. 2017 was an anomaly, and awful (4-9, worst results since the 1950s). Last year got better; this year better still, slightly, but we are questioning things with a lopsided 7-5 finish, and a stinker to San Diego St. last night.

Hopefully a Hawai'i Bowl can cure those ills.

Indiana has 8 wins, after squeaking by a weaker Purdue, in double overtimes, and may face a big or traditionally tough opponent. Beating Purdue, even after so many mistakes self-committed and the Boilers having a weakened team, feels really good.

I saw BYU play in person last week and it was really fun. UMass stood no chance, unlike when they upset the Cougars two years ago in Provo.

Both m schools missed multiple makeable field goals. IU lost 9 potential points and BYU 6. BYU also turned it over poorly, while Indiana took advantage of those turnovers.

Both schools are mid-ling powers, but I will take it.

My Hoosiers and Cougars will play in the post season.

No complaints. Happy holidays,