This next May will mark the one year anniversary of Classical Ride. I have enjoyed every minute of it. Chiefly because of feedback, whether good or bad. But in almost ten months it is easy to believe that I might have changed some of my opinions, or made some new realizations. This blog is the blog I would write now in place of some of the ones I have thrown out there.
1. I think the first mistake I made was a technical one and not a content one. It was a send-off of a very close friend of mine in prayer. My mistake was I included a picture of myself in plain view. My intentions later evolved into a much more anonymous methodology of never including a picture that fully showed my face. So, if you want, by all means go back to the blog entitled "Sarah Jane Murray" and take a look. I have deleted the picture that included my own face.
2. The next reservation is not so much a mistake as an imformative gesture of professionalism. I wrote a blog called "Proverbs...A Wise Man." Later, I wanted to add on with advice from another wise man, so I changed the aforementioned to "Proverbs...Wise Man I" and a whole series of "Wise Men" was sparked. That was simple enough.
3. This too, is not a big one, but I regret to have used the same picture in two separate blogs. Especially two that I liked very much. "Television Shows" and "The Gentleman's Handshake" both showed the same original picture. To me that just seems very unprofessional. Apologies.
4. Alright, this one is a real change of opinion. Sort of. In the blog "Inspire Me" I railed a bit against inspiration and how useless it is. It is something I have been thinking about ever since I wrote it. I have asked many good friend's opinions on it and gotten wonderful answers. I still don't really believe there is a permanent and quenchable inspiration. However, I longer believe to inspire someone alone is to fail. I no longer believe inspiration is useless. Perhaps Zig Ziglar put it best in saying, "People often say that motivation doesn't last. Well, neither does bathing that's why we recommend it daily." What did I ever think was wrong with constant refilling anyway?
5. In "Quote Commentary 10...Leeland Mooring" I criticize mildly the lyrics of a song that talk about the "...tears of the saints for the lost and unsaved..." Now I recognize that, still, it will take more than tears, but that raw, sincere emotion is vital in reaching the world. You have to have a heart for the lost, to build relationships and bring them home.
6. I think since "The Gentleman's Handshake" has one of the highest comment responses of any of my blogs that it deserves to be mentioned. Know this: it is not in modern etiquette the true proper way to shake a girl's hand I suppose. (Though the male instruction was the most widely approved way). Most people will tell you that a man should shake a woman's hand the same as anyone. It depends on where you stand in the feminist movement. Thanks to all for the comments, whether approved, practiced, interested, or annoyed. I love feedback.
7. Maybe my most controversial (unintentionally, though foreseen) post of all was "Science." This one I really went out on a limb and I do not expect to revoke any of my statements very much. I said that Christians should not ardently study science, and with good reason, science is now presented as free from supernatural explanation and that defies the prescence of Almighty God. But if one is firm in belief, "so firm," as one commenter put it so that "NO-THING can move us." If this is right, then be a scientific genius and be ready to argue the natural-obsession out of other scientists. By all means do. I would like to myself, had I the mental capabilities to get a lot of it. One reader rightly put that "Early science pioneers actually looked at science as a way to understand the world that God created, thereby coming to a greater understanding of God." and that "you are learning about God's creation and there is nothing to fear there." Maybe there is something to fear, then again maybe I'm wrong. In any case I will heed the book suggestion "Total Truth" by Nancy Peary that one reader offered. Our anonymous reader goes further on to say this "atheists believe that Christians are too stupid to appreciate the scientific intellect and rational thought, and I think most Christians are too afraid b/c they believe the lies of the atheists." That too I can finally agree with.
8. In "Born" I relate my experiences with "getting saved" or entering a relationship with Christ. Two rememberances have crossed my path either by verbal reminder or sudden nostalgic thought. The first was that my mother did indeed talk to me about what it meant to be a Christian and led my brother and I in the "sinner's prayer." So it was discussed with me to a state of apparent understanding, but not rememberance. Further brain racking reminded me of "getting saved" (if not the actual experience itself, the after effects) and my dad telling me the first thing I should read in the Bible is the book of John.
9. In "The Now" I am afraid that I gave the impression that Now was not a time to be treasured. I hammered it too hard. What I wanted to get across was that, we should never settle for less, at the same time we should not postpone present discomfort, because it only grows with time. No reservations though, just I may not have written on an appropriate degree. I spoke truth along with my fellow bloggeress Sarah Jane Murray. Co-writing is something I enjoyed very much, and plan to do in the future again.
10. "Welcome to America" Parts I and II were the scariest thing I ever posted. I was not sure if I agreed with myself or not. As Marshall McLuhan said, "I don't necessarily agree with everything I say." In part one "Definitions" I began to address the problem: the de-civilization of the United States. It is true in a lot of ways. Is there reason for hope? Sure, I am all about hope. In Part II, "Part of the Problem" I suggested a sure cure. For the record, I am a patriot. I love the U.S.. Tough love is a must at times. The blogs were tough love in words.
11. I made a big mistake in "Principle and Carpetball." It should have been in the Wise Man series (whether than "Anti-Climatic" really, though those were wise men), because the person who gave the advice is someone I consider very wise. Just know that, and I will not feel bad about not putting "wise man" in the title.
12. "..." is by far the weirdest blog I ever wrote. It was like trying to run for political office against a punctuation mark. The reason I wrote it is because I was reading a daily devotional that often would cut half a scripture out and change the meaning. I though that was very wrong. The Word of God needs no help or deception to prove a point. So I guess I just unleashed a little frustration on my readers. I had fun, but apologies.
13. "Wasted Laughter" makes people mad at me. I LOVE TO LAUGH! In fact I wrote an entire reservation blog called "Well-Spent Laughter" so there! I meant what I said in the first blog though. Laughter CAN be wasted.
14. "Author" was my response to all the 'lu-lus' who try and catch God with his own words. End of story.
15. "'Coursing Indepthrible Plasms': A Fictitious Christmas Prelude" felt daring at the time, but I was so blessed with a big response. It has sparked a much bigger project, stay tuned for details.
17. I am usually pretty good about giving credit for my sources. However, I failed to note the quotations that acted as anecdote in "Points of No Return." For those of you who didn't know. It was "Tom Sawyer" by Mark Twain.
18. I was excited about the response in "Question...The New Morality." From what I have gathered, the only thing that seems to be agreed on morally is that "if it hurts people it is wrong." I feel there must be more to it than that. Many believe that morality is subjective, or as one anonymous reader commented, "Morality is just a set of standards for a particular social group..." The same commenter goes on to state that morality simply isn't real. He then tries to prove his statement with one of our own, C.S. Lewis which gives me the impression he/she is well read. The quote was, "Human beings, all over the earth,have this curious idea that they ought to behave in a certain way,and cannot really get rid of it." This quote however was more assuring us that there is definitely a right and a wrong, but as to what is or isn't, it remains unclear. Another reader and fellow blogger ginniajo (http://ginniajo.blogspot.com/) suggests that it "very well could be piety." A logical guess. Sarah Jane (http://mitiocbygrace.blogspot.com/) agrees it is a "man-made set of rules" and makes good points from a Christian standpoint. The war goes on. I am starting to think Morality cannot be bound by reason. We have to know as C.S. Lewis talks about in "Mere Christianity" (the source of the anonymous reader's quote) that there is something bigger than us out there, and he gave us a really thick book to tell us things we couldn't possibly get together on our own.
15. "'Coursing Indepthrible Plasms': A Fictitious Christmas Prelude" felt daring at the time, but I was so blessed with a big response. It has sparked a much bigger project, stay tuned for details.
16. I was ashamed of "Extraordinary" when I wrote it and still kind of am. But it is alright. It sounded so arrogant, so I understand if you got that impression. I am still toying with the theory of one's 'extraordinariness.' I have come to the conclusion that everyone has the same amount, only the greats all capitalize on it. That's the trick. Capitalize. Just a thought.
17. I am usually pretty good about giving credit for my sources. However, I failed to note the quotations that acted as anecdote in "Points of No Return." For those of you who didn't know. It was "Tom Sawyer" by Mark Twain.
18. I was excited about the response in "Question...The New Morality." From what I have gathered, the only thing that seems to be agreed on morally is that "if it hurts people it is wrong." I feel there must be more to it than that. Many believe that morality is subjective, or as one anonymous reader commented, "Morality is just a set of standards for a particular social group..." The same commenter goes on to state that morality simply isn't real. He then tries to prove his statement with one of our own, C.S. Lewis which gives me the impression he/she is well read. The quote was, "Human beings, all over the earth,have this curious idea that they ought to behave in a certain way,and cannot really get rid of it." This quote however was more assuring us that there is definitely a right and a wrong, but as to what is or isn't, it remains unclear. Another reader and fellow blogger ginniajo (http://ginniajo.blogspot.com/) suggests that it "very well could be piety." A logical guess. Sarah Jane (http://mitiocbygrace.blogspot.com/) agrees it is a "man-made set of rules" and makes good points from a Christian standpoint. The war goes on. I am starting to think Morality cannot be bound by reason. We have to know as C.S. Lewis talks about in "Mere Christianity" (the source of the anonymous reader's quote) that there is something bigger than us out there, and he gave us a really thick book to tell us things we couldn't possibly get together on our own.
Well those are my reservations for the year. Once again thank you for coming along on the always...Classical Ride.
Very nice review here. Are you planning on keeping this blog, or are you going to start a new one? If so, please keep me posted :)
ReplyDeleteYour posts spark many things when I read them. Most pieces I happily agreed with, and still there are few that I have to question. You put us a good fight anyway, with your sick arguing jazz. Disclaimers are weak, and second thoughts can be as well. All-in-all you've presented excellent, well rounded work. It has been my pleasure thus far.
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