Japan is famous for its technology, but there are 3 things that I am particularly looking forward to trying out.
Toilets - Apparently, Japanese toilets are amazing! You can choose the temperature of the seat, and sometimes you can choose sounds to use as white noise. If you want to be really clean, you can choose the temperature of the water and the temperature of the air that dries you off. All of this to create the most pleasant bathroom experience imaginable.
Vending Machines - More specifically, the vending machines for alcohol. Apparently, the machine scans your head and determines whether or not you are old enough to purchase alcohol. But I am betting the design is based on Japanese characteristics. Japanese typically have fairly large heads. My head is tiny. I can't wait to see if I'm "old enough" to buy alcohol from a Japanese vending machine!
GPS - I hear that you can choose not just what language, but also what accent. Australian English, British English, Southern US English... My Japanese instructor had hers set to Japanese but had to switch it to English because the Japanese was too vague. I imagine it's afraid of offending the driver. So if it's that accurate, then does the Southern US English say "Bless your heart!" when you fail to make a turn? Do they have Brooklyn English ("Do I have "Information" on my forehead?!?!")? How about Seattle English (gives directions to the closest latte)? Is the British English very proper? Or is it cockney? I'll need to try them all!
But we have this treasure in jars of clay to show that this all-surpassing power is from God and not from us. (2 Cor. 4:7)
Saturday, November 12, 2011
Friday, November 11, 2011
Thursday, November 10, 2011
Where is the compassion?
In a recent post, I quoted John Stott’s description of sin
as self-centeredness. “For God’s two great commandments are first that we love
him with all our being and secondly that we love our neighbour as we love
ourselves. Sin, then, is the reversal of this order. To put ourselves first,
virtually proclaiming our own autonomy, our neighbour next when it suits our
convenience, and God somewhere in the background.” This quote was the latest
link in a chain of comments I’ve seen in the last year that basically put
self-centeredness at the core of so many issues. For example, a year ago, when
studying the concept of humility, I read something by CS Lewis saying that
humility is not to think less of yourself than you are, but basically not to
think about yourself at all – that is, selflessness. And I’ve read things by
John Stott, CS Lewis, and others all noting the importance of selflessness in
showing love to others.
In recent weeks, I’ve read a string of absolutely
horrifying accounts of people turning their back on someone in great and
immediate need, people completely lacking compassion. First, there was the
toddler in China who was run over by TWO trucks in the presence of witnesses,
and nobody came to the child’s aid. I saw some argument about how police there
can be lazy and declare whoever is close by to be guilty, so people were
afraid. But it was a toddler! Better to face injustice in this world than to
lose your soul.
Soon after reading about the toddler in China, there was a
(very fast) conviction in the Lululemon murder. Apparently, employees of the
store next door heard the murder happening, heard the woman calling out for
help, and turned away and went back to work. Why? Because they thought it could
just be a drama. ARGH!! Who cares if it is a drama?! If it turns out the store
employees have a tv that they’re watching, they’ll learn to turn down the
volume to a reasonable level when you or the police come to check it out. A
woman might have survived if only people hadn’t turned their backs.
And sadly, no list of horrifying selfishness and/or total
willingness to ignore what’s going on in front of you would be complete without
Penn State. How many people’s
lives were destroyed because a whole string of Penn State employees chose to
ignore an eye-witness account (much less the previous investigation) and simply
decided to say it shouldn’t happen on their campus? They told a predator to go
elsewhere. Nobody bothered to find the child and make sure he got help. Nobody
called the police to report a violent crime.
Unfortunately, such stories aren’t really new. If they were,
we wouldn’t have the parable of the Good Samaritan. A Levite and a priest both
avoided the man in distress. - It could be a trap! They could be defiled and have to go through a week of
purification! – Instead, it’s the Samaritan who shows love and compassion to
the man, risking danger and using his resources to respond to a need.
Of course, all of these examples are horrifying in their
seriousness, but there are little ways that we turn our backs on people every
day. Granted, we can’t respond to every need, but there are many times where a
kind word, bringing a meal to a sick friend, or lending an ear to a person in
the midst of a trial makes a world of difference in a person’s life. What a
different world this would be if people spent less time thinking about
themselves and more time thinking about others.
In the middle of all of the immoral and callous actions I’ve
read about recently in the press, I did read one thing that made me proud. Recently,
a girl at my old high school was stabbed repeatedly in the chest and neck by a
fellow (mentally unstable) student. She survived because of the immediate actions of her fellow students to
subdue the attacker and staunch the bleeding and the quick thinking of medical
personnel. That’s one life that
did not end, one family that was not devastated, and an entire school that does
not have to hang its head in shame.
They can be proud, because they did not turn their back on a person in
need or waste precious moments thinking about their personal safety. They showed love and compassion to a
person in need. Praise God for these “Good Samaritans”.
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