Okay, I realize that this is a bigger deal to me than it may be to some of you. But as a dedicated English teacher, I cannot help but use this medium to promote the proper use of our language. After all, we would never want our careless presentation to detract from the message we have to deliver.
God is a God of order: grass grows upward, water flows down a hill, and so on. Although the Bible does not contain grammar instructions, the nature of God shows us that there are absolutes. This philosophy applies even to the everyday use of words. When a word has a defined meaning, it is important to use the word correctly. More and more frequently, people have been using words to say things that those words do not exactly mean. If this continues, we will eventually have chaos instead of communication as everyone uses his favorite word to mean whatever he wants it to mean.
Occasionally, I would like to present a few common usage problems and the solutions for how to avoid them. Let's do what we can to preserve the meaning of our language. (Don't worry. I do not plan to include grammar diagrams in any of this series.) :)
I'll start with a simple one: anxious vs. eager. We seldom use the word eager, and we seldom use the word anxious properly. According to the American Heritage College Dictionary, anxious means "uneasy and apprehensive about something uncertain; worried." Eager means "having or exhibiting keen interest, intense desire, or impatient expectancy." Basically, anxious and eager both indicate one's emotions while waiting for something. Eager indicates a positive excitement, and anxious indicates a nervous expectation.
Therefore, if you told me "I'm anxious to see you next week," I would wonder what it is about me that scares you. I'll try to be nice, really. The gracious thing to say is "I'm eager to see you next week." Unless we honestly mean that we dread what is ahead, eager is the better word choice.
Bottom line: when talking about a future event, use anxious when you are nervous about it and eager when you are looking forward to it.
Sunday, September 24
Thursday, September 14
Speak out about Rosie O'Donnell's comments
Surely you have heard about Rosie O'Donnell's hateful comments about Christians on The View. This is outrageous! Why is she allowed to say whatever she wants to about us?
To send an e-mail to ABC about this, go to this address:
https://secure.afa.net/afa/activism/takeaction.asp?id=214
Remember, Edmund Burke said, "All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." We cannot sit idly by and watch people like Rosie tear down the name of our God, comparing His followers with terrorists. The least we can do is send an e-mail. The network must see that there are people out there who care. There is also a mailing address (click on the link and scroll down) if you would like to send a letter too. I have heard that letters are much more effective than e-mails or phone calls, but any little bit will help.
If you are not familiar with what she said the other day, read this article:
http://worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=51956
To send an e-mail to ABC about this, go to this address:
https://secure.afa.net/afa/activism/takeaction.asp?id=214
Remember, Edmund Burke said, "All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." We cannot sit idly by and watch people like Rosie tear down the name of our God, comparing His followers with terrorists. The least we can do is send an e-mail. The network must see that there are people out there who care. There is also a mailing address (click on the link and scroll down) if you would like to send a letter too. I have heard that letters are much more effective than e-mails or phone calls, but any little bit will help.
If you are not familiar with what she said the other day, read this article:
http://worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=51956
Saturday, September 9
John R. Rice on Christians studying language and literature
"There are three great needs in writing and speaking for God. They are clearness, force, and beauty. No one has a right to speak so he cannot be clearly understood. No one has a right to speak for God without trying to make himself forceful to get results. And no one has the right to speak or write for God without trying to make what is being said attractive and charming. So to get a good speaking style, to make oneself easily understood, to make oneself forceful and effective, every Christian worker ought to study language and great literature. It is not wasting time to sharpen the axe if you are going to chop wood. It is not wasting time when you get ready to serve God, to serve Him acceptably and to reach the greatest number of people possible with the Gospel. I am all for special training in language and in literature for all who go into full-time Christian work."
He also says,
“I did not know when I majored in English and took Shakespeare and Browning and Tennyson . . . that I was preparing my mind and coloring it and getting ready to understand truth better, to speak more fluently and charmingly.”
He also says,
“I did not know when I majored in English and took Shakespeare and Browning and Tennyson . . . that I was preparing my mind and coloring it and getting ready to understand truth better, to speak more fluently and charmingly.”
Sunday, September 3
I was tagged :)
I've been getting tagged; so I figured I may as well join everyone else who is doing this.
I was tagged by Shanna and Jessica.
1. Some of the Book(s) that changed my life: the Bible
2. Some of the Book(s) that I’ve read more than once: The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Bronte, Great Expectations and Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens, Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Hiding Place by Corrie ten Boom, and many others
3. Some of the Book(s) I’d want to have with me if I were alone on an island: my Bible, Tenant of Wildfell Hall, Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe (for inspiration), and a book about wilderness survival
4. Some of the Book(s) that made me laugh: Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift, Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, anything by Richard Lederer (such as Anguished English, Adventures of a Verbivore), and anything by O. Henry
5. Some of the Book(s) that made me cry: Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriett Beecher Stowe
6. Book(s) that I wish had been written: Mom and I would like to write a book someday about the incredible ways that God has taken care of us in fulfillment of His promise to take care of fatherless and widows
7. Book(s) I wish had never been written: anything by Charles Darwin or John Dewey
8. Book(s) I’m currently reading: the textbook for the English Literature class I'm teaching this semester
9. Some of the Book(s) I’ve been meaning to read: Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen, Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy, Middlemarch by George Eliot
I was tagged by Shanna and Jessica.
1. Some of the Book(s) that changed my life: the Bible
2. Some of the Book(s) that I’ve read more than once: The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Bronte, Great Expectations and Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens, Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Hiding Place by Corrie ten Boom, and many others
3. Some of the Book(s) I’d want to have with me if I were alone on an island: my Bible, Tenant of Wildfell Hall, Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe (for inspiration), and a book about wilderness survival
4. Some of the Book(s) that made me laugh: Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift, Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, anything by Richard Lederer (such as Anguished English, Adventures of a Verbivore), and anything by O. Henry
5. Some of the Book(s) that made me cry: Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriett Beecher Stowe
6. Book(s) that I wish had been written: Mom and I would like to write a book someday about the incredible ways that God has taken care of us in fulfillment of His promise to take care of fatherless and widows
7. Book(s) I wish had never been written: anything by Charles Darwin or John Dewey
8. Book(s) I’m currently reading: the textbook for the English Literature class I'm teaching this semester
9. Some of the Book(s) I’ve been meaning to read: Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen, Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy, Middlemarch by George Eliot
Friday, September 1
Thoughts on contentment

Sheep don't know what's best for them; they don't see the big picture of life. Any needs that they have -- protection, food, shelter -- must be met by their shepherd. A good shepherd will take good care of his sheep.
Our Shepherd is the Lord. He knows exactly what we need and loves us completely. When the Bible says "I shall not want," it means that there is nothing that we should have that we won't have. If it is good for us, then our perfect Shepherd will take care of it.
Therefore, if there is something that He has chosen not to provide for us, perhaps a door that has been closed, then we can know that it would not have been good for us. If it were, He would have provided it.
Like the sheep, we don't see the big picture. Sometimes God has to make decisions for us that we would not make ourselves. But He has promised that we shall not want for anything. Rather than being disappointed, we ought to be excited to see what "exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think" plans He has, as we trust with full confidence that His way is best.