Sunday, March 29, 2009

10 Great Quotes from Jesus of Nazareth


1. Love Your Enemies!

OK, you have to admit this is a pretty radical concept...

“You have heard the law that says, ‘Love your neighbor’ and hate your enemy. But I say, love your enemies! Pray for those who persecute you! In that way, you will be acting as true children of your Father in heaven. For he gives his sunlight to both the evil and the good, and he sends rain on the just and the unjust alike. If you love only those who love you, what reward is there for that? Even corrupt tax collectors do that much. If you are kind only to your friends, how are you different from anyone else? (Matthew 5:43-47 )

2. Don't Worry About The Future

Sometimes insightful sayings seem obvious once you hear them - I think that is the case here. Live in the moment you're in!

“So don’t worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will bring its own worries. Today’s trouble is enough for today. (Matthew 6:34)

3. How To Treat Others

“Do to others whatever you would like them to do to you. This is the essence of all that is taught in the law and the prophets. (Matthew 7:12)

4. The Most Important Commandment

“Teacher, which is the most important commandment in the law of Moses?”
Jesus replied, “‘You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, and all your mind.’ This is the first and greatest commandment. A second is equally important: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ The entire law and all the demands of the prophets are based on these two commandments.” (Matthew 22:36-40)

5. Spiritual Greatness

In the topsy-turvy world of the Kingdom of God it seems the usual understanding of things is reversed. Here is yet another example:

“You know that the rulers in this world lord it over their people, and officials flaunt their authority over those under them. But among you it will be different. Whoever wants to be a leader among you must be your servant, and whoever wants to be first among you must be the slave of everyone else. For even the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve others and to give his life as a ransom for many.” (Mark 10:42-45)

6. Gaining The World, Losing Your Soul

Here Jesus highlights that the eternal and spiritual dimension is more important than the temporal physical one. Those who choose to follow His teaching will make physical sacrifices for spiritual rewards.

Then, calling the crowd to join his disciples, he said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must turn from your selfish ways, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake and for the sake of the Good News, you will save it. And what do you benefit if you gain the whole world but lose your own soul? Is anything worth more than your soul? If anyone is ashamed of me and my message in these adulterous and sinful days, the Son of Man will be ashamed of that person when he returns in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.” (Mark 8:34-38)

7. The Kingdom Of God Is Not Physical

Christian faith should not be militant, things like the crusades were not in line with what Jesus taught, or even the concept of christendom. He also taught that the Kingdom of God was in the hearts of men.

The statement below was said in response to questioning in his trial before the roman govenor.

“My Kingdom is not an earthly kingdom. If it were, my followers would fight to keep me from being handed over to the Jewish leaders. But my Kingdom is not of this world.” (John 18:36)

8. God Loves Everyone

This very well known passage is actually a quote from Jesus.

“For God loved the world so much that he gave his one and only Son, so that everyone who believes in him will not perish but have eternal life. God sent his Son into the world not to judge the world, but to save the world through him. (John 3:16-17)

9. Ask, Seek, Knock

“And so I tell you, keep on asking, and you will receive what you ask for. Keep on seeking, and you will find. Keep on knocking, and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks, receives. Everyone who seeks, finds. And to everyone who knocks, the door will be opened. (Luke 11:9-10)

10. His Claim To Be God

While it seems Jesus didn't make a point of telling everyone that he was God, he did make it clear on a few recorded occasions. This quote is taken from Jesus' court trial, from which the resulting conviction of 'blasphemy' led to his crucifixion.

I include this quote, not because it's a great teaching, but because it affects how one perceives his teaching. It's hard to think of Jesus as [just] a good moral teacher when you know that he thought himself to be God. Either he is a weirdo, or he is God!

Then the high priest said to him, “I demand in the name of the living God—tell us if you are the Messiah, the Son of God.”
Jesus replied, “You have said it. And in the future you will see the Son of Man seated in the place of power at God’s right hand and coming on the clouds of heaven.” (Matthew 26:63-64)

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Valentine


If Sometimes you...
...suddenly...
...think you are suffocating....
...feel traped...
...or feel despressed...
...what do you do?
Do you Cry?
Do you smash everything up like a monster?
Do you get angry?
Do you take drugs?
NO... even if you...
...are sad...
...and look like shit...
...you feel guilty...
...if you are scared...
...or you feel you are really small...
please do remember...
there's one person there for you...
...who think you are...
...WONDERFUL...
...GREAT...
...and who loves you!!!

ကိုယ္ခ်င္းစာႏိုင္ၾကဖို႔

ခင္ပြန္း
တစ္ခါတေလမွာ သူဟာ ကေလးဆိုးၾကီးနဲ႔ တူတတ္တယ္။
ရံုးဝတ္စံုကို ခြ်တ္ျပီးေနာက္ သူ႔ပံုစံကို တစ္မ်ဳိးေျပာင္းခြင့္ေပးလိုက္ပါ။
သြားတိုက္ေဆးဗူးကို လံုေအာင္မပိတ္တတ္တဲ့ သူ႔ကို ေဗြမယူပါနဲ႔။
သြယ္ဝိုက္ျပီး အၾကိမ္ၾကိမ္ သတိေပးမွ ကုိယ့္ေမြးေန႔ကို မွတ္မိတတ္တဲ့သူ႔ကို ခြင့္လြတ္နားလည္ေပးပါ။
တကယ္ေတာ့... သန္မာထြားၾကိဳင္းတဲ့ သူ႔ခႏၶာေအာက္က အသဲႏွလံုးတစ္စံုဟာ
ကိုယ့္ဆီက ခြင့္လြတ္နားလည္မႈ နည္းနည္းနဲ႔ ခ်စ္ျခင္းေမတၱာေတြကို လိုအပ္ေနပါတယ္။

ဇနီး
သူ႔ဆီမွာ ကိုယ္ေတာင္းဆိုတဲ့အရာေတြက ကိုယ့္မိခင္ဆီ ကိုယ္ေတာင္းဆိုတဲ့အရာလို သဘာဝက်ပါသလား?
တစ္ျခားက႑ကေန ပါဝင္ၾကည့္ပါ။
တစ္ခါတေလ ကေလးႏို႔ပုလင္းကို ကိုင္ၾကည့္ပါ။
တစ္ခါတေလ မီးဖိုေခ်ာင္ဝင္ၾကည့္ပါ။
လိုအပ္တဲ့ ဆန္၊ ဆီ၊ ဆားအျပင္ ဂရုစိုက္မႈ၊ နားလည္မႈနဲ႔
ခ်ဳိျမိန္တဲ့ စကားေတြ သူ႔ကိုနည္းနည္း ပိုေပးလိုက္ပါ။

သားသမီး
ေသးငယ္တဲ့ သူ႔ရဲ႕လက္ေတြ ေနာင္တစ္ခ်ိန္မွာ ဘယ္လိုလက္ဖဝါးၾကီးမ်ဳိး ျဖစ္ႏိုင္မလဲ?
ရီပို႔ကတ္ေပၚက အမွတ္ေတြကို သူ႔ဆီက ကိုယ္ေတာင္းဆိုသလို ပတ္ဝန္းက်င္၊ သဘာဝတရားေတြကို သူခံစားတတ္ေအာင္ သင္ေပးပါ။
စိတ္ဓာတ္ေတြ သန္မာၾကံ့ခိုင္ေအာင္ သင္ေပးသလို ႏူးညံ့ေပ်ာ့ေပ်ာင္းတဲ့ ႏွသားသားတစ္စံု ရွိသင့္ေၾကာင္းလည္း ေျပာျပပါ။
သူၾကီးျပင္းရာ လမ္းတစ္ေလွ်ာက္မွာ လမ္းညႊန္ဆံုးမသူအျဖစ္ အေဖာ္ျပဳေပးပါ။

မိဘ
အခ်ိန္မီေသးတဲ့အခ်ိန္မွာ တန္ဖိုးထားပါ။
ကိုယ့္သားသမီးေတြရဲ႕ ငိုသံက ကိုယ့္မိဘေတြရဲ႕ သက္ျပင္းခ်သံထက္ ပိုၾကင္နာမႈရခဲ့ပါတယ္။
သားသမီးေတြ ေက်ာင္းလြတ္တဲ့အခ်ိန္ကို ကိုယ္မေမ့ေပမယ့္
ကိုယ္အိမ္ျပန္ခ်ိန္ကို ေမွ်ာ္ေနတတ္တဲ့ မိဘေတြရဲ႕ ဂရုစိုက္မႈကိုေတာ့ ကိုယ္လွ်စ္လွ်ဴရွဴမိတတ္တယ္။
ေလာဘရမၼက္ရဲ႕ ေတာင္းဆိုမႈကို ဥစၥာပစၥည္းေတြက မျဖည့္တင္းေပးႏိုင္ပါဘူး။
အေရးၾကီးတာက မိဘေတြကို ကိုယ့္ရဲ႕အခ်ိန္ေတြ နည္းနည္းပိုေပးဖို႔ပါပဲ။

ေမာင္ႏွမ
stand by me ကိုယ့္ဖက္မွာပဲ သူရွိေနခဲ့တယ္။
အေဖက အစ္ကို႔ကို ပိုအလိုလိုက္တယ္လို႔ ထင္ခဲ့တယ္။
အေမက ညီမေလးကို ပိုခ်စ္တယ္လို႔ ထင္ခဲ့တယ္။
တကယ္ေတာ့... လက္ဖဝါးခ်င္းပါပဲ၊ ေသြးရင္းေတြပါပဲ
ကိုယ္လိုအပ္ခ်ိန္မွာ သူတို႔က ကိုယ္ဖက္မွာ ရွိေနခဲ့ပါတယ္။


ခ်စ္သူ
အခ်စ္က တစ္လမ္းသြားမဟုတ္ပါဘူး။ ေရာင္ျပန္ဟပ္တတ္ပါတယ္။
ကိုယ္ေပးဆပ္သေလာက္ ျပန္ရတာပါပဲ။
စိတ္ဆိုးခ်ိန္မွာ သူ(သူမ)ရဲ႕ ေကာင္းကြက္ကို ရွာၾကည့္ပါ။
မေက်နပ္ခ်ိန္မွာ သူ(သူမ)ရဲ႕ အနစ္နာခံခဲ့တာကို သတိရပါ။
ေအးစက္ခ်ိန္မွာ သူ(သူမ)ရဲ႕ ေႏြးေထြးမႈကို အမွတ္ရပါ။
ေပးဆပ္ျခင္းကို ႏွစ္ေယာက္စလံုးနားလည္ခဲ့ရင္ အခ်စ္က ထာဝရတည္တံ့ပါတယ္။
ႏွလံုးသားခ်င္းထပ္ျပီး ႏွစ္ေယာက္အတူ ခ်စ္ဖို႔ရာ မလြယ္ကူပါဘူး။
လမ္းခဲြတဲ့စကားကို လြယ္လြယ္ကူကူ မေျပာလိုက္ပါနဲ႔.....

Thursday, March 19, 2009

The Seven-Day Week

from http://www.crowl.org/Lawrence/time/days.html)
The Babylonians marked time with lunar months. They proscribed some activities during several days of the month, particularly the...

first ---------- the first visible crecent,
seventh -------- the waxing half moon,
fourteenth ----- the full moon,
nineteenth ----- dedicated to an offended goddess,
twenty-first --- the waning half moon,
twenty-eigth --- the last visible crecent,
twenty-nineth -- the invisible moon, and
thirtieth (possibly) -- the invisible moon.

The major periods are seven days, 1/4 month, long. This seven-day period was later regularized and disassociated from the lunar month to become our seven-day week.

The Naming of the Days
The Greeks named the days week after the sun, the moon and the five known planets, which were in turn named after the gods Ares, Hermes, Zeus, Aphrodite, and Cronus. The Greeks called the days of the week the Theon hemerai "days of the Gods". The Romans substituted their equivalent gods for the Greek gods, Mars, Mercury, Jove (Jupiter), Venus, and Saturn. (The two pantheons are very similar.) The Germanic peoples generally substituted roughly similar gods for the Roman gods, Tiu (Twia), Woden, Thor, Freya (Fria), but did not substitute Saturn.

Sunday - Sun's day
Middle English sone(n)day or sun(nen)day
Old English sunnandæg "day of the sun"
Germanic sunnon-dagaz "day of the sun"
Latin dies solis "day of the sun"
Ancient Greek hemera heli(o)u, "day of the sun"

Monday - Moon's day
Middle English monday or mone(n)day
Old English mon(an)dæg "day of the moon"
Latin dies lunae "day of the moon"
Ancient Greek hemera selenes "day of the moon"

Tuesday - Tiu's day
Middle English tiwesday or tewesday
Old English tiwesdæg "Tiw's (Tiu's) day"
Latin dies Martis "day of Mars"
Ancient Greek hemera Areos "day of Ares"

Tiu (Twia) is the English/Germanic god of war and the sky. He is identified with the Norse god Tyr.

Mars is the Roman god of war.

Ares is the Greek god of war.


Wednesday - Woden's day
Middle English wodnesday, wednesday, or wednesdai
Old English wodnesdæg "Woden's day"
Latin dies Mercurii "day of Mercury"
Ancient Greek hemera Hermu "day of Hermes"

Woden is the chief Anglo-Saxon/Teutonic god. Woden is the leader of the Wild Hunt. Woden is from wod "violently insane" + -en "headship". He is identified with the Norse Odin.

Mercury is the Roman god of commerce, travel, theivery, eloquence and science. He is the messenger of the other gods.

Hermes is the Greek god of commerce, invention, cunning, and theft. He is the messenger and herald of the other gods. He serves as patron of travelers and rogues, and as the conductor of the dead to Hades.


Thursday - Thor's day
Middle English thur(e)sday
Old English thursdæg
Old Norse thorsdagr "Thor's day"
Old English thunresdæg "thunder's day"
Latin dies Jovis "day of Jupiter"
Ancient Greek hemera Dios "day of Zeus".

Thor is the Norse god of thunder. He is represented as riding a chariot drawn by goats and wielding the hammer Miölnir. He is the defender of the Aesir, destined to kill and be killed by the Midgard Serpent.

Jupiter (Jove) is the supreme Roman god and patron of the Roman state. He is noted for creating thunder and lightning.

Zeus is Greek god of the heavens and the supreme Greek god.


Friday - Freya's day
Middle English fridai
Old English frigedæg "Freya's day"
composed of Frige (genetive singular of Freo) + dæg "day" (most likely)
or composed of Frig "Frigg" + dæg "day" (least likely)
Germanic frije-dagaz "Freya's (or Frigg's) day"
Latin dies Veneris "Venus's day"
Ancient Greek hemera Aphrodites "day of Aphrodite"

Freo is identical with freo, meaning free. It is from the Germanic frijaz meaning "beloved, belonging to the loved ones, not in bondage, free".

Freya (Fria) is the Teutonic goddess of love, beauty, and fecundity (prolific procreation). She is identified with the Norse god Freya. She is leader of the Valkyries and one of the Vanir. She is confused in Germany with Frigg.

Frigg (Frigga) is the Teutonic goddess of clouds, the sky, and conjugal (married) love. She is identified with Frigg, the Norse goddess of love and the heavens and the wife of Odin. She is one of the Aesir. She is confused in Germany with Freya.

Venus is the Roman goddess of love and beauty.

Aphrodite (Cytherea) is the Greek goddess of love and beauty.


Saturday - Saturn's day
Middle English saterday
Old English sæter(nes)dæg "Saturn's day"
Latin dies Saturni "day of Saturn"
Ancient Greek hemera Khronu "day of Cronus"

Saturn is the Roman and Italic god of agriculture and the consort of Ops. He is believed to have ruled the earth during an age of happiness and virtue.

Cronus (Kronos, Cronos) is the Greek god (Titan) who ruled the universe until dethroned by his son Zeus.

A History of the Months

(from http://www.crowl.org/Lawrence/time/months.html)
The original Roman year had 10 named months Martius "March", Aprilis "April", Maius "May", Junius "June", Quintilis "July", Sextilis "August", September "September", October "October", November "November", December "December", and probably two unnamed months in the dead of winter when not much happened in agriculture. The year began with Martius "March". Numa Pompilius, the second king of Rome circa 700 BC, added the two months Januarius "January" and Februarius "February". He also moved the beginning of the year from Marius to Januarius and changed the number of days in several months to be odd, a lucky number. After Februarius there was occasionally an additional month of Intercalaris "intercalendar". This is the origin of the leap-year day being in February. In 46 BC, Julius Caesar reformed the Roman calendar (hence the Julian calendar) changing the number of days in many months and removing Intercalaris.

January - Janus's month
Middle English Januarie
Latin Januarius "of Janus"
Latin Janu(s) "Janus" + -arius "ary (pertaining to)"
Latin Januarius mensis "month of Janus"
Janus is the Roman god of gates and doorways, depicted with two faces looking in opposite directions. His festival month is January.
Januarius had 29 days, until Julius when it became 31 days long.

February - month of Februa
Middle English Februarius
Latin Februarius "of Februa"
Latin Februa(s) "Februa" + -arius "ary (pertaining to)"
Latin Februarius mensis "month of Februa"
Latin dies februatus "day of purification"
Februarius had 28 days, until circa 450 BC when it had 23 or 24 days on some of every second year, until Julius when it had 29 days on every fourth year and 28 days otherwise.
Februa is the Roman festival of purification, held on February fifteenth. It is possibly of Sabine origin.

Intercalaris - inter-calendar month
Latin Intercalaris "inter-calendar"
Latin Mercedonius (popular name) "?"
Intercalaris had 27 days until the month was abolished by Julius.

March - Mars' month
Middle English March(e)
Anglo-French March(e)
Old English Martius
Latin Martius "of Mars"
Latin Marti(s) "Mars" + -us (adj. suffix)
Latin Martius mensis "month of Mars"
Martius has always had 31 days.
March was the original beginning of the year, and the time for the resumption of war.
Mars is the Roman god of war. He is identified with the Greek god Ares.

April
- Aphrodite's month
Old English April(is)
Latin Aprilis
Etruscan Apru
Greek Aphro, short for Aphrodite.
Aprilis had 30 days, until Numa when it had 29 days, until Julius when it became 30 days long.
Aphrodite is the Greek goddess of love and beauty. She is identified with the Roman goddess Venus.

May
- Maia's month
Old French Mai
Old English Maius
Latin Maius "of Maia"
Latin Maius mensis "month of Maia"
Maius has always had 31 days.
Maia (meaning "the great one") is the Italic goddess of spring, the daughter of Faunus, and wife of Vulcan.

June - Juno's month
Middle English jun(e)
Old French juin
Old English junius
Latin Junius "of Juno"
Latin Junius mensis "month of Juno"
Junius had 30 days, until Numa when it had 29 days, until Julius when it became 30 days long.
Juno is the principle goddess of the Roman Pantheon. She is the goddess of marriage and the well-being of women. She is the wife and sister of Jupiter. She is identified with the Greek goddess Hera.

July
- Julius Caesar's month
Middle English Julie
Latin Julius "Julius"
Latin Julius mensis "month of Julius"
Latin quintilis mensis "fifth month"
Quintilis (and later Julius) has always had 31 days.
Julius Caesar reformed the Roman calendar (hence the Julian calendar) in 46 BC. In the process, he renamed this month after himself.

August
- Augustus Caesar's month
Latin Augustus "Augustus"
Latin Augustus mensis "month of Augustus"
Latin sextilis mensis "sixth month"
Sextilis had 30 days, until Numa when it had 29 days, until Julius when it became 31 days long.
Augustus Caesar clarified and completed the calendar reform of Julius Caesar. In the process, he also renamed this month after himself.

September
- the seventh month
Middle English septembre
Latin September
Latin septem "seven" + -ber (adj. suffix)
Latin september mensis "seventh month"
September had 30 days, until Numa when it had 29 days, until Julius when it became 30 days long.

October - the eighth month
Middle English octobre
Latin October
Latin octo "eight" + -ber (adj. suffix)
Latin october mensis "eighth month"
October has always had 31 days.

November
- the nineth month
Middle English Novembre
Latin November
Latin Novembris mensis "nineth month"
Novembris had 30 days, until Numa when it had 29 days, until Julius when it became 30 days long.

December
- the tenth month
Middle English decembre
Old French decembre
Latin december "tenth month"
Latin decem "ten" + -ber (adj. suffix)
December had 30 days, until Numa when it had 29 days, until Julius when it became 31 days long.

From www.zairem.com