Friday, October 4, 2002

Bratislava Beer Storm

Dormitory presentation again Wednesday night, but with a twist. Coinciding with the Star, the dorm hosted a free beer bash and mixer in the entry plaza. Dance music at disco levels, rowdiness, kissing, shouting, dancing, breaking glass, running about; you know. As show time approached, we had *no* takers for the Star. A beer storm was raining us out. I was ready to present to five people if that's who showed. But popping bottles, thumping music plus the opposite sex... the mix is a kind of Siren call to the college ear and eye. Tough to run that gauntlet. Not just beer. Free beer.

Perhaps everyone can agree that God and beer are a mismatched fight. By the 8 o'clock hour, we had two people. But then a dozen came in. Then a dozen. Another dozen. Another. Another. When we began, we had a core group of about 60, with another dozen or so of froth at the back. This crowd was more intense than last night. More engaged. Amazing, but the noise outside did not seem to disrupt. Cross-cultural humor is dangerous, so I don't attempt much of it. But tonight, attention was so close that I did, and it worked. Laughs across the language/culture gap. And then awe at the close. In short, a great audience. He was there tonight.

It was very good for the Slovak team to agree that the show would go on. We set up out of faithfulness when it looked pretty bad. And then He provided an excellent, engaged, appreciative audience. He boosted our faith tonight.

If you have time, please thank Him with all of us:

"It would be good if we were always full of faith, Lord. Sometimes we do things out of dogged determination, without any real expectation that you will change the course of reality. And then you do change the course. We give you praise that you do so much more than our puny faith expects. We thank you for encouraging us to believe you a dozen times, then another, and another. Build us into faithful people by helping us to see it when you work. Open our eyes to the things you do for us so that we can learn more of who you are. So we can adjust our expectations to your nature. We often do the opposite. And we want to stop. We pray in Jesus' name, amen."

Many more presentations coming. Don't know when I can write next. Pray, even if you don't hear from me.

Beer Storm

Dormitory presentation again Wednesday night, but with a twist. Coinciding with the Star, the dorm hosted a free beer bash and mixer in the entry plaza. Dance music at disco levels, rowdiness, kissing, shouting, dancing, breaking glass, running about; you know. As show time approached, we had *no* takers for the Star. A beer storm was raining us out. I was ready to present to five people if that's who showed. But popping bottles, thumping music plus the opposite sex... the mix is a kind of Siren call to the college ear and eye. Tough to run that gauntlet. Not just beer. Free beer.

Perhaps everyone can agree that God and beer are a mismatched fight. By the 8 o'clock hour, we had two people. But then a dozen came in. Then a dozen. Another dozen. Another. Another. When we began, we had a core group of about 60, with another dozen or so of froth at the back. This crowd was more intense than last night. More engaged. Amazing, but the noise outside did not seem to disrupt. Cross-cultural humor is dangerous, so I don't attempt much of it. But tonight, attention was so close that I did, and it worked. Laughs across the language/culture gap. And then awe at the close. In short, a great audience. He was there tonight.

It was very good for the Slovak team to agree that the show would go on. We set up out of faithfulness when it looked pretty bad. And then He provided an excellent, engaged, appreciative audience. He boosted our faith tonight.

If you have time, please thank Him with all of us:

"It would be good if we were always full of faith, Lord. Sometimes we do things out of dogged determination, without any real expectation that you will change the course of reality. And then you do change the course. We give you praise that you do so much more than our puny faith expects. We thank you for encouraging us to believe you a dozen times, then another, and another. Build us into faithful people by helping us to see it when you work. Open our eyes to the things you do for us so that we can learn more of who you are. So we can adjust our expectations to your nature. We often do the opposite. And we want to stop. We pray in Jesus' name, amen."

Many more presentations coming. Don't know when I can write next. Pray, even if you don't hear from me.

Saturday, June 15, 2002

Phlegon of Tralles

Research concerning the Star is ongoing. Perhaps it will be unending. Occasionally I hit pay dirt, and that is a genuine thrill for me. Yesterday was thrilling!

I spent some time in the microform section at the main Texas A&M library. I was looking at works from the mid-1700's satisfying myself that what I have been finding online is trustworthy. Well, I'm satisfied! So here is the historical nugget that I've just added to the Star web site.

During the reign of Emperor Hadrian (117-138 AD), a Greek freedman named Phlegon of Tralles wrote a history which he named "Olympiades." His home town of Tralles was near Ephesus. Many of you may know that ancient historians widely used the Greek Olympic calendar to date events. We understand that dating system today and can relate it to our "modern" Gregorian calendar, first instituted in 1582.

Phlegon used the Olympic calendar, which obviously suited his subject. Much of Phlegon's writing is lost to history, but in Fragment 17 of what survives, we read in Greek the following report:

"In the fourth year of the 202nd Olympiad [AD 32-33], an eclipse of the Sun took place greater than any previously known, and night came on at the sixth hour of the day [noon], so that stars actually appeared in the sky; and a great earthquake took place in Bithynia and overthrew the greater part of Niceaea."

Thus, we have a non-Biblical source confirming the Gospel records of a darkening of the Sun and earthquakes at the Crucifixion! Right down to the hour of the day!

My research shows that Phlegon's account has been the subject of study and debate for centuries. But I am satisfied that it is sound and belongs on the web site. Phlegon's record is mentioned in: F. Richard Stephenson, Historical Eclipses and Earth's Rotation (Cambridge University Press, July 1997) ISBN 0-52146-194-4. Stephenson's book is listed on Amazon for hundreds of bucks USED. Figure that out; it's only a paperback, and it's not even out of print. Or, just get it on interlibrary loan like I did.

As Phlegon plainly understood, the "eclipse" he describes was not an ordinary eclipse. He certainly describes it as being extraordinary: "greater than any previously known." What he probably did not understand is that the darkening was not caused by the moon's shadow, which is how we understand 'eclipse of the Sun' today. With modern astronomical understanding, we know that whatever darkening people saw and the Gospels record, it was not the moon's shadow. That is not possible during the time of the Passover full moon.

The means of the darkening is yet a mystery, although continuing research may yield clues.

If you have time, join me:

"Lord! Keep revealing! Reveal more and more evidence that shows your word to be true. Uncover what is hidden. We already believe your Word, and we don't ask for proofs to convince us. But we are braced when we find again and again and again that your Word is truth. Thank you for preserving the Bible for us. Thank you that your Book is now in the hands of more people than ever before in history. Call those who do not believe to increased respect for the Bible. Lead them to yourself, Father. We love to see your Word magnified! And we pray in the name of Messiah Jesus, amen."

Rick