Monday, November 28, 2011

The Bible in my life

A Christian Science perspective.

My first recollection of the Bible goes back to my early Sunday School days in the Episcopal church that my parents attended. The Sunday School room had a large sand table, like a sandbox on legs. After hearing Bible stories read to us, we were led to the sand table, where we created oases, formed dunes, and peopled them with cardboard depictions of the Bible characters in the stories. What I learned of these Bible stories in that Sunday School provided a foundation on which to continue building, and I recall those days with fondness.

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Some time later, a friend gave me a Bible (she already had one) that had been awarded to her for excellent Sunday School attendance in the Congregational Sunday School. I liked it because all of Jesus? words were printed in red ink. In public school my acquaintance with the Bible was reinforced through opening exercises at the start of each day, comprised of citations from the Bible, chosen and read by students, and the repetition of the Lord?s Prayer.

When a group of Christian Scientists began holding public services in our town, my mother decided to return to the denomination of her youth, Christian Science, and enrolled me in the Sunday School, where my familiarity with the Bible expanded in a new context. Now I was learning that I had the same access to God as the Bible characters had, that His presence in my life could result in guidance and healing, as it had for those luminaries in biblical days.

I recall the comfort I received when as a 16-year-old I traveled by bus to attend a dance at a private school with a date I had yet to meet. I was apprehensive and frankly dismayed about this plan executed between my mother and a relative, whose friend?s son needed a date for the occasion. My mother knew through her relative that I would be well chaperoned by his parents. His family met me at the bus terminal and escorted me to my hotel room. I felt desolate and disagreeable, and it suddenly occurred to me that there would be a Bible in the bedside table drawer, as the Gideons? mission was to place one in the rooms of each lodging establishment. I eagerly opened the drawer, and, sure enough, there it was. A feeling of warmth, home, and familiarity washed over me as I drew it out. I turned to the book of Psalms, knowing I was sure to find comfort and assurance in its pages.

Psalm 18 says, ?The Lord is my rock, and my fortress, and my deliverer; my God, my strength, in whom I will trust; my buckler, and the horn of my salvation, and my high tower.? Further on in that chapter, I read, ?In my distress I called upon the Lord, and cried unto my God: he heard my voice out of his temple, and my cry came before him, even into his ears.? I immediately felt comforted. Fortified with what I had read, I enjoyed the weekend despite my initial resistance.

I consider these early encounters with the Bible as important waymarks in my progress spiritward. Today I look forward to reading and studying it daily, in consonance with the Christian Science textbook, ?Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures,? by Mary Baker Eddy. That book contains this tenet: ?As adherents of Truth, we take the inspired Word of the Bible as our sufficient guide to eternal Life? (p. 497). I find the Bible stories revealing themselves in new and inspiring ways according to my need of the moment, and I am grateful to those who, over the years, have respected and promoted the Bible?s messages.

The 23rd Psalm is, of course, a familiar favorite. Praying one night for freedom from resentment, I found the message I needed in that psalm: ?Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies.? The enemy I had been wrestling with was resentment, sometimes referred to as frozen hate. Right there where that ?enemy? seemed to be, I could instead partake of the table before me that the Lord had prepared, a table that I envisioned as laden with His qualities of mercy, justice, lovingkindness, peace, generosity of spirit. I prayed deeply to feel the cleansing effect of this insight. The resentment faded, and I felt washed clean of the ?frozen hate.?

Whatever our need might be, and wherever in the world we might be, the Bible offers within its pages comfort, hope, and healing.

National Bible Week is being celebrated from Nov. 20-27.

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Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/nsapJYPDyBk/The-Bible-in-my-life

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Green's catch carries Bengals

Greg Little

By JOE KAY

updated 5:12 p.m. ET Nov. 27, 2011

CINCINNATI - A.J. Green did it to the Browns again.

The rookie receiver made a leaping catch for a 51-yard gain in the final minute Sunday, setting up a field goal that rallied the Cincinnati Bengals to a 23-20 victory over self-destructive Cleveland.

The surprising Bengals (7-4) stayed right behind Baltimore and Pittsburgh in the AFC North with another second-half comeback forged by their rookie big-play combination.

Andy Dalton threw a high down-the-middle pass that Green went way above the defenders to grab. Green was run out of bounds at the 2, and the Browns (4-7) forced Cincinnati to settle for Mike Nugent's 26-yard field goal with 38 seconds left ? the Bengals' first lead of the game.

Cincinnati's turnaround season started in Cleveland, where the Browns failed to line up promptly and were surprised by a quick snap that led to Green's uncontested 41-yard touchdown catch.

That one was easy. This one was amazing.

Green, who sat out a loss at Baltimore last Sunday with a bruised right knee, set up the winning kick with his catch-and-run. The first-round draft pick had three catches for 110 yards. The Browns and Steelers had been the only teams in the NFL that hadn't allowed a 100-yard receiving game.

For the second time in three games, a botched snap cost Cleveland an opportunity to take a late lead. Phil Dawson was short on a 55-yard try with 1:51 left after the snap skipped along the ground, giving Cincinnati its last chance.

It was a familiar outcome for the intrastate rivalry ? Cincinnati has won 12 of the past 15 games and six of seven at Paul Brown Stadium. Only 48,260 showed up at the 65,500-seat stadium to see a game decided by a bad snap and a great catch.

Cleveland was buoyed by the return of running back Peyton Hillis, who missed the past six games with a strained left hamstring. He carried 19 times for 65 yards, helping the Browns put together long drives.

The Browns scored 20 points for only the second time this season and were in position to take the late lead when the bad snap resulted in Dawson's short kick. He'd already connected from 32 and 54 yards, his longest field goal of the season.

It was a stunning gaffe. The Browns had a chance to take the late lead two games ago against St. Louis, but a bad snap scuttled Dawson's 22-yard field goal with 2:13 left and sent Cleveland to a 13-12 loss.

Dalton had the challenge of bringing the Bengals back in the second half against an AFC North opponent for the third week in a row. They came up just short against Pittsburgh and Baltimore, but remained in the thick of the playoff competition by pulling one out against Cleveland.

Down 20-10 late in the third quarter on Sunday, Dalton helped the Bengals get the rematch. He was 21 of 31 for 270 yards and his 16th touchdown pass of the season, topping Greg Cook for the Bengals rookie record. Cedric Benson carried 21 times for 106 yards, his second 100-yard game against the Browns.

Colt McCoy was 16 of 34 for 151 yards with a pair of touchdowns. His fourth-down pass was knocked away at midfield with 10 seconds to go, sealing Cincinnati's win.

McCoy's 24-yard pass to Jordan Norwood capped Cleveland's opening drive and gave the Browns their first touchdown in the first quarter all season. They'd managed a total of nine points in the opening quarter until then.

McCoy's touchdown pass to Greg Little made it 17-7 at halftime, more points than the Browns had scored in any of their past five games. Little dropped numerous passes, including one on Cleveland's last possession.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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