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R & R

Sorry we have been so slack in our blogging during this trip to the US, we just have been enjoying basic peace and tranquility with the families and friends. This Saturday we are heading to Charlotte and then to Concord. It has been two years since I (Jan) have been to Concord! I can't wait!

Home for Christmas!

Well after three days, thirty-one hours of driving, two countries and seven states (1,643 miles) we have safely arrived at Greg's parents' home in Stony Point.  Just to let everyone know - we made it, hallelujah!!! 

Happy Birthday Zack!!!

100_1081Today Zack turned 15.  If he was a girl then we'd have to have him a Quinceaños party but fortunately we don't have to shell out several hundred dollars for that.  Instead we're having a surprise party for him with his cell group from church. 

Zack's a very special kid - always dependable and he has a generous, kind soul.   We're very blessed as parents to have him as our son.  ¡Feliz cumpleaños, hijo!

Father & Son Time

100_1024This past weekend Max and I went on a trip together.
Here we are just before catching a bus to Ciudad Victoria. 

100_1027 In the VIP lounge at the Central Bus Station in Monterrey.  It is NOT permitted to take pictures in the VIP lounge.  But I just couldn't resist...

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At our hotel - Los Monteros.  $25 a night!

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The courtyard of the hotel.

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The Museum of Natural History and Planetarium in Ciudad Victoria.

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                                  So here's a shout out to Max.  I hope he had as much fun as I did. 

Friday night in Chattanooga

Yosef Do you remember early on in the football season when Appalachian State stunned Michigan by beating them in front of their home crowd 34-32? We both graduated from ASU, and enjoyed years of going to the games and cheering on for our Mountaineers... well, this Friday, they will go for their third national championship (threepeat) in a row in Chattanooga against Delaware! We will be traveling, and not able to watch the game, but if you are interested - tune in to cheer for our Apps!

Why you should read Calvin...

John_calvin__young_2One of my goals (Greg) for the upcoming year is to finally, once and for all, read John Calvin's Institutes of the Christian Religion.  This 1,400 page magnum opus has long fascinated and shaped my theological thinking and it's time I plunged full-depth into the work.  This past year Jan & I have waded, with much profit, through St. Augustine's Confessions  and have benefited greatly from the wisdom and perspective of this brilliant and pious saint.  So why read Calvin?  Pectus facit theologum, the heart makes the theologian, said Anselm; and it was certainly true in the case of John Calvin.  In an excellent article by theologian J.I. Packer called "Calvin the Theologian," Dr. Packer writes:

What were Calvin’s aims and qualifications as a theologian, and what was the extent of his achievement? To find the answer to these questions, we shall not need to look further than the 1559 Institutes, the definitive edition of Calvin’s magnum opus, at once confession of faith, Protestant apologia, Christian vade-mecum, Reformation manifesto, and theological text-book—by common consent the finest theological work of the Reformation, if not of all time. Its full title includes the statement that its contents, greatly augmented, had been rearranged for this edition into four books and eighty chapters.

The Institutes introduces itself in the opening chapters of Book I as a treatise on the
knowledge of God. As such, it may be described from two points of view, corresponding to
the traditional distinction between the formal and material principles of the Reformation (that
is, the principle of biblical authority and the doctrine of justification by faith only—sola
Scriptura and sola fide). Formally, it is an analysis of the entire theological content of the
Bible, from which, as the Word of God, our knowledge of God must derive and on which it
necessarily depends. God is the ultimate subject, as He is the ultimate author of all Scripture,
and if we would know Him it is to Scripture that we must go; for it is through His inspired
witness to Himself in Holy Writ that God makes Himself known to us today. Accordingly,
Calvin’s eighty chapters constitute a thorough systematic analysis of all that Scripture
discloses of the will and ways of God, and may be read, from this standpoint, as an extended
answer to the questions: how can men know God? and what is included in a true knowledge
of Him? But this is not all that they are. Just because, formally, the Institutes is an ordered
exposition of the biblical revelation, it is also, materially, a theology of the gospel and a
handbook of evangelical religion; for that is what the Bible, viewed from the standpoint of its
contents, is itself. Inspection shows, first, that the hub of the Bible is the gospel, the New
Testament kergyma, in which the Creator reveals Himself to sinners as Saviour through the
work of Christ and the gift of the Spirit; and, second, that Scripture presents this redemptive
revelation in a practical way for a practical purpose—namely, to restore ungodly men,
through faith in Christ, to a life of obedience and love towards God, in which true religion
consists. Calvin, as a faithful expositor, presents the biblical material from the biblical angle
of approach. Accordingly, his summa theologica is of set purpose, as its title proclaims, a
handbook of religion.

The complete text of The Institutes of the Christian Religion can be downloaded from the excellent and very useful website Christian Classics Ethereal Library