Allen Hunt's Blog
Where Real Life and Faith Come Together
1 Comments •
Life+Misc
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291 Words
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Monday, October 29, 2007
Updates on stories we have talked about on the show - some quite often:
1) Genarlow Wilson is free. Thank God the state of Georgia's Supreme Court could see what everyone else could see. A mandatory 10 year sentence for consensual oral sex by a 17 year old man with a 15 year old girl is extreme, cruel and unusual. Genarlow is free after serving almost 3 years. Still too long, but 3 is better than 10. Here is your second chance, Genarlow. Please show the world what you're made of.
2) Albus Dumbledore is gay. For some reason, J.K. Rowling, the author of the Harry Potter series, found it important to state that publicly. Dumbledore, Harry's defender and guide, exhibits no sexual behaviors of any kind in 7 books. But Rowling now wants us to know that he was gay. Who cares? If it was important to you, you should have put it in the book. These are fictional characters in your head, Ms. Rowling. They are not real people. The series is over. Move on.
3) A recipient of the vitriol spewed by the folks at Westboro Baptist Church in Topeka, Kansas, is fighting back. These folks, led by Fred Phelps, picket US military funerals because they believe God is pouring out wrath on America for being too gay-friendly. They picket with signs like "God Hates You", and "Thank God for dead Soldiers," in addition to their remarkable web site www.godhatesfags.com. Finally, the family of one slain soldier is fighting back by suing the Phelps family and the church picketers for infliction of emotional distress. Not sure how the law suit will pan out but glad to know that the Phelps family will have to pony up money to defend their indefensible behavior.
1 Comments •
Education
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160 Words
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Thursday, October 25, 2007
Here we go again. The assault on free speech, free inquiry, and intellectual pursuits continues at Emory University in Atlanta.
In the same week that Emory hosted the Dalai Lama and several speeches and events in which he shared a message emphasizing grace, compassion, and tolerance, Emory also hosted David Horowitz. Horowitz was scheduled to speak on Islamo-fascism awareness week topics.
I.e., Horowitz wants to expose the truth about Islam, violence, and terror. At Emory, he never had a chance. He was shouted down and had to be escorted from the room for safety purposes. A short video can be seen at www.incorrectu.com.
Shameful may not be a strong enough word. Emory preaches tolerance and free intellectual inquiry. Emory practices oppression and suppression.
I graduated from Emory's Candler School of Theology in 1991, and my experience included speech codes, closed discourse, and shout-downs of opposing views. The more things change, the more they stay the same.
The virus of political correctness continues to infect.
1 Comments •
Inspirational+Heartfelt
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156 Words
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Tuesday, October 23, 2007
Every few weeks God reminds me or shows me just how wonderful our listeners are.
With folks coming out to our Chick-Fil-A events (the third and final one is next Monday), it has been heartwarming to hear how the show helps listeners in their real lives.
With callers like the ones we experience every week, it is easy to see why the show is gaining popularity. Just this week we had one of the most powerful calls ever - a father dreaming of hearing his own autistic son speak for the first time.
And then there are our bloggers - atheists, pornographers, followers of Christ, and everything in between.
All in all, just a simple blog to say thank you to each listener. We are having fun and the best is yet to come.
We will begin distributing our show via satellite in November, which will allow us to reach additional markets.
Keep on listening - and tell your friends!
9 Comments •
Life+Misc
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302 Words
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Thursday, October 18, 2007
I got to thinking about Jack Alderman. In all likelihood, today is his last day on earth.
He is scheduled to be executed tomorrow.
Alderman has requested his final meal include fried chicken, 12 fried shrimp, fries, tossed salad with Russian or French dressing, a pint of cherry or strawberry ice cream, and iced tea.
That got me thinking about what I would do if I knew I had exactly 24 hours to live. If I knew I were going to die tomorrow, how would I spend today?
Several things became important to me
1) I would get up early before my wife and daughters and go to worship, probably to a Catholic mass since they offer worship most days early in the morning. Simple quiet prayerful time in the presence of God. Meditating on His love and His promises. Envisioning His heart.
2) I would want to spend the day with my wife and two daughters. Since I am the one dying tomorrow, I get to pick what we do. Hike in the mountains of Western North Carolina on a trail that means a lot to me. Looking Glass Rock. 3 miles up, 3 miles down. Breathtaking view at the top where you see nothing but forest - no people, no towns, no cars. Just unblemished nature as far as the eye can see.
3) We would descend and miraculously end up in Macon, Georgia, to eat at Tucker's BBQ, a little known joint south of town. Sandwich, fries, stew, and sweet tea.
4) Probably spend the evening sitting on Coleman Hill in Macon for personal memories of the place.
5) Stay up as late as I was able (I am not known for my ability to be alert much past 11:00) and watch movies with my wife and girls.
6) Say a quiet prayer together.
That's my last day on earth.
4 Comments •
Law
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323 Words
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Wednesday, October 17, 2007
Christoper Scott Emmett is scheduled to die tonight.
Jack Alderman is scheduled to die on Friday.
Emmett in Virginia, and Alderman in Georgia. Both by lethal injection.
Alderman has requested his final meal include fried chicken, 12 fried shrimp, fries, tossed salad with Russian or French dressing, a pint of cherry or strawberry ice cream, and iced tea. Not sure why he did not ask for Fincher's BBQ which is not all that far from the Georgia death row. But that is his own business. He is a human being.
Georgia's Supreme Court refused to postpone Alderman's execution until the US Supreme Court rules whether death by lethal injection constitutes "cruel and unusual punishment." The High Court recently agreed to hear a case from Kentucky from two inmates claiming that the three-drug cocktail used to kill inmates is excruciatingly painful and therefore unconstitutional.
I cannot believe that we are debating this. Now we are trying to find a "humane" way to execute criminals?
QUESTION: What is a humane way to kill someone?
ANSWER: There is no such thing.
The death penalty is wrong for so many reasons not the least of which is that life is not ours to make and not ours to take. The death penalty costs more to implement than does life imprisonment (Witness the present case of Brian Nichols), the death penalty is usually applied to the poorest criminals who cannot afford good counsel, and the death penalty does not accomplish vengeance or satisfaction (it merely creates one more horrific death to add to the pile). Please do not tell me that you can see Jesus walking up to the chair and pulling the switch - on in this case, up to the gurney and slipping in the needle.
Alderman and Emmett have been convicted of heinous crimes. They no longer pose a risk to society. Leave them in prison to reflect on their guilt. Leave them there until they die of natural causes.
THAT is justice.
1 Comments •
Life+Misc
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280 Words
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Monday, October 15, 2007
OK, I admit it. I watched Dr. Phil today.
I feel better now that I have confessed.
Not sure that OJ feels better, however. In the book, IF I Did It: Confessions of the Killer, making its way ever so glacially to publication, OJ shares details and facts about the murder of his ex-wife, Nicole, and Ron Goldman, that no one could ever know lest they were at the murder itself.
So OJ, always looking for $, narrates a book (it would have been too time-consuming to write it himself, and he is looking for the real killers in his spare time)for one of three reasons:
1) He needs money - that is true
2) He desires more publicity - possibly true
3) His internal conscience is desperately trying to find some way to process what he did but was acquitted of - this is my theory
Edgar Allan Poe's "Tell-Tale Heart" shows how powerful our guilty consciences are. And OJ's new book is the latest proof. He HAD to find a way to confess. His sanity is on the line. Somehow he has to get the confession out. So he does it "hypothetically" in a book IF I did it.
Confession is good for the soul. The only thing worse than doing something wrong is carrying the guilt around inside you with nowhere to vent it. It eats your soul from the inside out. That is why confession is such an important part of the spiritual life.
It is also why OJ "wrote" this book.
Now, with his latest arrest in Vegas, it looks like OJ will have plenty of time to process his guilty conscience in prison.
And while he is there, I hope he gets to watch Dr. Phil.
13 Comments •
Christianity+Church
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211 Words
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Tuesday, October 9, 2007
Intolerant
Crabby
Boring
Judgmental
Words used to describe Christians. By nearly everyone who is not a Christian in our nation.
Gabe Lyons has done good research as has the Barna Group regarding how Christians are perceived in America. And the results are not pretty - too political, too anti-gay, too judgmental, AGAINST more than things than they are FOR, and the list goes on and on.
Lyons and Barna conclude that we Christians have an image problem.
I disagree. We do not have an image problem. We have a conversion problem.
The problem does not lie in how people perceive us as Christians. The problem lies in the depth of our transformation in Christ Jesus.
Too many of us swim in the deep waters of this materialistic, consumeristic, self-serving culture and do so without ever giving it a second thought. We pursue the American dream without considering how our faith in Christ enters the equation of our lives in any real way.
What we need is not to change our behavior or the perception of that behavior.
What we need is faith. Real, genuine, authentic, deep faith. Faith that will change us from the inside out. We cannot change ourselves. Only God can do that.
Only then will we be perceived for love and mission rather than politics and judgmentalism.
Faith transforms. Completely.
7 Comments •
Family
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179 Words
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Thursday, October 4, 2007
My friend (yes, I only have one) shared with me this week that his 8 year old son was the only boy in his school class not to receive an invitation to a classmate's birthday party. The birthday boy passed out his invitations in class - to everyone but my friend's son, "Johnny."
Are you kidding me?
My wife taught first grade for years and learned early on to make it plain to parents - if you are gonna pass out invitations in class, invite everyone. If not, invite folks privately.
But, really, it is not the teacher's responsibility. It is the parents'.
When my friend called the birthday boy's parents to inquire about what happened and why, the father was billigerent. "Our son doesn't want your son at the party. We let him choose who comes to his party."
Fine, then pass out the invitations privately or by phone. Have a heart. Even better, be a PARENT for heaven's sake, and teach your son to have class (no pun intended).
Who's running the house? Mom and Dad or the kids? Parents know the difference.
3 Comments •
Life+Misc
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248 Words
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Wednesday, October 3, 2007
This Paul Henss story is remarkable. 85 year old man living outside Atlanta and it turns out that he was a guard at Dachau, one of the worst concentration camps in Nazi Germany.
He evidently trained dogs to attack anyone trying to escape. When he came to the USA in 1955, he simply said that he wanted to forget the war and no one knew of his role in the Dachau camp.
He has lived here for 52 years. Working in a meat packing company in Milwaukee, then retiring in Atlanta to be near grandkids and family.
And now he has been discovered by the feds. He is subject to deportation proceedings because of his role at Dachau. He now claims that he "did not know" what was happening at the concentration camp he worked at.
YOu know what he needs? Confession.
The Holocaust survivors who despise him just might show some mercy and compassion if he came out and said, "I'm sorry. I really am. I have regretted my actions for the past 60 years. Please forgive me."
Confession would help everyone move forward. Can you imagine carrying that guilt around for 60 years? All your adult life? Confession would advance his own healing as well as that of the rest of us who were horrified by the Holocaust atrocities and the folks who claim not to have known what was happening.
But, instead, it looks like Paul Henss will be recalcitrant and combative to fight his deportation. For that, I am sorry.
Description
The Allen Hunt Show is about faith and life, plain and simple. According to a Gallup Poll in May of 2005, 85% of Americans consider their faith important or fairly important to their lives. Yet there is a gap on the talk radio airwaves that examines where faith and life come together. This show fills that gap like nothing currently on the radio. This is not one more political talk show, nor is it another faith-based counseling show because ultimately, life is not about what is right or left, but about what is right and wrong. The Allen Hunt Show takes on real life issues, with real life people, to see how faith can have a real impact. Join us on Saturdays from 9-11 PM and Sundays from 6-9 PM. Blessings!
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