August 30, 2008

  • Court Dance - Two Butterflies and Two Dragons

    These performers are dressed in traditional clothing and are dancing a court dance from the Joseon Dynasty, which ruled Korea from 1392 to 1910. Some court dances involved up to 200 dancers.

    These pictures were taken during a performance of different traditional Korean music styles in the Secret Garden at Changdeok Palace, located in Seoul.

     

  • Pansori

    Pansori is a Korean opera style performed by one singer and one musician. The performer acts out all of the parts.

    These pictures were taken at a demonstration of traditional Korean musical styles conducted every Thursday during the summer in the Secret Garden at Changdeok Palace in Seoul.

     

August 20, 2008


  • Dragonfly - Boramae Park, Seoul, August 2008


    Moth on Aster - Boramae Park, Seoul, August 2005

     

June 30, 2008

  • Back in Seoul

    My time in Korea this term has been quite tiring this last term. We are currently on term break, and it feels as if it didn't come soon enough.

    Last term I decided to move to the English Village that SDA Language Institute has been given to operate over the next two years. For some reason, English villages have been losing money, and it was hoped the SDALI could make a difference. I was to go there and see what I could do to help make things happen.

    At the school in Daegu, a teacher went out of town, so I substituted for her for about ten days. I then went to a school in Bundang, located just southeast of Seoul. A teacher had pneumonia, so I subbed for her for about a week. Then her husband came down with pneumonia, and I was there for a second week. They recovered, and I was sent to the textbook office at SDALI Main Campus to fill in for a teacher who accepted a job with the Korea Herald newspaper. The job duties have nothing to do with teaching. I write material for a textbook designed to help students prepare for an oral proficiency exam that is administered by computer.

    The need was so great that I was offered a permanent position with textbook development, and I accepted. So I spend time reading the Internet looking for ideas for the books we are preparing, as well as copyediting material, and looking over galley sheets as we prepare for the deadline coming up in July. My eyes hurt from eye strain. I don't wear my glasses while reading, which is okay, but I am forced to move closer to the computer screen so I can read it. My glasses make the computer screen print too small for me to read comfortably. It is a drag, but that is the way it is for now.

    I am writing. I am reading. I am trying to get back into a creative state of mind so I can take pictures and write poetry. It has been a long, dry period, and I hope the weather breaks soon.

     

May 5, 2008

April 22, 2008

  • Hunter’s Green: My Celebration of Life in General

    Green
    has always been my favorite color. Unlike some people, I have managed
    to narrow it down to a specific shade of green found in the woods when
    the skies are heavy with rain. After the rainfall, bounce the light
    from the grey clouds off the grass onto the leaves above and you will
    find my shade of green under the trees. Its a dark shade of green I
    think of as Hunter Green. It's darker than olive drab, and to me is
    full of life though it is best seen in the dark.

    One of my
    favorite memories of being in the woods occured sometime around
    November 1988. It was my first time deer hunting. My brother-in-law and
    a friend and I went deep into Lawrence County, Kentucky, early one very
    cold and dark morning. We climbed out of the truck, got our rifles, and
    set off into the wooded eastern Kentucky hills. At the top of a hill, I
    took my place, sitting on the ground under a tree, looking down the
    slope and just listened to the wind rustling through the leaves that
    still remained on the branches overhead.

    Occasionally I would
    hear rifle fire from other hunters across the valley from me. I kept my
    eyes open on the woods in front of me, and listened to the wind.

    I
    heard something move. I looked toward the sound, and I saw something
    there, but I could not identify the animal. Slowly it moved, and I was
    sure it was a deer. I sat there and watched it move. A moment later, I
    heard a "baa" like a sheep. When I told my companions about it as we
    perpared to leave, they told me that deer do make that sound.

    Going
    into the woods again to stalk deer is something I will never again get
    to do. While I know I would enjoy it, it just isn't possible to do here
    in Korea. However, there are many woods to explore in the vast national
    park system operated by the South Korean government. I've been to Apsan
    Park twice, Soraksan and Bukhansan National Parks once, and hiked
    Namhansan Fortress four times. There are lots of woods and many shades
    of green to explore and to photograph. So much beauty to experience, so
    little time in which to experience it.

    Last year, while living
    in Chuncheon, I felt as if I missed the blooming of the spring. The
    overabundance of air conditioning in the classrooms left me with cold
    symptoms for most of the summer. It got cold again all too soon. My day
    spent hiking Bongeiusan was one of coughing and clicking, but it was
    also warm and beautiful, the way a summer day was meant to be
    experienced. Classroom windows were closed to keep out the pollution
    from the traffic four stories below our classrooms. What I got in
    return was cold air forced through dirty air filters that had me
    coughing three days a week. Too much time was spent indoors. Not enough
    time was spent in the clean mountain air Chuncheon is famous for.

    My
    classroom windows are open. Outside the trees are green, the azaleas
    have bloomed, and Daegu is proving itself to be a beautiful, colorful
    city, though the peace is shattered by an overabundance of traffic and
    the occasional scream of Eagles as twin turbofans push F-15Es of the
    South Korean air force into the heavens. Peace, balance, harmony
    between heaven, earth, the human race are in such a disorder that only
    God can clean up the mess.

    I hunted deer with a rifle that is no
    longer in my hands. Two years later I was baptised into the Seventh-day
    Adventist church, and with my renewed dedication to God to (attempt to)
    keep holy the Sabbath came a stronger dedication in honoring His
    creation of all life on earth. God told Adam and Eve to have dominion
    over the earth. For me, "to have dominion over the earth" means that
    the human race has a duty to preserve nature, to ensure that life on
    earth thrives, is successful, abundant, and healthy. A king has
    dominion over a kingdom. He should want his people to live in a country
    that is beautiful, vibrant, full of life and that the people want to
    love and preserve. So it should be that we as human beings would want
    to take pride in ouir planet and keep it thriving for all generations
    to enjoy. This reminder comes to me every week. There are fifty-two
    Sabbaths in a year, and for me that is 52 times a year to celebrate
    Earth Day, while honoring the One who gave us the blessing of this
    planet that we are sytematically destroying.

    I lived in
    Kentucky for over 20 years. People from out of state would speak of the
    beauty of the Kentucky highlands but lamented that Kentuckians trashed
    the landscape. Driving any one of the backroads through Appalachian
    Kentucky these visitors found beer cans, cigarette butts, fast food
    wrappers, broken bottles, and other debris that shattered the natural
    beauty of the landscape. Some residents I know were saddened by the
    industrial pollution carried into northeastern Kentucky that caused
    some older people to have problems with allergies or cold symptoms, or
    worse. Often these travelers would tell me how much cleaner the
    backroads were in neighboring Ohio.

    My first experience with
    yellow dust came in the spring of 2006. From a classroom I looked
    outside at the yellowish-grey sky, wondering if my eyes were deceiving
    me. It was one of the worst yellow dust storms to blow into Seoul, and
    in the days ahead meteorologists were criticized for not predicting it
    sooner. Many older people had some problems breathing as a result of
    the dust storm. As I looked into yellow dust, I found out what heavy
    metals it carried, as well as the pollution it picked up as the winds
    carried it over China, Korea, Japan and eventually into the western
    United States.

    My past experiences with automobiles were so
    bad that I was glad to come to Korea to serve as a missionary English
    teacher. It meant that I would never again have to drive a car. Unlike
    the "Green Meanies" of the environmental extremist movement who claim a
    divine right to pollute without paying any penalty for their arrogance,
    I walk when I can, and take the bus or subway or taxi when necessary. I
    do not like the way the Green Meanies have hijacked my favorite color
    and forsaken their obligation to preserve the earth according to the
    common sense approach taken by hunters and conservationists in the gun
    rights movement. Ted Nugent has more crediblity to me as an
    environmentalist than Al Gore.

    In my paradigm, life is sacred.
    It is a gift that should not be taken for granted. The news I read on
    the Internet tells me that many people promoting environmental causes
    do not believe the way that I do. While we believe that the earth is
    our home, we differ on how it should be preserved. I am saddened that
    so much has been destroyed through overdevelopment, and yet, it is
    difficult in finding a happy medium on which we would agree in making
    things balance out in the end. I do not like the news that a developer
    wants to continue the destruction of a Civil War battlefield in
    Perryville, Kentucky, knowing that so much has already been detroyed by
    developers around Gettysburg, Richmond and Petersburg, Virginia, and
    other historical sites. We lose more than we gain by this
    overdevelopment and the urban sprawl that many cities are dealing with.

    Food
    prices around the world are on the rise because of the Green Meanie
    movement to produce biofuels from corn, wheat and barley, so that we
    don't continue to rely on fossil fuels. People will starve to death
    because they don't have food to eat, but that is okay, for some green
    meanie will earn some points on a long term investment. For the green
    meanie, it is money in the bank. For everyone else, it is one more hole
    in the ground to be filled with tears of mourning.

    Life goes on. Until Jesus Christ returns, death will go on, as well.

    Go
    outside. Walk in the woods. Stop and smell the roses. Know that God has
    filled the earth with blue and green and is calling us to give praise.
    Be joyful, for death will die soon enough. And life will go on in a
    world where peace, balance, harmony has been restored between heaven,
    earth and the human race. 

    Surely come quickly, Lord Jesus. Amen

March 31, 2008

March 17, 2008

  • Sabbath: What's the Issue?

    Anti-Judaism at root of 'Sunday Sabbath'?
    4th century church banned observing Saturday at risk of ex-communication

    Posted: March 16, 2008
    5:25 pm Eastern

    © 2008 WorldNetDaily

    When
    Samuele Bacchiocchi, a Seventh-Day Adventist, immersed himself in the
    research of how the biblical Sabbath moved from Saturday to Sunday, he
    did so in an unlikely environment for a non-Catholic – the Pontifical
    Gregorian University in Rome.

    He not only had open access to
    long-forgotten historical records, he also graduated at the top of his
    class – summa cum laude, an honor which included a gold medal from Pope
    Paul VI.

    But what he found in that investigation would probably
    shock most Christians who have never studied the subject, nor thought
    deeply about what became of the fourth commandment.

    What caused
    the switch from worship on Saturday to Sunday? One of the principle
    motivations in the early church, Bacchiocchi finds, was anti-Judaism.

    Consider
    this Nicene conciliar letter from Constantine written in A.D. 325: "Let
    us then have nothing in common with the detestable Jewish crowd: for we
    have received from our Savior a different way ... Strive and pray
    continually that the purity of your souls may not seem in anything to
    be sullied by fellowship with the customs of these most wicked men ...
    All should unite in desiring that which sound reason appears to demand
    and in avoiding all participation in the perjured conduct of the Jews."

    Not
    surprisingly, anti-Sabbath laws followed in Rome – imposing harsh
    penalties for anyone who refused to work on Saturday or who deigned to
    worship on that day of the week.

    He quotes Sylvester I, the pope
    from 314-337: "If every Sunday is to be observed joyfully by the
    Christians on account of the resurrection, then every Sabbath on
    account of the burial is to be execration (loathing or cursing) of the
    Jews."

    Observing the Sabbath meant excommunication from the
    church as of A.D. 363 and the Council of Laodicea: "Christians must not
    judaize by resting on the Sabbath, but must work on that day, rather
    honoring the Lord's Day; and, if they can, resting then as Christians.
    But if any shall be found to be judaizers, let them be anathema from
    Christ."

    But Bacchiocchi also reminds readers the Saturday
    Sabbath, despite official repression against it, never was completely
    abandoned.

    Likewise, over the years, some prominent voices have never forgotten the Sabbath – and what became of it.

    Was it, indeed, a Roman Catholic decision made after the first century and the death of the apostles?

    It's hard to argue with the historical record.

    In fact, some Catholics revel in the role Rome played in the switch.

    "The
    Catholic Church of its own infallible authority created Sunday a holy
    day to take the place of the Sabbath of the old law," wrote the Kansas
    City Catholic on Feb. 9, 1893.

    Other Catholic sources agree with little self-doubt.

    "Sunday
    is a Catholic institution, and its claims to observance can be defended
    only on Catholic principles," wrote the Catholic Press in Sydney,
    Australia, on Aug. 25, 1900. "From beginning to end of Scripture there
    is not a single passage that warrants the transfer of weekly public
    worship from the last day of the week to the first."

    James
    Cardinal Gibbons seconds the motion in his famous "The Faith of Our
    Fathers," published in 1876: "You may read the Bible from Genesis to
    Revelation, and you will not find a single line authorizing the
    sanctification of Sunday. The Scriptures enforce the religious
    observance of Saturday, a day which we never sanctify."

    But it's
    not just Catholics who acknowledge the church has just plain forgotten
    one of God's great commandments – without so much as a second thought.

    Dwight
    L. Moody, one of America's great Protestant evangelists of the 19th
    century, noted the omission in his book, "Weighed and Wanting."

    "The
    Sabbath was binding in Eden, and it has been in force ever since," he
    wrote. "The fourth commandment begins with the word 'remember,' showing
    that the Sabbath already existed when God wrote the law on the tablets
    of stone at Sinai. How can men claim that this one commandment has been
    done away with when they will admit that the other nine are still
    binding?"

    How do today's top Christian pastors refute the evidence the Sabbath is still in effect?

    Greg
    Laurie, a Calvary Chapel pastor with one of the largest congregations
    in the country in Southern California, as well as a weekly columnist at
    WND, says there are three reasons Christians do not observe the Sabbath:

    It is the only commandment not repeated in the New Testament.
    Jesus never taught anyone to keep the Sabbath.
    The apostles never taught anyone to keep the Sabbath.
    The Sabbath, he says, is a "shadow of the things that were to come; the reality, however, is found in Christ."

    "It
    would be like coming back from a long trip away from my wife and kids,"
    he says. "I could not wait to get home and be reunited with them. Then
    while getting off the plane I see them with the sun behind them casting
    a long shadow before them. Then I get off the plane and run and fall
    down and try to hug the shadow!"

    ----- my comments -----

    Regarding
    Greg Laurie's comments, it should be remembered that in the New
    Testament, the Sabbath was not an issue because it was already the day
    of worship. Jesus didn't teach anyone about keeping Sabbath because
    they already knew about it and were keeping it. In the four gospels we
    read that Mary the mother of Jesus and Mary Magdaline rested on Sabbath
    then went to the tomb in the early hours of the first day of the week.
    In Acts Paul preached on Sabbath. The gospel was to go to the Jew
    first. Jews didn't need to be taught about Sabbath.

    Is the
    Sabbath a "shadow of things to come?" Jesus celebrated Sabbath with
    Adam and Eve in Eden. The day will come when we will sit in His
    pressence with the Father in heaven and keep the Sabbath. Sabbath
    observance will never again become a point of contention between
    Christians who pray for the peace of Jerusalem, ask for the mind of
    Christ, and seek to enter into His rest as we strive for true unity in
    the Holy Spirit.

    There is a reason why God said "Remember the
    Sabbath day." We have forgotten it and now as He tries to lead us back
    into His rest, we treat it as if it were irrelevant, an old relic that
    doesn't mean anything to us. If we break one commandment, then we are
    guilty of breaking them all. If Sabbath is irrelevant, then so are the
    commandments regarding adultery, murder, coveting, bearing false
    witness, among others. If this is just a "shadow," then the people who
    fought so hard to keep the Ten Commandments hanging in the courts
    throughout America were just wasting time.

    If the Ten
    Commandments have value to Christians, then we must allow them to be
    written on our hearts and imprinted on our minds so that we will not
    sin against God or each other.

    The world doesn't hate
    Christians because of the love we claim to have for it. It hates us
    because of our divisiveness and our hypocracy. Sabbath is just one more
    issue that drives this point home. It is not an issue of salvation; it is an issue concerning obedience to God's laws that govern His kingdom.

  • Happy St. Patrick's Day!

     

    May the luck of the Irish pull you through when all the other luck available to you fails.