26 April 2013

Our deranged Modern World

In the old days, when parents arranged marriages, the marriages seemed to last forever. These days, we're free to choose our spouses, and the rate of separation and divorce is disgraceful. It shows a greater erosion in our current society: It seems the freer we get, the more insane we become. We're not restrained any more by timeless principles, but by rash emotions and hormonal dictates. 

We make more babies than families; have more passing lovers than lifelong spouses; have more sex but have less love; we lust more and love less.

The Dark Ages is nothing compared to this age. We deserve  fire and brimstone more than Sodom and Gomorrah; and the flood more than the days of Noah.

Thank God He promised not to punish us like that again.

Ganjiki


--
Ganjiki

"INSPIRING PASSION"
 

17 April 2013

HEART OF WISDOM

HEART OF WISDOM


"Teach us to number our days, that we may gain a heart of wisdom." A psalm of Moses (90:12)



I turned another year old today. But I really stopped celebrating birthdays after 16. I wanted to stay there forever. Sometimes I think I am. Anyway, it's a time where I'm reminded of how precious life is (not that I forget on ordinary days): to know and be known by the Maker of the Universe; to love and be loved by an incredible woman; to belong to an awesome family; and to dwell in the sweetest country. Such is my lot.



What does it mean to be Papua New Guinean? We were deliberately placed here by God. He didn't randomly chuck us here. Or throw us into the air and see where we'd land on Earth. He deliberately decided I'd be Papua New Guinean. He could've made me Jewish so I'd be real smart. Or German so I'd be real tough. Or African so I could run marathons. Or Jamaican so I could run fast. He made me here, before I was even conceived. Before the foundations of the Earth, He decided to make me PNGean.


I didn't ask Him for this. I couldn't walk up to His drawing table and make corrections to His earlier designs of me. It was all on Him. In that infinite wisdom of His, He decided this. He must have had a plan. Surely better plans than I could ever have. And so here I am. Here we are. I’ve been a Papua New Guinean for 10,227 days. I'm learning to number my days. Maybe so I can gain a heart of wisdom. Just like Moses said.



Speaking of Wisdom, maybe this a good time to tell of 2 of my life verses: (1) "If any of you lacks wisdom let him ask of God who gives liberally and without reproach." [James 1:5]. (2) "So give your servant a discerning heart to govern your people and to distinguish between right and wrong. For who is able to govern this great people of yours?" ~ Solomon [1 Kings 3:9]


We don't seem to seriously seek wisdom these days. We think a modern information-age education is synonymous with wisdom. Far from it. Solomon's wisdom was a direct result of his prayer. It was God who gave him wisdom, increased his powers of observation and guided his learning. As a result he could recognized reality correctly and make calls that have stood true and profound through the ages.Here's my definition of wisdom: wisdom is the true understanding of truth and reality, for the accurate utility of knowledge, to the perpetual and eternal benefit of man, for the ultimate glory of God.


Foolishness is therefore knowledge un-girded by truth, not perpetually beneficial to man, and un-glorifying to God. And our knowledge is wreaked with those 3 negative characteristics. My definition of truth is "reality translated into information." If information does not accurately correspond to reality, it is not truth.


We need truth. But to discern truth one must have wisdom. Why is truth vital? Because without it we don't have an accurate grasp on reality. We haven't yet recognized the problems to even begin addressing them. If we are honest enough we'd realize that we're far from correctly discerning reality. We do not have truth. We're groping for answers and pathways but we don't know where or what the obstacles are. Nor do we know where we're going. We're blind. But we don't know it, because we have not seen the light. We don't know if there should be a difference.


We mistake digress for progress. Up for down. Childishness for manliness. Weakness for strength. Good for bad. Lies for truth. We celebrate vices and scoff virtues. Darkness for light. Revenge for justice. Insanity for freedom.


Today we're surrounded by leaders who think they know enough to not need wisdom. And so we have a nation that has every indication of a lost and degenerating society. And yet we glorify ourselves in our foolishness.


If we would only humbly ask God for wisdom we could probably figure out how to run our country better. My prayer is that these life verses will become cornerstones of the daily prayers of young people of PNG. That more would be constantly asking God for a heart of wisdom and the ability to distinguish between right and wrong. That they'd seek after His Word and read into books to gain a correct understanding of reality.


We would do well to seek wisdom above all things. Like precious and rare rubies. Like treasures stashed in some secret place, requiring vigilant seeking, and asking and knocking.


A nation of wise people per our Vision 2050 is an impossible dream if our youths are not interested in gaining a heart of wisdom.


Heavenise day!


Ganjiki

03 April 2013

NATIONAL DOCUMENTS SHOULD BE COMPULSORY READING

For some inspirational and nationalistic reading, try the Constitutional Planning Committee Report.

It's one of the most inspiring documents you as a Papua New Guinean could ever read. It contains the ideals of a new nation. An attempt at harmonising conflicting values of diverse cultures and a modern western-influenced world.

It will also tell you where we went wrong. We set for ourselves a goal. We wrote it down. But as soon as we started the journey our drivers threw out the roadmap and tried to figure it out on their own. As a result we've had successive governments simply continuously trying to undo the work of the previous, and trying their own thing every time. And we have a people who don't know what we started out to do so we don't know how to get our government back on track.

The CPC Report should be compulsory reading for every person (citizen or not), in the PNG education system. Without it and the without the Preamble of the Constituion being compulsory reading, we the people have ended up with a massive vacuum in our mindsets. Our philosophies are lacking a major component. And without that component we continue to be a lost people.

The Preamble of the Constitution is one of the most profound pieces of literature this nation owns. Its ideals are so sound it rivals the profundity of the American Declaration of Independence (at least in my view). The words can move you. The goals contained in the National Goals and Directive Principles are noble and perpetual. If our leaders would take those goals to heart they would realise what they're doing wrong. They'd change and start taking us where we need to go. (That's presuming they are remotely interested in taking us where we need to go).

So we are a nation of blind people being lead by blind leaders. We don't know where we're going and we want to get there real fast. We penned a vision, but threw it out as soon as we started the journey. Now we're travelling a hundred miles an hour not really going to a predetermined destination. We're circling a roundabout of conflicting visions and dreams imposed on us by leaders who want to make a name for themselves but end up mudding our nation's name.

So if you as a resident, or a citizen of this country, are interested in knowing what we should believe as a nation, and where we should be heading, and how we should get there, read the CPC Report and the Preamble of the Constitution.

It'll be worth it.

God bless PNG.

Ganjiki D Wayne
Patriots PngInc

29 March 2013

Short Good Friday Message from Tokaut Tokstret

There are two kinds of people in the world: The Judases and the Peters.

On the night of His arrest both Judas and Peter betrayed Jesus. Perhaps one's betrayal was deadlier than the other, but they were both betrayals by Jesus's most "loyal" friends. After realizing their acts of treason, one went and hung himself, thinking his sin was beyond forgiveness. The other went and repented in shame, and became the Rock on which the church is being built.

Peter understood and received God's forgiveness. Judas thought God could never forgive him. I'm convinced if he repented like Peter, God would have forgiven him. Although Judas was born to betray Jesus, he wasn't outside of God's infinite grace and mercy. He only needed to believe and receive it.

You and I betray Jesus everyday, for we all sin and fall short of His glory.

Question is: Do you return like Peter, or are you slowly "hanging" yourself like Judas?

No matter how grave a sin you think you've committed, God's grace abounds above it.

Don't hang yourself...

I guess that's why it's called "Good" Friday. Despite all the bad things that happened, good triumphs above it all. That can even go for our soul.

Heavenise Good Friday

Ganjiki

21 March 2013

A Confused World

By GDW

You shall know the Truth, and the Truth shall set you free.”
~Jesus

We live in a morally confused world. Where philosophers tell us even the notion of morality is an irrelevant consideration in the makeup of society. "What you believe in private doesn't matter in public". So keep your  morality at home.

In the book of Genesis, in the Garden of Eden the Devil, through a serpent, tried to convince man he didn't need God to know good from bad, right from wrong. That we could be like God. Nothing has changed except the form of the devil’s messenger. The message is still the same. Now he just uses secular philosophers, high-powered media, politicians, and "special interest" groups to push this agenda, not mentioning Hollywood and the entertainment industry. They're excellent salesmen for a very bad product. And the world is totally buying it.

Meanwhile, the people who do have the best product to sell to the world are the most miserable salespeople. Christians are selling the Gospel short, through their lack of assertive communication and of course their (our) blatant hypocrisy. In fact they're even buying that dangerous product dished out by its aggressive salesmen.

The world thinks it can fix this itself without God. And people who believe in God are starting to believe that to be true too. We somehow think that by walking away from faith in the one who gives us a choice to believe in Him, we're becoming liberated, and somehow more advanced in our humanness.

But look around. See how lost we are. By being our own "god" we've almost blasted morality into oblivion, and inserted our own preferences for determining what's right and wrong. And we’re getting “loster”. We don't know what's right or wrong anymore. We go by the majority and by the loudest philosopher, like Oprah or Chopra. And grasp the air for some longer-lasting point of reference from which we can know what's right is really right. Because our private preferences are wearing thin. We say things like:

  •   It’s ok if it feels good
  •  As long as you aren’t hurting anybody else
  • As long as the person you’re doing it to/with consents to it, it’s ok
  • You have the power and freedom over your own body
  •  Be yourself!
  • Don’t be held down by religion. Be free.
  •  Look out for yourself, your happiness is all that matters
  •  If it makes sense to do it, do it!
  •  God is what you say it is.
  •  God only thinks it’s wrong if you hurt others

If you push those statements to their logical end, you’ll find a world of contradictions, inconsistencies, clashes and lies. Let’s talk through a few of them.  

“If it feels good it’s ok”. But for some people it feels good to kill others. It feels good to rape and taunt others. It feels good to hurt themselves. It doesn't work. So enter another assertion: “As long as you don’t hurt others”. But hurting others feels good. And besides, the other consents to it. So here he is, killing because he feels good, and the other consents, but the world doesn't know so the world prosecutes him. “Be yourself!” But he was being himself when he was raping the kids. He can’t reconcile that need to be himself with the need to not hurt others without their consent. “You have the power and freedom over your own body”, so kill that child in your body before it has a chance to breathe on its own. But then why are we concerned that people should live healthy lives? Or why do we try to discourage them from using drugs and wasting their lives? And when they want to commit suicide—which means consenting to your own death, and executing yourself, because you just want to be yourself and people won’t let you—we tell them no please call us on this hotline and we’ll talk about it first. And when they call we tell them “don’t do it!” Aren’t they entitled to do whatever they want with their live and just “be themselves”? Aren’t they being themselves? Maybe not existing anymore is better for them than existing miserably? They’re not “hurting” others right? And finally, God thinks it’s wrong only if you hurt others. But if God cares about not hurting others, how could He not care about you hurting yourself. Contradictions abound!

Back to the earliest line that’s supposed to dismiss even this kind of essay: “What you believe in private shouldn’t be shared in public!” So moral convictions should not be brought in to the public discussions about how society is shaped. Morality shouldn’t be a major factor in politics and social re-programming. But think about that statement; a self-contradictory statement: It is itself a private belief being shared publicly, in the attempt to discourage the public sharing of private beliefs, by private individuals. You might as well say “my opinion matters and not yours. My word is truth and not yours.”  

Secular teachings can get us into deep deep trouble. It cannot provide a coherent set of answers to life and society’s moral dilemmas.  You’ll have to amend the principles every time a situation changes.

One time at the crowded bus stop at Waigani a man had a carpenter’s saw sticking out of his back pack, bare and ready to slice an unaware commuter. I asked the man kindly to be careful about his saw as it may cut the others when we all rushed for a bus. His arrogant answer was “wari blong ol!” He couldn’t care less if someone got hurt by his equipment. But you wonder how his response would be if he was another commuter who did get hurt by the saw sticking out of someone else’s back pack. He would probably retaliate in anger at the person’s carelessness. He would have amended his “wari blo ol!” principle. In fact he would have completely about-faced on it.

And that’s what the secular world tells us: to amend every time the situation or some other variable (e.g. popular belief) changes.

Sure we can be "good", do "good" things and generally not do anything considered "evil" in this world. Even in a god-less state of mind. But if we push our self-induced morality to its ends, we'd likely find a whole heap of contradictions, and ultimate a weak foundation. Like houses built on sand instead of on rock.

And oh how we try to redefine God according to our preferences. Maybe He cares about this and not that. Maybe He thinks this way and not that. As if His nature is dependent on our beliefs. Like if I believed strong enough a stone will turn to bread. Some things can't be altered no matter what or how strongly we believe. Same for truth. We don't like it so we change its very definition, making it malleable.  We want "truth" that's amenable and subjective and relative...and of course convenient. But that isn't truth. Truth (a translation of reality into information), isn't dependent on our beliefs. It can't be changed. 

Ray Boltz, a Christian musician responsible for some of Christendom’s most popular songs such as “I Pledge Allegiance” and “Thank You (For giving to the Lord)”, came out publicly declaring that he was gay. Then he said, “If this is the way God made me, then this is the way I'm going to live." So he divorced his wife and pursued his homosexual practice. But did God really “make” him that way? Does God want Him to stay that way? He seems to have amended God’s character without God’s consent, only to suit his sexual proclivities. It would have been better if he said clearly that “there is no God”.

The question "Is there a God?" can only be answered "yes" or "no". We can't ever say "it depends!" Yet the most intelligent people and nations in the world would say "it depends". If yes, does He give us our moral code? Did He write them in the deepest crevices of our souls that we can know it without knowing Him? If no He doesn’t exist, then no problem. Everything is permissible. And anything that is not permissible must be explained to be not permissible. If it depends, then morality is just a matter of “it depends”. It depends on anything: feelings, gains, science, security, happiness, selfishness, pleasure, pain, etc. etc. etc. 

A moral code keeps people from freedoms they think they must have to be happy. Renowned atheist Aldous Huxley said it himself, betraying that the true reason for people like him rejecting a God-ordained morality is their selfish lusts. “We objected to the morality because it interfered with our sexual freedom.” (in Ends and Means).

That kind of world, Papua New Guinea, can get as confusing as confusion can get. Yet it seems to be what the world wants. As a nation we would do well to steer clear of it.

Heavenise day!

Ganjiki

19 March 2013

Akwinamak


Akwinamak
27/02/13

This day o'er two decades ago
While I was just learning to talk
Looking softly and tenderly
The infinite God He spoke 

"I shall make for this son a helper
A companion, his steady staff
A pillar of strength
His prime care giver"

And so she arrived
To tend with me this garden
Bred in central modesty
Guided by His Majesty

She waltzed into my vision
With a brethren's acute description
"Talk to the hand" said she
First attempt, oh poor me!

But love and curiosity grew
So much so that she consented
To hear me pledge allegiance
"Forsaking all others" I commented

This bride, me she dazzled
This man of many words 
I am left baffled

That God would give me this masterpiece
Carved by Mercy
She forgives my faults
Seasoned by truth
She affirms belief
Endowed with strength 
Steadies a shaky pace
Gives pause for wisdom's embrace

With drops of compassion
She points to vital burden
With wings of peace
She steadies my storm 
Her way of love
Never lets me starve
As St. Paul said before
She is my glory, my pride and more 

That Maker His mercy knows no end
His love it knows no limit
His faithfulness I can't comprehend
Amazing grace I do understand 
And I trust you see it too

All because He gave me you...

(c) Ganjiki D Wayne
27/02/13

19 February 2013

AND THEN? AND THEN?


AND THEN? AND THEN?
By GDW 

They say they'd look into it
And so we waited...
And crossed our feet

That crook who was a politician
Those missing millions
Those laws broken
Those lives that sank
Those jaws broken
By cops who were smoking

That plane that came crashing
Those ladies who were raped
By what couldn't have been apes
Those ladies burnt
By villagers vigilante
Those aliens that take our bread
Those fugitives who bought citizenships
From crooked selfish Ministerships

They said they'd investigate
They set up an inquiry shop
Then they enquired
They tasked the force to sweep
Sweep em clean
Block a sewer leak
They commissioned the Ombudsman
To go get em
Put em in jail

So they went to get em
And we waited
For thieves to be caught
For money to be brought
Back from dirty hands
To restore cheaply sold lands
For that reckless shipman
To pay for dead family man
For those stoned murderers
Of suspected sorcerers

They said they'd catch them
That justice would be served
They'd put them in jail
But alas
The justice league it failed

Still we stand and watch
And cry time and again
To them we cry

“And then? And then?....”

© Tokaut Tokstret