
Just an update on what is going on with me this summer…
- Yesterday: Hiked a 9 mile loop at Cave Run (thought about 1 Corinthians and how much creation must really be waiting for us to let God restore us) and tried to imagine how much more beautiful creation might be in the new creation. Wow! Hard to imagine it being better.
- Reading: I just finished “A Peculiar People” by Rodney Clapp. Almost finished now with N. T. Wright’s new book, “Surprised by Hope” (great!)


- Thinking: I have been thinking a lot about studying Economics. Today, with so much of my heart and attention on problems in Energy, on the struggles of the people in Eastern Kentucky, on the Medical needs (along with so many others) of Africa, I wonder if God might have me serve in the future as an Economic researcher of adviser in government somewhere/somehow. Recently I heard part of a lecture and read a little of a book by Jeremy Rifkin on the future of energy. Perhaps I will move more in that direction in the future. Maybe a class on Economics in the fall.
- My classes at MSU are going great. The Summer Success Academy (the program I am teaching a math class as a part of this summer) seems to be off to a great start.
- Books I have read this summer so far:


(only the first few chapters – had to finish other books instead)
- Listening: I just bought an album by an acoustic guitarist named Andy McKee. It is great! A bit of smooth jazz…though there seems to be a bit of traditional folk melody that makes its way in sometimes (or maybe it is just that I like it so much it seems that way). 4 stars.

You can check it out for yourself…
- Articles of Interest: A few of the things that I have read that have really caught my attention.
TIME: The Great Wall of America

(This photo comes from Time Magazine’s news article about border crossing.)
I wonder what God’s take is on nation-states. As we change and reshape the borders of the world to keep people out and keep others in, I wonder if God is pleased or disgusted with the way we seek to build up our own economy at the cost of keeping out others who are just as willing to work. I wonder how much of these immigration problems are really problems with immigration rather than the immigrants.
Read the article here:http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1816488,00.html
National Geographic: Who Murdered the Virunga Gorillas?
In a recent article on the Virunga Gorilla murdering of last year, it is amazing to see how much the conservation of wildlife, the poor of Africa, the racism and hate that is so prevalent among the people groups of that part of Africa, corruption and violence are all so interrelated. It seems the murdering of one of the greatest and most prized of the world’s animals is due to the greed of (and confusion too) those involved in the illegal transporting of charcoal – outlawed because it of conservation of the jungle there.
See more here: http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2008/07/virunga/jenkins-text

