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Name: Elizabeth Grace
Country: Iraq
Birthday: 1/10/1986
Gender: Female


Expertise: burning food, always.
Occupation: Student


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Website: visit my website


Member Since: 10/30/2004

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Saturday, January 10, 2009

well, happy birthday to moi.

23. man.
i really hope that 23 kicks 22's arse ... because 22 was rough, no doubt about it.

i think 23 is going to be a good year. i'm believing for it, at least.
(though i am in denial regarding my birthday. i don't want to get any older than this, i don't think.)

anyway.
weird entry.
c'est la vie?

:)


Currently
Greatest Hits
By Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers
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Tuesday, November 25, 2008

It's strange to be on xanga. I always forget that it even exists...it's funny how things and trends shift and change.

Anyhow. Anyhow.

Life's not all too exciting right now, I'm still just doing school, and a lot of it ... trying my hardest to be faithful with it, and it's looking like I will be able to pull off graduating in spring of 2010 - Which would be phenomenal.

My heart's in a shifting phase right now, and I don't know that I have the words to communicate how, or to what direction it is doing so.

Solitary hikes have become a major source of peace for me. Sometimes it's just good for me to be outside. Most times it's just good for me to be outside.

I think I really find myself, more and more, whenever faced with weird circumstances or huge life questions ... I feel like the vast majority of the time, I just come back to this : either God is sovereign, or He's not.  Either Jesus gets this, or He doesn't.   (And oh, how I believe that He does, and that He is sovereign).  He doesn't give us more than what we can bear... of this I have to remind myself over and over again, on a daily basis.

It looks like I'm going to be studying abroad next Fall in Cairo. As much as my little heart was not wanting to go back there quite yet, this looks like the direction God is pointing me in, and so I'm going to go, and going to hopefully just be enraptured with the people and the culture, unlike the first time I was there, exactly 4 years ago today (How weird is that?)  I was telling a friend that I really think that going back to Egypt is going to have such an interesting impact on my heart ... because Egypt is where this whole obsession began for me, and I feel like when I was there, God began showing me pieces of His heart like never before.

I'm home this week for Thanksgiving, and it's always eye-opening, hilarious, and comforting to be with my family. I'm really looking forward to spending time with my extended family on Thursday and Friday.  (Although, I swear, if my mom's family gangs up on me again like they did last year b/c I'm still single, I am going to throw rolls or pies at them. Juuuust kidding.)

Anyway. This update wasn't much on substance, but I kind of feel like those days for xanga are over, or maybe I'm just lazy and unwilling to broadcast anything about myself to the world that isn't only skin-deep. Hm.

Happy Fall, and Peace, Salaam, and Shalom to you.





Currently
Education of a Wandering Man
By Louis L'Amour
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Friday, October 24, 2008

why i love jim wallis.

(i posted this on facebook already, but just in case you didn't read it, or would be interested to read it...)

My Personal 'Faith Priorities' for this Election
written by Jim Wallis, Editor-in-Chief of Sojourners (www.sojo.net)

"In 2004, several conservative Catholic bishops and a few megachurch pastors like Rick Warren issued their list of "non-negotiables," which were intended to be a voter guide for their followers. All of them were relatively the same list of issues: abortion, gay marriage, stem cell research, etc. None of them even included the word "poverty," only one example of the missing issues which are found quite clearly in the Bible. All of them were also relatively the same as official Republican Party Web sites of "non-negotiables." The political connections and commitments of the religious non-negotiable writers were quite clear.
I want to suggest a different approach this year and share my personal list of "faith priorities" that will guide me in making the imperfect choices that always confront us in any election year — and suggest that each of you come up with your own list of "faith" or "moral" priorities for this election year and take them into the voting booth with you.
After the last election, I wrote a book titled God’s Politics. I was criticized by some for presuming to speak for God, but that wasn’t the point. I was trying to explore what issues might be closest to the heart of God and how they may be quite different from what many strident religious voices were then saying. I was also saying that "God’s Politics" will often turn our partisan politics upside down, transcend our ideological categories of Left and Right, and challenge the core values and priorities of our political culture. I was also trying to say that there is certainly no easy jump from God’s politics to either the Republicans or Democrats. God is neither. In any election we face imperfect choices, but our choices should reflect the things we believe God cares about if we are people of faith, and our own moral sensibilities if we are not people of faith. Therefore, people of faith, and all of us, should be "values voters" but vote all our values, not just a few that can be easily manipulated for the benefit of one party or another.
In 2008, the kingdom of God is not on the ballot in any of the 50 states as far as I can see. So we can’t vote for that this year. But there are important choices in this year’s election — very important choices — which will dramatically impact what many in the religious community and outside of it call "the common good," and the outcome could be very important, perhaps even more so than in many recent electoral contests.
I am in no position to tell anyone what is "non-negotiable," and neither is any bishop or megachurch pastor, but let me tell you the "faith priorities" and values I will be voting on this year:

With more than 2,000 verses in the Bible about how we treat the poor and oppressed, I will examine the record, plans, policies, and promises made by the candidates on what they will do to overcome the scandal of extreme global poverty and the shame of such unnecessary domestic poverty in the richest nation in the world. Such a central theme of the Bible simply cannot be ignored at election time, as too many Christians have done for years. And any solution to the economic crisis that simply bails out the rich, and even the middle class, but ignores those at the bottom should simply be unacceptable to people of faith.

From the biblical prophets to Jesus, there is, at least, a biblical presumption against war and the hope of beating our swords into instruments of peace. So I will choose the candidates who will be least likely to lead us into more disastrous wars and find better ways to resolve the inevitable conflicts in the world and make us all safer. I will choose the candidates who seem to best understand that our security depends upon other people’s security (everyone having "their own vine and fig tree, so no one can make them afraid," as the prophets say) more than upon how high we can build walls or a stockpile of weapons. Christians should never expect a pacifist president, but we can insist on one who views military force only as a very last resort, when all other diplomatic and economic measures have failed, and never as a preferred or habitual response to conflict.

"Choosing life" is a constant biblical theme, so I will choose candidates who have the most consistent ethic of life, addressing all the threats to human life and dignity that we face — not just one. Thirty-thousand children dying globally each day of preventable hunger and disease is a life issue. The genocide in Darfur is a life issue. Health care is a life issue. War is a life issue. The death penalty is a life issue. And on abortion, I will choose candidates who have the best chance to pursue the practical and proven policies which could dramatically reduce the number of abortions in America and therefore save precious unborn lives, rather than those who simply repeat the polarized legal debates and "pro-choice" and "pro-life" mantras from either side.

God’s fragile creation is clearly under assault, and I will choose the candidates who will likely be most faithful in our care of the environment. In particular, I will choose the candidates who will most clearly take on the growing threat of climate change, and who have the strongest commitment to the conversion of our economy and way of life to a cleaner, safer, and more renewable energy future. And that choice could accomplish other key moral priorities like the redemption of a dangerous foreign policy built on Middle East oil dependence, and the great prospects of job creation and economic renewal from a new "green" economy built on more spiritual values of conservation, stewardship, sustainability, respect, responsibility, co-dependence, modesty, and even humility.

Every human being is made in the image of God, so I will choose the candidates who are most likely to protect human rights and human dignity. Sexual and economic slavery is on the rise around the world, and an end to human trafficking must become a top priority. As many religious leaders have now said, torture is completely morally unacceptable, under any circumstances, and I will choose the candidates who are most committed to reversing American policy on the treatment of prisoners. And I will choose the candidates who understand that the immigration system is totally broken and needs comprehensive reform, but must be changed in ways that are compassionate, fair, just, and consistent with the biblical command to "welcome the stranger."

Healthy families are the foundation of our community life, and nothing is more important than how we are raising up the next generation. As the father of two young boys, I am deeply concerned about the values our leaders model in the midst of the cultural degeneracy assaulting our children. Which candidates will best exemplify and articulate strong family values, using the White House and other offices as bully pulpits to speak of sexual restraint and integrity, marital fidelity, strong parenting, and putting family values over economic values? And I will choose the candidates who promise to really deal with the enormous economic and cultural pressures that have made parenting such a "countercultural activity" in America today, rather than those who merely scapegoat gay people for the serious problems of heterosexual family breakdown."
 
 


Thursday, September 04, 2008

May I just say ....

... that I find it completely ridiculous that I have been out of the country more times than Vice Presidential hopeful Gov. Sarah Palin?

 

 


Thursday, August 07, 2008

(something i wrote a few weeks ago)

Oh life.

We have a love/hate relationship, you and I.

Although I don’t want it to be this way. 

 

How I want to shed this shell.

 

I have to trust that suffering is the one universal thing which unites all of humanity.

And therefore, a true bond is a potential, always.  It doesn’t matter.

 

How we want to sit on our high and golden throne, telling others that they are wrong – they are evil, they are misled.

“they,” because they are not “us” … they are wrong.

Because they don’t believe what we do

Or look like we do

Or have the same goals and aspirations that we do

 

But it’s just not the case. It can’t be.

 

I have to believe that suffering is the one universal thing which unites all of humanity.

And so, we are united.

We are united.

 

Though we declare wars upon one another, on pretenses of false superiority.

Though we have so much, and others have so little.

Though we point the finger many more times than facing the blame, the consequence.

 

We are so similar.

 

God, if we could just grasp this.  If we could remember again how precious people truly are.

If we would embrace the common experience of suffering, of pain.

And out of that, bring forth our love, our talents, our gifts, our wealth - to nurture and provide.

If we could remember that people are people.

That they are worth something.

 

If only we would remember.

I really and truly believe (as naïve, childlike, and cheesy as this may sound) that remembering, and acting upon this remembrance … it could do much to alter the state of our world.

 

And so I will try, with all of the might contained within this tiny broken heart of mine …

I will try. I will try to see people for what and whom they are.

 

I will give my heart away, to people – and to places …

Over and over again.

 

I will do my part to unite with humanity. 

 

Because we’re all so similar, in the end.

 

My heart is similar to the hearts of so many others, wandering about.

 



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