A timely truth and reminder
Tim Collver is a scientist and a churchmate of mine. We belong to a Viber group, and one day he posted this material that made me pause and think. I asked permission to have this posted, and this was his reply: “Francis, I’m excited that you consider my comments worthy of your column.” You see and sense this gentleman’s high level of honesty and humility. Perhaps not as lofty as other of today’s messages, but this is also so true a reflection of our global abandonment from the Church.
Tim continues to say: “Please allow credit where that’s due; I paraphrased my presentation from several authors who are individually unique and beyond my capacity; If anything, I’m just the conduit - not the source.”
Here is the material he shared:
A youngster asked his grandfather, “Grandpa! How did you people live before with:
No technology
No airplanes
No internet
No computers
No dramas
No TVs
No aircon
No cars
No mobile phones?”
Granddad replied, “Just like how your generation lives today with:
No prayers
No compassion
No honor
No respect
No character
No shame
No modesty”
We, the people born between 1940-1970, are the blessed ones. Our life is living proof.
While playing and riding bicycles, we never wore helmets.
After school, we played until dusk; we never watched TV.
We played with real friends, not internet friends.
If we ever felt thirsty, we drank tap water, not bottled water.
We never got ill sharing the same glass of juice with four friends.
We never gained weight eating plates of rice every day.
Nothing happened to our feet despite roaming barefoot.
We never used any supplements to keep ourselves healthy.
We used to create our toys and play with them.
Our parents were not rich. They gave love, not worldly materials.
We never had cellphones, DVDs, PlayStation, Xbox, video games, personal computers, internet, or chat, but we had real friends.
We visited our friend’s home uninvited and enjoyed food with them.
Relatives lived close by so family time was enjoyed.
We may have been in black and white photos, but you can find colorful memories in those photos.
We are a unique and the most understanding generation because we are the last generation who listened to their parents and also the first who have had to listen to their children.
We are a LIMITED edition! Enjoy us! Learn from us! Treasure us!
And then Tim closed with a call to action: “To my Brothers... Share if you enjoyed our era and bring the kids back to Sunday Service!”
And so, I tried to look for the sources and the original authorship of the materials Tim used in his message, but unfortunately, I could not find them. Proper credit attribution should be given if perhaps you can help me locate the original authorship for the materials. But this stuff is so good this has to be shared.
Expect a lot more changes to come to our lives in the coming days. Technology drives change. But when the changes we dub “progress” comes at the expense of old-fashioned family values, friendship, relationships, morality, and ethics, then I guess the word “progress” would hardly be a justifiable term for humanity to embrace.
Meanwhile, love God and love your neighbor. Follow the parting advice of the wisest person who ever walked on earth. Solomon says: “The conclusion, when all has been heard, is: fear God and keep His commandments because this applies to every person.” (Ecclesiastes 12:13 NASB) I am sure I have given the right credit attribution this time. And yes, one more thing. Bring your kids to church.
(Francis Kong’s podcast “Inspiring Excellence” is now available on Spotify, Apple podcast, Google podcast, or other podcast streaming platforms.)
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