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Radical Islam: What You Need to Know


Radical Islam: What You Need to Know by Dr. Jim Denison

Why do radical Muslims hate us? How will the death of bin Laden affect this global conflict? What will it take to win the longest war in America’s history?

Jim Denison explains the mind and motives of radical Islam, telling you what you need to know about the greatest threat our nation has ever faced.

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U.S. Navy SEAL Eric Greitens, CEO of The Mission Continues delivers the commencement address at Tufts University's 156th Commencement on Sunday, May 20, 2012 (Credit: Tufts University/Alonso Nichols)It's been a rough morning in the news.  Hewlett-Packard has announced that it will lay off 27,000 workers after profits slid 31 percent.  The Congressional Budget Office states that the U.S. economy could fall off a "fiscal cliff" if tax increases and spending cuts due to take effect at the end of the year are not avoided.  Retail sales slowed sharply last month; the economy added fewer jobs than expected.

How should we respond?  This morning I'd like to encourage you to see the challenges of our day in a different light.

Eric Greitens was the commencement speaker for last Sunday's graduation at Tufts University.  He graduated from Duke University in 1996.  While in college, he aided war refugees in Croatia and Rwanda, where he learned a principle that would change his life.  As he told the Tufts graduates, "Those who knew that they had a purpose that was larger than themselves, those who knew that others were counting on them, they grew to be stronger."

After Duke, Greitens was named a Rhodes Scholar.  He earned a master's degree from Oxford in 1998 and a Ph.D. in political science in 2000.  An accomplished marathon runner and boxer, he then became a Navy SEAL, serving four tours overseas.  He targeted terrorists and survived a suicide truck bomb in Iraq.  There he learned another lesson about service.

Visiting those who were injured more severely than himself, he asked them what they wanted to do when they recovered.  Their answer?  "Every single one of them said to me, 'I want to return to my unit.'"  Those who were injured too severely to continue in the military said they would go home and find another way to help others.  Once they had begun a life of service, they knew they would not be fulfilled doing anything else.

Greitens then told the graduates, "The best definition I have ever heard of a vocation is that it's the place where your great joy meets the world's great need.  There are infinite possibilities for you for joy, for service, to make a contribution, and we need all of you to find your vocation.  To develop your joys, your passions, and to match them to the world's great need.

He concluded: "I would like to ask something of you.  Let's decide that today will be both a day of celebration and a day that we embrace a challenge.  Let's look back with pride at all that you have accomplished, and let's also look forward with confidence, knowing that you will go forward to use all of your talents and abilities, all of your creativity and energy to find a way to be of service to others.  If you do that, life will not be easy, but you will have chosen for yourself a very meaningful adventure."

The One who called us to "wash one another's feet" (John 13:14) and prove our discipleship by our love (v. 35) would agree.  Hard times are the best times to serve.  Whose need will you meet today?
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Comments  

 
0 # jan Victor 2012-05-24 09:06
Thank you for this article. This is the best advice, and our holy mandate, for living in any economy. It's as much about what it does for those serving as it is about those being served. So simple, and yet so counter to our success-dricen culure.
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+1 # Pastor Jay Farrar 2012-05-24 09:12
Amen Navy Seal! I heard this same life lesson from a pastor in chapel (required) at Baylor University in 1957.
I accepted the concept then. I am still a pastor and still teach when I can as an ajunct professor. I am 74 and I would be lost without my mission. My mission: To help people find a better life through a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. Life just is better with Jesus Christ. A selfish life is a lost life!
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0 # Jim Plummer 2012-05-24 09:17
Your article points out how perfectly God has created us to fill a roll in his service. When asking God where I might better serve him. He surprised me by saying my work is my mission field. I was already there, I just needed to make certain my work reflected Him. The joy just naturally followed.
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0 # Rafa J.C.Y. 2012-05-24 09:21
Thank you, Dr. Denison! By the time I got to the last paragraph, the challenges and fears posed by the reports in the first paragraph had already dissipated. What lingered in my mind and heart were images of possibilities and a sense of hope. In love and service we manifest our oneness with God.
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0 # Bob Stephens 2012-05-24 09:22
A great message for all people, not just young grads. I think our political leaders have missed a tremendous opportunity to focus on spiritual/human messages rather than self promoting political messages when speaking at commencement programs.

I believe this young man's message was so impactful that most in the audience will carry it with them through their lives.
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0 # Newton Jones 2012-05-24 10:58
Great message. I also read William Bennett's comments on Eric's address. I want to be just like Eric when I grow up.

Newton Jones, age 62
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0 # Jimmie Phagan 2012-05-26 15:14
Please keep me on your email list. AMEN.AMEN. AMEN
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