thePIANIST
Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Hey ya... Back to update again... Although I'm ultra sick today...Yesterdays' Happenings!! Well... Went my house there with Edwin Eddy and Ivan... Can see that they are yugioh freaks... Ha ha.. Ivan as crappy as ever... Me, as powerful as ever =X and Edwin as boastful as ever.... ERRM EDDY... Nobody want to team with him... ZZZ... He's not bad luh.. Thinking of upgrading my deck... But then thinking about it... I think don't want to waste anymore money ler... Proud of my RAIGEKI!!! Never seen another copy around... Only a few people have ba.. Went tournament 2 years ago and discovered that only 6 people have out of the 4 digit of participants... PROUD OF THAT CARD MAN!!! Haha anyway... Almost went home halfway during school hours yesterday... Headache + Fever... Now still abit immobilised... Super weak la... Cant walk properly... Went up to 40.3 degrees... Super bad... Almost went to hospital... Thank God for letting me feel again the hunger for your love.


Why do people run away from God? Is it because of anger, disappointment, despair, disobedience, or a web of rebellion woven from our own desires?
The book of Jonah looks at a prophet who rejected God’s call to deliver His word to the people of Nineveh. In the first chapter (vv.3,10), we read that Jonah deliberately headed for Tarshish to run away from the Lord. He knew exactly where he was going and why. After being given a second chance (3:1-2), Jonah delivered God’s message but reacted angrily when the Lord spared the repentant city (3:10–4:2).
The book ends with the Lord speaking to Jonah about His compassion: “Should I not pity Nineveh?” (4:11). But there’s no indication that the disgruntled prophet changed his attitude. The people of Nineveh repented; Jonah did not.
The story of Jonah should cause each of us to be honest about our feelings toward the Lord. Do we harbor resentment for His leniency toward people we feel deserve judgment? Have we forgotten that God has forgiven us? Are we ready to obey His call and leave the outcome to Him?
The story of Jonah illuminates our reactions to God and measures our willingness to trust Him when we can’t understand His ways.

Sometimes it’s hard to trust the Lord
When you don’t understand;
But fight the urge to run from Him
—Reach out and take His hand.
He pleases God best who trusts Him most.



1:33 PM; The Pianist'

thePIANIST;

Shane from RP class w35a

Loves the piano

Hates rappers

ur hates here

the WISH:

Someone

theCHATTERBOX;


theEXITS;

thePAST;