On the Air

Click here to listen to my first interview as an author: Sunday, 1/11/09 on Urban Literary Review (BlogTalkRadio) with L. Martin Johnson Pratt ( @iluvblackwomen on Twitter ).

Click here to listen to my Saturday, 7/11/09 interview with Evangelist Maureen Chen and her co-host Juergen on Kingdom Club on BlogTalkRadio.

Robin Tramble interviewed me on 7/14/09 on the subject "Why Forgiveness Tests Our Faith", during her awesome Dynamic Women of Faith Telesummit. (Recording issues required that the interview be split into two parts - Part II is here.)

My transformation from atheist to born-again Christian minister was fodder for a second 60-minute interview with Evangelist Maureen Chen and co-host Juergen Mair on Kingdom via the BlogTalkRadio network on Saturday, 7/25/09.

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Stepping into the Light: You’re a Christian, what now? is a great primer for the new adult Christian, as well as a devotional and inspiring Christian living guidebook.

Written by Diane L. Harris, the daughter of a South Bronx born Jew and a Jamaican-American ex-Episcopalian Jewish convert, Stepping into the Light is the fearless testimony of a former atheist who admits that while Christian salvation erases the threat of eternal damnation, becoming a Christian is not a magical pill for the ills of life on earth.

Combining curiosity, transparency, a gift for simplifying erudition and a palpable joy, Minister Diane explores the questions for God that inundated her as a “baby believer.”

With clarity and wielding a humble sense of humor, this woman of God leads the way to a down-to-earth relationship with a loving Messiah by answering such important questions as: What’s the meaning of salvation? Who do I become when I’m born again? Do I need to know about spiritual warfare? How is the Old Testament relevant to me as a Christian? What does the New Testament teach? What promises does God have for me? Can I contribute to the kingdom of God?

If you are a Christian, “baby believer” or not, who is asking yourself, “what now?” this book is written for you.

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Monday
Nov032008

My Brother's Keeper: Intolerance

Three months ago, I posted a piece called "Cain's Gift", wherein I hinted that when Cain asked God "Am I my brother's keeper" the answer may have been "no". I didn't follow up on that until now because, frankly, my memory isn't what it once was and the thought that inspired the above suggestion escaped me. The little runt came back today as I fell into an afternoon nap.

 

When God asked Cain where was Abel, God knew the answer, and Cain knew that God knew the answer. When Cain answered with his famous rhetorical question, he was being both evasive and facetious.

 

The traditional public answer to Cain's question is "yes", when we look at the word "keeper" as meaning "responsible for the care of". But I don't think that's the sense Cain was using when he asked the question, "Am I my brother's keeper?" I think Cain meant basically, "It's not my turn to babysit Abel." He was being a smart butt. And he'd be right: no, it wasn't his turn or his duty to babysit Abel, especially since Abel seems to have been self-supporting. What Cain failed to acknowledge, however, was that he was his own "keeper". He may not have been responsibile to guard Abel every minute, but he was responsible with every breath to guard his own behavior and line it up with God's will.That's part of the meaning of being made in God's image. (Genesis 1:27)

 

On that note, here's a quote to make us all think further about our relationships to our "brothers" and "sisters":

 

"Intolerance lies at the core of evil. Not the intolerance that results from any threat or danger. But intolerance of another being who dares to exist. Intolerance without cause. It is so deep within us, because every human being secretly desires the entire universe to himself. Our only way out is to learn compassion without cause. To care for each other simply because that 'other' exists." (by the late Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, leader of the Lubavitcher movement from 1951 until his death in 1994)

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Reader Comments (1)

You have a lovely site. I will keep coming to get more inspiration from it.
Barikiwa sana (GOd bless you)

November 7, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterPrince Hanniel

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