Thursday, April 29, 2010

The Science beyond the perimeters of human understanding.

Can water be affected by our words?
Dr. Masaru Emoto, a Japanese scientist, believes so.
And he has proof.





Dr. Emoto took water droplets, exposed them to various words, music, and environments, and froze them for three hours. He then examined the crystal formations under a dark field microscope. And he took photographs.

The results were totally mind-blowing.

Here's a photo of ordinary water without any prayer spoken over it. The molecular structure is in disarray.




The photo below is water after a prayer was said. It's simply breathtaking. (I now have a great respect for praying before meals! More on this later.)




Dr. Emoto also exposed water to Heavy Metal music. Here's how it looks like. Looks sad if you ask me.



Here's water exposed to classical music and folk dance music. Looks much better, right?






Next, Dr. Emoto stuck a piece of paper with these words: "You make me sick. I will kill you." Here's how the frozen water droplets looks like under the microscope…




Below is how water looked like with the words "Love" over it. The difference is amazing.




This is Polluted water…




This is water from Lourdes , France . Utterly beautiful, right?




Wait A Minute— Aren't You Made Up Of Water?

Yes! 72% of your body is made up of water. Imagine how your words affect your own body. When you say, "I'm a failure," or "I'm hopeless," or "I won't get well," imagine how these words weaken your health.

Make a choice to say the best words out there. Say often, "I'm wonderful," and "I'm beautiful".

It's not only water.

Dr. Emoto also experimented with cooked rice. He placed one cup of cooked rice in two airtight jars. On one jar, he wrote, "I love you," and on the other, "You fool." Everyday for 30 days, Dr. Emoto would say these words to each jar of rice.

After 30 days, the "I love you" rice was still white. But the "You fool" rice was so rotten, it was black. How can you explain this?



(Just as a side note: When I was a child, my mother taught me to pray before meals. Now I realize it wasn't just a nice thing to do. When I pray over my meal, I know a material transformation takes place in the molecular level of the food that I pray for. I say, "Be blessed," to the water and food on the table—and I expect it to be blessed.) ~Shen

Yeah – that's why we always wish others well on birthdays, anniversaries, graduation, festivals, examination days, etc…. BE BLESSED, everybody!

credits to nst-worship.blogspot.com and Shen!

Monday, April 12, 2010

Love Makes the Difference


"A new commandment I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another. By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another." ~John 13:34-35

As you look at today's Scripture, think of it this way. The non-Christian world has the right to judge whether or not there is a God by the way we Christians love each other.

Yes, the world will know us by our fruit. Think of ourselves as trees, and if we were bad trees, we would bear bad fruit, but if we are good trees, then we will bear fruit. And the fruit can be regarding as a metaphor for our attitudes to other people around us. There is no greater witness of God's love on Earth than when Christians love in the same manner as Jesus loves.

Here is how historian Aristides described the Christians to the Roman Emperor Hadrian:
"They love one another. They never fail to help widows, they save orphans from those who would hurt them. If they have something, they give freely to the man who has nothing; if they see a stranger, they take him home, and are happy, as though he were a real brother. They don't consider themselves brothers in the usual sense, but brothers instead through the Spirit, in God."

Aristides was describing the kingdom of God made visible by believers.

Therefore, one of the major duties of every Christian is to make the invisible kingdom of God visible.