Thursday, October 10, 2013

To Pastor, Afterlife Is Where We 'Learn To Live Together'





Detail of the central compartment of The Adoration of the Mystic Lamb, completed in 1432 by Jan van Eyck, where pilgrims gather to pay homage to the lamb of God. Many art historians interpret the painting's fountain as a symbol of eternal life.



DEA Picture Library/De Agostini/Getty Images

A majority of Americans from all walks of life believe in life after death. Yet conversations about the afterlife — from what it might look and feel like to who else one may find there — often remain highly personal ones, shared with family members, clergy or others who share one's faith.


To better understand how many Americans conceive of the afterlife, All Things Considered has spoken with leaders from different faith traditions on their views on life after death.


First, an evangelical Protestant's perspective. The Rev. Gabriel Salguero, a pastor of The Lamb's Church in New York City and president of the National Latino Evangelical Coalition, tells NPR's Robert Siegel how faith in the afterlife informs Salguero's life and why he sees heaven as a place where diverse people coexist without the tensions that sometimes divide them on earth.



Interview Highlights


On what he expects heaven might be like:


The faith of my childhood ... talked about a heaven where there was no sickness, no disease, no hate, no crime, no evil. And I very much still cling to that eternity of heaven where we as people have learned to live together, despite difference and despite our cultural backgrounds. So whether that's a distant place beyond the galaxies or a renewed earth where the kingdom of God and the reign of God is, I think that's what's most important. ...


Revelation has these beautiful images — and of course ... I interpret most of it metaphorically, right, not literally — it talks about us eating and playing and singing and chatting and having relationships. Jesus, when he talks about preparing a place for us, you know, he often talks about us talking and eating. After the Resurrection in the New Testament narratives, the first thing Jesus does is actually ask for food in his resurrected body. He says, "Hey, where's the bread, where are the fish?"


So I think it's a vision of a corporal reality where we finally learn to be reconciled with God and each other.


On his views on ethnic or racial identity and the afterlife:


What Revelation says, particularly in chapter 7, ... says, "From every tribe, nation, and tongue." I don't think eternity does away with difference. I think we're going to see people's race, culture, in eternity.


What I think it does is it reconciles it. Where it says, "I'm Hispanic, I'm Latino." And I'm going to see African-Americans, and I'm going to see whites, and I'm going to see Asians in heaven. And I think that phenotype will be there. I would be saddened if difference was obliterated in eternity. I think they're just going to be reconciled and we're going to learn, finally, to live together. ...


I think what God is calling us [to], and particularly as a Christian, is right relationships. And for me that's done through the person of Jesus Christ. A right relationship with God here on earth, and also in eternity. So I'm gonna see people from across the geographic spectrum, and across the racial/cultural spectrum.



On how belief in eternity can inform life on earth:


I think that the calling of eternity, for me — and even as I preach to my parishioners, which is a very multiethnic congregation — what I tell them is, that the view of eternity should serve as an ethical imperative. Or, in the words of Jesus of Nazareth in his prayer, "Let your kingdom come, let your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven."


So heaven, ... the view of eternity, is a template for moral relationships here on earth. It's a calling to our higher angels, if you will.


On how he would live his life if he didn't believe in eternity:


If there were no eternity ... I think the teachings of Jesus would be enough for me. He lived a moral life. He told us, "Love our neighbor, forgive our enemies, bless those who persecute you." That's enough. That's the highest teaching I've ever encountered.


But, fortunately enough, it's not an either-or, but a both-and. There is an eternity, from where I sit, and the teachings of Jesus are enough.


All Things Considered is collecting stories all week about what you think happens when you die. To join the conversation, please use the comments below or send a message on Twitter, Tumblr or Facebook using the hashtag #nprafterlife.



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Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Scientists: Supplemental red snapper season likely in Gulf of Mexico

Scientists say one of the most popular fish in the Gulf of Mexico has rebounded enough to allow a second season for red snapper this year.

The Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council meets in New Orleans on Wednesday to consider increased fishing quotas and a supplemental 2013 season for red snapper, one of the region's most popular game and eating fish.

Click to read more.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/id/52490570/ns/local_news-new_orleans_la/

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Monday, July 15, 2013

Elon Musk Will Reveal His High-Speed Hyperloop Transport Design By August 12

Elon MuskStartup renaissance man Elon Musk has spent the past year or so not-so-subtly dropping hints about yet another ambitious transport project of his, and it seems he's getting ready to describe it in more detail. Amid plenty of speculation, Musk revealed in a tweet earlier today that he plans to publish his tentative designs for the Hyperloop system by August 12.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/e4ARwjTUAbk/

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Friday, July 12, 2013

'The Lion King' on the road hits $1 billion

NEW YORK (AP) ? It's a mainstay on Broadway and now "The Lion King" has proved it's a king on the road, too.

Disney Theatrical Productions said Wednesday that the show's total touring box office gross in North America has reached $1 billion. Producers estimate that more than 15 million theatergoers in over 70 cities across North America have seen the show since 2002.

Says Jack Eldon, a vice president at Disney Theatrical Productions: "We remain overwhelmed by the enduring response to the show and are enormously thankful to our patrons ? new and returning ? for their continued enthusiasm and support."

It reached its milestone quickly. Three national tours of "The Phantom of the Opera" have grossed over $1.5 billion in combined box office sales but the first kicked off in 1989.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lion-king-road-hits-1-billion-212254050.html

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Coatings have simple recipe for success

Cheap approach, natural ingredients may prove useful in foods, medicines

By Rachel Ehrenberg

Web edition: July 11, 2013

Enlarge

COATS AFLOAT

Mix iron and tannic acid in water and they'll bond, forming little capsules (shown), scientists have discovered. The process is quick, easy and reversible.

Credit: Courtesy of Science/AAAS

It?s not often that chemists find a quick, simple and cheap method for making things using widely available ingredients, but researchers have done just that: They?ve created elegant little capsules and coatings in water simply by mixing iron and a compound from plants called tannic acid. The soft coatings form on their own around whatever else is in the water ? glass beads, bacteria, gold nanoparticles and more. Just changing the solution?s pH can prompts the coatings to disassemble.

The coatings? ingredients are considered safe ? tannic acid is found in wine, while iron is an important element for living things. That means the capsules might help in delivering drugs in the body or find use in cosmetics or foods, says bioengineer Gregory Payne of the University of Maryland in College Park.

The work fits with an ongoing effort to find biologically friendly, useful materials, Payne says, and it takes advantage of materials that are right under everyone?s noses. ?It opens up a lot of opportunities.?

Using ordinary lab equipment, the research team, led by materials scientist Frank Caruso of the University of Melbourne in Australia, create the tiny coatings at room temperature. When the researchers add tannic acid to water, it tends to congregate around surfaces, whether they be a piece of polystyrene or an E. coli bacterium. When the researchers add iron ions to the mix, the iron latches onto the tannic acid molecules, connecting them into a thin film. At a pH of 7.4, the capsules were still intact after 10 days; at a pH of 3, they disassembled within four hours, the team reports in the July 12 Science.


W.E. Bentley and G.F. Payne. Nature?s other self-assemblers. Science. Vol. 341, July 12, 2013, p.136. doi:10.1126/science.1241562. [Go to]

R. Ehrenberg. Microsculptures made easy. Science News Online, May 16, 2013. [Go to]

D. Castelvecchi. Hooking up. Science News. Vol. 172, November 10, 2007, p.301. [Go to]

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/351501/title/Coatings_have_simple_recipe_for_success

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