Crashing through Barriers

Why do you think Matthew started his Gospel with a boring list of so-and-so begat so-and-so? Consider just the women mentioned in this genealogy. There are four of them before you get to Mary. Matthew introduces their glorious Messiah.. as descending from two harlots, one born out of incest and an adulterous. They are the only four ladies mentioned in the genealogy other than Mary.

He came crashing through the barriers that said, “You have to be born spiritually out of the ‘right kind’ of people.”

And today, he comes crashing through barriers you’ve erected, too. The barriers that place God in a nice comfortable corner where you can keep an eye on him. He breaks down those excuses that say, “God, you can’t use me. You can’t love me. I’m a sinner.”

God built a monument to grace on that genealogy. That’s why you shouldn’t shy away from admitting your past for what it was. It can be a monument to God’s grace in our lives. That’s when God can use us the most- when we realize who we are, where we come from, and how much our lives are dependent on God's grace—on receiving it and giving it to others.

Don’t hide from the past and pretend it didn’t happen. By admitting who we are and acknowledging how God completely changes us, he can bring us further than he could otherwise and use us more.. just like those people in the genealogy.

You stack up a row of harlots and liars and murderers and cheaters, and what do you have? You have Jesus. That’s the way God works.

Stephen Goforth

A Pardon in the Pocket

A prisoner in 1830 named George Wilson was pardoned by the President. They brought Wilson the pardon, but he refused to accept it because it would mean admitting his guilt. So he walked to the hangman’s noose with the pardon in his pocket. That’s what each human is like. We have pardons in our pockets. But most people ignore their guilt, ignore the pardon, the new life, the love and power.

Harold Myra, The New You

A King Gives Away His Crown

A Texas high school football player gave fans another reason to cheer, after turning over his homecoming king crown to a friend with cerebral palsy. Fossil Ridge Panthers quarterback Max Akin stunned the crowd during a halftime ceremony when he kneeled and presented his crown to team equipment manager K.L. Norwood, who was also nominated for king. “What I did wasn’t as admirable as how K.L. treats everyone,” says Akin. “Loving everybody and having a heart like K.L. is what really matters in this world.” 

Read more at CNN

18 Amazing Things AI is Being Used to Do Now

Build Walls

An autonomous excavator can build a wall out of nearby boulders by an AI system that uses the data to determine the best placement for each boulder – HackaDay

 

Predict Weather

NASA and IBM are building an AI for weather and climate applications – Engadget

 

Map Icebergs

Researchers at the University of Leeds have created an AI system that can map icebergs in satellite images 10,000 times faster than humans - ESA

 

Mute Chip Crunching

Frito-Lay has created an AI-powered mic filter that can remove the crunching sound created by eating chips during online gaming sessions – Marketing Drive

 

Predict New Stable Compounds

Google DeepMind has created an AI system that can predict the structure of crystalline materials much faster than humans – The Next Web

 

Track Tomatoes

A data visualization tracking tomato production in Europe – Data Innovation

 

Make a Movie

Make I asked ChatGPT to create a Hallmark Christmas movie — and it went better than expected – Tom’s Guide

 

Be a Personal Assistant

Personalized A.I. Agents Are Here. Is the World Ready for Them? – New York Times 

 

Win Awards

The Grammys will consider that viral song with Drake and The Weeknd AI vocals for awards after all – Engadet

 

Let you Speak in Other Languages

This new AI video tool clones your voice in 7 languages — and it's blowing up – Tom’s Guide

 

Edit Major Movies

How Will Editors Use AI? The Tech’s Role in Production and Post Scrutinized at IBC – Hollywood Reporter  

 

Translate Podcasts

Spotify develops ai-powered voice cloning tool that can translate podcasts into multiple languages – Music Business Worldwide

 

Fashion Modeling

Spanish influencer agency designed this AI model after deciding real-life influencers are a pain – BGR 

 

Create Anime  

Tezuka Fans Unimpressed by Black Jack's First Official AI-Generated Manga – CBR

 

Read Books for you

Why Read Books When You Can Use Chatbots to Talk to Them Instead? - WIRED

 

Haggle with Sellers

See how well you can haggle with AI to purchase real products – AI Garage Sale

 

Create a Dead Actors Voice

AI-Generated Jimmy Stewart Narrates Bedtime Story for Calm App – Variety

 

And do other chores

6 ChatGPT mind-blowing extensions to use it anywhere – Medium  

Here's what I know for sure

There are three depths of knowing.

  1. Hearsay: You’ve heard of the president. You’ve heard of Mt. Everest.

  2. Introduction: You’ve been introduced to the president. You’ve visited Mt. Everest.

  3. Intimately: You’re a good friend of the president. You’ve climbed Mt. Everest.

Understanding comes when you wrestle with these questions:

  1. What is the surest thing to you? 

  2. What would be the most impossible thing to doubt?

Stephen Goforth 

Separate Identities

Although the act of nurturing another’s spiritual growth has the effect of nurturing one’s own, a major characteristic of genuine love is that the distinction between oneself and the other is always maintained and preserved. The genuine lover always perceives the beloved as someone who has a totally separate identity. Moreover, the genuine lover always respects and even encourages this separateness and the unique individuality of the beloved. Failure to perceive and respect this separateness is extremely common, however, and the cause of much mental illness and unnecessary suffering.

Scott Peck, The Road Less Traveled

Disrupter’s DNA

Clay Christensen (who wrote The Innovator’s Dilemma and came up with the idea of “disruptive innovation”) put together a study called The Innovator’s DNA, which attempts to take us inside the minds of successful innovators. Christensen and his fellow researchers believe it's more than a case of good genes when it comes to disruptive innovators. Christensen found five habits common among them:

  1. associating: Innovators connect seemingly unconnected things (He writes, "Innovative breakthroughs often happen at the intersection of diverse disciplines and fields).

  2. questioning: Innovators keep asking why things aren’t done differently ("What would happen if we did this?"). Questions outnumber answers in conversations and a good question is respected as much as a good answer.

  3. observing: Innovators are also intense observers. They pay attention to detail.

  4. networking: They are great at networking ideas. They are constantly "finding and testing ideas through a diverse network of individuals."

  5. experimenting: Innovators are constantly trying out new experiences and ideas. They "explore the world intellectually and experientially, testing hypotheses along the way."

Read more here.