Behold, The Power of Words!

This is a powerful video showing the power of words. The lady did not give the blind man money. She gave him much more than that. She changed the entire outcome of his day by giving him a new set of words.

As Christians we have been given the most amazing and thrilling news to share with people, the good news of the Gospel. God has done something startling, in the Person and work of His Son – His life, death and resurrection. It is the Holy Spirit who opens the heart and gives sight to the blind so that people might see the beauty of Christ, yet He uses means to do so – the preaching of the gospel. It is a sin to make this dazzling news boring by the words we use. A boring sermon is a great sin!

There might be a thousand other applications for each of us. Think about it, and make your own.

7 Billion: How did we get here?

Genesis 1:27 So God created man in his own image, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over every living thing that moves on the earth.”

The human population of the world recently passed the 7 billion mark. This short video (below) reveals how this has taken place in a visual form.

As NPR’s Adam Cole reports, it was just over two centuries ago that the global population was 1 billion — in 1804. But better medicine and improved agriculture resulted in higher life expectancy for children, dramatically increasing the world population.

Much of the growth has happened in Asia — in India and China. Those two countries have been among the world’s most populous for centuries. But a demographic shift is taking place as the countries have modernized and lowered their fertility rates. Now, the biggest growth is taking place in sub-Saharan Africa.

Due in part to that region’s extreme poverty, infant mortality rates are high and access to family planning is low. The result is high birth rates and a booming population of 900 million — a number that could triple by the end of the century. Population expert Joel Cohen points out that, in 1950, there were nearly three times as many Europeans as sub-Saharan Africans. If U.N. estimates are correct, there will be nearly five sub-Saharan Africans for every European by 2100.

As higher standards of living and better health care are reaching more parts of the world, the rates of fertility — and population growth — have started to slow down, though the population will continue to grow for the foreseeable future.

U.N. forecasts suggest the world population could hit a peak of 10.1 billion by 2100 before beginning to decline. But exact numbers are hard to come by — just small variations in fertility rates could mean a population of 15 billion by the end of the century.