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2011년도 부산위성대전도회[김대성 연합회장 & 이상구 박사]

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여기 2011년 부산에서 열린 "위성 대 전도회" 동영상을 소개합니다.
 
6번째 설교 인데요, 아주 단순하고 솔직한 어법이라 여늬 설교하고는

달리 독특하고 은혜충만합니다. 

놀라운 그리고 잘 준비된 이 전도회를 통하여 많은 이들에게

하나님의 진리의 말씀이 전 세계로 퍼져나가도록

다른이들에게도 이 -멜로 소개하는 선교의 축복으로

연결되기를 간절히 기도합니다. 
  
아래 링크를 클릭하면 동영상 나옵니다.
 
http://vimeo.com/25265049

 

 

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예수님이 침례 요한으로 부터, 침례받으셨던 요단강,

 

많은 군중틈에서 혈루병여인을  고치셨던 길,

풍랑이 일어 죽게된 제자들, 그리고 풍랑을 나무라시자 곧 잔잔한 물결로 변했던 바다,

고단한 여행길에 잠시 즐겨 머물러 쉴수 있으셨던 곳, 나사로와 막달라 그리고 마리아 친구의 집,

 

십자가에 달리시기전 피땀흘려 기도하시고 제자들은 피곤하여 곤한 잠에 떨어져 있었던 올리브 동산,

닭이 두번 울기전에 세번 예수님을 부인하고 나자마자, 서로 시선이 마주쳤던 베드로와 예수님이 계셨던 그 마당,

 

십자가를 메고 지나가시던 거리,

너무 무겁고 힘겨워 쓰러지실때, 대신 그 십자가를 메었던 구레네 시몬이 걸었던

골고다로 가는 길목...

 

예수님이 십자가에서 돌아가신후 무덤에 머물었다, 다시 부활하신 예수님의 무덤,

 

"HE IS NOT HERE, HE IS RISEN" 이라고  푯말을 붙여논 예수님의 무덤,

하늘에서 두천사가 내려와 지키시던 예수님의 무덤("GARDEN TOMB"),

 

부활후 제자들을 갈릴리 바닷가에서 다시 만나시는

시대의 소망에 나오는 "다시한번 더 바닷가에서" 의 무대 배경이 되던 그 갈릴리 호숫가,

 

이 모든 성지순례를 "ADVENTIST WORLD RADIO" host, JIM AYER 와 함께 하시며, 은혜도 받으시고,

다른나라에서 온 친구들도 있으면 그들에게 www.awr.org/listen 을 소개하여 자국어로 듣고,

또, "세계여행" 도 하면서 생명의 말씀으로 인도되는 좋은 선교경험을 갖게 되기를바라며

그 "요단강에서"의 동영상 프로그램을 소개합니다.

 

아래 링크를 클릭하시면, 동영상을 볼 수 있습니다.

 http://www.awr.org/en/making_waves/play/bCQVFnDG

 

 

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요즈음 내게 있는 어려운 문제를  right on time 에 이렇게 시원스런 해답을 여기 이 두분 목사님을

통하여 내게 해답을 공급해 주신 하나님을 정말 찬송하며 어떤해답을 받았는지 이 굉장한

경험을 여러분과 같이 나누고 싶습니다.

 

[Dan Steven] 문제 많은 세상을 위한 하나님의 배려 from KASDA on Vimeo.

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[Dan Steven] 문제 많은 세상을 위한 하나님의 배려 from KASDA on Vimeo.

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[Dan Steven] 문제 많은 세상을 위한 하나님의 배려 from KASDA on Vimeo.

 

 

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중동부 야영회 2011년

이준원 박사님의 "벼랑에서 떨어져야 산다" 를 소개합니다.

 

아래 링크를 클릭하면 동영상 나옵니다.

 http://vimeo.com/27599981

 

 ㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡ 

미국 재림교회 방송 Hope 방송을 담당하고 계시는, 한국인 목사님이시고  

지회 사회봉사 부장으로 일하시며,  그리스도와 함께하는

탁월한 영향력으로 많은 이들에게 봉사하고,

또 헌신적으로 일하시는 권성근 목사님의

설교 (데이톤 한인재림교회 방문:  지역사회 봉사와 교회성장 세미나)

소개합니다.

 

아래 링크를 클릭하시면 동영상 나옵니다.

 http://vimeo.com/25725214

 

 

ㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡ

ㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡㅡ

창조과학 세미나 [과학과 기적 그리고 영혼] 김명현 교수님

 

아래 링크를 클릭하시면 동영상 나와요.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gpl9moHB_y8&feature=related

 

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감동적인 벧엘수양원 최차순 원장님의 설교:  "예수님께 배운다 " 소개합니다.

(실생활에 예수님의 특별한 도우심 을 체험한 간증설교: ) 

 

아래 링크를 클릭하시면 동영상 나옵니다.

http://www.betheln.com/set4_1/59074

 

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재림집회 설교 영상 :  김정곤 목사 소개합니다.

 

아래 링크를 클릭하면 동영상 나옵니다.

 

http://awake.or.kr/781

 

하용판 장로

http://awake.or.kr/799

 

:  강상진 목사

http://awake.or.kr/802

http://awake.or.kr/678

 

:최차순 원장

http://awake.or.kr/784

http://awake.or.kr/702

 

:최면순 의사

http://awake.or.kr/751

 

:허리은 집사

http://awake.or.kr/691

 

:고영식 장로

http://awake.or.kr/778

 

:정계화 집사

http://awake.or.kr/731

 

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아래의 제목을 클릭!
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여기 좋은 글이 있어 우리들의 젊은 자녀들에게 도움이 되는 글을 소개합니다.

What single quality predicts a good doctor?


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What is the most important characteristic a medical student should have?

Intelligence? Empathy? Time management?

I recently came across an article by Dr. Faith T. Fitzgerald, former dean of students at the University of California, Davis, School of Medicine, that pitches a different idea:

Curiosity.

Dr. Fitzgerald wrote her insightful piece in response to a request from politicians that more humanities coursework be added to the medical school curriculum. The idea was to help medical students became more humane.

But the dean was skeptical. “I wondered what evidence supported the idea that being well versed in the humanities made one more humane,” she wrote.

So she did a study. She and her colleagues read reviews of third and fourth year medical students in their clinical clerkships, written by supervising physicians. They noted words that suggested humane behavior, such as “caring” and “warm.” They then looked to see if there was any connection between positive descriptors and coursework taken prior to medical school.

Surprisingly, there was. Medical students viewed as more humane took on more coursework in college – but not just in the humanities. The more classes students took, period – in the humanities or in the sciences – the nicer they were described.

But why? What does taking a lot of classes have to do with being compassionate?

According to Dr. Fitzgerald, there is a single trait underlying both the desire to learn in the classroom and to be empathetic on the wards. She writes:

“What is kindness, as perceived by patients? Perhaps it is curiosity: ‘How are you? Who are you? How can I help you? Tell me more. Isn’t that interesting?’ And patients say, ‘He asked me a lot of questions’; ‘She really seemed to care about what was going on with me.’”

That is, the same inquisitiveness that fuels students to seek knowledge in the classroom also propels them to find out more about their patients. And seeking to find out more comes across as a display of compassion.

There are many gems in Dr. Fitzgerald’s argument. One is that it calls into question the unfair yet enduring stereotype of the cold, distant doctor (or medical student), who objectifies patients as intriguing problems to be solved instead of fellow human beings to be empathized with.

This stereotype is not unique to doctors. Scientists not in the medical profession may be even easier targets. I’ve always found odd the idea that an interest in science somehow suggests a person is emotionally detached. That it is impossible to harbor, in the same body, the ability to think through scientific problems and to care deeply about others. That students who choose to study the humanities do so with a moral advantage.

It does not make much sense to me that engaging with Nabokov instead of glycolysis makes a person more likely to donate to charity.

Speak with students passionate about the sciences and those passionate about the humanities, and you’ll find they are often motivated by similar desires. They summon similar concepts to explain their interest. Both want – that is, are curious – to understand some aspect of the world around them. To do so, they learn a language specific to their field and immerse themselves in it until they begin to discern patterns. The only difference is whether these patterns are in physical phenomena, or in the human experience.

A second gem from Dr. Fitzgerald’s article is the message of how to actually go about exhibiting curiosity. Watching talks given by Nobel Prize winning scientists for inspiration, she noticed similarities in their ways of thinking. They all seemed to toss around ideas with no pretense of linear thought, no semblance of structure, and, perhaps most importantly – no pretense of competence.

“The scientists seemed oblivious to intellectual constraints and unconcerned about being seen as naive or unknowledgeable.”

Dr. Fitzgerald hits upon something here that I have found particularly relevant in medical school. It is much more difficult to obtain knowledge, much less to propose something innovative, if you are preoccupied with proving yourself. In order to discover a good idea, you need the luxury to experiment with bad ones. To put forward incorrect hypotheses, explore false leads, and work through ideas without any particular end goal – or any guarantee you will uncover something at all.

The pass/fail system during the first two years of many medical schools is a good first step in cultivating a non-pressured, curious environment. Especially at this early stage of training, we should be more concerned with gaining knowledge than with showing off that we’ve got it. Don’t understand something? Ask questions. I try not to let a fear of sounding “dumb” overwhelm an opportunity to learn.

“Rather than stating that the study of humanities makes one humane, I propose that humane people are curious and therefore choose to explore the humanities as well as the sciences.”

I am a bit late (now twelve years since her article was published) in lauding Dr. Fitzgerald for so elegantly pointing out a quality essential to many aspects of medicine. It is time we recognize that the sciences and humanities are complementary, not conflicting, and that it is counterproductive to construct arbitrary walls between them. Lopsided intelligence is not in vogue. Scientists can write compelling arguments, and humanists can solve puzzles. Viewing the world from diverse angles should be encouraged as a way of understanding it in a more complex, more meaningful way.

“Truly curious people go beyond science into art, history, literature, and language as part of the practice of medicine. Both the science and the art of medicine are advanced by curiosity.”

I am inspired by the idea that we can point to a single underlying trait that makes one more likely to keep up to date in the medical literature; to understand the biochemistry of a patient’s reaction to a drug; to propose improvements in health care systems; and to simply ask a patient: “how are you feeling today?”

(From the archives: this post was originally published on December 5, 2011, on Unofficial Prognosis’ former website.)

Ilana YurkiewiczAbout the Author: Ilana Yurkiewicz is a first-year student at Harvard Medical School who graduated from Yale University with a B.S. in biology. She was a science reporter for The News & Observer in Raleigh, North Carolina via the AAAS Mass Media Fellowship and then went on to write for Science Progress in Washington, DC. She has an academic interest in bioethics, currently conducting ethics research at Harvard after previously interning at the Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues. Follow on Twitter @ilanayurkiewicz.
 
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혹은 브라우져에 type www.sciam.com하시면 됩니다.
 
 
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