Archive for April, 2010

The eco-footprint challenge

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Kirsten Bolinger
Public relations editorial assistant

You don’t have to drive a hybrid car, chain yourself to a tree or attend protests to be “green.”

According to the Australian Conservation Foundation, Australia has the fourth highest eco-footprint in the world. An eco-footprint is a measure of the land required to supply all the resources a person’s lifestyle demands.

Reducing our eco-footprint is simple. Here are five tips:

  1. Use less standby power. Standby power is the electricity used by an appliance when it is not performing its primary function. More than 10 per cent of residential electricity used in Australia is attributable to standby power. So, turn off your appliances at the switch or unplug them when they are not in use.
  2. Become a vegetarian. Eating meat is hard on our natural resources. Growing grains, vegetables and fruits uses only five per cent as many raw materials as producing meat. You can produce enough food to feed 20 vegetarians on the same amount of land needed to produce food for one meat eater. If you are a meat eater, try reducing your meat intake.
  3. Recycle plastic. Plastics pollute in all stages of their production and use. Some forms of plastics, such as styrofoam and vinyl, constantly give off harmful gases. Remember to recycle plastics whenever possible and bring your own bags when you go shopping so you do not have to use the plastic ones.
  4. Turn off the lights. Lighting represents about 10 per cent of Australia’s domestic greenhouse gas emissions. Use compact fluorescent light globes. They reduce energy use by about 25 per cent and last longer than incandescent globes.
  5. Use less paper. Use double-sided printing and copying whenever possible. Print documents for review on recycled paper or, better still, review documents electronically. And take notes in meetings using your laptop computer instead of a paper and pen or pencil.

If you want to find out what your eco-footprint is, visit www.acfonline.org.au and search for “eco-calculator.”

References:
www.earthhour.org.au
www.greenpeace.org/australia
www.acfonline.org.au

I have friends

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Dr Bruce Manners
Senior minister
Avondale College Seventh-day Adventist Church

I have friends. Thirty-seven of them according to my Facebook this morning, with three more who want to be friends. Wanting to be friendly, I now have 40 friends all within a couple of weeks of setting up the site.

I’d delayed joining Facebook until I had to. Avondale College Seventh-day Adventist Church has a Facebook and to be able to comment on it, I needed to join Facebook. I’d hesitated because I could see each day slipping away with the time it would take to keep my site up to date.

When I joined Facebook, I had five people who wanted to be my friend within the first hour. At five an hour, that’s 120 a day. This worried me so much I wandered around the church office telling anyone I could find I didn’t want any more friends and asking what I should do.

I’m OK now—thanks for asking. I’ve realised it’s only as time pressured as you make it. Sorry, but I don’t check it every day.

I’ve discovered my Facebook friends come in different categories: family; people I’ve known for years; those who are part of the church or the campus; people I’ve met somewhere and I’ve forgotten where; and those I’m still trying to work out who they are.

What I’m saying is I’m sure you won’t find all my Facebook friends standing around a campfire with me singing Michael W Smith’s “Friends” simply because they don’t fit into that kind of relationship.

“A true friend is someone who stabs you in the front,” said Oscar Wilde. That kind of friendship is one to treasure.

The Facebook advantage is to build connections at all levels of “friend.” At whatever level, though, each of them has value, God-given value.

Learning from kids

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Dr Bruce Manners
Senior minister
Avondale College Seventh-day Adventist Church

I’ve just spent the weekend with four of my favourite people—our son and daughter-in-law and their two children. Although some work got in the way, it was good to catch up with them again.

The children, Talyah and Zachary, are almost seven (in two weeks, she reminded me) and five. Talyah has discovered Sudoku puzzles and is quite good at them. Zachary has discovered he’s the fastest runner in his school for his age. They’re different, but they both laugh at my jokes. Grandpa jokes work with this age.

They were excited with our coming. They insisted on being at the airport to meet us (Mum had to stay at home so we could fit in the car). They wanted to tell us about everything. They wanted to show us everything (they’d shifted house since we’d last seen them). Then they simply wanted to be where we were.

They reminded me—again—of Jesus saying about becoming like little children to enter the kingdom of heaven (Matthew 18:3), and I wondered whether I matched up.

How often do I get excited about God, and about telling Him of the good things that happen, or is He stuck with listening to me talk about the bad things and how He should fix them?

Children have a sense of awe and wonder about simple things. I think there are times when we need to drop our sophistication and cynicism to appreciate simple things.

Life is serious, but they were teaching me about the role of imagination. Walking along a trail and Zachary became a David Attenborough pointing out markings on trees. His narrative wasn’t strong, but his play-acting was. It was fun.

Then there were lessons in trust—they trusted their parents, and us, and they had a simple, but real trust in God.

You can learn a lot from kids.