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To: ST.LOUIE1; Aquamarine; Billie; dansangel; dutchess; Mama_Bear; FreeTheHostages; .45MAN; Aeronaut; ..

August 19, 2004

Grace And Glory

Read: Psalm 84:5-12

The Lord will give grace and glory; no good thing will He withhold from those who walk uprightly. —Psalm 84:11

Bible In One Year: Psalms 103-104; 1 Corinthians 2


There's a circular path in the park where I walk behind our home in Boise, Idaho. When I've walked three times around, I've gone 1 mile.

It's easy to lose count of the laps on my 3-mile walk. So each morning I pick up nine small stones and put them in my pocket, discarding one each time I finish a lap.

I always feel good when there's one stone left in my pocket. It puts spring in my step. I pick up the pace.

It occurs to me that my walk through life is a lot like those daily walks. I've completed three-score and ten years and don't have far to go. That too puts spring in my step.

I'm in no hurry to leave this life, but my times are in God's hands. As the body is breaking down under the weight of the years, there is a grace within that sustains me. I go now "from strength to strength," and in good time I will appear "before God in Zion" (Psalm 84:7,11). That will be glory for me.

Our Lord gives "grace and glory," the psalmist says—grace for our earthly walk and glory when we have finished it. "No good thing will He withhold from those who walk uprightly" (v.11).

Do you need grace today? God gives it with both hands. All you have to do is take it. —David Roper

When all my labors and trials are o'er,
And I am safe on that beautiful shore,
Just to be near the dear Lord I adore
Will through the ages be glory for me. —Gabriel

God gives grace for this life and glory in the life to come.

8 posted on 08/19/2004 4:36:14 AM PDT by The Mayor ("On Christ, the solid rock, I stand—all other ground is sinking sand.")
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To: The Mayor

Hi Rus. Great devotional today. Am passing this one on to my folks. And thanks, as always, for the coffee. Much needed today!


17 posted on 08/19/2004 7:40:09 AM PDT by dutchess
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To: The Mayor

Well JH2 another fine thread. Missed it last week. I'm using the libray's computher mine blew the mother board last night while I was FReeping. So I'll be down to 1 hr of FReeping a day until mine comes back from the shop. Boo, hoo.


39 posted on 08/19/2004 10:41:49 AM PDT by GailA ( hanoi john, I'm for the death penalty for terrorist, before I impose a moratorium on it.)
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To: All

‘Benji’ movie seeks to raise quality of family entertainment
By Dwayne Hastings
Aug 19, 2004

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP)--After a 16-year hiatus from the big screen, Benji is back. A new movie starring the winsome pup -- actually the fourth dog to be cast as Benji -- will be in theaters starting Friday, Aug. 20.

Understandably, Joe Camp, creator and producer of “Benji: Off the Leash!” and all of its predecessors, is asking that people yearning for family entertainment go see the movie, especially this weekend. In doing so, they will send a message to Hollywood that wholesome movies can be successful, said Camp, who spent three months traveling the country looking for the next Benji in animal shelters.

He discovered the brown-eyed star of the latest Benji movie in a humane society shelter in Gulfport, Miss., and he believes he has the best Benji yet. The film spotlights three unassuming heroes -- a soft-hearted dog catcher, a determined boy and a lovable stray, played of course by Benji.

Camp planned for the movie to have a holiday theme; he had already written a Christmas script. Yet when he met this Benji, he said God convinced him to scrap the original script and craft a screenplay that conjectures how this little mixed breed ended up in a dog pound.

“The dialogue is all in the eyes of the animals,” Camp said. There are no computer-generated or talking animals in the movie -- except a loudmouth cockatoo who does her own speaking. Although handling some tough subjects like puppy mills and abusive households, Camp said the film depicts an entertaining and fun adventure of Benji and his canine sidekick, Lizard Tongue. (Both dogs have become the Camp family’s pets.)

One of the movie’s central themes is perseverance, a character trait Camp is intimately familiar with after being rebuffed in marketing the screenplay in Hollywood.

It wasn’t that Hollywood wasn’t interested in handling the movie, Camp said; it was that studio executives wanted to have their hands all over what the Benji film eventually would look like. “They wanted to do the movie, but only if they could have control and put in the stuff they deem necessary for an economic bottom line.”

No way, Camp said.

“Hollywood is consistently lowering the bar for what they, not we, think is appropriate for family entertainment,” he said, explaining that he was not going to let any Benji film be trashed by references to bodily functions or the like. That is the norm in many contemporary children’s films, he added.

“One studio exec told me you had to have that stuff in there to make money. He said the kids want it and if you want to make money on a movie, it has to have the language, the potty humor and sexual innuendo,” Camp said.

But Camp stood his ground and turned his back on Hollywood. With the aid of his co-producer, Margaret Loesch, he eventually secured financing for the film. That’s why he is so insistent that families go to theaters this weekend to see the film; he promises they won’t be disappointed.

“If Hollywood sees there is a strong economic bottom line from the release of a good family movie that doesn’t have those kinds of things in it, it will be a lot easier for those of us who care about making that kind of movie to get it financed and keep creative control,” Camp said.

“As long as people keep going to so-called family movies with inappropriate material, Hollywood will keep making them,” he continued, describing the entertainment industry as committed to “lowering the bar until there is none.”

Noting how critical it is for the movie to have a good opening weekend, Camp said it otherwise might become its last weekend in theaters. Major studios can force theater owners to hold a poor-performing movie over by threatening to withhold the right to air the studio’s next blockbuster, but Camp doesn’t have that leverage. Rather, his focus is on the millions of parents who want to be able to take their children to a real family movie.

Mel Gibson’s success with “The Passion of the Christ” showed the impact of individual moviegoers, Camp said. “People got out and went to the film because they cared about the product,” he said, noting like Gibson, he was steadfast in not giving in to the demands of the movie studios.

Camp said he doesn’t have the $30 million Warner Brothers spent just on television advertising for the movie “Garfield,” a movie he says that was identified as a family movie but wasn’t really appropriate for children.

“As consumers, we have to make hard decisions to support the things that are right and not support the things that aren’t,” Camp said. “That’s a message Hollywood has to hear.”
--30--
For more information on Joe Camp and Benji, visit www.benji.com.


60 posted on 08/19/2004 4:06:58 PM PDT by Dubya (Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father,but by me)
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