Kerusso (Greek- κηρύσσω)-kērússō

Kerusso (Greek)- verb

1)To cry or proclaim as a herald

2)Proclamation

3)Announcement

4)To preach the Gospel



See Luke 4:18-19, Romans 10:10-17







Friday, October 29, 2010

Hmmm... :)

Okay, just as a heads up, right now I'm going to be talking about one of the most controversial topics in America today. One that thousands, if not millions of people have found themselves involved in. One that help rewrite today's society and culture. Twilight. No, not the time of day when the sun sinks below the horizon. The "Twilight" that I'm talking about is the book series that got author Stephanie Meyer instant fame, the one that helped launch this new era of vampire fascination, as well as, to some extent, interest in werewolves and other creatures. The books, which have been on bestseller lists everywhere, is one of the big things for this generation, like facebook and texting. I myself am not a huge fan of the Twilight books. I don't care for vampires at all, much less sparkly ones. But I can understand why they're such a hit. They provide dozens upon dozens of people, girls and women primarily, with a certain fulfillment. They wish for someone to love them as fully and completely as Edward allegedly does. But Edward is but a man- a very very old sparkly blood-thirsty "man"-fantastical supernatural being- but a man just the same. And man messes up.
Man disappoints.
Man fails.
Man is not perfect.
So why do people insist on putting hopes and trust in men, fictional or not? I think it might be because it's what we're used to. We're used to depending on the tangible, the hands on stuff. But sometimes we forget, if we can hold it, it can break. The only thing that we can truly rely on is that which we can not physically touch. If you can't hold it, you can't break it. God, Jesus, He's the only One who can truly love you, truly fulfill you, truly sustain you. He can fill every void you have in your life, I promise. It's time to make sure that everyone knows it. There's too much pain to let them keep hurting. To many broken hearts for them to keep getting disappointed. Jesus is the only one who can heal the hurting and mend the broken for good. Let them know. :)

Friday, October 22, 2010

Well, hey there :)

Okay, I guess that since I made this about 10 minutes ago, no one will know about this, what I'm about to write. So I might as well go ahead. I got my name for this- kerusso- from a t-shirt company. I sincerely hope they don't mind, but seeing as it's really a Greek word, I don't think that there will be any copyright infringement or anything silly like that. :) I know that this sounds crazy, but I think that kerusso is my new favorite word. I mean, it's really fun to say for starters. Go ahead. Say it. Keh-roo-soh. And it makes me feel exotic. No one I know knows what 'kerusso' is. But I think it's my favorite word because of what it means. It's a Greek word, a verb, that means "To cry or proclaim as a herald", "announcement", as well as "preaching; to preach." (The New Testament in the Bible actually uses a different word, kerygma for preaching, but kerusso sounds cooler.(: ) That's pretty much our job as Christians. To tell people about the good news, the love that Jesus offers them. When Jesus was reading from the book of Isaiah (look up Luke 4), He read from Isaiah 61:1-2a:

"The Spirit of the Sovereign LORD is on me, because the LORD has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim freedom for the captives and release from darkness for the prisoners, to proclaim the year of the LORD's favor."

He then told everyone that He was the one that was annointed, the one to preach, the one to bind the broken, to free the captives, and release the prisoners. He did. Now, it's our turn to tell everyone about Him, how they can be healed, freed, released. We need to "cry, proclaim as a herald". We need to brings an "announcement." We need "to preach". We need to, well, kerusso.