Sunday, October 19, 2014

11 Men on a Ledge/11 Friends on a Ridge (Part 1)


The picture "Men at Lunch" with the 11 fearless builders precariously hanging out on an iron beam atop of the burgeoning New York City amidst the Great Depression has remained an American favorite for nearly a century. It depicts courage and comradery in the midst of a world of chaos and confusion; and it associates 11 anonymous faces with an ideal for which we all aspire.

…An ideal to be people who are capable of rising above the circumstances below us, and along with a few other friends – experiencing instances of serenity amidst exhausting efforts of constructing something great.
   
I bet that most those guys in the picture above were in their 20's or 30's at the time of the take; and just like the 11 friends from our young adult's group below, they probably had all kinds of questions about their future and worth and relationships and dreams.
  

Dreams of doing something meaningful with their lives, and of making enough money to have a life. Of sharing their lives with people they care about, and of caring for the people that make their lives worthwhile.

Bogota Colombia in the 21st century is a little different from New York City at the beginning of the 20th, but young adults throughout every era and in every continent are all trying to make their lives count.
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Picture Referenced:

Thursday, July 31, 2014

Reggae Reflections

Jeez Lue Weez man, last night I was talking to one of my best friends and he mentioned Magic! and so I checked them out and they're awesome! haha. I really like them, and their music video Rude is pretty solid... check it: 


...The main idea is that there's this guy that has a crush on a girl and so he asks her dad for his blessing to marry her, but all the dad says is "tough luck my friend," and that he's never going to get his blessing till the day he dies...Like never... Ever... never, ever, EVER!... Like never ever ever EVER!!! and so it's just like... whoa! jeez lue weez, that is soooooo... RUDE!!! Why you gotta be so ruuuude? haha. 

Can you imagine that? 

You can't live without this certain girl... the one and only girl that you love and care about more than anybody or anything else in the whole world, and so you try to be nice, you try to be cordial, but all the dad does is say no and throw it right back in your face.

He completely denies you the opportunity to marry her, and so you're like, what?!? Like really? I mean like man alive... why you gotta be so rude like that? That's just so ruuuude!!!

So what do you do?

Well, you marry her anyway. You marry her no matter what he says... You run away with her and become your own family. That's what you do... It's what you do fair and square. End of story. That's all there is to it.    

Do you see how that could raise a little tension?

...Now imagine that tension multiplied a million times over in a tiney little country surrounded by multiple Arab states 650 times your size that really don't like you very much at all, and you just might start to get an idea of what it's like for Israel.... 

Israel is the guy wanting the girl. The girl is the land they're living on, especially Jerusalem. But Palestine, or multiple people from the various Arab nations surrounding Israel, are the "dads" who don't want to give that land away.

...And so the problem is that the land has technically already been given away to Israel, and it was given to them back in 1948 by like the official land and country marriage organization called the United Nations.   

And so this marriage to Israel and their land… well, not only is it officially recognized by most of the world – there’s also a little rumble that occurs there between the brand new Israeli state and the Arab states a few days later... A little rumble that Israel miraculously wins!

Now these rumbles go on and on and on for decades (and the turmoil is highlighted in 1967 with the Six Days War), until about in 1987 when a rather small political organization of Arabs called Hamas is formed out of a previous organization called Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood Movement. This group gains momentum, and in the 1990's and early 2000's starts really getting after it on every opportunity they’ve got to destroy the notion of Israel as it's own sovereign state... And Israel, on the other hand, with a surprisingly powerful Air Force and Defence Force - defends themselves from the oncoming attacks while also managing to perpetually retaliate in a semi-offensive way.

And so what does Hamas do? Well they don’t really care too much about all their losses as long as that gets them more sympathy from the public, and so they keep debilitating Israel... They keep attacking – they throw rockets to Tel-Aviv and send suicide bombers into Jerusalem and build secret tunnels especially into the Israeli side of perhaps the most coveted realty zone in the whole world; namely the Gaza Strip.

In other words, to get a better understanding of this whole messy disaster, check out this video that explains the history of this dilemma in a little more detail...


And as a side note, just keep in mind that Israel as a nation with its strategic connection to the continents of Africa, Europe, and Asia right along the Eastern border of the Mediterranean Sea is the epicenter of the whole world. And Jerusalem; the great city of King David – is the epicenter of Israel. And Temple Mount; the specific place where the Jews want to build the temple that you can read about in the Bible - that's in the epicenter of this city… and well, just to top it off and make matters even worse – let’s just say that Temple Mount is inconveniently already taken up by a huge Islamic Mosque…

Now if you’ve ever heard of a gnarly situation, I think that this one would definitely constitute itself as being the biggest.

And so who’s to blame for it all?

…Well, that’s where it gets really tough to define because apparently both Israel with their killing of so many Arab civilians; and Palestine with their incessant launching of so many rockets are definitely almost both just as seriously and as equally in the wrong in all of this.

…Maybe we could go back and blame it on Abraham, the ancestral father of both Israel and Palestine, or perhaps we could just stick with SIN as being the ultimate source of it all… The same kind of sin that you and I have; just as much as the Arabs and Jews, and which can only be remedied with the blood of the most controversial Jew who ever lived in those parts… The most controversial Jew who some acknowledge as the promised and long awaited Messiah… the King of Kings and Lord of Lord’s, the Everlasting Son of God.


He’s the ultimate Savior that can bring true shalom to the world (John 14:27), and in the midst of all these tears and wars and bloodshed, I think that one of the only things that we can really cling to are the promises in the Bible concerning the final victory of Jesus when all of this will turn around…

Seriously man. And while you're at it, please click play on Matisyahu's song: One Day to hear a spectacular interpretation a Jewish reggae artists's hope for change:


Yeah for Matisyahu! (best song ever).
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Luke 19:41-44

And when he drew near and saw the city, he wept over it, saying, “Would that you, even you, had known on this day the things that make for peace! But now they are hidden from your eyes. For the days will come upon you, when your enemies will set up a barricade around you and surround you and hem you in on every side and tear you down to the ground, you and your children within you. And they will not leave one stone upon another in you, because you did not know the time of your visitation.”

Luke 13:34-35

 O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the city that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it! How often would I have gathered your children together as a hen gathers her broodunder her wings, and you were not willing! Behold, your house is forsaken. And I tell you, you will not see me until you say, ‘Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord!’”
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Other Good Videos Explaining the Situation in Israel:




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Pictures Cited: 
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/05/398512.htmlhttp://www.theguardian.com/world/gallery/2014/jul/24/the-conflict-in-gaza-in-pictures
http://www.islamic-architecture.info/WA-IS/WA-IS.htm
http://www.frontpagemag.com/2014/robert-spencer/hamas-genocidal-technocrats/
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2012/feb/15/bbc-supreme-court-middle-east-report

Friday, July 4, 2014

Colombia vs. Brazil

Today is the 4th of July, and the USA couldn't be further from my mind.

I know that's a really terrible thing to say, but it's just that with Colombia's most important game today up to date - somehow all my patriotism is concentrated and focused on my native country right now rather than on my ancestral one. 

Colombia is bouncing and buzzing and beaming with anticipation like you'd never believe it, and it makes sense - cause I mean with about 60% of this whole nation's population sporting a yellow jersey - it's like we're all part of some huge bumble bee colony or something... A huge bumble bee colony that's completely united in the tension of knowing that today we either win or lose it all.

glued to the tube
3:00 p.m. is this nation's moment of truth! and everyone alike: friends, families, strangers, and enemies - we'll all be glued to our tubes just waiting for our first goal of glory. Will it ever come? Will it come before Brazil? Will it be complimented with a second or third? Will we clinch the game? ...or will the match just draw out incessantly with our boys fighting tooth and nail for every inch of Estadio Castelão till the wistle blows and we go to shoot outs... It's truly amazing how today in Colombia soccer is really the only thing that matters.

The thing about it though, is that - so it is in Brazil!

All the hype we feel right now here in Colo - well, it's just augmented all the more across the border. 

Today will be the first game for Colombia in this World Cup where there will be more fans rooting for our opponent than there will be for us. We're the visiting team, and as such we'll be wearing red. We're the underdog that's never even made it into the quarter-finals before; much less won five championship titles like Brazil. Everything is on the line, and like I said before - we've got it all to either win or lose.

Colombia team sporting the red jersey
And did you know that spiritually our lives as Christians are kind of like a soccer match as well?

It's an abstract thought, but this is how I view it:

The team: the Church (1 Cor.12:27-29). 
The head coach: God (Col.1:2a).
The team captain: Jesus (Col. 1:18).
The player's positions: different gifts of the Holy Spirit (Eph.4:11-12).
The objective: make disciples of all nations (Matt. 28:18-20).
The strategy: love and unity (Eph.4:2-5).
The jersey: baptism and the Lord's Supper (Eph.4:5; 1 Cor. 10:16-17).
The opponent: spiritual forces of evil (Eph. 6:12).
The audience: angels and heroes of the faith (1Pet.1:12; Heb. 12:1).
The glory: God (Phil.4:20). 
The outcome: victorious (Rom. 16:20).

So no matter what happens today in Brazil, just remember there's something bigger going on every single day throughout the whole World.  

Are you a part of it?

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Picture Cited:
http://www.eltiempo.com/mundial-brasil-2014/noticias/seleccion-colombia/uniforme-rojo-de-colombia-para-enfrentar-a-brasil-en-el-mundial/14203000

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

NaIRONMAN Quintana

Nairo Quintana is all that and a bag of chips.

True story man, winning the Giro D' Italia with a lead of almost 3 minutes, Nairo became the second Colombian ever to win a Grand Tour, following Lucho Herrera with his win of the Vuelta a España back in 1987.

Nairo Quintana in Boyaca
Born and raised in Colombia's mountainous department of Boyaca, Nairo's physical combination of having a small body, a robust heart, and a couple really muscular legs give him just the right qualities of being the most tenacious escarabajo* around.

And it's actually super cool to have a new and young national hero rise up from the trenches of poverty and capture the heart of this whole country.

Here in Colombia we like to think of his victory as simply being the precursor for all our high hopes of success in the World Cup.

Winners unify us, they inspire us, and they give us a reason to celebrate, which, if you know much about Latin culture - is something we're always trying to find a good reason for (or any reason for, honestly).

...But in researching Nairo's races in the Giro D' Italia, I've really honed in on his saucy performance in stage 16 where, starting the day in fifth place, he cleverly took advantage of a confusing situation in really wet and nasty conditions, and managed to chase down the lone breakaway rider in a perilous descent when many thought they were supposed to slow down.

Nairo Quintana taking the lead
Then, 2 km into the final 20 km ascent, Quintana attacked and caught up to the leader, finally surpassing him and finishing the day in the lead with the pink jersey.

Colombia celebrated, and four days later Quintana became a national icon as he took the stage as Giro D' Italia's overall first place winner.

...I read a few articles about Nairo, but there's one specifically that really annoys me, and it comes from the most important cycling news website in the world: cyclingnews.com, and in it, the author describes Quintana as "defiant."

I have a problem with that, because words are important to me, and Quintana was not defiant. Defiance is associated with open rebellion or bold disobedience, and there was nothing in Quintana's performance throughout the tour that denoted such things. He was audacious, yes. He was unrelenting, unabated, uncompromising, persistent, and tenacious - absolutely... but he was not defiant.

Lance Armstrong
Defiance is winning 7 consecutive Tour De France titles with the help of any kind of undetectable doping method possible, all the while swearing to the whole world that you've never taken any sort of Performance Enhancing Drug whatsoever. That's what defiance is - it's being a cheat, it's being a fake, it's being a fraud, it's being a sociopath; but being defiant is not being clever or bold enough to take a calculated risk that is completely legitimate even while everyone else is slowing down or falling asleep at the wheel.

...As a missionary I either live or die depending on the words I use to communicate the gospel; and not only that - I have to use them in such a way that captivates people's attention and stirs them to action.

I have to use words appropriately, without manipulation or hypocrisy, or otherwise I'm cheating. At the same time, I should definitely use words correctly, sincerely, persuasively, and attractively so as to save both myself and my hearers (1 Tim 4:16).        

In 2 Timothy 2:5, in Paul's final appeal to his most beloved disciple to carry on in the work of the Lord, he reminds Tim that "...anyone who competes as an athlete does not receive the victor's crown except by competing according to the rules."

Nairo Quintana winning the victor's trophy
The example of one who doesn't (such as Lance Armstrong), serves as a crude reminder of how easy it is to become a fraud, even for someone like me; who has such an obviously Christian profession... However, I believe that the example of Nairo Quintana who legitimately (albeit provocatively), won the Giro D' Italia; serves as an even greater example for us all, of one who "pushed his body and made it his slave," in his drive to be a champ; just like I want to do as well, so that "after I have preached to others; I myself will not be disqualified for the prize" (1 Corinthians 9:27).  

Most defiant and arrogant picture in the history of Twitter
Paul says that at the end of the day, "everyone who competes in the games goes into strict training. They do it to get a crown that will not last, but we do it to get a crown that will last forever" (1 Corinthians 9:25), and so I hope that we who know about this "crown" would be all the more *verracos in legitimately fighting for it.

*(an escarabajo is a nickname given to Colombian cyclists who perform extremely well on mountain stages of bike races).

*(a verraco is a word we use here in Colombia to describe an extraordinarily valiant person who is always up for fighting through the toughest jobs).

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Works and Pictures Cited:

http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/quintana-defiant-in-the-face-of-giro-ditalia-stelvio-fall-out
http://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2014/jun/06/nairo-quintana-giro-ditalia-richard-williams
http://www.theguardian.com/sport/2014/jun/01/nairo-quintana-giro-ditalia-victory-stage-20
http://www.radiosantafe.com/2013/07/06/nairo-quintana
http://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/other-sports/cycling/cyclist-lance-armstrong-posts-twitter-1430955

Friday, June 6, 2014

Sky Full of Stars

Cause in a sky, cause in a sky full of stars, I think I saw yoooooou OOOU♫... Cause you get lighter the more it gets dark...


That's basically been the #1 song that's been going through my mind lately since I bought Coldplay's new album, Ghost Stories a couple weeks ago.

I honestly don’t think it’s one of Coldplay’s greatest albums, but “A Sky Full of Stars” is cool, catchy, and techy enough for me to really enjoy it (especially at 2:48 when it goes like: tatatatatoom BAMBAMBAM BABADABADAM), and I also really like the concept Chris writes about of his girl being like a “sky full of stars,” who gets “lighter the more it gets dark.”

That’s cool because Philippians 2:15 says, in relation to working out one’s own salvation in fear and trembling (or in other words producing the works that are the natural overflow of it), that by doing them without grumbling or arguing – then we will shine among a warped and crooked generation like stars in the sky.

That’s pretty awesome, because about stars – it’s like Chris Martin says – they just get lighter the more it gets dark.

Stars are always there, they’re always present in the sky, but it’s when it gets dark that we actually see them. So too, I think that in our service towards Christ, there’s a lot of times that what we’re doing for Him won’t even be noticed by most people, but as we continue to do it, and as we do it with a good attitude – well, everything around us, all the sin and corruption and malarkey in this world, it will all just pale by comparison. Especially as we bring the gospel to more and more un-reached areas, the good work of the Lord will just stand out in starker and starker contrast to everything else.

Are our lives really different from the world around us? Are we honestly making a difference? Are we really shining like stars in the sky? The truth of the matter is that we are the light of the world. A city on a hill cannot be hidden, and neither do people light a lamp and put it under a bowl. In the same way, let’s let our light shine before others, that they may see our good works and glorify our Father in heaven! (Matt. 5:14-16). 

Monday, April 21, 2014

The Failing Heart of a Missing Flight/The Strengthened Heart of a Saving Faith

Picture of airplane 9M-MRO taken by a plane enthusiast
So whatever happened to Flight 370, no one knows.

And if you're looking for answers, none of the steps that have been taken to find the plane have led to any answers.

Every path has just left us chasing after.

Was it a freak accident? Was it a terrorist attack? Is it a conspiracy?

Somehow we just have to know. I mean we're willing to spend a quarter billion dollars just to find some sort of clue. Anything would be nice.

It's that feeling of losing 239 people who for many are friends and family members and not knowing how to move on. Of being frozen in time, and not knowing how to grieve because there's nothing on which to place the grief... On an accident which would result in sorrow? on a terrorist attack which would result in anger? or on a failure to follow correct safety procedures by mechanics, pilots, and/or air controllers which would result in a demand for compensation?

Either way, I would imagine that the pain of uncertainty is unbearable for those who are close to the friends or family members of those who were on the plane.

And then what happens if say a year or two goes by and then something turns up? What then? Something that you finally learn to leave unknown you all of a sudden have the chance of figuring out but maybe then you'd rather not. You'd rather not because what do you do with the answer? You just open up that wound again and the 3 questions you had to begin with now all of a sudden turn into 10?

I'm not saying that that's the right attitude, but I guess that even for me there's a couple things I've decided that I'd rather not figure out; and I think that the primary reason for that is because if I did - either way I can't do anything about the answer.

And I suspect that many of the disciples, especially Thomas, had some of the same issues going through their minds after Jesus died... And then when Thomas heard that he had risen - well what then? He was just supposed to take someone else's word for that and go on with his life without hearing from Jesus personally?

I think that Thomas needed to know for sure because perhaps he understood some of the implications involved in how he would have to live the rest of his life, if in fact Jesus was alive.

Remember that he was the one who said, ¨Let us also go that we may die with him¨ (John 11:16), when referring to the idea of going back to Judea with Jesus after Lazarus died.

Here we see a man that was ready to give everything to follow Jesus, and I suppose that Thomas knew it was possible for Jesus to rise again (because he saw Jesus raise Lazarus), but he needed that certainty to let him know that he had, just to know what to do next and to have the inspiration to do it.

Well, that command of what to do next was ultimately to go and preach throughout the whole world the things that Jesus had taught the disciples, and to baptize those who would came to faith in him in the name of the Father, Son, and the Holy Spirit (Matt. 28:19-20).

What we know of Thomas is that he actually did follow through with that. He went all the way to India in his obedience to fulfill the Great Commission, and I think that the diligence he had in doing so stemmed from the certainty he had of seeing Jesus and touching him in his side.

For me personally, I know that I´ve never seen Jesus face to face, but I still believe that he has risen from the dead and so that belief pushes me forward in my drive to make Him known.

I´m not like those who are left in oblivion without knowing the truth of what happened to their loved ones on flight 370. I´m like one of those who Jesus said was blessed because I have believed without having seen (John 20:29)... I´m not like one of those that shrinks back only to be destroyed, but rather I´m like one of those with the kind of confidence that will be richly rewarded. A confidence stemming from faith in the resurrected Jesus Christ, the Living Son of God (Hebrews 10:35-39).

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Judging Others

skit we performed in the San Jose youth group back in 2010 
Let's get real for a second.

Fact #1 - there is such a thing as right and wrong.

Fact #2 - we're all inconsistent in our lives in one way or another.

Fact #3 - judging is REALLY risky business.

Fact #4 - churches should be concerned with morality.

I fully believe that everything I just said in the above list is completely true, but with reference to fact #4, I find the question of how? to be super complex.

On the one hand, I explained in my last entry that we shouldn't teach "cheap grace"; and on the other hand, I know that if I'm trying to reach non-Christian young adults, or if I've already started a church with new believers who have somewhat "morally complicated lives"... well - let's just say that things can, and will probably (and actually most definitely) at some point get a little gnarly (or in most cases really gnarly).

So for starters, let me just say that there are two huge differences that need to be taken into account in this discussion: 1 - how we perceive and approach anyone outside the church, and 2 - how we work with and tenderly correct anyone within the church.

I honestly don't believe that it's worthwhile to tell everyone outside the church who is in sin that they need to change, or to try and make them understand that what they are doing is wrong, or to somehow disassociate ourselves with them because of their incorrect lifestyle. Rather, what we need to emphasize is that we've all failed and have been crippled by sin, and that because of it, life is really messed-up, but there's a remedy, and it has come in the person of Jesus Christ who actually really loves sinners, and with whom he not only associated with, but also found his whole life purpose in giving us the opportunity to be forgiven through his death, no matter what.

That's the main point that needs to be talked about with our friends (and even enemies) that aren't part of the church... or in other words, who aren't Christians.

Agreed?

I really hope so, because the idea of judging people who aren't in the faith, and telling them that who they are is wrong (or telling other Christian friends to stay away from them because they're wrong) - I don't know man - I mean doing so is liable to turn us into something like arrogant, irrelevant, judgmental, hypocrites (even though I do understand the danger in being 100% tolerant of everything, and becoming desensitized towards sin, as well as being overpowered by it).        

But, what about for those who are a part of the church but are blatantly living in sin?

Well, let me give you a real-life, unfiltered, really-complicated situation:

The first guy I ever baptized in my life is a guy named Elkin.

I met Elkin while he was living with his girlfriend with whom he has a daughter, and sure enough - after hanging out with him for a while and studying the Bible together - he decided to put his trust in Christ.

I baptized him, because I view baptism as the symbol of salvation - that in Jesus we have died to our selves and been buried with Christ in his death and resurrected through him in his life... I didn't baptize him to say that he is morally perfect in every sense, and that he has his whole life together - but it is to say that he has been justified (legally declared perfect or righteous in God's sight because of Christ, irrespective of his good works or even his recurrent tendency towards sin), and that he's now a new creation.

That's what I was saying when I baptized him (or better said that's what he was saying as he got baptized), and yet here's the catch: now after 4 years have passed (and as he's matured, and grown in his knowledge of Christ, and brought other members of his extended family to the Lord); still, he has not officially gotten married to his girlfriend either by state or church standards (even though they do live together and their relationship has been flourishing a lot).

So that's really awkward because 1: he's a poor role model to young believers; 2: he's a bad testimony to unbelieving outsiders; and 3: he's a bad example to his daughter who may be inclined to think that a lifelong commitment before God, the state, and your friends and family members towards the person you love and desire to live with, is unnecessary.

And that's not all right.

It's not all right, and so the church needs to do something about it.

At the same time though, it's clear that his involvement in the church has benefited him, his family, and other members of the church significantly (including myself), and by 1: forcing him to get married we run the risk of embittering him and having him do something against his will; by 2: judging him all the time and incessantly talking about the issue could make us seem more interested in him signing a paper and going through with an official ceremony than in seeing him grow deeper in love with his girlfriend and daughter; and by 3: dismissing him from the church we are effectively handing him over to the devil who is extremely powerful, and could very well even go so far as to physically take his life away from him (1 Cor. 5:5).

So that's some pretty serious stuff, isn't it?

What's ironic is that many other people who I know from San Jose that at one point were actively involved in the church there, have voluntarily handed themselves over to the devil in a sense, when they arbitrarily decided to leave the church out of their own volition... that reality should sadden us so much, and we should lovingly aim to do all that we can to get them back.

And what's tough in Elkin's case, is that I honestly think that the most Biblically logical way to deal with the situation, is to tell him that he can't come to our meetings until he repents, thereby showing him the supreme importance of needing to be serious about this issue, while fervently praying for him to follow through with the act - and to once again find restoration among us once he has (2 Cor. 2:6-8).

But even better than that, is that I think we should hope and do everything we can to encourage them to separate by mutual consent for a time (1 Cor. 7:5), while still letting them be active within the church, and hoping that in the mean time they would be compelled to officially get married.

Obviously, the way we go about this, and the way we talk about it has to be extremely tactful and loving and sensitive, but I honestly don't think that just having more patience will solve the issue... Even though everything inside of me wishes that I and the elders from the church in San Jose wouldn't have to do this - I think it's time that we be a little more radical about the issue; and hope that God in his infinite grace will work the situation out for his glory.

...And so there's an example of really complicated religion.

However, in going about it (and in relation to EVERY form of judgement), I find Jon Foreman's words concerning religion really apt, so as to keep us in check, when he says the following in his song, "The World You Want" from his Fading West album:
What you say is your religion,
How you say it - your religion,
Who you love is your religion,
How you love is your religion,
All your science - your religion,
All your hatred - your religion,
All your wars are your religion,
Every breath is your religion, yeah.


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Believe it or not, according to the British weekly newspaper The Economist, in 2012, Colombia was said to have the lowest percentage of marriages in the world

http://www.eltiempo.com/gente/ARTICULO-WEB-NEW_NOTA_INTERIOR-12587116.html