Elke's Boring! [tm] Blog
 
 

 



Saturday, May 03, 2003

If you hunger to grow ever closer to God, another great resource is A Daily dose of Spurgeon.

By the way, I found out yesterday that David Bloom, the reporter for NBC and MSNBC of whom I became quite a junkie during the Iraq War, was a believer! The list of cool people to praise God with around the Throne just continues to grow!
Here is the report as clipped from the Christian Coalition of Iowa webpage:


DAVID BLOOM'S LAST EMAIL By Joel C. Rosenberg, national correspondent, WORLD magazine (www.worldmag.com)

(WASHINGTON, D.C., April 17, 2003) -- I met David Bloom during the Forbes campaign in 1996. He was friendly, enthusiastic, a tenacious reporter and clearly loved his job. Like so many others, I became a fan, and followed his work over the years.

What I didn't know was that in recent years he'd become a Christian who considered his personal relationship with Jesus Christ far more important than all the glamorous assignments he'd had, from White House correspondent to war correspondent on the road to Baghdad. That I learned yesterday, through David Bloom's last email.

So did more than 2,000 others, including White House press secretary Ari Fleischer, former New York Mayor Rudy Guiliani, NBC Nightly News anchor Tom Brokaw and TODAY Show host Katie Couric, who turned out Wednesday at a memorial service in St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan to mourn Bloom's death and remember his life.

Bloom, 39, died of a pulmonary embolism early in the morning of Sunday, April 6. The night before he died, he called the NBC assignment desk in New York to check the NCAA Final Four scores, and then called home to talk to his wife, Melanie, and their three young daughters. He also sent his wife an email that seemed to foreshadow his imminent death.


"I hope and pray all my guys get out of this in one piece," Bloom wrote.

"But I'll tell you, Mel, I am at peace. Here I am, supposedly at the peak of professional success, but I could, frankly, care less. It's nothing compared to my relationship with you and the girls and Jesus."

On the night before he left for Iraq, Bloom told the Rev. Father Matthew McGinness: "I'm almost afraid to say this, but I'm ready." He had a sense he might not come home.

"David had recognized God's sovereignty over his life," McGinness said.

Reuters reported that "Bloom's religion played a central part in his life. 'David had...personal issues to address,' said his friend Jim Lane, who met Bloom at a New Canaan, Connecticut, Bible study group."

It's not easy to take an honest measure of one's life and shortcomings, or pursue a real spiritual journey, in the high-powered world of politics and media.

It's not easy to demonstrate child-like faith anywhere -- to believe that God loves us and has a wonderful plan for our lives...that each of us are sinful and rebellious and thus separated from God...that Jesus Christ's death on the cross and resurrection from the grave is God's only provision to forgive us of our sins...that we must individually receive Jesus the Messiah as our personal Savior and Lord by faith through prayer...and that only then can we truly experience God's love and plan for our lives.

But that's what Bloom did. How fitting that as we celebrate Passover and Easter, a news reporter's last email should point us to the most important news of all, and good news at that: "For God so loved that world that He gave His one and only Son, that whosoever believes in Him shall not perish but have everlasting life." (John 3:16, the New Testament)

Farewell, David, and thanks.

In Christ,
Elke