Christian Post > _World_ (http://www.christianpost.com/world/) |Fri, Oct. 
07 2011 09:04  AM EDT  
Steve Jobs: A Glimpse Into His Spiritual Life
By _R. Leigh Coleman_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/author/r-leigh-coleman/)  | Christian Post  
Reporter

 
Inside the secretive world of Apple and their dedication to getting  things 
right, was a man who believed in trusting your gut, destiny and karma.
 
Steve Jobs, the force behind the global _technology_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/technology/)  giant Apple, died Wednesday 
at the age of  56. 
He died in Palo Alto, surrounded by his family. 
The visionary co-founder who inspired the world to want something even 
before  they knew what it was, embarked on a path of giving the world iconic 
products  like the Macintosh computer, iPod, iPhone and the iPad. 
As technology and design admirers flocked to Apple stores worldwide on  
Thursday to express their sorrow at the death of Jobs, some are wondering if he 
 had a spiritual life and a belief in God. 
Charismatic, visionary, ruthless, perfectionist, brilliant thinker and  
irreplaceable – these are some of the words that people have used to describe  
Jobs over the years. 
But what about Christian? Was Jobs a believer in Jesus Christ even if he  
eventually turned to Buddhism later in life?  
Most fans do not realize that Jobs, who was adopted, was baptized a 
Christian  early in life and eventually grew into the Lutheran Church. He 
discovered  Buddhism later in life. 
Bob Stith, a national strategist for the Southern Baptist Convention, says 
it  is possible that the word of God was brought back to Jobs during his 
last  hours. 
“I find it hard to believe that anyone would turn to any other religion 
after  coming to know Jesus Christ as their savior,” Stith told The Christian 
Post. 
“But we can pray that the teachings he received when he was younger were  
brought back to him during his last days on earth. Once a child of God, 
always a  child of God.” 
A glimpse of Jobs’ philosophy about life, death and faith can be found in a 
 speech to the 2005 graduating class at Stanford. 
“When I was 17, I read a quote that went something like: 'If you live each  
day as if it was your last, someday you'll most certainly be right,'" Jobs 
said  from the podium. 
“It made an impression on me, and since then, for the past 33 years, I have 
 looked in the mirror every morning and asked myself: 'If today were the 
last day  of my life, would I want to do what I am about to do today?' And 
whenever the  answer has been no for too many days in a row, I know I need to 
change  something.” 
He said this approach to life never let him down. Jobs also pointed out 
that  he always thought he would be dead soon and used it as a tool. 
He used this thought process of impending death to motivate him during the  
first 10 years of Apple, Inc. from just the two in a garage into a $2 
billion  company with more than 4,000 employees. 
Jobs also used it later in life as Apple started producing some $65.2 
billion  a year in revenue compared to $7 billion in the late 1990s, according 
to 
Wall  Street figures. 
“Because almost everything – all external expectations, all pride, all 
fear  of embarrassment or failure – these things just fall away in the face of 
death,  leaving only what is truly important," Jobs said to the graduates. 
Apple employees say Jobs had a peaceful spirit and mood around the office 
and  when they saw him at the Apple cafeteria during the day around the Apple 
campus  in Cupertino. 
One Apple employee, who works on hard-drive systems at the headquarters, 
told  The Christian Post that Jobs was all about karma, ethical behavior and  
unconventional _leadership_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/leadership/)  skills. 
“I know he liked a peaceful working environment. The word was he did not 
like  normal company _politics_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/politics/) ,” the employee at Apple, who 
wished to remain  anonymous, said about 
Jobs. 
“It was all about out of the box thinking around here. It is like everyone  
here wants to get a taste of that wisdom Mr. Jobs had. It is also a fun 
place to  work with free snack bars, game areas and soothing decorative areas. 
He inspired  me." 
Dr. R. Albert Mohler Jr., president of The Southern Baptist _Theology_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/theology/)  Seminary, suggests in a column 
that Christians  can learn from the life that Jobs led, even though he did 
not publicly profess  to be a Christian. 
"Christians considering the life and death of Steve Jobs will do well to  
remember once again the power of an individual life," Mohler wrote in a  
commentary Thursday. 
Jobs might have dropped out of college, but he soaked in everything that he 
 learned while attending classes including the font types in a calligraphy 
class  he stumbled into. Jobs said without that class, the MAC computers 
might not have  had different font types to choose from when creating a 
document. 
After leaving college, he ended up taking a journey through _India_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/region/india/)  in search of spiritual guidance 
prior 
to founding  Apple. 
The Examiner reports Jobs had a deep spiritual life, marked by the 
pilgrimage  to India in the 1970s, experiments with psychedelic drugs and a 
life-long  Buddhist practice supported by a strict vegetarian diet. 
In the summer of 1974, Jobs and his college friend, Dan Kottke, who both  
shared an interest in Eastern religion and mysticism set out to meet a 
spiritual  leader in India, the Examiner reports. 
Christian teachings bubbling up? 
“No one wants to die. Even people who want to go to heaven don't want to 
die  to get there,” Jobs continued to say to the Stanford graduates in the 
2005  address. 
“And yet death is the destination we all share. No one has ever escaped it. 
 And that is as it should be, because death is very likely the single best  
invention of Life. It is life's change agent. It clears out the old to make 
way  for the new. “ 
Probably some of the most powerful words Jobs spoke to the graduates were  
about other people’s opinions. 
“Don't let the noise of others' opinions drown out your own inner voice. 
And  most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They 
 somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is  
secondary.” 
What is interesting is that Job’s address to the graduates does not sound  
like a Buddhist manifesto. 
“Jobs is a Buddhist, a choice he might have made thanks to his India  
connection," consumer trend strategist Jeff Yang told The Times of India. 
"He said that the secret of Apple's success lied in Jobs’ embrace of a Zen  
Buddhist principle that expresses the power of nothingness. It is this that 
made  Apple put simplicity at the core of its products." 
“There is something about it that, if not intentionally Christian, is at  
least consonant with the best of Christian teaching,” writes Scott Richert, a 
 religious author and editor for Chronicles: A Magazine of American 
_Culture_ (http://www.christianpost.com/topics/culture/) . 
“I like to think that, when Jobs was composing it, the lessons of his  
Lutheran catechism kept bubbling up in his mind.” 
Richert also believes that any Christian whose life has been touched by the 
 technology that Steve Jobs brought into the world will hope and pray that 
those  same Christian lessons came to mind Wednesday, as he approached the 
final  moments of his earthly life, while “surrounded by his beloved family 
and the  guardian angel who never abandoned him even when he sought a 
different  path.” 
The pre-order sales for the biography of Steve Jobs spiked to No. 1 at  
Amazon.com following his death Wednesday. The biography is being written by  
Walter Isaacson and based on more than 40 interviews with Jobs conducted for  
more than two years. 
---------------------------------------------------------------------- 
 
 
 
 

 

 
_Steve Jobs Funeral Held in Private to Avoid Protests by  Church?_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/news/steve-jobs-funeral-held-in-private-to-avoid-protes
ts-by-church-57642/) 
Sat, Oct. 08, 2011 Posted: 10:25 AM EDT   
____________________________________
  
 
Steve Jobs, Apple Inc’s co-founder, was buried Friday in a private funeral 
at  an undisclosed location apparently to evade protests by an independent 
Baptist  church that holds the iconic entrepreneur responsible for gay 
marriage. 
Jobs’ family held a private funeral Friday, according to The Wall Street  
Journal, which quoted “a person familiar with the matter.” However, the 
source  refused to disclose where and what time it was held or who were 
invited, 
“citing  respect for Jobs and his family’s privacy.” 
Jobs, the man behind gadgets such as the iPod, iPhone and iPad, was likely  
not buried in Palo Alto, the Californian city where he lived. Fox News 
quoted  Lt. Sandra Brown, a spokeswoman for the Palo Alto police department, as 
saying  that she believed it was held outside the city. 
The location of the funeral was not disclosed perhaps due to the 
possibility  of protests by the Westboro Baptist Church in Topeka, Kansas, 
which had  
announced that it was planning to picket the funeral. “THANK GOD! Steve Jobs 
is  dead! Westboro will picket his funeral!” said the WBC Blogs which is 
linked to  the church’s website. The church also sent messages via Twitter for 
iPhone. 
Westboro is a small church, made up of family members of leader Fred 
Phelps,  notorious for picketing funerals and desecrating the American flag. It 
made  headlines in 1998, when it picketed the funeral of Matthew Shepard, a 
young man  from Wyoming who was beaten to death by two men because of his  
homosexuality. 
While the people, governments and silicon companies around the world paid  
tribute to Jobs after he died in his home Wednesday, the church’s blog held 
him  responsible for gay marriage. “Westboro will picket his funeral. He had 
a huge  platform; gave God no glory & taught sin,” Margie Phelps, daughter 
of the  church’s founder, tweeted Wednesday night on her iPhone. Phelps is 
the lawyer  who represented the church’s First Amendment case last year at 
the Supreme  Court. 
In contrast, Dr. Michael A. Milton, chancellor-elect of Reformed 
Theological  Seminary, in a statement Thursday linked Jobs oddly with The Great 
Commission.  “We at RTS remember that [Jobs’] contributions and the 
contributions 
of his  company, Apple Computer, became critical collaborators in seeking 
to fulfill the  Great Commission of Jesus Christ,” he said. 
Apple Inc has said there will be no public services. However, in a letter 
to  the company’s employees Wednesday, the day Jobs died of an undisclosed 
illness,  Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook said a “celebration of Steve’s 
extraordinary  life” would soon be held for staff. 
“Steve’s brilliance, passion and energy were the source of countless  
innovations that enrich and improve all of our lives,” Apple’s board said in a  
statement after his death. “The world is immeasurably better because of 
Steve.”  Jobs died at 56.
Anugrah Kumar
Christian Post Contributor   
____________________________________
  
 
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