Recently I was reading a blog by Justin Taylor that obviously for me stood out. I am the very proud father of four boys. My wife and I have a boy that absolutely loves to read and another boy that truly struggles to spend time in a book. Justin Taylor references an article he found in the Wall Street Journal Opinion Journal about the struggles of our modern boys to become readers. There is an old saying, "Readers are Leaders." We are finding a drought of solid leaders in our males and perhaps one of the issues is found in there lack of motivation to grow and mature.
I am going to leave the entire article here for you to read for yourself. I am under no delusion that the author is looking at this from a religious vs. secular viewpoint. I think he is simply looking at this from a realist standpoint. May I as a father of boys show my boys the joy of reading over the joys of sitting in front of a Brain Drain like the TV or computer screen. Let's demonstrate the amazement and the thrill of being immersed in the story of a good book rather than the numbing of carpel tunnel causing computer gaming. Here is the article.
By THOMAS SPENCE
When I was a young boy, America's elite schools and universities were almost entirely reserved for males. That seems incredible now, in an era when headlines suggest that boys are largely unfit for the classroom. In particular, they can't read.
According to a recent report from the Center on Education Policy, for example, substantially more boys than girls score below the proficiency level on the annual National Assessment of Educational Progress reading test. This disparity goes back to 1992, and in some states the percentage of boys proficient in reading is now more than ten points below that of girls. The male-female reading gap is found in every socio-economic and ethnic category, including the children of white, college-educated parents.
The good news is that influential people have noticed this problem. The bad news is that many of them have perfectly awful ideas for solving it.
Everyone agrees that if boys don't read well, it's because they don't read enough. But why don't they read? A considerable number of teachers and librarians believe that boys are simply bored by the "stuffy" literature they encounter in school. According to a revealing Associated Press story in July these experts insist that we must "meet them where they are"—that is, pander to boys' untutored tastes.
For elementary- and middle-school boys, that means "books that exploit [their] love of bodily functions and gross-out humor." AP reported that one school librarian treats her pupils to "grossology" parties. "Just get 'em reading," she counsels cheerily. "Worry about what they're reading later."
There certainly is no shortage of publishers ready to meet boys where they are. Scholastic has profitably catered to the gross-out market for years with its "Goosebumps" and "Captain Underpants" series. Its latest bestsellers are the "Butt Books," a series that began with "The Day My Butt Went Psycho."
The more venerable houses are just as willing to aim low. Penguin, which once used the slogan, "the library of every educated person," has its own "Gross Out" line for boys, including such new classics as "Sir Fartsalot Hunts the Booger."
Workman Publishing made its name telling women "What to Expect When You're Expecting." How many of them expected they'd be buying "Oh, Yuck! The Encyclopedia of Everything Nasty" a few years later from the same publisher? Even a self-published author like Raymond Bean—nom de plume of the fourth-grade teacher who wrote "SweetFarts"—can make it big in this genre. His flatulence-themed opus hit no. 3 in children's humor on Amazon. The sequel debuts this fall.
Education was once understood as training for freedom. Not merely the transmission of information, education entailed the formation of manners and taste. Aristotle thought we should be raised "so as both to delight in and to be pained by the things that we ought; this is the right education."
"Plato before him," writes C. S. Lewis, "had said the same. The little human animal will not at first have the right responses. It must be trained to feel pleasure, liking, disgust, and hatred at those things which really are pleasant, likeable, disgusting, and hateful."
This kind of training goes against the grain, and who has time for that? How much easier to meet children where they are.
One obvious problem with the SweetFarts philosophy of education is that it is more suited to producing a generation of barbarians and morons than to raising the sort of men who make good husbands, fathers and professionals. If you keep meeting a boy where he is, he doesn't go very far.
The other problem is that pandering doesn't address the real reason boys won't read. My own experience with six sons is that even the squirmiest boy does not require lurid or vulgar material to sustain his interest in a book.
So why won't boys read? The AP story drops a clue when it describes the efforts of one frustrated couple with their 13-year-old unlettered son: "They've tried bribing him with new video games." Good grief.
The appearance of the boy-girl literacy gap happens to coincide with the proliferation of video games and other electronic forms of entertainment over the last decade or two. Boys spend far more time "plugged in" than girls do. Could the reading gap have more to do with competition for boys' attention than with their supposed inability to focus on anything other than outhouse humor?
Dr. Robert Weis, a psychology professor at Denison University, confirmed this suspicion in a randomized controlled trial of the effect of video games on academic ability. Boys with video games at home, he found, spend more time playing them than reading, and their academic performance suffers substantially. Hard to believe, isn't it, but Science has spoken.
The secret to raising boys who read, I submit, is pretty simple—keep electronic media, especially video games and recreational Internet, under control (that is to say, almost completely absent). Then fill your shelves with good books.
People who think that a book—even R.L. Stine's grossest masterpiece—can compete with the powerful stimulation of an electronic screen are kidding themselves. But on the level playing field of a quiet den or bedroom, a good book like "Treasure Island" will hold a boy's attention quite as well as "Zombie Butts from Uranus." Who knows—a boy deprived of electronic stimulation might even become desperate enough to read Jane Austen.
Most importantly, a boy raised on great literature is more likely to grow up to think, to speak, and to write like a civilized man. Whom would you prefer to have shaped the boyhood imagination of your daughter's husband—Raymond Bean or Robert Louis Stevenson?
I offer a final piece of evidence that is perhaps unanswerable: There is no literacy gap between home-schooled boys and girls. How many of these families, do you suppose, have thrown grossology parties?
Mr. Spence is president of Spence Publishing Company in Dallas.
Friday, September 24, 2010
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
Not building Museums, but being part of a Movement
One of the people coming to our church passed along a link to this site recently. On the site was this video where Darrin Patrick spoke of a church that was planted and then within two generations, died. Watch the video. It is alarming, yet it is filled with hope. Young and old alike need to heed the warning and may it truly challenge our churches to mature and build for a future that is anticipating the coming of Christ, but willing to work faithfully until He does so.
Friday, July 9, 2010
A "WOW" Moment!
I had a "Wow" moment this morning. In order to get to that let me take you back to...oh.... the beginning of this week. We have had a lot of rain here over the past few weeks. Now, if you are in the southern parts of the States, please do not take that as a snub to you. But we have. We keep getting these huge gully washers. You in the south know what those are. Heavy deluges of sheet after sheet of rain. Needless to say, my grass has grown over those days. Problem? Well, the timing of my week has been mismatching the available moments to drag out the mower and actually cut that lush blanket of green stuff that needed to be brought under control.
So...(getting to the "wow")....I woke this morning knowing that again I would have no time to cut it this evening and knowing that tomorrow was pretty much shot and that of course Sunday is not the day of mowing but the day of musing. That leaves Monday...NO, I am taking a van load of kids to camp! So....I had the idea of seeing if my eldest child could handle the responsibility of mowing the lawn.
Caleb is now 10 and will be 11 in January. He is a responsible boy, but is he able to handle the job? I have him drag out the mower. We go through the pre-mow checklist. Gas? Check. Oil? Check. Primed? Check. What is that thing under the mower called that actually cuts the grass? "Blade, Dad." Ok, Check. What happens if you get your foot under the mower? ...you get the idea. This is serious business. Life or death in the power of a 10 year old! I gave the lecture on watching out for rocks and to not get cute while mowing. He pulls the cord, it cranks, I lecture on cutting the tall stuff and doing a good job. He takes off and as far as I know, has done a great job.
WOW!
Where has the time gone? When did my firstborn child become tall enough, strong enough, and even decisive enough to be able to handle such a job? It has been happening everyday for the past 10 years. (Pause while I grab a kleenex.)
Where is this all going? In reality, I don't know. I mean, yes, I know what I want to say here, but what is next in his life, for him as a growing young man? I don't know. That is somewhat scary, yet I have a responsibility to teach, live, and just simply allow him to expand as he is ready. Problem is....I don't want him to be ready. I want him to stay little, controllable, maintainable, and even dependent upon me. I don't want to let the rope out and let him step out, and sometimes mess up.
But the beauty of God's Word states that I have to train him and teach him, why? Because one day he will be most likely having the same conversation with his son or daughter that my father had with me. Not just about mowers, but about life, and about making wise decisions and even how to handle failures and mistakes.
I need to teach him the joy of doing it God's way and the pain that comes in trying a wrong way. I have to warn him, but in the end, I have to remember that there will be a day when I won't be there to grab him or choose for him. What then? Will he choose wisely? I hope so. I hope that there will be many more "wow" moments where I am able to see the growth, maturity, and power of God working in him.
One thing that comes to my mind in all of this is that I can't stop leading and living the kind of life before him that shows how important God is and how involved God wants to be. I want to show him, not just tell him, how wonderful God is and how special it is to be called a child of God. That it really is a "WOW" thing to be in the will and arms of a gracious, loving God.
Oh,and another thing....Now I have someone else to mow the lawn!
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Happy Father's Day!
We come again to another turn in the yearly cycle where we have celebrated a New Year, Valentine's Day, the entrance of Spring, Motherhood, Veterans, and soon, Fathers.
As I am a father it is a bit more personal for me. As well, we welcomed our 4th boy into the world just three weeks ago. This is a very special Father's Day indeed.
The greatest challenge we have as dads is to realize that a very high standard has been set up for us. The God of this universe is referred to as, "Father." His place in our existence is such as Creator and originator. James tells us plainly that from Him comes all that is good in our lives.
Every good thing given and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights, with whom there is no variation or shifting shadow. James 1:17
We have the classic passages where Christ describes the generosity and fairness of God. Where God is seen as a loving Father who would not withhold any good thing from His child.
"Or what man is there among you who, when his son asks for a loaf, will give him a stone? "Or if he asks for a fish, he will not give him a snake, will he? "If you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father who is in heaven give what is good to those who ask Him!" Matthew 7:9-11
I also take note of what Christ had said just prior to that passage.
Therefore you are to be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect. Matthew 5:48
Mark Twain is credited as once saying that when he was 13 he realized how stupid his father was, but by the time he reached his 20's he couldn't believe how smart his father had become.
Our job as fathers is not to seek the approval of our children. We are to seek the approval of God, our Father. We are not here to emulate man's philosophy of raising children, but we are to emulate the philosophy of God in how He seeks to raise us into the image of His perfect Son, Jesus Christ. Our ministry is such as the Father has for us.
May we as fathers look to stop being selfish, self-centered, and more enamored with the reflection of our faces in the mirror of God's Word. May it reveal our faults, but may we then seek from that same book to rectify our lives according to the truth of God. Let's live each day as fathers. Let's live each day in such a way that our heavenly father is seen in us for our children's sake and for the rest of the world to see.
Friday, May 28, 2010
Newest Member of our family
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Humor From The Aged
Believe it or not, but my mother sent me this and I just wanted to share it here. Very cute and for some it is one you have heard before, but I hope it tickles a part of your funny bone today.
The local news station was interviewing an 80-year-old lady because she had just gotten married for the fourth time. The interviewer asked her questions about her life, about what it felt like to be marrying again at 80, and then about her new husband's occupation.
"He's a funeral director," she answered.
He then asked her if she wouldn't mind telling him a little about her first three husbands and what they did for a living. She paused for a few moments, needing time to reflect on all those years.
After a short time, a smile came to her face and she answered proudly,
Explaining that she had first married a banker when she was in her early 20's, then a circus ringmaster when in her 40's, and a preacher when in her 60's, and now in her 80's, a funeral director.
The interviewer looked at her, quite astonished, and asked why she had married four men with such diverse careers.
She smiled and explained, "I married one for the money, two for the show, three to get ready, and four to go."
The local news station was interviewing an 80-year-old lady because she had just gotten married for the fourth time. The interviewer asked her questions about her life, about what it felt like to be marrying again at 80, and then about her new husband's occupation.
"He's a funeral director," she answered.
He then asked her if she wouldn't mind telling him a little about her first three husbands and what they did for a living. She paused for a few moments, needing time to reflect on all those years.
After a short time, a smile came to her face and she answered proudly,
Explaining that she had first married a banker when she was in her early 20's, then a circus ringmaster when in her 40's, and a preacher when in her 60's, and now in her 80's, a funeral director.
The interviewer looked at her, quite astonished, and asked why she had married four men with such diverse careers.
She smiled and explained, "I married one for the money, two for the show, three to get ready, and four to go."
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Allow for Space in the Music
I frequently get e-newsletters from Christianity Today (a very evangelical magazine and ezine). Some of them are good and some are infuriating, but this particular article stood out to me as one that was well written and challenging.
The content is about dealing with the uncomfortable situation of being a true friend to some individual suffering through chronic or lifelong pain or suffering. What words of comfort are truly comforting? What words are well intended but in the end cause more frustration or feelings of wanting to withdraw even more.
As a pastor there are times I feel void of any ability to offer hope to someone. I have individuals in my family and in my church who struggle with persistent physical or emotional turmoil. What are my choices of communicating hope to these people. What can I say that won't hurt them more and drive them deeper into despair?
This article was a good reminder of some things to be aware of and conscious of. There are times we are totally unaware of the burdens that some people carry and so we find ourselves saying things that are hurtful without knowing it. Those are different situations from the ones that this article addresses.
May we learn to Rejoice with them that do rejoice, and weep with them that weep. (Romans 12:15)
I like the last part of the article where it derives the title. Sometimes it comes down to us simply living out the truth we wish to verbally share. Sometimes we simply need to shut our mouths and let our actions relay the truth of comfort the person truly needs.
Allow for Space in the Music | Christianity Today | A Magazine of Evangelical Conviction
The content is about dealing with the uncomfortable situation of being a true friend to some individual suffering through chronic or lifelong pain or suffering. What words of comfort are truly comforting? What words are well intended but in the end cause more frustration or feelings of wanting to withdraw even more.
As a pastor there are times I feel void of any ability to offer hope to someone. I have individuals in my family and in my church who struggle with persistent physical or emotional turmoil. What are my choices of communicating hope to these people. What can I say that won't hurt them more and drive them deeper into despair?
This article was a good reminder of some things to be aware of and conscious of. There are times we are totally unaware of the burdens that some people carry and so we find ourselves saying things that are hurtful without knowing it. Those are different situations from the ones that this article addresses.
May we learn to Rejoice with them that do rejoice, and weep with them that weep. (Romans 12:15)
I like the last part of the article where it derives the title. Sometimes it comes down to us simply living out the truth we wish to verbally share. Sometimes we simply need to shut our mouths and let our actions relay the truth of comfort the person truly needs.
Allow for Space in the Music | Christianity Today | A Magazine of Evangelical Conviction
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
Laughter
I sit right now in my office and down the hall from me a group of our ladies are sitting together for a Bible study. The sounds though are sounds of comfort, refreshing, and joy. The sounds are of laughter.
The thing that makes this sound so great is that I know that many of these ladies are dealing with life's tough side. Some are struggling with health issues, some are struggling with unsaved spouses, some are struggling with relationships and family obligations. But for this moment, they can laugh.
Scripture is right:
A merry heart maketh a cheerful countenance: but by sorrow of the heart the spirit is broken. All the days of the afflicted are evil: but he that is of a merry heart hath a continual feast. Proverbs 15:13,15
So many times we become enamored with our lack, our frustration, and our dread of situations and life; but God's Word is filled with the optimism of hope, strength, and that source of wisdom when appropriately applying the knowledge that God grants us that ask it of Him.
Trials bring focus and that focus should be upon the One that brings joy and thus the ability to still find ways to laugh and not be overwrought and even overwhelmed with circumstances. Keep your attention on the Divine and less on the details that want to cloud our vision of what God is accomplishing in our lives.
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Six the same but different
Found this online the other day. Amazing the technology and with that the possibilities. Also, this guy has quite a range. Enjoy it and remember this is the same guy, singing all six different parts.
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Chronic.....Joy?
I just recently sat at the side of a hospital bed with an individual who has all of their life experienced one physical complication after another. Serious surgeries where organs have been removed, and procedures that left this person with drastic limitations. One thing after another has hit this one and they are "sick and tired of being sick and tired."
I have never experienced that. The chronic pain, the chronic suffering, the chronic bouts of physical limitations that lead to the battle of depression, discouragement, and a longing for release!
Chronic....On going, never finding a full release, no end in sight, or just when you think it is finally over....Chronic!
Where is there any joy in that? How can I, in reasonably good health, never much for hospitals, not aware of any physical abnormalities and find getting a head cold a point of absolute misery...How can I extend a hope of joy?
How can I offer to this dear soul the words of comfort and hope that they need in order to "feel good" when life is filled with the chronic "bad" that has plagued them for all these years?
The reality is that JOY is not mine to give. Joy is not mine to create. Joy is not within me to begin with. Joy is outside of me and comes from a source beyond me.
"If you want Joy, real joy, wonderful joy, Let Jesus come into your heart," as the old chorus goes. "Your sins He'll wash away, your night He'll turn to day, your life He'll make it over a new."
But let all who take refuge in You be glad, Let them ever sing for joy; And may You shelter them, That those who love Your name may exult in You. Psalms 5:11
You will make known to me the path of life; In Your presence is fullness of joy; In Your right hand there are pleasures forever. Psalms 16:11
For His anger is but for a moment, His favor is for a lifetime; Weeping may last for the night, But a shout of joy comes in the morning. Psalms 30:5
The angelic herald at Christ's birth shouted this statement: But the angel said to them, "Do not be afraid; for behold, I bring you good news of great joy which will be for all the people; Luke 2:10 Joy came with the coming of Christ. The ability to find contentment, rest, peace.
"Just as the Father has loved Me, I have also loved you; abide in My love. If you keep My commandments, you will abide in My love; just as I have kept My Father's commandments and abide in His love. These things I have spoken to you so that My joy may be in you, and that your joy may be made full. "This is My commandment, that you love one another, just as I have loved you. "Greater love has no one than this, that one lay down his life for his friends."
John 15:9-13
Love and joy, being loved, finding joy. This is our God we are speaking of. The One that knows that this dear one is in a hospital bed for the "umpteenth" time and is discouraged with life and the body they find themselves encased in.
This is the same God however, that endured our death so that even though our "sin-afflicted" existence should leave us trapped in a physical body that just won't respond as we would hope, we have this joy! HE is coming to redeem us, to deliver us, to free us and that existence will bring about freedom from pain, suffering, trials, and depression of mind and spirit.
But what about while we wait? What do I do now? How do I endure until that day? By finding Christ to be that daily source of joy. He is my contentment, He is my daily bread, He is my peace, my lover, my provider of grace. As I live with Him in mind my pain has a purpose. My suffering has a reason. My life is not about me, but about using the daily reminder that God has given me that I need Him! He is my joy and He is my grace. He is my confidence and He is my heart's physician.
I am nothing without Him and through Him I can do all that He asks of me. He is my cause, my reason, my hope and all my tomorrows!
"My Joy...in you," Jesus says just hours, minutes, before the cross. Real joy, wonderful joy. A life changing joy that is not based upon circumstances, but a joy that brings contentment in the midst of "real life."
Joy when life is...well, "Chronic."
I have never experienced that. The chronic pain, the chronic suffering, the chronic bouts of physical limitations that lead to the battle of depression, discouragement, and a longing for release!
Chronic....On going, never finding a full release, no end in sight, or just when you think it is finally over....Chronic!
Where is there any joy in that? How can I, in reasonably good health, never much for hospitals, not aware of any physical abnormalities and find getting a head cold a point of absolute misery...How can I extend a hope of joy?
How can I offer to this dear soul the words of comfort and hope that they need in order to "feel good" when life is filled with the chronic "bad" that has plagued them for all these years?
The reality is that JOY is not mine to give. Joy is not mine to create. Joy is not within me to begin with. Joy is outside of me and comes from a source beyond me.
"If you want Joy, real joy, wonderful joy, Let Jesus come into your heart," as the old chorus goes. "Your sins He'll wash away, your night He'll turn to day, your life He'll make it over a new."
But let all who take refuge in You be glad, Let them ever sing for joy; And may You shelter them, That those who love Your name may exult in You. Psalms 5:11
You will make known to me the path of life; In Your presence is fullness of joy; In Your right hand there are pleasures forever. Psalms 16:11
For His anger is but for a moment, His favor is for a lifetime; Weeping may last for the night, But a shout of joy comes in the morning. Psalms 30:5
The angelic herald at Christ's birth shouted this statement: But the angel said to them, "Do not be afraid; for behold, I bring you good news of great joy which will be for all the people; Luke 2:10 Joy came with the coming of Christ. The ability to find contentment, rest, peace.
"Just as the Father has loved Me, I have also loved you; abide in My love. If you keep My commandments, you will abide in My love; just as I have kept My Father's commandments and abide in His love. These things I have spoken to you so that My joy may be in you, and that your joy may be made full. "This is My commandment, that you love one another, just as I have loved you. "Greater love has no one than this, that one lay down his life for his friends."
John 15:9-13
Love and joy, being loved, finding joy. This is our God we are speaking of. The One that knows that this dear one is in a hospital bed for the "umpteenth" time and is discouraged with life and the body they find themselves encased in.
This is the same God however, that endured our death so that even though our "sin-afflicted" existence should leave us trapped in a physical body that just won't respond as we would hope, we have this joy! HE is coming to redeem us, to deliver us, to free us and that existence will bring about freedom from pain, suffering, trials, and depression of mind and spirit.
But what about while we wait? What do I do now? How do I endure until that day? By finding Christ to be that daily source of joy. He is my contentment, He is my daily bread, He is my peace, my lover, my provider of grace. As I live with Him in mind my pain has a purpose. My suffering has a reason. My life is not about me, but about using the daily reminder that God has given me that I need Him! He is my joy and He is my grace. He is my confidence and He is my heart's physician.
I am nothing without Him and through Him I can do all that He asks of me. He is my cause, my reason, my hope and all my tomorrows!
"My Joy...in you," Jesus says just hours, minutes, before the cross. Real joy, wonderful joy. A life changing joy that is not based upon circumstances, but a joy that brings contentment in the midst of "real life."
Joy when life is...well, "Chronic."
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
No Greater Love
It is very rare that I comment on movies or such things like that, but here in the past few posts the movie industry has come up. However, this time I highly recommend a visual production entitled, No Greater Love.
This is a Lionsgate production and comes with a 4 out of 5 for family friendliness from the Dove Foundation.
My wife and I viewed this just recently and both of us were just overwhelmed with the acting and the portrayal of Christianity through the eyes of an unbeliever. We loved it! It was honest, fresh, very well done, and tastefully, yet vividly emotional.
The opening scenes are abrupt and certainly get your attention. They deal with a wife caught in the grips of deep depression and turns to alcohol as a way out before she abandons her husband and 10 month old son. The movie then comes to the present day where this abandoned husband, Dave, and his 10 year old son are very attached and lovingly strong in their relationship. The husband now, an unbeliever, is now actually thinking of marrying another woman, yet has such emotional ties to his long-lost wife.
The movie brings us along the journey of discovering his lost wife, now dealing with the anger, bitterness, yet overwhelming love he still has for her. The problem now is that the wife, Heather, has become a Christian. She is a totally different person. What now? Believers and Unbelievers being married? Divorced? Different paths, plans, and what about the burden of a believer's heart to follow God when now comes this man she lost contact with and a son she has not known for his entire life practically?
This is a great movie that tugs at your heart and portrays the power of Christ's change in those who are truly saved and walking in obedience.
I encourage you to watch it. I think the content is a bit much for a younger audience and would agree with Dove's assessment of keeping it to an audience of 12 years old and up. This is a much milder version of a Fire Proof kind of movie. The emotions are calmer yet very intense at the same time.
We found our copy in the local video store, so make it a date movie if you like that and enjoy, No Greater Love.
Friday, January 22, 2010
Service Times and The Big Game!
Recently a man I respect and admire wrote an article about how we determine our approach to scheduling church services during big sporting events like the one coming up on February 7. What will the churches do especially if they are rooting for teams that could be headed in that direction? John Pratt, a pastor and teacher at Central Seminary in Plymouth, Minnesota addresses this topic.
He brings out several things that we all should wrestle with even if you are not a sports fan, but have any activities in which you are an enthusiast. Let it challenge you as much as it did me.
(If unable to use the link - http://centralmn.wordpress.com/2010/01/22/service-times-and-sporting-events/ )
He brings out several things that we all should wrestle with even if you are not a sports fan, but have any activities in which you are an enthusiast. Let it challenge you as much as it did me.
(If unable to use the link - http://centralmn.wordpress.com/2010/01/22/service-times-and-sporting-events/ )
God given abilities
Was shown this recently. Thought I would pass it on. Great story and a great family from all indications.
( If having trouble seeing the clip - www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=9xwCG0Ey2Mg )
( If having trouble seeing the clip - www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=9xwCG0Ey2Mg )
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Multi-site churches, are they effectively connecting?
This has been a discussion point for some in our church already. Interesting thoughts and I personally like the direction this writer took this piece. I am in agreement for the most part on many of the points he makes for this post. Collin Hansen also notes an USA TODAY article in his post that you should check out as well.
The Hansen Report: Valuing Visitation | Out of Ur | Conversations for Ministry Leaders
I do agree that more needs to be said on this topic and that there are some things that Collin left out or just bated the reader into thinking on, but I do think that it is not about mega as better, but about are we still effectively resembling a body that is fit to bring people into a relationship with Christ and into a growing identity with Him?
Christ is the focus and we simply come with abilities and gifts that God wants to add to this local body to make it effective in demonstrating the power of God's love and grace, and to show forth the change Christ is able to make in our individual lives as we work together for Him.
NOTE:
If you are having trouble with the link above then copy this link and paste in your browser bar.
http://www.outofur.com/archives/2010/01/the_hansen_repo_6.html?sms_ss=blogger
The Hansen Report: Valuing Visitation | Out of Ur | Conversations for Ministry Leaders
I do agree that more needs to be said on this topic and that there are some things that Collin left out or just bated the reader into thinking on, but I do think that it is not about mega as better, but about are we still effectively resembling a body that is fit to bring people into a relationship with Christ and into a growing identity with Him?
Christ is the focus and we simply come with abilities and gifts that God wants to add to this local body to make it effective in demonstrating the power of God's love and grace, and to show forth the change Christ is able to make in our individual lives as we work together for Him.
NOTE:
If you are having trouble with the link above then copy this link and paste in your browser bar.
http://www.outofur.com/archives/2010/01/the_hansen_repo_6.html?sms_ss=blogger
Friday, January 8, 2010
The Book of Eli
I just received an email today from a source for churches and inside its contents was a link to invite churches to use this new movie called The Book of Eli as a way to have a Bible study.
I clicked on the link and open up to a trailer about a movie cast in the future after the earth, especially the United States has endured a apocalyptic event some 30 years prior.
The movie comes with a "R" rating and contains graphic violence and language throughout. So, my first twinge of consciousness is why are we even using this as a study guide to Bible study? The link above will take you to a page where there are study notes that you can download referring to particular scenes from the movie.
This obviously made me more curious about the movie itself. So I went to the movie's official site to learn a bit more about this movie.
The interesting thing is that the Bible is at the center of this film. That is due to it being supposedly the last remaining copy in existence and Denzel's character, Eli is on a mission to carry it from the east coast to the west coast. Why? We never really get a clear reason other than he has a destiny and perhaps a vision has spurned him on. So for years now he has been making his difficult journey across country to fulfill this mission given him by....well, I guess God.
Now...I know this is a movie. I know that it has many flaws and perhaps some admirable attempts to introduce faith and purpose around a iconic symbol like the Bible. But it is a movie produced by secular minds to present some sort of sordid philosophy about ignorance and education, faith and the power to control through fear and intimidation. Good versus evil in just another setting and in another imaginative way.
From all the trailers and dialogue it reminds me of a remixed version of Mad Max and Waterworld. We have led us to our deserving end and where is the leader that will rise to save the existing world and make the good to prevail?
Ok, enough about movie reviews especially since I have not seen the movie and probably won't since I have a problem with promoting a Christian to see something that even the world says is worthy of a "R" rating.
That leads me to my next thought. Why do we need to use this film to help us promote what is already in the Bible? Why do we need to turn to secular sources and even such violent ones to help us make parallels with the Biblical truth?
Now someone might argue that Jesus took the familiar and the examples around Him to bring out heavenly principles, but I would still argue that He didn't use such examples as "R" rated movies to fulfill His search for an analogy.
How far is too far and where do we start drawing lines in helping us be careful not to condone worldliness in an attempt to be "in touch" or "in tune" with where people are today? I could draw parallels to many of the apocalyptic movies of today and yesterday, because we know that sin destroys and people without Christ are basically zombies, but I still don't think we should go out and bring in clips from "Night of the Living Dead" to help us illustrate the point.
Now we have a movie that uses the Bible as its symbolic icon in a movie that is filled to the hilt with violence and vulgarity and we just have to make sure we use it to help people learn some sort of Biblical truths?
Come ON!
Tuesday, January 5, 2010
Alive!
I am writing this obviously more for my benefit than for anyone else's. The seasons of Thanksgiving, Christmas, and now New Year have come.....and gone! So, now what? What do we have to look forward to? In a word....
LIFE.
So much of life happens between the bookends. As we read the book the title just draws us in and the contents page just lays out the progression, but until you turn to page 1 and begin to read, nothing really can be learned or appreciated from the book.
So much of life I feel falls in a similar vein. We can start this year with all the good intentions and can declare it by title...2010! Now the analogy breaks down, because as LIFE happens the contents of this year begin to be etched upon the pages of each day, month, and then in summation, the year's end. But nothing can be experienced apart from the living of this life.
We look back and see that from January 1st to December 31st we have experienced the real and the mundane. But is life really able to be mundane? When you take into account that somewhere right now children are born....and children die? When you take into account that there are those whose livelihoods were taken away this past year and others had great success? When you consider that someone's daughter or son went off to college, graduated, got married, or moved to another country?
How can we say that life is mundane? How can we call life routine? Life is what we are filled with, look forward to, protect with all our might. Life is who we are and what we live for.
So, what will our life be like this new year? What will we live for? What will we give up, let go, or claim as the moment of great delight, fear, hope, dread, or success?
LIFE
To know it, and to have it, and then to live it. As a Christian my life is sourced, founded and sealed in the ONE who alone has given to me real LIFE, real purpose, and real hope. LIFE has no real meaning apart from Christ and the life He has blessed me with. Yes, blessed me with. Even in death, in loss, or in great triumph and new found directions, all of these come together for His glory and my good.
As comes the New Year, so comes the opportunity to remember the New Life that we have because of Christ. May this new year afford us the opportunity to make Christ the real success in our lives. May we be found at December 31, 2010 as a faithful steward and a promoter of LIFE in Christ.
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