Concerning Life as It Is Supposed to Be

Category: Uncategorized Page 53 of 71

Coming Soon, to a Browser Near You!

Due to the generous hard work of a member, Hope Presbyterian Church will soon (by Sunday, August 24, hopefully) be debuting a brand new web site! We are excited by this, as the ‘facelift’ will give the site a much cleaner, more modern appearance.

These days, more often than not, before a person visits a church, he will visit that church’s web site. The web site becomes a primary means of communicating to the world a concept of who we are and what we are like. It is important that the site give to those who come an accurate as well as attractive picture of who we are. We are hoping this site does that even better than the last site.

The most popular use of the web site has been as a source for people to download sermons which they either missed or because of distance or absence could not be present to hear. If you are one of those who has been downloading sermons, you will find the new site to be much simpler to use. Plus, we will have far more sermons. The previous site limited us to 12. This site erects virtually no limit.

The site will be accessible via the same www.gohope.net address. However, if you have set up an RSS feed or podcast for your sermon downloads, those links will probably change. You may need to update your reader/subscription.

I hope the transition is as painless as possible for all concerned.

Special thanks to Tim for his great work on the previous site, and to Keith for his investment in the new. You guys are such great assets for the kingdom!

Technorati Tags:

We’re fine


Fay took a sharper turn east and came ashore a hundred miles south of us. Right now it is cloudy, blustery, but dry here. That could change, but there is no danger for us now.

So, back to work.

Technorati Tags:

Bullseye


We’ve been here before, in the bulls eye of a hurricane. I joked with Barb that sometimes the safest place to be, given the vagaries of hurricane predicting, is in the bulls eye. However, this is looking more and more serious, and so we covet the prayers of our friends in calmer environs. Here is the latest from the hurricane center:

AT 11 AM EDT…1500 UTC…A HURRICANE WARNING IS IN EFFECT FOR THE SOUTHWESTERN COAST OF FLORIDA FROM FLAMINGO TO ANNA MARIA ISLAND. A HURRICANE WARNING MEANS THAT HURRICANE CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED WITHIN THE WARNING AREA WITHIN THE NEXT 24 HOURS. PREPARATIONS TO PROTECT LIFE AND PROPERTY SHOULD BE RUSHED TO COMPLETION.

As I type, I am just inland from Anna Maria Island, clearly under a hurricane warning. What an exciting place to live.

I’ll keep you posted, if I can.

UPDATE: My much better informed farmer’s daughter tells me that actually, the storm is slated to hit somewhat south of us, which would put us on the mild side of the storm.

And, my much more spiritually minded colleague has posted this excellent reflection on hurricanes and the like.

FURTHER UPDATE: This is what makes this so uncertain (from the National Hurricane Center):

IT SHOULD BE NOTED THAT…SIMILAR TO CHARLEY IN 2004…SMALL DEVIATIONS FROM THE FORECAST TRACK COULD MAKE LARGE DIFFERENCES IN WHEN AND WHERE THE CENTER OF FAY MAKES LANDFALL ON THE FLORIDA COAST.

Technorati Tags:

John Adams

A year or two ago, a friend loaned me David McCullough’s Pulitzer Prize winning biography of John Adams. This 752 page behemoth drew out from me strange behavior. I would be found sitting at the dining room table a time or two past midnight reading because I would be deeply moved and unable to put it down.

Get it and read it. It is better than caffeine to keep one up at night!

But this post is not about a book.

Recently, HBO produced a seven part miniseries based upon that book, starring Paul Giamatti as John and Laura Linney as Abigail, and this is now available on DVD. Seven segments demand a hefty investment of time, but Barb and I took it all in over three successive Friday nights. My overall assessment is this: you must watch the first six segments to get to the seventh, but by all means get to the seventh. In the seventh and last segment, a brilliant and fascinating but flawed man is made human. There is much redemption in this last piece, which makes the first six worthwhile.

The first segments, while good, move at too rapid a pace. Beginning with the Boston Massacre in 1770, the series quickly moves through one major event after another of our nation’s founding. Giamatti’s voice is too high pitched to impress upon me Adams’ power as an orator, and much in these earlier segments focuses upon Adams’ oratory. I was not quite a fan. Yet.

It is the last segment that makes all the others worth watching. As we see an aging Adams deal with the complexities of his life from the perspective of age, we are also treated to a view of a family that had endured a lot, and yet lived in love and respect for one another.

The makeup department should receive some kind of award for making the forty-year old Giamatti a convincing 90 year old Adams. This is not, however, for the weak of stomach. Those who like watching primitive early 18th century anesthesia-free surgery may do fine. Enough said.

The relationship between John and Abigail, whom he addressed as his ‘dearest friend’ and called his greatest advisor and his ballast, is the thing that moved me most about the book. That relationship is preserved throughout the miniseries. One is struck with the price that families such as this was forced to pay because of the demands of the time. Our freedoms were not purchased only by death’s on the battlefield.

The Adams’ daughter Nabby is played by a Canadian actress Sarah Polley, who does a wonderful job. I’m reminded that fame in Hollywood is not just a matter of talent. So many talented actors never reach headline status, and yet can captivate us by their work. Polley accomplishes that. [Coincidentally, Polley was nominated for an Oscar last year, but not for her acting. Rather, she wrote and directed the movie Away from Her, receiving the nomination for her writing.]

Had you asked me part way through what I thought, I would have given a somewhat middling assessment of the series. But this work has to be evaluated as a whole, and as a whole it is memorable. I’m glad it was made; I’m glad we watched it.

Now, I need to read the book again.

Technorati Tags:

Smart People and the Space Alien Comedy


Smart people will not waste their time watching Smart People, the movie. It lacks heart, emotion, and originality, on top of being not very entertaining. So, what does that say about Barb and I wasting 95 minutes Friday night watching it?

Far better, grab your kids and watch the Stephen Chow film CJ7, which my son and daughter-in-law brought for us to watch Saturday night. Be prepared for silliness and to not take too much here seriously. And yet, as fun as it is, it is not all mindless. Our 8-year old loved it, and our pizza guest (herself a very ‘smart people’) who may never forgive me for making her watch King of Kong, seemed to have a great time as well.

Technorati Tags:

Heavy Metal Me

Last week I mentioned being, in a sense, reformed, charismatic, catholic, and even pentecostal. You’ll need to read the posts to understand what I mean.

So, in the midst of that, this came across my desk:

I’m working on reformulating my preaching and worship style as we speak….

(Thanks to Snowbot for this link.)

Technorati Tags:

Doing What We Love

Before Flannery O’Connor was a great writer, she was a student at an Iowa writing workshop. Which is to say, before she was a great writer, she put herself on the path to becoming a great writer.

A man in our church is a potter. He is doing what he loves. But his path to being a potter wound through college, an artists training center in Tennessee, and a masters degree at one of the finest universities in the country. He still is not making his living making pots. But he, and his wife, also a potter, care enough to pay the dues, invest the effort, and perfect their craft.

I am appalled at the tendency I see in me to want to accomplish things without investing the effort necessary to do them well. I want to accomplish without paying the dues. I want to excel without focus. Perhaps that works in the case of a few geniuses (Mozart comes to mind). But for the vast majority of us, we need to find what we love, and then devote ourselves to pursuing it with every ounce of passion we have.

Success in anything demands, of course, that we have some endowment of gifts. But an endowment is not sufficient. The commitment to pursue what we love has to come with it.

While I was ruminating on this, several quotes passed by me, profound and not. My favorite is the last.

“Do or do not… there is no try.” – Yoda

“Baseball is 90% mental – the other half is physical.” – Yogi Berra

“You can’t help but remember what Faulkner is alleged to have said when asked whether he wrote daily or only when the inspiration hit him. It’s said he replied that he wrote only when the inspiration came, but that he made sure it came every morning at ten o’clock sharp when he sat down at his desk.” – Rick Bass

Technorati Tags: ,

So You Think He Can Dance?

Worth seeing.

Thanks to Looking Closer for the link.

Call for Resources


As you know, the internet can be a wonderful place for finding helpful resources to aid our Christian reflection, knowledge, and growth. (It can also be an albatross, but let’s think positively here.)

On August 24, I will be teaching an informal class at Hope Church in Bradenton on how to use the internet for Christian growth. I will be introducing the class to

  • the accessing of information through a search
  • downloadable audio and print resources
  • blogs and the wonders of RSS

You get the idea. It will just be one day and I won’t be able to do much. However, I would like to leave each participant with a list of possible resources.

So, here is my request: list for me the resources on the web that you find the most helpful in your growth as a Christian. I’m looking for audio, blogs, news sources, and the like. I’m looking for the types of things to which I might direct an average Christian looking for helpful resources.

My idea is to compile a list (which I will, of course cull and edit a wee bit) to pass on to the members of the class.

My view across the web is limited. I would love to have you help broaden my scope. What do you find helpful?

Technorati Tags: ,

Addicted… to E-mail

Apparently on Monday Google Mail had a server power problem resulting in the temporary cessation of its service for a whopping two hours. Did you notice? I didn’t, but that would have only been because I was otherwise occupied at the time.
Apparently, many did.

If you follow the above link, you will be introduced to a philosophy of work and life management known to insiders as GTD. It is based on David Allen’s very helpful book Getting Things Done. I commend it. But more on that later (or better, more now here in James Fallows’ summary of the system).

I noticed a month or so ago that I was addicted to email. I’ve always been a little bit ADD. (Can one be a LITTLE bit ADD?) I was on a week of study leave and was hanging out at a nearby retreat center where I had no internet access. All I could do was read and reflect with no distraction from the outside world.

But here is what I noticed: that I was constantly stopping what I was doing to look at the computer screen where a little red dot would appear every time a new email came in. Intellectually I KNEW that it would be impossible for any email to appear. But I was stopping nonetheless and looking – habitually. I wanted a dot to appear. I wanted the distraction!

But the distraction never came. Boy, did I accomplish a lot during those times.

I happen to think that email is a wonderful thing. So is pizza. But I can indulge either way too much.

Like any addict, kicking the habit is painful. There are times – particularly when I am engaged in concentrated study – that I simply turn email off, and let the productivity begin.

I share this because I suspect I am not alone. If it isn’t email, it’s Facebook, or blogs, or puzzles, or novels. Good things can often steal from us the best things.

I’ve had relapses. But I’m learning.

For those of you for whom email really is a productivity killer, check out this post on the psychology of the ‘ding’. A piece to whet your appetite:

Even the beeps notifying the arrival of email are said to be causing a 0.5 per cent drop in gross domestic product in the United States, costing the economy $70bn a year.

Hmmm.

Technorati Tags:

Page 53 of 71

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén