Needless to say, we made a memory. It was awesome taking a family mission trip together to minister to those who needed a smile, a hug, and a reminder of Jesus' love. I'm not sure if this will become a family tradition or not but I'm positive that this is one Christmas we will never forget.
Wednesday, December 27, 2006
A Costa Rica Christmas
Thursday, December 14, 2006
Selling Like Hotcakes!
Monday, December 04, 2006
Gift Idea
In a move that is totally and shamelessly self-serving, may I suggest that you consider purchasing this book for that person who is hard to shop for. Heck, buy one for people that are easy to shop for!
Guys tend to like this book because it's easy reading, full of short stories, anecdotes, quotes, and jokes. It's good to keep nearby for those times when you just need a quick read (if you know what I mean.)
Okay, seriously, there are only about 300 of these left in existence. If everyone who reads this blog buys one and tells 299 of their friends to buy one, then I won't have to pay my distributor anymore for storage and warehouse fees. Plus, if I sell a lot this month it will raise my rating with Amazon!
For those of you who live in NAug, I might even sign it for you.
So hit the link to your right that says "Get My Book Here!"
You'll be glad you did.
And me too.
Tuesday, November 28, 2006
No Limits
Doug Blevins story should be a reminder to us that there are no limits when we put our minds to something. Most average thinking people would have discounted any possibility that a victim of cerebral palsy could coach in the NFL. If a person’s own will and determination can do that, how much more can we do with Christ at our side! “I can do everything through him that gives me strength” - Philippians 4:13.
God, keep me from being an “average thinker” and give me the strength to realize that, with you, there are no limits
Tuesday, November 21, 2006
Giving Jesus The Butterflies
If you’re not a pastor, you may not be able to relate to this but something tells me you will. Sunday mornings are anxious times for pastors. On a good Sunday (and most of them are good), I wake up with somewhat of a nervous stomach. A little excited about the day ahead. When I was an athlete we called the pregame jitters “the butterflies.” I’m concerned that everything will be done with excellence. Sometimes concerned about a logistical issue, a new song, or that the message will connect with the congregation. I have a feeling that many pastors feel the same way. On a bad Sunday, well…I don’t even want to think about the occasional dreaded Sunday but let me say that there have been Sundays in the past when I did not want to go to church.
This past Sunday was a good Sunday, in fact, a great Sunday. But in my usual walking around making sure everything is in order and working (not that our excellent TNC setup team needs me to do that, I just do. It’s a pastor’s instinct, I guess) I, as usual, had “the butterflies.” At around 8:10 AM, I overheard Steve and Chuck say that they needed something from the office. Steve (our Lead Pastor) volunteered to go get it but I knew that he needed to meet with some baptism candidates at 8:30 AM. I told them that I would go, so I made my way to my car.
Because parking space is at a premium, the staff and leaders are asked to park on the other side of the parking lot so it is a pretty good walk to where I park. Steve originally parked his car out front to unload some stuff so he and two of his boys, Christian and Cameron, were moving his car to the boonies to park too. As I got into my car to go to the office, the Davis boys were getting out of their car making the long trek back to the gym. Christian and Cameron were playing with a football and as they were making their way back they tossed and kicked the football to each other.
That’s when I learned a lesson. As I watched the three of them, one of the boys stopped to punt the football. Now if I were in Steve’s shoes, I would have kept walking and I would have emphatically told the boys to do the same! It was 8:17. I had a meeting in 13 minutes. Two sermons to preach. Details to go over with the worship leader and production team and a costume to put on. (If you didn’t attend TNC last Sunday, you won’t get the costume thing.) There’s no time to stop and kick the football, I would have said.
But I noticed that Steve stopped what he was doing, showed his son how to properly hold a football for a punt, and then he watched him kick it to his other son. I smiled when I saw that.
Maybe that story doesn’t do anything for you but for me it was a relief. It reminded me that I need to stop and take every opportunity I can with my family and friends. Even in the busyness of life. Even on harried Sunday mornings when there are half a dozen things to do. Even when there seems to be no time. It’s important to invest in people, not just a production or a program. I was reminded that Jesus said, “I will build my church.” It’s his job not mine. Why do I need to stress over it? Why should I get anxious on Sunday mornings? Why not let Jesus have “the butterflies”?
Thursday, November 16, 2006
Proud Humility
A pastor friend of mine preached a sermon on humility one Sunday morning. While greeting his congregation as they filed out the front door after the service, one of his dear elderly women said, “You know, Pastor, I’ve always been proud of my humility.”
Pride is a sneaky thing. We are naturally bent to look out for number one. It’s the core of our human nature. And, if not kept in check, it can lead to disaster. Someone defined pride this way:
P - I am concerned with my position.
R - I want my rights.
I - I am most important.
D - My desires are more important than yours.
E - I expect everyone to agree with me.
Jesus said, “Whoever exalts himself will be humbled, and whoever humbles himself will be exalted.” (Matthew 23:12)
Saturday, November 11, 2006
Arrrgh!
Thursday, October 26, 2006
Happy Birthday To Me
I called my friend Richard today to remind him that it's been 28 years.
Monday, October 23, 2006
Gallivantin'
Thursday, October 19, 2006
A thought from Oz
I love Oswald Chambers. In fact, his devotional website is my home page, i.e., www.myutmost.org. I try to read it each day before I dive into the computer.
Here’s a quote from today’s thought. I edited it and took out some of the old English. Oz wrote this book about 100 years ago so it is difficult to read sometimes.
The great enemy to the Lord Jesus Christ in the present day is the conception of practical work that has not come from the New Testament, but from the systems of the world in which endless energy and activities are insisted upon, but no private life with God. The emphasis is put on the wrong thing. In the life of Jesus, there was none of the press and rush of tremendous activity that we regard so highly, and the disciple is to be as His Master. The central thing about the
Saturday, October 07, 2006
Catalyst
Wednesday, September 27, 2006
Great Wall of Integrity?
In ancient
How then did they get into
“The man of integrity walks securely, but he who takes crooked paths will be found out.” (Proverbs 10:9)
Tuesday, September 12, 2006
A Big Wow!
Thursday, August 31, 2006
Selfless Service
This video link features Coach K and the Team USA basketball team as they were visited by Col. Bob Brown and some of his soldiers. Of course, in the video you can see Dwayne Wade and Carmelo Anthony and other NBA stars, moved by the story of selfless service. One of Bob Brown's lieutenants was severely wounded in combat in Iraq but continues to serve even though he was blinded by his wounds. This lieutenant is featured in this video. Take a look. You will be inspired.
http://boss.streamos.com/wmedia/nba/pinnacle/usab_army_mh_final.asx
Wednesday, August 30, 2006
Jesus Christ, Stand-up Comedian
Anyway, it's interesting for a couple of reasons. One, it's the only book I am aware of that addresses the subject. I wish someone would write another one with a more contemporary tone to it. Trueblood's book was written in 1964 and is a little more of an academic approach. Second, we don't often note Christ's humor when we read the red letters. He used a lot of irony and sarcasm. Jesus was a little bit of a smart-aleck - but in a godly way, of course. I tend to be sarcastic and smart-alecky sometimes so maybe I'm more Christlike than I think!
Jesus inserted a lot of humor in The Sermon on the Mount, for example. Grab your sword and look up Matthew 6:2, 5, 16, 34; 7:6, 12, 34. Now these passages probably won't have you ROTFLOL (rolling on the floor laughing out loud) but keep in mind that Hebrew humor was different than humor today. Jesus was no slapstick comedian but he did know that exaggeration and irony would get a few chuckles. Like when he said that it is easier for a camel to go through the needle's eye - (A small gate available to latecomers at night when the main gates of Jerusalem were closed. A camel had to get down on it's knees and crawl through. Not impossible, just a little more difficult than normal.) - than for a rich man to get into heaven. I don't care who you are - watching a camel crawl on his knees has to be a funny sight.
Trueblood notes over 30 passages in the Gospels where Jesus used a humorous approach. I love to laugh and I like to make people laugh so it's refreshing to know that Jesus was the same way. We need to laugh more, I think. I'm glad I attend a church where laughter is welcome. Church doesn't have to be stuffy. The sooner Christians learn that, the better off we'll be
Sunday, August 13, 2006
Turn The Page
We discovered Stevens Creek Community Church in August 1998 and fell in love with it. SCCC was the only contemporary church in the metro Augusta area so we decided to jump on board with them. At the time, they met in an elementary school cafeteria and had 200-250 in attendance. I joined the staff in May 2000 and it has been a great ride! Last Sunday, we had 1041. Pretty good growth in 8 years.
Today was our last day at SCCC and tomorrow I report to the offices of TrueNorth. It's been a little surreal the last couple of weeks. We didn't really see this coming but we know that God has orchestrated this all along. We are sad to say goodbye to so many dear friends at SCCC and yet we are excited about the new friends we are going to make at TNC. We are moving from one great church to another great church and from one great staff to another great staff. Our experiences at SCCC will help us minister at TNC.
We can't wait to see what God is going to continue to do as we turn the page and began a new chapter in our lives.
Monday, August 07, 2006
Killing Your Heart
Friday, July 28, 2006
Christian TV At Its Finest
As I am reading the message boards on www.theooze.com I can overhear my daughter, Bailey, in the next room watching "America's Got Talent" on TV. As you know, these stupid reality talent shows are getting really irritating and the talent is sometimes miserably poor. We heard a vocalist doing a terrible job singing and my wife and I both yelled into the den, "That's awful!" Unbeknownst to us, Bailey was changing channels. She said, "That's not 'America's Got Talent,' it's the Christian station."
Aaaaaargh! Christian TV strikes again. I'm convinced that TBN is a tool of the devil.
Friday, July 14, 2006
deathclock.com
Monday, July 10, 2006
Costa Rica
Each day we hosted a Vacation Bible School for approximately 200 kids. They watched a puppet show and did crafts. They also enjoyed face painting, jump rope, bubbles, etc. while they waited to get into the puppet show. A medical team treated 349 people. This ministry was very much needed. I was really glad we could offer the medical ministry this year. We also showed the Jesus film Friday night.
We experienced lots of laughs and lots of tears. The first day in the precario is always the
toughest for the new ones. When we finished with the cookout Saturday, Joy, one of the missionaries, gave me two used margarine tubs that we ordinarily wouldn't think twice about
throwing away. She told me to give them to someone. I asked her how to say, "Would you like this?" in Spanish. I turned toward the crowd and asked the first two ladies that I saw. They graciously took them like I'd given them a $100 bill. I looked at my wife, Beth, and said, "Even used margarine tubs are considered something of value here." She couldn't take it. She'd been fighting tears all day and that incident brought out the tears. Even Pedro, our translator, who was there for his third time, was moved to tears by a situation that the doctor was helping with. It's unreal how poor those people are.
This team will never be the same. God moved in many hearts...Costa Ricans, Nicaraguans, and Gringos.
Tuesday, June 27, 2006
Donald Miller notes
Miller says that we tend to take the Bible and create formulas for everything. (Think alliterated, three point sermons - five steps to... and eight ways to...) But the Bible isn't a book of formulas. It's a book about relationships. People who have called on God and people who have run from God. We learn how to have a relationship with God through the relational experiences that others have had with him in the past.
Here are a few quotes and thoughts:
"If the gospel of Jesus is just some formula I obey in order to get taken off the naughty list and put on a nice list, then it doesn't meet the deep need of the human condition, it doesn't interact with the great desire of my soul, and it has nothing to do with the hidden (or rather, obvious) language we are all speaking. But if it is more, if it is a story about humanity falling away from the community that named it, and an attempt to bring humanity back to that community, and if it is more than a series of ideas, but rather speaks directly into this basic human need we are feeling, then the gospel of Jesus is the most relevant message in the history of mankind." p. 45
Becoming a Christian is more like falling in love than agreeing with a list of principles. p. 46
"The battle we are in (i.e., the cultural battle in the US between conservatives and liberals) is a battle against the principalities of darkness, not against the people who are different from us. In war you shoot the enemy, not the hostage." p. 190 (italics mine)
Jesus says there will be people who will heal other people, but when they die he is going to say he didn't know them. It is somewhat amazing to me that all of Christianity, all our grids and mathematics and truths and different groups subscribing to different theological ideas, boils down to our knowing Jesus and his knowing us. p. 200 (GJ's note: Paul stated that nothing was more important than knowing Christ - Philippians 2:9)
Monday, June 26, 2006
The Slowskies
I feel like the Slowskies sometimes because it feels like it is taking forever to get my second book going. But I'm making progress. I have the first 3 chapters and the proposal almost complete so that my agent can begin shopping it to publishers. The working title for now is Your Greatest Challenge and subtitled Selfless Living in a Selfish World. Maybe we'll get moving on this thing when a publisher bites on it.
In the meantime, I'd appreciate your taking a look at my first book Timely Words. It's a great gift book - men especially seem to like it because it has a lot of quick reads.
Monday, June 19, 2006
You are rich!
Addendum 06/20/06: A friend of mine emailed today to thank me for this link and to say that he just returned from a mission trip to Guatemala. According to him, the average annual salary there is $650.
Saturday, June 17, 2006
Change Your Life!
The following is a quote from Story by Steven James:
“Frankly, I’m tired of hearing about conferences, seminars, books, and DVDs that will change my life. ‘This (fill in the blank) will change your life! Attend this life-changing (fill in the blank) and you’ll never be the same again! It’ll be life changing!’”
“On the back of one Christian book I recently picked up were three separate quotes by Christian celebrities, all of which promised, ‘This book will change your life!’”
“A hernia will change your life. Swallowing two pounds of Ex-Lax will change your life. Getting bitten by a rabid dog will change your life. So will going bankrupt, joining a cult, or getting a tapeworm. All of these things are very life changing.”
“Change is not always a good thing. What I need isn’t change from one thing to another but transformation from who I am into who I was meant to become. Only when God’s transforming power touches me can I begin to live the simpler, freer, fresher, more creative, more patient, more passionate, more sacrificial, riskier, rawer, more real, more love-driven life God intended for me to have all along.”
“That transformation is what awaits all who will dare to enter the story of God. As Paul wrote, 'Let God transform you into a new person by changing the way you think' (Romans 12:2).”
Click this link to get your copy of Story
Friday, May 26, 2006
Writer's Conference Debriefing
Monday, May 22, 2006
Motivation Mountain
Wednesday, April 19, 2006
Thoughts on Prayer
It has been said, “Prayer is the key which unlocks the door of God’s treasure house.” In the classic book, The Kneeling Christian, the author (unknown) prefaced the book saying, “It is not too much to say that all real growth in the spiritual life depends upon the practice of prayer.” Later he wrote,
The greatest thing we can do for God or for man is to pray. We can accomplish far more by our prayers than by our work. Prayer is omnipotent. It can do anything that God can do! When we pray God works. All fruitfulness in service is the outcome of prayer – of the worker’s prayers, or of those who are holding up holy hands on his behalf.
Friday, April 07, 2006
Guess I'm getting old...
Friday, March 31, 2006
Your Dash
What are you doing with your dash? No, not the dashboard on your car. The dash between your birth year and your death year. One day there will be a headstone with your name on it in a cemetery. It will have your name and the beginning and ending years of your life. In between, there will be a dash. The dash may represent 80 years or more. Regardless of the years represented, the question remains, “What are you doing with your dash?”
Are you accomplishing your purpose in life? Do you have one? Are you making a life or making a living? Are you leaving a positive impression on those around you or are you leaving them in depression?
These are hard questions yet it is a hard reality. Consider the life of King David of Old Testament fame. The Bible simply says that “when David had served God’s purpose in his own generation, he fell asleep,” (i.e. he died). You have a purpose for your generation. How are you doing with your dash? (Timely Words, p. 17)
Monday, February 20, 2006
How Christians Get A Bad Name
10. Spending a gazallion dollars taking over a humongous sports arena.
9. Saying that we should assassinate the President of a certain South American country.
8. Wearing entirely too much eye shadow.
7. Wearing a white suit and slinging your hair from one side of your head to the other to cover up your baldspot.
6. Shooting your quail hunting partner. (Oh wait, that's another way that Vice Presidents get a bad name.)
5. Having a clip from your religious program shown on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart.
4. Having a fish on the back of your car...especially the fish eating the Darwin thing.
3. Having a divorce rate higher than the rest of the country.
2. Letting fundamentalists like the preacher dude at www.godhatesfags.com actually represent Christ-followers.
1. Playing the church game and not fleshing out what it truly means to be a Christ-follower.
Thursday, February 16, 2006
Quotes
"Let's play pirates like the good ole' days. Let's laugh so hard we pee in our pants. Let's go to Canada and go bowling, just so we can say "remember that time we went bowling in Canada?" Then Thank the King for our playfulness. Live today - out loud and hilariously!"