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Monthly Archives: December 2009

Poetic Justice

Growing up the son of a police officer I have always held a deep appreciation for laws and those who risk their lives to enforce them.  Now doubt the foundation to every free society is a system of laws and a people that follow those laws.  On Christmas day a man aboard a flight bound for Detroit tried to blow up an airplane and yet failed.  While the story is still unfolding, it seems it was a failed attempt due to the device not working as planned and the quick response of fellow passengers. When you are 30,000 ft above the Atlantic ocean there isn’t any official police force that protects us…but thankfully there are laws.  I love the idea since 9/11 passengers are more willing then ever to intervene to prevent a terrorist attack by taking the law into their own hands. Now my parents always taught me that this was not the route to take when danger lurks.  If someone is being robbed in front of you…call the professionals, the police to come and deal with it…never risk your life to help save someone elses. But is that how we should always respond when we could do something? What about the Golden Rule? What would we want others to do if they were observing us being robbed or hurt by another?

So what are your thoughts about taking the law into our own hands?

Check out this video of two thieves on a motor-scooter flew by and snatched a woman’s purse on a street in Wenzhou, China. As he was passing by the front of a hotel near where the thievery happened, he stopped, calmly got off his bicycle, picked it up, and then threw it at the thieves. The bicycle hit them.

 
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Posted by on December 29, 2009 in Uncategorized

 

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Christmas

Ahh another Christmas.

 If you are like me you always spend some time during the holidays thinking about how things have changed over the years.  When you think about it some things never change no matter how much you hope they would and alot of the stuff we hope would last forever just doesnt come back the next year.  One thing I’ve noticed these last couple years which is pretty funny is how much it bothers me that we spend so much $$$ on toys for my nieces. I mean don’t get me wrong, there is nothing better than watching them get excited and smile when they open up a box that reveals the gift they have been wanting…what I have a tough time with is just how fleeting it all is.  While this is true throughout the year it is highlighted on Christmas…they were so excited to get the Wii setup and yet once we tried to teach them how to play they gave up on it and returned to playing with other toys. My nieces are 5 & 8…this year they got a Wii, tons of Wii games & accessories, clothes, playmobile stuff, dolls and tons of Zuzu pet stuff. 

 This is all amusing because as my mom reminds me I was no different when I was their age, I was the king of Toys R Us. While I wish I could deny it all they have video proof :/

 
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Posted by on December 25, 2009 in Uncategorized

 

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Floating Thoughts

  • Helped out this morning with Food & Toy…an annual effort Sunset has to bring Christmas to hundreds of families.  It was very cool to get a birds-eye view of this awesome operation.
  • Looking forward to heading home Monday for Christmas. It will be my 6th time since moving to Oregon in 04′…expecting this year to be another interesting year home. This will be the first year I will not be staying over New Years, I’m returning to Portland on the 31st.
  • Got wireless internet at my apartment yesterday! Comcast ran a great deal I couldnt resist – $20 a month!  Excited to have it and yet worried it will be quite the time thief.
  • Have some anxiety waking up this morning hearing that Healthcare Reform might be passing now. Why? Well my understanding is that the church will lose it’s ability to use out of state health insurance companies…which is how I’ve been able to have amazing health insurance this past year. :(
  • Read StrenghFinders 2.0 and took their online assessment this past week.  These are my top 5 Themes: Restorative, Strategic, Communication, Empathy & Connectedness.
  • Met this past week with a former youth pastor who burnt out many years ago. It was a very encouraging time, he spoke just what I needed to hear…reminded me of what needs to change.
 
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Posted by on December 19, 2009 in Uncategorized

 

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Wildfire Wrap

Attendance

Below average.

Talk

We ended our three week series on Christmas called: Tis the Season talking about LOVE.  The Big Idea was: Love is more than a word, it requires action.  Overall it was a strong end, felt like the students responded well, even had a couple approach me after the talk to tell me that they liked the talk. Each month when we do Game Nights the transition into the talk is usually a rough one, with the video intro I would say last night was one of the best transitions we’ve seen. 

Volunteer Involvement

Still looking for some more adult leaders for our small group team. We have a number of groups still pushing 10-15 students and one leader which doesnt create an environment where students can be known, loved and cared for. If you are interested in helping out or known someone who might be, please let me know.

Music/Program

Last night was the third Wednesday of the month, which meant it was a Game Night…we replace the worship time with an extended game time involving all the students.  Jenna brought a Christmas game, having students form groups and act out different lines from the 12 days of Christmas song.  The group that one had “twelve geese a laying”…picture students squatting like they are going to the bathroom, complete with the look on their face. Then others students appeared through their squatted legs…pretty funny stuff. For the Wifi video we showed this clip of hands down the best spinning sign guy I’ve ever seen;

Final Thought

Wildfire is done for 2009. Seems like it was just yesterday and I was writing the first Wildfire Wrap of the school year back in September.  It’s been a WILD four months…definitely challenging given less resources at our disposal, but our volunteers have done a great job, it has been awesome watching so many new leaders become vital parts of Wildfire. I’m looking forward to a couple weeks off and the new year ahead.

 
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Posted by on December 17, 2009 in Uncategorized

 

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Merry Christmas 2009

Continuing my tradition of a digital Christmas Card…here is this years installment.

 
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Posted by on December 15, 2009 in Uncategorized

 

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Asking Santa for Help

I drive a couple middle schoolers home each week from Wildfire and this week we talked about how little kids give their Christmas Lists to Santa and sometimes write him letters this time of year. As a Pastor I tend to notice how alot of similaries exist between kids relationships with Santa and our relationship with God.  The other day I read an interesting and sad article about what some kids are asking for this Christmas. Check it out;

Santa letters aren’t all about toys _ or manners

SCRANTON, Pa. – A microscope. A new puppy. A mother. And absolutely, positively NO CLOTHES.

From the humorous to the heart-wrenching, children’s wish lists to Santa reveal that children aren’t as toy-centric as parents think – and that they’re not as polite as perhaps they should be.

Carole Slotterback, a psychology professor at the University of Scranton, analyzed nearly 1,200 letters sent between 1998 and 2003 to the central post office in Scranton, a struggling former coal city in northeastern Pennsylvania.

The missives were scrawled or painstakingly handwritten on every type of paper and in every shade of ink. Many were decorated with drawings, stickers or glitter; some children gave Santa not only their addresses but their phone numbers, parents’ cell phone numbers and their school pictures – just to make sure the Big Guy knew how to find them on Christmas.

Slotterback, who describes her findings in the book “The Psychology of Santa,” said the letters “touched me in so many different ways.”

“Some are just absolutely a stitch, and others are some of the saddest things I’ve ever read,” she said.

One kid asked to be an elf. Another made a list that included Pokemon cards, a camera and a microscope. But about every third item, the child wrote: “NO clothes.”

And then there was the one written in careful cursive on bright pink paper, in which Santa was asked for perhaps the greatest gift of all: a mom.

“Not just for me but my daddy, brother and granny … my daddy works so hard and then he comes home to cook and clean and it should be easier,” the letter read.

The child drew a 5-cent “stamp” on the envelope before dropping it in the mailbox.

The U.S. Postal Service receives hundreds of thousands of letters to Santa each year, with increases during tough economic times, said spokeswoman Sue Brennan.

None of them make it to the North Pole. But some do get responses through Operation Santa; about 500,000 letters in New York City alone were answered last year by individuals, companies and postal employees, Brennan said.

Some are funny – one asked Santa to check the appropriate box: Real or not real? – but many more are not, she said.

“I’ve never gone 5 or 10 minutes without getting teary,” said Brennan. “It’s very emotional.”

Children who sent letters instead of lists were generally more polite and chatty, for instance asking about Mrs. Claus, Slotterback said.

Except for the death threat. One child wrote: “Dear Santa, I am going to kill you and steal the toys from your workshop.” Slotterback reported it to the postmaster, who agreed to contact people at the return address, which she believes was a juvenile facility.

The letters also show kids are sensitive to current events. In 2001, just months after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, children’s letters were very patriotic, Slotterback said. Kids drew pictures of Santa’s sleigh with American flags hanging off the back, and of St. Nick putting flags in stockings; they also asked for fewer toys that year, she found.

And there was no indication that children feared the terrorists would get Santa, she said.

“Terrorists can do all kinds of things to our world, and they can hurt us in many ways, but one thing they can’t do is touch Santa,” said Slotterback. “And that was nice to see.”

Overall, between 3 percent and 6 percent of letters had what Slotterback called “family requests,” such as for a sick grandmother to get better or for Mom and Dad to stop fighting.

She suggested parents ask to see their kids’ wish lists, because they might be surprised at what is – and what’s not – on it. Requests are often “simpler kids of things than you might think,” Slotterback said.

But she noted a surprising lack of social niceties in the correspondence, unless the child was asking for a pet. A boy who asked for a golden retriever used “please” 16 times, she said. The next-highest use came from a girl who wanted a horse.

Slotterback cited other research that found people who expect their requests to be fulfilled – like a boss asking an employee to do something – are less likely to say please. Perhaps likewise, she said, kids expect Santa to come through.

Still, she said, “you’d think if you were asking for a lot of presents, you would throw in a ‘please’ or a ‘thank you.’”

USPS Operation Santa Claus: http://www.operationlettertosanta.com

University of Scranton: http://www.scranton.edu

By KATHY MATHESON Associated Press Writer

 
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Posted by on December 11, 2009 in Uncategorized

 

Wildfire Wrap

Attendance

Slightly below average.

Talk

We continued our Tis The Season series which is talking about aspects of Christmas. This weeks focus was on PEACE. Seemed like it really hit home with alot of students, I know the Holidays can be a very stressful season, so I think this message was very timely.  Our Big Idea was; Peace is meant to be experienced through relationship—with God and with others.

Volunteer Involvement

Another great week…our volunteers rock! Even in the frigid cold they come in with warm hearts to love on students.

Music/Program

Last night was Coco Puff Chaos for our weekly game.  Once again we learned the hard way that Cool Whip cant be put into the fridge beforehand…very hard to spread on kids faces in chunks.  Worship was great, Nick was back and lead out on a nice mix of Christmas carols and worship songs.  If you havent heard it was Nicks last night with us was the volunteer worship director. He had served faithfully over the past year and a half…we are grateful for all his hardwork and care of the worship/tech teams. Tyler starts officially today was the new worship director, we wont introduce him as such to the students until January.  Excited about this transition and think it holds good on all sides.

For our Wifi video we showed this video of a girl getting owned by her closet door.  This is one of those that wouldnt be funny if we didnt see the girl was alright after it.

Final Thought

Christmas has unfortunately lost alot of it’s peaceful feel to it. Seems like the issues just seem to amplify during the holidays…specifically family issues.  My prayer for our students and leaders this year is that we would slow down enough to experience some of Christ’s peace this Christmas…that we might be part of bringing that peace to our homes, neighborhoods and workplaces.

 
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Posted by on December 10, 2009 in Uncategorized

 

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Celebrities “Private” Lives

Unless you live under a rock or on the moon I’m sure you have heard all the press recently surrounding Tiger Woods and his extra-marital affair(s). This raises a seemingly never answered question; Should Celebrities Private Lives Be Made Public? I have heard alot of different opinions on this one recently with Tiger…seems to become more of an issue the more perceived character a celebrity has.  I mean if culture perceives someone to be a loser we dont really care how much they are exploited do we? Think Anna Nicole Smith. Now with Tiger being the face of many respected organizations, companies and on the cover of cereal boxes I hear alot of talk about keeping this sort of stuff out of the news.  Personally I have always believed that celebrities cannot have it both ways…with the spotlight unfortunately comes a higher standard…especially if the image you attempt to portray in culture is one of integrity and not trash.  Now as a Christian do I believe in forgiveness? Absolutely…I serve a forgiving God who has given me many… many second chances. However God is also one who brings light to darkness, truth to lies and pulls things once hidden into revelation.  Part of the process I believe of a celebrity’s full forgiveness has to be public…afterall didnt he fall short of the image he has been portraying to us?

Now don’t misinterpret what I am saying…I do think there’s a line and unfortunately some channels will always cross it.  He deserves to be treated with respect and not ripped to shreds on late-night talk shows. We all make mistakes and trust me I am thankful that I am not a celebrity and would then begin to understand the sort of shame Tiger and his family must feel these days. 

What do you think?

 
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Posted by on December 6, 2009 in Uncategorized

 

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Wildfire Wrap

Attendance

Average.

Talk

 We started a brand new series on Christmas called; “Tis the Season.” The first one was all about exchanging your hope for something bigger.  The Big Idea was: Hope means trusting in a bigger picture, even if it’s not the picture you envisioned. Overall it seemed to connect well…we even had time for some Unscripted which is always interesting to see what questions the students come up with.  My favorite from last night was; I am starting to lose hope in god. everything seems to be going wrong. how can i find hope and see the bright side in life? This question alone showed me the topic last night was needed.

Volunteer Involvement

 We had a great turnout last night of leaders…especially appreciated so many of them coming early for our prayer/pre Wildfire meeting at 615p…always fills me with energy.

Music/Program

 Tonight Jenna and Luke put a slight variation on our Impossible Shot game…for Christmas students tried to throw a football through a wreath.  A couple came close but none went all the way through.  With our children’s ministry program happening Sunday, Nick was out this week practicing for that. Laura one of our High School praise team members led worship for the very first time.  She did awesome and it was really neat to see her respond to a momentary “hiccup” and handle it so well. 

For the WiFi video we showed a video we found taken from the top of the new Worlds Tallest Building in India. It was pretty cool to me…and I think the students would have liked it better had we set it up.

Final Thought

Today is the Civil War game in Oregon…two rivals face off and everyone gets excited about…well nothing.  Most of you know I am not a big sports guy, and though I say alot of negative things about it I know sports can do alot of good things and has meant alot to alot of people…I guess I still just have a block as to why so much attention and $$$ is given to these games that don’t really matter.  What if we put as much passion and resources into the local church as we did Oregon Football? What sort of things would happen if people wore Jesus colors and took time off work to share their faith? Sports not unlike gluttony seem to be acceptable to the North American church and are rarely called out as being sinful.

 
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Posted by on December 3, 2009 in Uncategorized

 

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Floating Thoughts

  • There are 30 days left in 2009. I think this has been the fastest year of my life.
  • Excited about Tyler taking on our new postion of Student Worship Director. Read his thoughts on it HERE.
  • Sunday night I played a record 4 games of Catan in one night! It was alot of fun.
  • I am looking forward to getting up to the mountain this season…not sure where I will find the $$$ or time to do though.
  • Monday is my final exam in my Seminary class….no where near as prepared for this one as I was the last. A busy week ahead = not alot of study time.
  • I find it interesting that Obama plans to send more troops into Afghanistan when he was so critical of the Iraq war…specifically how much $$$ we put into it.  How is Afghanistan that much different in his mind? Won’t our precious image in the world continue to be tarished as he says it has been under Bush?
 
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Posted by on December 1, 2009 in Uncategorized

 

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