Yep. Florida and Texas. Oh, and Florida also basically called Jesus a recreational drug user...
Messengers at the 146th Florida Baptist State Convention annual meeting
overwhelmingly approved a bylaw revision requiring all trustee nominees
to "agree to abstain from drinking alcoholic beverages and using any
other recreational drugs."
Thank God they stopped short of the more severe charge of "recreational drug Dealer" evidenced in John 2.
The audacity of Canadian Baptists! This is just too much. Let's get rid of these jerks. If they don't want our name, we don't want them. The name "SOUTHERN Baptist" was good enough for Jesus and Paul, so why isn't it alright with Canadians? No wonder their magazines cost more.
Glen Hansard of The Frames and Marketa Irglova starred in the movie Once. Powerful songs like "Say It To Me Now" should be reason enough to watch it...
Hansard and Irglova covering Van Morrison's "Into the Mystic" out on a sidewalk...
Sigur Ros' new Hvarf-Heim is a 2 CD set of mostly unreleased songs and a brief acoustic set. It's very good. Pitchfork likes it, as do others. It's a companion to a new, yet unreleased (Nov 20th) DVD Heima, which will be a music-filled documentary of sorts. Hvarf-Heim is a companion to the DVD, though it seems none of the music is in the film. Here's the captivating trailer for Heima (ps - I'm moving to Iceland)...
That shift might be related to their embrace of Reformed theology,a doctrine that encourages believers to acknowledge that they are all
inherently sinful and have received undeserved grace (thus making them respond less judgmentally
to others' sexual behavior). Reformed theology also rebuffs the idea
that behavior makes one righteous, effectively discouraging the
equation of patriotism and blind party activism with piety. A 2006 Pew survey
shows that college-educated conservatives are more likely to be less
conservative on issues like gay marriage, stem-cell research, and
contraception than those who've completed only some college or high
school. And according to a study by Barna group,
a Christian research organization, young born-again Christians are 15
percent more likely than their elders to find homosexual behavior
morally acceptable. Even many of my college-age evangelical friends at
the conservative Christian school Patrick Henry College see popular
films, attend rock concerts, and have no objection to drinking or dancing.
One reason it didn’t work was that we couldn’t find enough
planters with a heart for our area who could plant a self-governing,
self-supporting self-reproducing church….I believe that there are few guys with the calling and requisite skill set to plant a reproducing incarnational/attractional church.
This is evidenced by the 70% failure rate in church plants. I saw this
in our own context as we simply couldn’t find the guys with the calling
and skill- set to give people to. Now, this has not stopped us from
planting locally as we just sent out an elder and people to plant about
45 minutes out in the burbs. We have another intern who hopefully will
plant in the next two years. My point is that if your church is
experiencing growth like ours, you cannot plant fast enough, chiefly
because of the lack of called, qualified, church planters.
Goodmanson writes...
Timmis, upon reflection asked is the problem we face the leaders or the types of churches we are planting? When
he examined Paul's missionary journey, Paul traveled through cities
where people converted. Paul returned in under two years and more
likely after a couple months to appoint elders. Timmis
surmised that the problem then cannot be our leaders but the types of
churches we are planting and the leader requirement necessary to run
them.
Goodmanson adds Timmis' two conclusions...
1. We need to re-think leadership in the local church.
Much of our leadership shortage stems from wrong assumptions. Churches
can appoint elders, who fulfill all that is required in Timothy &
Titus. This means we select elders by the grace evidenced in their
life, not by the attractional qualities they hold. How many of these
guys are in your church right now?
2. Church Planters have a unique set of gifting that are best served planting churches.
(Timmis called church planters 'apostles') Since there are fewer of
these 'initiators/gatherers' they ought to do more missional church
planting (often done in a team setting where people travel with them)
to plant churches. The skills these 'apostolic leaders' possess
include: Visionary, Creative, Adaptable, Productive, Impatient - always
wanting to move things forward, self-starters and a bit of a maverick.
These skills serve the planter well to create new works, but often these skills make them poor leaders of established churches.
Very good and important thoughts. You can also check out Mark Driscoll's "Videology: Why We Use Videos" for a pro-video point of view.
Tonight [11.1.07], at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Sufjan Stevens will debut The BQE, a 30-minute symphonic and cinematic exploration of New York City’s infamous Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. A controversial roadway since its inception in the 1930s, the BQE tears through 11.7 miles of Brooklyn and Queens, severing neighborhoods, pillaging industrial yards, and contouring waterways with the brute force of modern urban planning. (Read the rest)
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I know I posted on this a long time ago, but when my wife and I were at the first Reform & Resurge Conference in Seattle (2006) we heard Darrin Patrick's talk on "The Life and Death of the Missional Leader." I listened to it again this morning and was struck by how helpful of a message it is right now in my life. I encourage you to listen to it.
The first is the last soccer Saturday for my boys this fall. They played as tough as they look. The second is Halloween. We told the kids that since we spent so much on Disney World that they had to make do on Halloween on what they already had. Danny already had a Power Rangers outfit with no mask. Elijah (Alfonso Soriano) always has sports clothes around. Sarah is playing a mom (she has puke made from cream of mushroom on her shoulder...yuck). And Jack isn't just any skateboarder, he is Rodney Mullen.
I've spent some time with the Literary Study Bible and am really enjoying it and highly recommend it.
I generally don't enjoy study Bibles. I think they can distract Christians from reading and discovering the meaning of Scripture for themselves by encouraging people to read Scripture in a choppy way: verse or two, check the study notes, verse, cross-references, study notes, another verse, etc. Study notes can be very helpful if used correctly, but I've never seen a Christian use them in a way that I've found very helpful.
The ESV-LSB removes those bold section headings and cross-references and instead gives a shaded box with brief guidance before each chapter or two, or section or pericope of Scripture. So you start with some guidance concerning the genre, literary structure, techniques, symbolism, whatever. Then you read the passage (single-column) without distraction. That means the emphasis isn't on finding your favorite verse or cheating to get
the meaning through headers or notes. The emphasis is to read it yourself and focus on getting the gist of larger sections of Scripture.
The ESV-LSB provides notes before each book of Scripture, which is in pretty much every study Bible. These are really well done. What I liked the most was the section in each book introduction describing how the book fits into the larger "story of the Bible." Brilliant. So you aren't just getting the understanding of larger sections of Scripture, or even whole books. You are also gaining understanding of how the books work together in the storyline of Scripture.
This Bible also has wider margins for your own notes and their own Bible reading plan at the end. It's easily my favorite study Bible and I hope many of you pick it up. And by the way, one of the editors of the ESV-LSB is Dr. Leland Ryken who has produced many great books including two favorites of mine: The Christian Imagination and The Liberated Imagination. Even more reason to love this study Bible.
It wouldn't work for me, but Sprint's new HTC Touch might be a nice phone for those who can't afford an iPhone.
As the father of an autistic son, I take notice when pediatricians urge autism screening for all children. We know our son would have been diagnosed sooner (he was diagnosed at just about 3 years old) because the symptoms were there. The article says they urge screening because "early therapy can lessen its severity." We can testify that therapy greatly helped our son, and we urge parents of autistic children to find similar therapy all the time.
One of my favorite all time songs that Derek sings is "Somewhere North" from Caedmon's 40 Acres album. Here's a very high quality video of Derek performing it live...
A very different sounding Beirut song is on Natalie Portman's "for charity" mix CD. Hear it here. The album is available on iTunes for $7.99 beginning tomorrow. Some good bands on this CD: Vetiver, Tokyo Police Club, The Shins, M. Ward, Rogue Wave, and others. More at Pitchfork.
Holy Cow. I try to be biblically generous, but Doug Pagitt makes little sense in this short interview with Way of the Master's Todd Friel. It's just a small segment near the beginning of the show. Look, I'm
no Way of the Master fan or defender, and Friel really could have done much more with this conversation, but Pagitt shows both wacky theology and an inability to have a meaningful conversation based on...words...and ideas.
- three albums that I recommend you buy if you don’t already have them and
- three bloggers I’m tagging so that they’ll blog what three albums
they recommend and the three bloggers they’ll tag and so forth:
It's hard to do this when I already recommend so much in my Music Monday posts. So what I'll do is recommend the top 3 albums I think people who generally only listen to Christian or radio music must buy in order to stretch their understanding and enjoyment of music. I think these will broaden your musical horizons. I also recommend a couple of songs from each album.
Three albums I recommend you buy are... 1. Beirut: Gulag Orkestar(Voice, horns, and transportation to another culture in another time. Brilliant. Songs: "Postcards from Italy," "Brandenburg") 2. Joanna Newsom: Ys (A woodland creature inviting us beyond the thicket and into the magic. Songs: "Monkey and Bear" - but really crucial to hear whole album in order.) 3. Sufjan Stevens: Illinois (Hyper-creative folksy melodic wonders. Songs: "John Wayne Gacy, Jr.," "Decatur")
Tagging... 1. Kevin Cawley (Because he has great musical taste. Expect Pinback.) 2. Joe Thorn (Because he hates these sorts of things and his response or lack of will show whether he truly loves me. Expect Opeth.) 3. Justin Taylor (Because I REALLY want to see what his musical tastes are. Expect...The Gaithers?)
Three pics of my boys today. The first two are Danny (4 1/2) and the last is Elijah (7). The first is Danny looking out an airplane window on the way to Disney World. The second is at the University of Chicago waiting for Molly's 3 month follow up visit with her surgeon. She is now free for all normal activity after a great report from the doctor. The third is Elijah waiting for the Disney flight.
Since "It's a Small World" and a handful of other songs are all I heard for the last week or so, I'll have to do this Music Monday with a distracted ear. Hope it still helps you keep a pulse on some good music out there.
"Rock and roll is dead,” he says, voluble again. “Rock and roll is a
museum piece. It has no viability anymore. There are great rock bands
today—I love the White Stripes, I love the Raconteurs. But it’s a
museum piece. You’re watching the History Channel when you go to these
clubs. They’re just reenacting an old sentiment. They’re channeling the
ghosts of that era—the Who, punk rock, the Sex Pistols, whatever. It’s
been done. The rebellion’s over.