Tag Archives: links

Tuesday’s Links To Go

Common

But when you have come to talk about grief and walking through the pain of loss, it is not exactly a happy meeting. There were some in the room who have had less than a year on their walk with grief, for others it has been many years. Being the guest speaker in a church you’ve never been with before and talking about such a personal subject, you just never know how you’ll be received. They were wonderful listeners. But the word on my mind as I drove home was ‘common’.


Relationships are the new religion for many

In 2009, LifeWay asked 1,200 people ages 18-29, to name those things that were “really important” to them in life. Over 60% mentioned family, 25% mentioned friends, but only 13% mentioned spirituality or religion.
Unlike earlier generations, “Millennials prioritize relationships, especially family, over religion,” explains Jess Rainer, who co-authored a book drawn from the survey, The Millennials: Connecting to America’s Largest Generation.


Perspective

On the other hand, there is an eternity’s worth of difference between experiencing a rough day at the office to losing a father, a life’s mate, a son, a co-worker and trusted leader. What right do we have to compare a small sprinkle to a tsunami? Our selfishness very quickly devolves from the absurd to the obscene.


6 Conversational Evangelism Tips from the Master Himself

The message about Jesus is good news, and like all good news, it is most naturally and effectively shared in interpersonal conversations. As with any such communication, it involves sharing, asking questions of the other person, and listening to their thoughts and perspectives.


The Problem with Metrics, Part II

The problem with counting heads is that it hardly gets at missional progress. For instance, what if a new church plant gathers a thousand people BUT nine hundred and ninety-five of them are transfers from other churches? Yes, this may be nuanced, and perhaps hundreds of people in the area were going to drop out of many of the local churches anyway? But in general, it is likely the least effective metric we might apply. Simply counting heads is hardly the most responsible metric for assessing missionary progress.


‘Strong’ Catholic Identity at a Four-Decade Low in U.S.

The percentage of U.S. Catholics who consider themselves “strong” members of the Roman Catholic Church has never been lower than it was in 2012, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of new data from the General Social Survey (GSS). About a quarter (27%) of American Catholics called themselves “strong” Catholics last year, down more than 15 points since the mid-1980s and among the lowest levels seen in the 38 years since strength of religious identity was first measured in the GSS, a long-running national survey carried out by the independent research organization NORC at the University of Chicago.


Ten Tips for Memorizing Bible Verses

To find out the best ways to memorize Scripture, we turned to a truly huge and committed resource—Bible Gateway users! We asked Bible Gateway fans to share their Bible verse memorization tips. We’ve combed through the hundreds of responses and picked out our favorite Bible memory tips.


Sheriff’s deputy wrestles alligator away from middle school

A Florida sheriff’s deputy took matters into her own hands last week when a seven-foot alligator was spotted trying to break through the fence of a local middle school.
Jessica McGregor, a 29-year-old Lake County sheriff’s deputy and mother of two, responded to the call, fashioned a noose from a 30-foot rope and “lassoed the would-be intruder,” the Orlando Sentinel reports.


Spurs notebook: Ginobili says he nearly slept through draft

On the night back in 1999 the Spurs made him the 57th pick in the NBA draft, Manu Ginobili was preparing for a game in the middle of the Brazilian Amazon, in a place so remote, it was accessible only by boat or airplane.
He didn’t even realize it was draft night.
“I had checked all the mock drafts, and none of them had me going anywhere,” Ginobili recalled. “So I forgot all about it.”


Thursday’s Links To Go

What If Jesus Was Serious?

The thought: What if Jesus was serious when he said: Love and pray for your enemies, do not judge others, give to the poor, and don’t worry about your life?
I tweeted this thought and shortly thereafter, Greg Boyd responded and said: “THAT, my friend, would change EVERYTHING!”


Would You Pray for the New Pope?

Maybe this is a good time to re-think your own mindset toward Roman Catholics. Even in the very “liberal” circle of our fellowship which is prepared to accept into fellowship anyone who says Jesus is Lord—that’s usually how it is stated—I’ve noticed that they rarely include Roman Catholics in their circle. It’s pretty easy to include all those Christians who sing the same praise songs, have the same kinds of buildings, and who are more likely to fellowship us.


A Dangerous Heaven (What I think about the end-game of Christianity)…

The good news is, there’s a better end-game that somewhere else. I believe that the end game of Christianity is redemption; the making new of every old, broken, tired, useless, dead thing.


The Blogs, the Battles and the Gospel

Many bloggers have mastered all the practical rules of blogging, the short paragraphs, the use of subheadings, the best times and dates to post their articles. But these same bloggers, myself included, would do well to work toward mastering the spiritual rules of blogging.


Losing A Game We Deny We Are Playing

So, we are jealous of those who seem to be experiencing demonstrable success around us while unjustly criticizing them in our hearts and too often in our words. We envy the accolades we say we eschew. We tell ourselves we have risen above the surface game. But we keep looking below us to see if we are showing up on the score-tracker we said doesn’t matter. We say we only care about investing in the lives of those in front of us, but then we read the line-up in the big event brochures with a sigh because we were omitted again this year. We have been re-baptized many times in the ritual river of Nike the Triumphant and we can’t get the smell of that polluted stream out of our skin.


The New Testament’s Favorite Old Testament Stories

The last time I read through the New Testament, I decided it might be fruitful and interesting to keep track of all of the occurrences where the author made reference to narratives in the Old Testament. And since this week’s fighter passage makes reference to the Great Cloud of Witnesses, I thought it would be an appropriate time to post the list. You’ll find them below.


3 Indispensable Lessons I’ve Learned About Preaching

Among other responsibilities, I was afforded the opportunity to offer 3 indispensable lessons I’ve learned about preaching over the years I’ve preached. Obviously, there are many foundational things most preachers believe to be true. So, I took the assignment as: Share 3 indispensable lessons other than “the givens” you have learned about preaching.


The Acts 15 Problem – A New Shibboleth

There is a simple question we must deal with: Is politics going to come before faith? For many of us, the two are the same. And that is simply shameful. If your goal in to convert someone to Reaganism or Obamaism, you have traded the birthright of Christ for a bowl of political porridge. Your Christianity has no Christ. You have a party platform and no cross.


What Makes Churches Grow?

What is more, every church has a different set of membership and leadership with varying skills and abilities. This is why some churches read the newest book on ministry and it just doesn’t work for them because the congregation and minister that the book grew out of wasn’t the same context and didn’t have the same skill set at the churches on the receiving end. That can be very frustrating.


Did Venezuela’s Chavez nudge Christ to pick South American pope?

“We know that our commander ascended to the heights and is face-to-face with Christ,” Maduro said at a Caracas book fair. “Something influenced the choice of a South American pope, someone new arrived at Christ’s side and said to him: ‘Well, it seems to us South America’s time has come.'”
Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Argentina was elected in a surprise choice to be the new leader of the Roman Catholic Church on Wednesday, the first non-European pope in nearly 1,300 years.
“He (Chavez) may also call a constitutional assembly in Heaven at any moment to change the (Catholic) church on Earth so the people, the pure people of Christ, may govern the world,” Maduro added of his mentor.


Holy rivals? Brazil ponders Argentine pope

Bitter rivals in soccer. The butt of one another’s biting jokes. The samba versus the tango.
Brazil and its neighbor Argentina are bitter rivals in just about everything.
But now, in the realm of religion at least, Argentina has supremely passed the giant next door.
The Wednesday election of Pope Francis, formerly known as Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio of Argentina, put the country a step ahead of Brazil when it comes to holy matters.


36 Perfectly-Timed Animal Shots

Check out 36 perfectly timed animal shots. Taken with high precision but most of the time just lucky shots. Animal photography at it’s best, at least in a fun way..

Wednesday’s Links To Go

The Gospel: Far More Than a Key to the Front Door

In other words, the gospel isn’t something we need only to become a Christian. It’s not like it gets us in the front door, then we can pitch it. It’s the key to the living room, dining room, kitchen, attic and basement. It opens every drawer, cabinet, and appliance, turns on the water, heat and lights. The gospel should shape all of our lives as believers.


10 Compelling Reasons NOT to Resign

I would like to say to every minister I know that unless you are sure the Holy Spirit inside you is saying, “this is the time, walk away now,” don’t do it. Do not resign abruptly or impulsively.


Going to Heaven, Part I

Is it selfish for a prisoner of war to want to go home and see his family? Is it egocentric for a wayward son yearning for pig food to want to return to his father’s house? Jesus called it “coming to his senses.” (Luke 15:17)


7 Ways to Cultivate Joy

Want more joy in your day? Cultivate it! Joy springs from viewing the day’s events from eternity’s perspective. With this intentional focus, you’re sure to see today differently — with more joy and conviction that God is at work in your life.


Nun among 3 charged with illegal voting in SW Ohio

A southwest Ohio nun who voted on behalf of another nun who died before last year’s presidential election has been charged with illegal voting.
The Hamilton County prosecutor in Cincinnati said Monday that Sister Marguerite Kloos (kloos) was among three people charged with voting illegally.


Woman gets ticket for driving 2 mph under speed limit

Local NBC affiliate News4 reports that the woman, who asked to keep her name anonymous, was driving 63 miles per hour in a 65-mph zone. Police say the reason they ticketed her was that she was driving in the left lane reserved for speedier commuters.


Why Daylight Saving Time Is Pointless

So, none of the arguments for maintaining DST weigh up. I have one, very large, argument to support scrapping it, though: it loses the US billions of dollars every year. It damages retail, affects the stock market in a negative way, and even disrupts agriculture.
A century ago, we didn’t have data to tell us whether DST made a real measurable impact; it was acceptable to run with it because, for all we knew, it was useful. Now, we know better. Day light savings sucks—and we need to get rid of it.

Tuesday’s Links To Go

Churches Are Dying Because Christians Aren’t

In order to embrace Christ you have to first empty self by dying to life as you knew it. If you don’t teach that expect to develop Christians who can have one foot in the world and one foot in Christianity. It is hard to step out of faith if you have two feet with Jesus rather than just one. It is easier to step back into the world from on top of the fence than on the other side of it. Inadvertently, our lack of teaching has communicated that fence sitting isn’t all that bad.


Why Aren’t We Missional?

Yet, the majority of the church is not compelled to live a life on mission. You would think that if we have accepted the gospel and received forgiveness, we would run to a lost world and share the hope we have found. However, this is often not the case. We talk a good game, but we are not missional.


Trends in the Religious Unaffiliated, the “Nones,” by Age

There is some lagged effect, as the elderly are catching up the middle-aged in the past decade, but overall, the rise of the religious nones is something that spans all age groups. Thus it’s a societal-wide change more than just an age or generational change.


Sex in the Sermon

Over the past few years, my now 12-year-old daughter has been exposed to some rather uncomfortable subjects. Prostitution, homosexuality, whoring, menstrual cycles, bodily emissions, and rape have all been discussed in her presence.
You might wonder what type of parents we are. Do we let her watch too much TV? Allow her to listen to the wrong radio stations? Surf the internet without guidance? Actually my husband and I are fairly strict about the influences we allow into our home. It’s been one particular outside influence that has reached our daughter.
We take her to church.


An Israelite indeed

The Christian – the biblical – view of Israel has nothing to do with Palestine, politics or parentage. Rather, it has to do with the landscape of the heart, the politics of heaven, and the lineage of faith (cf. Gal. 3:26-29).
The one who follows Christ without hypocrisy is, with Nathaniel, an Israelite indeed.


I Resign From The Church’s Compliance Office

But, I’ve had enough now. I’m ready to refocus outward. I’m tired of dissecting what is wrong with every other church or ministry out there. I’m even tired of the self-critique. I’m ready to focus on what I’m for and spend my time encouraging what is good in my own heritage and others. I’m old enough now to feel my mortality, and I know I only have so much time and energy left. I’d like to spend it focusing on promoting what I believe in rather than fighting what I’m against.


Why Food Matters to Faith

When Christ is the focus of our joy and worship, we are able to put food, sex and our careers in their appropriate place in our lives. Since we have everything we need in Christ, we have no reason to pursue lesser gods. As Paul teaches, “We are not our own, we have been bought with a price, therefore glorify God with your body.” The Gospel, then, changes the way we eat because it puts Christ as our first priority, and everyone else falls second. It requires us to eat healthfully, and so fuel our bodies for the mission of God.


The Day of Atonement was a Copy of Christ’s Atonement

It is common to think of the Old Testament ritual as providing the model that Jesus’ priesthood subsequently copied and fulfilled. But Hebrews sees things differently. The Old Testament ritual of the high priest moving through the tabernacle—with its various rooms and furniture, especially the Holy of Holies and the ark with the mercy seat—is not the model but the copy (Heb. 8:5).


Getting Ready

Remember the Battle of Havana. Remember Juan de Prado and his failure to get ready. The king told him exactly what he needed to do, yet when the time came, de Prado didn’t do what he was told.


Identidades II
A photographer takes old portraits, locates the original subjects, and photographs them in the same pose. The results are fascinating.

Retratos

Monday’s Links To Go

Keeping the Faith but Losing Hope

And this is a longer post than most of mine, particularly because I really only want to make two points: First, if I may speak for my fellow young ministers, don’t be afraid of us losing our faith. Higher learning and critical study of the Bible have not caused us to lose our faith. Seeing the broken reality of the church, both in our experience and that of our mentors and predecessors, has not caused us to lose our faith; hearing the bitter testimony of ex-ministers and burned out leaders has not caused us to lose our faith. But, secondly, be afraid of us losing our hope: I worry that perhaps we’re losing hope that the church will care about these questions; hope that our doubts and anxiety will be anything but a burden on the church; hope that those questions about the church which direct us into scripture and into prayer will be regarded as relevant by those same communities.


Are Rewards In Heaven Based On Our Efforts Or God’s Grace?

I am not sure I have an answer right now. But it is an intriguing question. Nevertheless, I believe that justification is by grace alone without any regards to human effort. If human effort did play a part, grace is not grace. However, I believe that a theology of rewards must recognize that human effort plays a decisive role in the rewards we receive.


Seven Things to Pray for Your Children

So pray for your children. Jesus promises us that if we ask, seek, and knock the Father will give us good in return (Luke 11:9-13), even if the good isn’t apparent for 40 years. And because Jesus regularly asked those who came to him, “What do you want me to do for you?” (Mark 10:51), we know that he wants us to be specific with our requests.


Can’t I Just Skip Over the Genealogies in the Bible?

So when you read that Hezekiah was the father of Manasseh, don’t glaze over, but thank God for His constancy in shepherding the inheritance of Abraham through the centuries. And when you read that some of the procreators were scoundrels or the relatives of scoundrels, rejoice that He can do great things with bad bets. There’s even hope for us.


5 Ways to Find Joy in a Job You Don’t Love

Scripture promises that we can have joy through any work. Ecclesiastes 2:24 says work is a gift of God, and it is good to “find enjoyment in [it]”—the Hebrew literally reads, “make his soul see the good in [it].” Some jobs will make this joy easy for us; some won’t. But God wills that we make our souls see the good in our work, whatever it may be. We may never become heel-clicking happy about our job, but it is possible for us to have robust joy in it.


On Sermon Conclusions

The same is true of sermons. It may get off to a bumpy start. You may have to play catch up to stay within the allotted time schedule. The people on board may not like where it is headed. But all will be forgiven if you can safely land the sermon at its intended destination.


Battling Sinful Sarcasm

If my sarcasm always felt like a loving and innocent hug, there’d be no reason to question my heart’s motives. But when my humor feels more like a slap in the face, when people don’t “get” my sarcasm, and my jokes leave behind a wake of wounded brothers and sisters, I’m forced to dig a little deeper and face the facts.


You spend 23 days a year on your phone, survey says

The average answer is 90 minutes per day spent poking and prodding their blower. That’s 32,850 minutes a year, or 22.8 days. Over the course of the average person’s life, that’s 1,414 days — 3.9 years — spent squinting at a little piece of glass and plastic.


Bill would allow iPad use from takeoff to landing

McCaskill said neither members of the public nor lawmakers believe the FAA’s contention that regulations requiring passengers to shut off their devices during takeoff and landing “are any longer about safety.”