price_is_wrong.jpgIt’s 10:30AM and I’m sitting here channel surfing after 2-straight episodes of The Backyardigans with Ella curled up next to me on the couch. I find myself stopping at a little show called “The Price is Right” – a classic show that I literally grew up watching! As soon as I saw that it was on (we have that sweet “what’s on” feature with our Time Warner Digital Cable) I wondered aloud, “I wonder if Drew Carey is the host yet?”

After a short commercial Drew Carey came back on as the new-host of “The Price is Right” and nearly instantaneously disappointed me.

Sure Barkers shoes are nearly impossible to fill, but the uncomfortableness of Carey’s hosting is nearly too much to even watch.

Ugh. Another television letdown.

Is it okay to watch Backyardigans by myself while Ella naps?

The Colts.

11.5.2007 — 1 Comment

Due to a full afternoon and evening, I didn’t get to watch even a minute of the game until after 9:30PM tonight. (Thanks to my DVR)

For the next 2-hours, I sat and actually thought the Colts were going to win the game – even though I was hinted with a “sorry about the game” by one of my Life Coaches tonight before SNL. I thought he was just trying to get my riled up – turns out he wasn’t.

Good effort, Colts. I’m sure we’ll see those evil Pats again…

Vidcast Update

11.2.2007 — 6 Comments

lfbv_book.jpgAt about 1AM this morning I finished, “Little Family, Big Values: Lessons in Love, Respect, and Understanding for Families of Any Size” by the Roloff Family and interviewer, Tracy Sumner.

The book was definitely a quick-read, and I would surmise even a quicker-write.

My sister, Sherilyn, knows of my fascination with the Roloff family and bought me this book for my birthday this Summer. Jess and I are well into enjoying this new Season of the “Little People, Big World” television series with the Roloffs on TLC.

The book is great! Written partly by each member of the Roloff family, minus youngest-Jacob. The Roloffs share the values their family holds near and dear and shares from experience how defending those values has put them in the place they are today. There’s some great insight into their family within the pages of the book and some great words of wisdom.

I enjoyed most the chapter on the Roloff’s value of Faith. I read a clear statement of the Faith that Matt and Amy have in the One True God and salvation through Jesus Christ that I have received mere glimpses of through the television series. Jeremy, one of their twins talks about the importance that Faith has played in the family’s lifestyle, too.

The reason I felt it was a quick-write is because of an obvious mistake in which Zach was referred to as Jeremy in one of the first chapters.

aka_lost_book.jpgFinished reading “A.K.A. LOST” on Sunday morning here in my office before preaching.

I can’t get the book, or the ideas I learned from reading it out of my head nearly a week later. The book sits on my desk being a constant reminder of how challenged I was while reading it. I appreciate Henderson’s approach, his writing-language, and his willingness to be real. Reading the book has sparked numerous conversations about the subject of evangelism again and again since I started reading it a couple weeks ago!

The “tag-line”, ‘Discovering ways to connect with the people Jesus misses most’ speaks volumes of the content of the pages. One of the main points that has transformed my way-of-thinking already is moving from a “lost” mindset to a “missing” mindset. For me, this means re-realizing the “Sunday School Truth” that God loves EVERYONE and EVERYONE has been created in His image and that simply by referring to non-Christians as “lost” instantly builds a stereotype of “us vs. them”. On the other-hand, if I have a “missing” mindset – one that declares that Jesus wants a relationship with everyone and that it’s His job through His Spirit to “find” them; I begin to realize that my task on earth is to help people SEE Jesus as the one wanting a relationship with them.

Henderson suggests something called, “Ordinary Attempts” at evangelism in the book. “Ordinary Attempts” are opportunities that surround us probably daily. Simply asking someone “how they’re doing” and actually pausing long-enough to truly listen to the answer is classified as an “Ordinary Attempt”. Offering to pray for someone that mentions a situation that needs prayer is another “Ordinary Attempt”.

Growing up with an “old school” look at Evangelism that involved the confrontational “Where would you go if you died tonight?” and knowing that people we interact with in the “world” have come to expect such from Christians, I am excited at pursuing “Ordinary Attempts Evangelism”. In a sense, letting God do what He does best and realizing MY part in His plan for reaching those He misses.

The book has recently been re-released with a new cover and a new title, “Evangelism Without Additives” – I like that title better, too. I’d like to have dinner with Jim Henderson. (by the way, Jim Henderson is NOT the creator of the Muppets – that was Jim HENSON.)