- Genesis 3:19b: …for you are dust, and to dust you shall…
- Bob Barker, speechless. Love this clip from The Price is Right.
- Great picture of Ella. (Taken with picplz.)
- Ezra wanted his picture taken. (Taken with picplz.)
- Taco Bell’s single greatest contribution to our modern…
- The best (worst?) touchdown dance, ever.
- UP (the Pixar movie) house in real life.
- I love the ‘danger’ of Alpine Slides.
- Our living room camping setup. (Taken with picplz.)
- Woke up to this next to me this morning! She slept all night in…
- Camping out with Ella tonight in the living room inside our…
- Ella making the most of my sermon illustration this morning….
- Another at-home science experiment worth trying.
- The most insane bike ride you can imagine.
- The coolest axe you’ve ever seen in your life.
- Me. Androidified.
I was blown away this morning as I first received a text from a friend whose sister and family are currently in Japan. Instantly, I turned to Twitter to get minute-by-minute replays on what had taken place. An 8.9 magnitude earthquake off the coast of Japan. The images coming from this disaster are some of the most powerful I’ve ever seen.
I’m praying for those affected by this tragic earthquake and those who are continuing to evacuate from the path of the resulting tsunami.
UPDATE | 10:03AM
Incredible photo gallery of devastation in Japan is available here.
UPDATE | 10:08AM
This video from CNN shows the massive damage being done by the water and mud slides through Japan:
There has been enough media hoopla (especially in the Christian subculture) around Rob Bell’s latest book, “Love Wins” to fill hours of coverage.
When the pre-release banter began, I quickly jumped in the “don’t judge it until you’ve read it” camp.
I will always be quicker to jump into this camp – I think we Christians do a lot of pre-judging of things that we don’t know enough about.
That said, I wouldn’t ever take my “don’t judge it until you’ve read it” stance to the extreme that some have and do and say that we can’t judge anything without first ‘trying it’.
If you and I had to read everything ‘for ourselves’ before we could make a sound judgement on it, wouldn’t we be stuck reading for all of eternity? If I had to read every quasi-Christian article/book/newsletter that was available simply to make an educated-judgement on it, I would never do anything else.
The issue here is that we’re dealing with Rob Bell. He’s one of our “church superstars”. And so we feel even more apt to give him the benefit of the doubt and therefore jump into the “don’t judge it until you read it” bandwagon much quicker.
Case in point: if Charlie Sheen had written a book with the same title, sub-title, back cover description, and promotional video, we wouldn’t be having this discussion.
I’ve been challenged by Rob Bell in the past. I’ve been moved by some Nooma videos. I’ve been challenged by his sermons on the Mars Hill podcast.
This blog post was originally titled, “Why I WON’T read Rob Bell’s LOVE WINS”. I changed it to “don’t need to” because I still might, eventually. But for now, there are some trusted voices in the Christian world that are reading it and the reviews are still coming in and sadly, I’m not liking where things are going.
I don’t want to raise children to think that they have to “try it before they make a decision”, and there’s a difference between “judging a book by its cover” and “making educated responses to the facts”. Based on what reviews I’ve already read and as the reviews of Rob Bell’s “Love Wins” continue to pour in, I’m saddened to think as Bible-believing Evangelicals we’re going to continue to find increasing difficulty with its theological stance.
I would love for you to disagree or agree with me in this post’s comments.
The game of Monopoly has always been one of my favorites. Buying up as many properties as possible and charging as much rent as possible to everyone else is the way to win.
When this happens in real life, it’s not as fun.
Most of us have very few choices when it comes to how we can enjoy televised entertainment due to cable companies and their monopolies.
I recently read a post by Tyler Stanton entitled, “Cancel Cable and Still Watch it All” (Part 1, Part 2) that gave me just the nudge I needed to finish being stuck in “research mode” and make a decision to ditch cable once-and-for-all.
We have been happy Comcast customers for a number of years. Since moving to Pennsylvania, they have been the only option for Cable Internet, so when signing up at our two homes, we have always seemed to get a deal that offered us not only internet, but cable television as well. When we moved here to Shippensburg, we were given a 6-month deal on the package and also a free upgrade which included a DVR! This month we crossed over our 6-month subscription mark and they bounced our bill up by $20/month. I called on three separate occasions and spoke with three different customer service representatives asking about what other options I had and none of them could give me anything better than what our current package included. We even talked about dropping cable television and sticking with Internet-only, but would have only saved $5 and lost all television options.
Disgusted with these options, I started researching DSL. I’ve never been a real fan of DSL – always thinking it was inferior to Cable Internet technology and availability, but was quite pleased at the speeds offered by CenturyLink and was excited by the advertised prices.
One phone call to CenturyLink and an hour-long conversation with “Anna” netted us a deal on Internet-only DSL (this is not an advertised feature, but when I asked, they told me it was possible!). We were paying for 6Mb/s speed Cable Internet through Comcast, but this DSL promises 10Mb/s speeds and would cost us less than our current TV/Internet package.
The downside, of course is the loss of all television-programming including the DVR option that our family has grown to love so much (no commercials, recording our favorite shows automatically, pausing live TV, etc.)
At the same time we have been researching Internet options, we were also looking at television-options available over the web.
Our family landed on Netflix for a few reasons. #1, we subscribed for only $7.99/month which after subscribing STILL keeps us at around $20 LESS than what we were paying for Cable & Internet through Comcast! #2, Netflix offers instant-viewing on our television thanks to our Blu-Ray player. #3, contrary to some people’s thoughts, Netflix offers a wide-range of Children’s programming that made the choice to get rid of cable and go with Netflix an easier pill to swallow.
There are a few setbacks to removing cable completely – especially for a family like ours that does enjoy numerous television series together and individually. Not every show that we like to watch (NCIS, The Mentalist) is available through Netflix (yet), but we continue to make use of the likes of Hulu.com and even CBS.com to watch some of our favorites that are made available usually the day-after the original air date.
We also decided to invest in an over-the-air antenna to attempt to pick up whatever local channels were available to us. I was actually hoping to pick up our local FOX channel so that I could pull in the Super Bowl a few weeks ago. Sadly, after hooking it up, FOX is the one local network we don’t get.
After almost a month of making the switch, I think we’re very pleased with the change. Saving money is terrific and what we have gained continues to surprise us! We’re continuing to take advantage of full seasons of Dora the Explorer, Backyardigans, and Wonder Pets (and many more) through our new Netflix account.
Have questions about our switch from Cable TV to Internet-only? Ask them in the comments and we’ll keep this conversation going!
- A glimpse of my future, except hopefully my grandkids will be…
- Shower faucet infographic.
- Making hot pads with my girl on my day off. (Taken with picplz.)
- I’m calling these guys the Asian version of OK GO.
- Two miserable cold-having Sheets kids laying low today. (Taken…
- The 2011 Wesleyan Youth Convention this year is uniquely…
- Can’t say much for hot & sur soup except that it only…
- Bookcase organization stop-motion, time lapse. Watching the…
- Another fantastic Build & Grow clinic at @Lowes (Taken with…
- The world is obsessed with Facebook. (animated infographic)
- Fantastic interview with “The Invisible” author,…
- Great, sarcastic review of the Motorola Xoom tablet.
- Cool! Google now has “recipe view”! My wife…








