Monday, December 20, 2010

What are you working on?

In case you missed this...

What are you working on?

If someone asks you that, are you excited to tell them the answer?
I hope so. If not, you're wasting away.
No matter what your job is, no matter where you work, there's a way to create a project (on your own, on weekends if necessary), where the excitement is palpable, where something that might make a difference is right around the corner.
Hurry, go do that.
Posted by Seth Godin on December 18, 2010 | Permalink
I meet so many folks (even in ministry!) who answer this question with a job title not with a goal or a project. Sad, isn't it?
Trust me, life's too short. As Seth Godin points out, you need to solve this one...now.
Oh and don't make the mistake of assuming that the way you make a difference has to be the way you pay your bills.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Church, Honor Your Leaders (a meditation on 1 Thessalonians 5:12-13)

Dear brothers & sisters, always -- but especially at this time of year -- honor the leaders who are working so hard for you, those whom God has given responsibility for urging and guiding you along in your obedience to Him. Overwhelm them with appreciation and love!

You'll never know how demanding their work can be or the price they pay for their service; never pass up an opportunity to show them that their efforts among you are not wasted. Embrace them and their families so that even those who came to you as strangers will have no doubt about your love and welcome.

Also make sure each of you does your part to get along among yourselves--when you don't, it makes leadership a burden you can't imagine.

 

God be with you and bless you all! -- db

Posted via email from Ferndale Tonight

Friday, November 26, 2010

One More Thanksgiving

This seemed especially appropriate this year. Thanks to a treatment we were trying, I spent last Thanksgiving and Christmas fighting a migraine, unable to even think about food, crawling around on the bathroom floor. (Isn't it funny how soothing that cold tile feels...?) 
Anyway, yesterday I was able to feast with my family and celebrate with some of you online. It was time worth savoring and I'm grateful:

May God be praised now and forever.

Let us praise our God
of Whose bounty we have partaken

and through Whose goodness we live.

Praised be He, and praised be His name.

Blessed are You, Lord our God, King of the universe:

You sustain the world with goodness,
with grace,
with love and mercy.

You give food to every creature,
for Your love endures forever.

Through Your great goodness,
we have not lacked,
and may we never lack,
our daily bread.

God is great;
He nourishes and sustains all,
and deals bountifully with all,

providing food for all His creatures.

Blessed are You,
Lord who provides food for all.

Sustain Jerusalem,
the Holy City,
now and forever.


Blessed are You, Yahweh,
Who in His grace builds Jerusalem.

May He Who makes peace on high,
make peace for us,

and for Israel,

and all His people.

May God give strength to His people.

May God bless His people with peace.
 

Amen

(adapted from the Bir’khat haMazon,

the traditional Jewish Grace After the Meal)

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Doors

I ran across this at Forbes:


  When one DOOR CLOSES another DOOR OPENS;
                but we often look so LONG 
                                       and so REGRETFULLY
                  upon THE CLOSED DOOR
             that WE DO NOT SEE THE ONES
                      which OPEN FOR US.
– Alexander Graham Bell
What doors are you facing?

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Untitled

It's that time again... The annual Project Valour-IT fundraiser has launched. What's that you say? Check this out from the Soldiers Angels website:

Project Valour-IT helps provide voice-controlled/adaptive laptop computers and other technology to support Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen and Marines recovering from hand wounds and other severe injuries.  Technology supplied includes:

  • Voice-controlled Laptops - Operated by speaking into a microphone or using other adaptive technologies, they allow the wounded to maintain connections with the rest of the world during recovery.
  • Wii Video Game Systems - Whole-body game systems increase motivation and speed recovery when used under the guidance of physical therapists in therapy sessions (donated only to medical facilities).
  • Personal GPS - Handheld GPS devices build self-confidence and independence by compensating for short-term memory loss and organizational challenges related to severe TBI and severe PTSD.

  • This is an outstanding project that really makes a difference. Navy's goal this year is $15,000. Do what you can!
    (And of course I sent you to the Navy link! Duh. If that's a problem for you then here's the generic link for the project.

    Posted via email from Ferndale Tonight

    Friday, October 8, 2010

    Meditation

    God Almighty--He is Lord
    above us all .
    He is the only true refuge--He alone can save.
    He spoke and the result? All Creation!
    He faithfully preserves those who walk with Him.
    He communicates with anyone willing to listen.
    Other "spiritualties" are just distractions.
    You know that you know this!
    Isn't it time to turn and give Him your attention?

    Posted via email from Ferndale Tonight

    Friday, June 18, 2010

    Greatest Campaign Ad Ever?

    This just may be it:

    And what an endorsement!

    Has It Been 100 Years Already?

    From USA.gov
    When did Father's Day begin?
    Thu, 17 Jun 2010 17:49:14 -0500

    Sunday, June 20, 2010, is the centennial celebration of Father's Day. Visit the FAQ at USA.gov for the history of the observance, a link to U.S. Census information on fathers, and more.
    What are y'all doing to mark the day? You are going to mark the day, right?
    (And, yup, that's this Sunday--better get movin'!)

    Saturday, June 5, 2010

    John Wooden Made Me (look like) a Genius

    Even at 99, it saddened me to hear of former UCLA basketball coach John Wooden's death. You see Coach Wooden once bailed me out of a really tight spot and in the process made me look far better than I deserved.

    It was back in the mid-80's and I was pastoring a small, rural church in the mountains of Kentucky. Kentucky, where basketball is king. To make ends meet I needed a part-time job and someone told me that the local elementary school was looking for someone to coach 6th/7th grade baseball and that their expectations weren't very high. While still in high school I'd coached and umpired a few years of little league and played/umpired a little slow-pitch along the way. It couldn't hurt to ask, right? So I interviewed.

    And surprise, surprise, I got hired! (This would be a really short, pointless post if I hadn't, right?) The money was just right for what I needed and, as a pastor, what a great way to plug into the community.

    That's when the principal dropped the bomb that I wasn't just the baseball coach, I was The Coach.

    Fine, I can do softball, too.

    Good, but we also have boys' basketball starting in two weeks. 

    My heart almost stopped. I'd played C League (as in, "no blood/no foul" basketball for wrestlers and football players) Intramurals in college but that was the end of my basketball experience. I could probably muddle my way through running a practice but I'd never even seen a play diagrammed let alone tried to execute one. Could I handle it?

    Two things turned out in my favor:
         1. They didn't ask much. In this four-team league, they had a history of finishing fourth.
         2. I was their only candidate.

    I was in. Now, what to do...

    A friend with connections snuck me into a university library where I checked out four or five books on basketball coaching. One of them was "Practical Modern Basketball" by John Wooden.

    I recognized Wooden's name but I was intimidated by both his reputation and the thickness of the book. I had picked it up more out of desperation than out of any illusion that I'd be able to put it to work at Sparksville Elementary. Was I ever wrong. Turns out there's a reason for Wooden's reputation!

    Even with his reputation in coaching, I don't think Wooden ever stopped referring to himself as a teacher, The reason for that came through in his book.

    There were much thinner books among the five I picked up that day but none were clearer or more helpful. I had finished the other four before bedtime that evening and didn't particularly feel smarter for the effort. Out of resignation more than anything, I turned to Wooden.

    I should have started there. Coach Wooden taught me how to run a practice and how to run a fast break. He talked about the chemistry to look for in your starting five and how to pick who to keep and who to cut (a problem I didn't have--you can't cut anyone when you only have eight players!) When I was finished reading I still didn't feel qualified but I at least felt ready to face the boys.

    The league consisted of three outlying rural elementaries and the central "town" school. Rural kids could go to their local school or choose the bus ride into town every morning. Just before practices started our biggest/strongest/most gifted kid decided his future was in town. Foreshadowing, anyone?

    So, four team league with an eight game home and home schedule. Coming into the end-of-season league tournament we were 5-3, a record-setting second place regular season finish! We won our first game in the tournament and faced the "town" team in the final.

    Now, this isn't Hoosiers (although it kind of looked like it--we had the pre-game talk about not letting the size of the gym and the crowd get to you.) We lost. But my boys looked good. And in the end it was much closer than anyone expected (except me--I didn't know all the history). See, in our county district there was no question about who would finish first--the town school--so the real bragging rights went with second place. Think of it as finishing first in the small school class.

    John Wooden had briefly made me a local hero, a genius. Of course, fame is fleeting but that remains a very bright spot in what became a high-adventure period in my life. i owe it to Coach.

    In his basketball retirement, Coach Wooden wrote many great books on life and faith and leadership. Like Practical Modern Basketball, the ones I've read are worth your time. And along the way, I've seen several of Coach Wooden's former players write that Coach never steered you wrong. It was certainly true for me that year.

    Thank you, Coach Wooden.

    Posted via web from Ferndale Tonight

    Tuesday, June 1, 2010

    He's Not Lost, He's Home

    I've been telling y'all about Tom's death. Here's a video his wife, Margo, made that was played at his funeral. In it she embodies the warrior spirit that has kept our nation safe. There's nothing I can add to her example of strength, courage and faith so I'm just going to respectfully step aside and let her speak.

    May God bless and keep you, Belkofer family.
    May you experience warmth and grace as His face turns toward you.
    May you always experience the tranquil security of being under His unfailing watch and constant care.

    Monday, May 31, 2010

    A Different Perspective on Memorial Day

    TheBeth says Happy Memorial Day and introduces Jay & Sara:
    .

    .I’ve know Sara since she was seconds old.  In fact, I cut her umbilical cord.  Jay is my son’s best friend.

    Their parents, Frank & Tiff are very good friends to David and me.

    I think that every parent out there would agree that the birth of a child is one of the greatest highlights in life.  Being there to witness the arrival of such a precious miracle- is a gift itself.

    So how did it happen that I was in the delivery room with Tiff- and not Frank?  How is it that I saw Sara’s bright, blinking eyes- heard her pissed off cry- before her own father?

    Frank is in the United States Air Force.  He found out that he was being deployed overseas when Tiff was eight weeks pregnant.  He left for a six month tour when she was four months along....

    Be sure to read the rest. It's common to talk about death and injuries but y'all civilians rarely bring up what business folks call "opportunity cost." The price of missing major family events and just plain watching your kids grow up. After awhile you stop counting the funerals, weddings, anniversaries, holidays, births and birthdays...

    We retired from the Navy and discovered that while we'd been following Uncle Sam around the globe, y'all had been building equity in your houses and getting on a cycle that made that second (or third) car fairly easy. Y'all had been building up a nicely stocked household while we'd been having to ditch the iron, the fans, the mixer and such 'cause they'd only work on the local electricity supply we were leaving behind.

    I'm extremely grateful that I was there for every one of our kids being born but I've got strong memories (and extreme gratitude) of a night when some folks escorted my wife and (then) two daughters into a conference room for a Valentine's Day videoconference. My wife says the ~20 month old went around for weeks pointing to the TV and wanting to talk to Daddy!

    So one more reason to stop that person in uniform and say "thank you." And cut 'em some slack if you see them eying that iron at your yard sale! ;-)

    Posted via web from Ferndale Tonight

    More for Memorial Day: God of the Living

    No only will we remember them but none ever are forgotten by God.

    I learned of this hymn because it shares a tune with The Navy Hymn. I often recite it at the graveside service for funerals and it seems especially appropriate for Memorial Day.

    God of the living, in whose eyes
    unveiled thy whole creation lies,
    all souls are thine; we must not say
    that those are dead who pass away,
    from this our world of flesh set free;
    we know them living unto thee.

    Released from earthly toil and strife,
    with thee is hidden still their life;
    thine are their thoughts, their works, their powers,
    all thine, and yet most truly ours;
    for well we know, where'er they be,
    our dead are living unto thee.

    Not spilled like water on the ground,
    not wrapped in dreamless sleep profound,
    not wandering in unknown despair
    beyond thy voice, thine arm, thy care;
    not left to lie like fallen tree;
    not dead, but living unto thee.

    Thy word is true, thy will is just;
    to thee we leave them, Lord, in trust;
    and bless thee for the love which gave
    thy Son to fill a human grave,
    that none might fear that world to see
    where all are living unto thee.

    O Breather into man of breath,
    O Holder of the keys of death,
    O Giver of the life within,
    save us from death, the death of sin;
    that body, soul and spirit be
    for ever living unto thee.

    A great reminder that none of us ever passes from God's mind. He's always watching over us no matter what our human perception of the circumstances might be.

    Posted via web from Ferndale Tonight

    The Navy Hymn

    The original four verses of The Navy Hymn. Many more verses have been added to cover the Navy's various communities.

    Eternal Father, strong to save,
    Whose arm hath bound the restless wave,
    Who bidd'st the mighty ocean deep
    Its own appointed limits keep;
    Oh, hear us when we cry to Thee,
    For those in peril on the sea!

    O Christ! Whose voice the waters heard
    And hushed their raging at Thy word,
    Who walked'st on the foaming deep,
    And calm amidst its rage didst sleep;
    Oh, hear us when we cry to Thee,
    For those in peril on the sea!

    Most Holy Spirit! Who didst brood
    Upon the chaos dark and rude,
    And bid its angry tumult cease,
    And give, for wild confusion, peace;
    Oh, hear us when we cry to Thee,
    For those in peril on the sea!

    O Trinity of love and power!
    Our brethren shield in danger's hour;
    From rock and tempest, fire and foe,
    Protect them wheresoe'er they go;
    Thus evermore shall rise to Thee
    Glad hymns of praise from land and sea.

    Why Memorial Day?

    Here's the order that made it official:

    HEADQUARTERS GRAND ARMY OF THE REPUBLIC

    General Orders No.11, WASHINGTON, D.C., May 5, 1868

    I. The 30th day of May, 1868, is designated for the purpose of strewing with flowers or otherwise decorating the graves of comrades who died in defense of their country during the late rebellion, and whose bodies now lie in almost every city, village, and hamlet church-yard in the land. In this observance no form of ceremony is prescribed, but posts and comrades will in their own way arrange such fitting services and testimonials of respect as circumstances may permit.

    We are organized, comrades, as our regulations tell us, for the purpose among other things, "of preserving and strengthening those kind and fraternal feelings which have bound together the soldiers, sailors, and marines who united to suppress the late rebellion." What can aid more to assure this result than cherishing tenderly the memory of our heroic dead, who made their breasts a barricade between our country and its foes? Their soldier lives were the reveille of freedom to a race in chains, and their deaths the tattoo of rebellious tyranny in arms. We should guard their graves with sacred vigilance. All that the consecrated wealth and taste of the nation can add to their adornment and security is but a fitting tribute to the memory of her slain defenders. Let no wanton foot tread rudely on such hallowed grounds. Let pleasant paths invite the coming and going of reverent visitors and fond mourners. Let no vandalism of avarice or neglect, no ravages of time testify to the present or to the coming generations that we have forgotten as a people the cost of a free and undivided republic.

    If our eyes grow dull, other hands slack, and other hearts cold in the solemn trust, ours shall keep it well as long as the light and warmth of life remain to us.

    Let us, then, at the time appointed gather around their sacred remains and garland the passionless mounds above them with the choicest flowers of spring-time; let us raise above them the dear old flag they saved from dishonor; let us in this solemn presence renew our pledges to aid and assist those whom they have left among us a sacred charge upon a nation's gratitude, the soldier's and sailor's widow and orphan.

    II. It is the purpose of the Commander-in-Chief to inaugurate this observance with the hope that it will be kept up from year to year, while a survivor of the war remains to honor the memory of his departed comrades. He earnestly desires the public press to lend its friendly aid in bringing to the notice of comrades in all parts of the country in time for simultaneous compliance therewith.

    III. Department commanders will use efforts to make this order effective.

    By order of
    JOHN A. LOGAN,
    Commander-in-Chief

    N.P. CHIPMAN,
    Adjutant General

    Official:
    WM. T. COLLINS, A.A.G.

    I don't have any original sources to cite but it's my understanding that General Logan was formalizing something good that folks had started doing on their own initiative. I've seen claims for both North and South as the originators of the tradition, going out to tend the graves of the fallen "enemies" in the hope that wherever their boys had fallen someone was doing the same.

    Posted via web from Ferndale Tonight

    We Will Remember

    So Real It Couldn't Be Aired!

    They push the limits so much... Doesn't it make you wonder what they don't show you? Here's one example that didn't make the cut!

    Funny Mythbusters episode that won't be aired

    Adam Savage, host of Discovery Channel’s show Mythbusters, shared a funny story at Maker Faire about a rejected episode that will never see the light of day. Did your mother ever tell you not to eat sugary cereal because the cardboard box was more nutritious than its contents? Well, make her watch this video:

    Heard any others like this?

    Posted via web from Ferndale Tonight

    Reveille

    Reveille for Memorial Day
    Thanks to all my shipmates, soldiers and airmen serving and who have served. God bless you all.

    Saturday, May 29, 2010

    Why "Daniel"...

    ...and not just "Dan?"

    Two factors here:

    1, The Bible has many examples showing the spiritual significance of a name; and,
    2. Shouldn't your name inspire you, give you something to aspire to, or both?

    So given that Dan means "judge" (value-neutral and something we all routinely do dozens of times a day) but Daniel means "God is my judge," this seemed like a no-brainer.

    (Can you think of a better reminder to do what's right than thinking "God is my judge?")

    That said, my last name apparently refers to "the open-space suitable for rough pasturage" where some very long-ago ancestor lived.

    Yeah... I don't know how you apply that either.

    A friend once explained that his full name meant "a wee pile of stones" -- a reminder that things could always be worse!

    Posted via web from Ferndale Tonight

    Tom, We hardly knew you...

    All of us who serve are clear about the risks and still we go. But with each Purple Heart or each flag at half-mast that we can put a face to, we catch ourselves saying that we wish it hadn't been that one. It's especially true with Tom. I posted a few days ago about him being killed in Kabul, Afghanistan. It seems incomplete without adding this:

    Lt. Col. Thomas P. Belkofer
    (June 2, 1965 - May 18, 2010)

    Lt. Col Thomas P. Belkofer, age 44, of the Army’s 10th Mountain Division at Ft. Drum, New York and formerly of Perrysburg Township, Ohio died on Tuesday, May 18, 2010 in a Taliban attack on a NATO convoy in Kabul, Afghanistan.  Tom was born on June 2, 1965 in Toledo, Ohio to Donald Jr. and Sharon (O’Keefe) Belkofer.  He graduated from Rossford High School in 1983 where he played football and was a standout wrestler. After High School he briefly attended Wright State University and the University of Toledo before transferring to Bowling Green State University where in 1992 he earned a bachelor’s degree in architectural and environment design technology and married his college sweetheart, Margaret (Margo) Maness.  He served in the Army National Guard before signing up for the ROTC program at BGSU and was commissioned into the Field Artillery as a Distinguished Military Graduate.  In 2002, he earned a Master of Business Administration degree from Syracuse University. 

    Lt. Col. Thomas Belkofer was an 18 year veteran of the United States Army. His operational troop leading assignments included Company Fire Support Officer, Platoon Leader and Battalion Adjutant for 3rd Battalion, 82nd Field Artillery at Fort Hood, Texas; and Battalion Fire Support Officer and Battery Commander for Alpha Battery, 3rd Battalion, 29th Field Artillery.

    His leadership duties included Fort Carson, Colorado, Fort Meade, Maryland, The Pentagon, Vicenza, Italy, and most recently, Fort Drum, New York.  He was deployed to Afghanistan in 2005-2006 as Resource Manager for Office of Security Cooperation in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. 

    In his career he was awarded the Legion of Merit (Posthumous), Bronze Star (1 Oak Leaf Cluster), Purple Heart (Posthumous), Meritorious Service Award (3 Oak Leaf Clusters), Army Commendation Medal (1 Oak Leaf Cluster), Army Achievement Medal (2 Oak Leaf Clusters), Joint Meritorious Unit Award, Army Reserve Component Achievement Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal, Afghanistan Campaign Medal, Global War on Terror Service Ribbon, Humanitarian Service Medal, Army Service Ribbon, Overseas Ribbon, Air Assault Badge, Parachutist Badge, the Army Staff Identification Badge, NATO Medal (Posthumous), and Combat Action Badge (Posthumous).  

    He led a life of honor and was known as a man who loved his Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, his family, his country, his Army and his beloved Ohio State Buckeyes, which he proclaimed wherever he was stationed. In Afghanistan in 2005, he could be found awake in the middle of the night so that he wouldn’t miss a Buckeye football game.    

    Surviving is his loving wife, Margo (Maness) Belkofer; daughters, Alyssa, age 15, and Ashley, age 11; parents, Donald and Sharon Belkofer; brothers, Don (Cathy) Belkofer and Doug Belkofer; father in-law, William (Eleanor) Maness; mother in-law, Pauline Maness.  Also surviving are many, aunts, uncles, cousins and in-laws.

    Family and friends may visit at the Sujkowski Funeral Home of Rossford, 830 Lime City Rd. on Friday, May 28, 2010 from 2 to 8 PM.  Funeral Services will be held on Saturday, May 29, 2010 at 10:30 AM at Cedar Creek Church, 29129 Lime City Rd., Perrysburg, OH.  Interment will take place in Arlington National Cemetery.  The family suggests those wishing to make a memorial contribution in Lt. Col. Thomas Belkofer’s name to please consider Military Ministries #2283732, Campus Crusade for Christ, Attn: Contributions, PO Box 628222, Orlando, FL  32862-8222
    "DULCE ET DECORUM EST PRO PATRIA MORI." 
    "It is sweet and fitting to die for one's country."

    from Horace's Ode III, 2, 13

    Posted via web from Ferndale Tonight

    Wednesday, May 26, 2010

    As Someone Who Was "Hazed..."

    ...pre-Navy and pre- us all deciding that hazing was bad, I have to admit that this headline scared me:

    No Lard for Navy Plebes in Yearly Ritual
    As they have for 70 years, Naval Academy students celebrated the end of their grueling first year by scaling a 21-foot obelisk. But this time, without a lard coating on the monument, students completed the task in minutes. ...More

    And, for the record, I've only heard about hazing that involved lard, grease, Vaseline, etc.!

    Posted via web from Ferndale Tonight

    Aren't You Glad...

    ...that you don't have to explain this:
    Buoy Falls From Navy Plane Into Home
    A sonar buoy from a P-3 Orion on a routine training flight fell 500 to 600 feet through the roof of a Mandarin, Fla., house, landing next to a bed that had recently been vacated....More

    Three Hebrew Heroes

    You don't have to be a Bible scholar to know about Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego. The Bible's account of the Hebrew captives who refused to bow down to their new king's idol is a Sunday School classic.

    Think about it...
    Three young men, hauled away to a foreign country famous for it's ruthlessness. They seem to be doing really well, excelling in the Babylonian system (see Daniel chapter 1).while still being able to maintain their integrity as Jews.

    One day King Nebuchadnezzar (who was so full of himself that he had to be a real treat to be around), builds a 90-foot high statue of himself and declares that when he strikes up the band everyone is supposed to bow down to this new idol. And of course our three heroes won't bow.

    Now, it never fails that integrity and excellence will tick someone off. Trust me, I've seen time and again how jealousy will grow until folks start working behind the scenes looking for an excuse to knock down the high-performers. You may have experienced this yourself.

    So the jealous folks can't wait to go rat out Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego to King Nebuchadnezzar. (Isn't copy/paste a wonderful thing?) And, (as often happens in these situations) even before checking the facts the king just loses it--his attitude toward our three immediately turns from favor to fury.

    In that frame of mind, he summons them.

    And that's a good place for a break. I'll pick this up later.

    Posted via web from Ferndale Tonight

    Saturday, May 22, 2010

    Toddlers who lie 'will do better'

    Toddlers who lie 'will do better', research suggests

    The little dears...

    Toddlers who tell lies early on are more likely to do well later, researchers claim.

    The complex brain processes involved in formulating a lie are an indicator of a child's early intelligence, they add.

    Maybe this is one of those things where being shocked or offended just shows a certain naivete, a lack of sophistication. I know I've seen "sophistication" cover a multitude of sins. Still this sets me back a bit... Is lying a truly desirable skill like making conversation and knowing which fork to use?

    I do understand the intelligence part where the researcher says that this shows the children

    had developed the ability to carry out a complex juggling act which involves keeping the truth at the back of their brains.

    But is this really "development?" You know, a milestone like toilet training, walking or first words? Doesn't development still imply progress?

    I know I've met some weasels in my time but I still can't imagine that we're ready for "lies readily, easily and effectively about relatively insignificant details" on a resume!

    Can't you picture video of that heartwarming moment when parents first realize their child has reached the level of deciding they should put their own self-interest (in satisfying their curiosity and in not getting caught at it) above honesty and obedience to authority?

    "Doctor, we're worried. our daughter hasn't told her first lie yet...
    She's not even showing any signs of slight prevarication.
    Is  she... normal?"

    Maybe there's a Hallmark lab somewhere prepping a "baby's first lie" card for market... 

    Look, I know that children all experience enough of life that soon enough they realize all these gory details (and more.) It's just that seeing it described as a developmental milestone seems like passive acceptance. In fact, reading this among today's other headlines kinda makes me wonder if we need to redefine "doing well."

    And, in what I'm sure is a totally unrelated detail, the researcher adds

    "They even make bankers in later life."

    Probably just a coincidence, right?

    Posted via web from Ferndale Tonight

    Friday, May 21, 2010

    Memorial Day Came Early This Year

    One of the advantages of insomnia is that you're really on top of the news. One of the disadvantages is that sometimes you learn things that make it that much harder to fall asleep... 
    So I was awake night before last when the news came that a family friend had been killed in Kabul, Afghanistan when a mini-van packed with 1500 pounds of explosives made its way into a convoy. Our friend was one of five Americans killed, one of many total. (The news accounts are really inconsistent about Afghan deaths.)
    Tom leaves behind a wife and two beautiful daughters. Like many military families, they passed through the DC area a few years ago and become part of our congregation. Tom loved his family and loved his Lord and was a wonderful friend and Christian brother. He did his first tour in Kabul during that time, came home safely and a few months later they moved to Italy, then to New York. 

    O God of grace and glory,
    we remember before you our brother Thomas.
    We thank you for giving him to us, his family and friends,
    to know and to love as a companion on our earthly pilgrimage.
    In your boundless compassion, console us who mourn.
    Give us faith to see in death the gate of eternal life,
    so that in quiet confidence we may continue our course on earth,
    until, by your call, we are reunited with those who have gone before;
    through Jesus Christ our Lord.
    Amen

    Tom you've left us too soon.

    At this Memorial Day, we thank you for proving to us the truth of Jesus' words, "Greater love has no man than this: that he lay down his life for his friends." 
    Maybe it's the image of your wife and daughters getting the news that their husband and father won't be coming home. I'm a father of daughters as well. I know what it took to leave them. To trust them to God in the event I didn't come back. Our prayers are with them. 
    We knew Afghanistan was dangerous. But you were in the capital not out in the provinces. And with your rank and your MOS, we just didn't think of it as being "in harm's way" in the classical sense. Like a couple of my trips--in a combat zone but not really in combat. Maybe that's why your death came as such a shock.
    Regardless, the cowardice of a suicide bomber is no way to go. As a warrior, you deserved a better death. 
    One last thing, Tom. And this may seem stupid. But your death makes me feel that I let you down. Not you specifically but you among all our warrior brothers and sisters.
    In "What I Did in The Navy" I wrote about being part of providing warning to our military community, warning y'all of hostile intent. I can't describe how frustrating it is to be here in this bed when y'all are out there. I was good. There's a war on. I should be there with y'all. 
     So when I heard about your death, that useless, impotent, "I wish I had been there--maybe I could have done something" feeling washed over me. I know all the reasons I'm excused. I know that I'm sick. I read the retirement certificate they sent me; thus my service is fulfilled. None of it matters. I wish I had been there. Maybe... 
    All I could feel was that what has happened to you is so untimely and wrong. And as a Brother, I wanted to go to war, to stand in the gap for you and Margo and especially for your girls. But I can't
    So, Tom, on your behalf I offer the warfare that I still can do:

    O God, from the dawn of the first day
    You have cared for Your people.
    By Your hand we were created;
    in Your hand we live;
    and to Your hand we return again.
    You have revealed Yourself in many ways,
    until, in the fullness of time,
    Your Word was made flesh and dwelt among us
    in Jesus Christ our Lord.
    In his life, death, and resurrection
    we find our calling in this world and our hope for the world to come.
    We give You thanks for Your servants,
    who, having lived this life in faith,
    will live eternally with You.
    We especially thank You for Tom, for the gift of his life,
    for the grace You have given him,
    for all in him that was good and kind and faithful.
    Into Your hands, O merciful Savior, we commit Your servant Tom.
    Acknowledge, we pray, a sheep of Your own fold,
    a lamb of Your own flock,
    a sinner of Your own redeeming.
    We thank You that for Tom death is past,
    pain is ended,
    and he has entered the joy You have prepared
    in the company of all the saints.
    Give us faith to look beyond touch and sight,
    and in seeing that we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses,
    enable us to run with perseverance the race that is set before us,
    looking to Jesus,
    the author and finisher of our faith.
    Bring us at last to Your eternal peace,
    through Jesus Christ our Lord,
    Amen.

    God of the living, in whose eyes
    unveiled thy whole creation lies,
    all souls are thine; we must not say
    that those are dead who pass away,
    from this our world of flesh set free;
    we know them living unto thee.

    Released from earthly toil and strife,
    with thee is hidden still their life;
    thine are their thoughts, their works, their powers,
    all thine, and yet most truly ours;
    for well we know, where'er they be,
    our dead are living unto thee.

    Not spilled like water on the ground,
    not wrapped in dreamless sleep profound,
    not wandering in unknown despair
    beyond thy voice, thine arm, thy care;
    not left to lie like fallen tree;
    not dead, but living unto thee.

    Thy word is true, thy will is just;
    to thee we leave them, Lord, in trust;
    and bless thee for the love which gave
    thy Son to fill a human grave,
    that none might fear that world to see
    where all are living unto thee.

    O Breather into man of breath,
    O Holder of the keys of death,
    O Giver of the life within,
    save us from death, the death of sin;
    that body, soul and spirit be
    for ever living unto thee.

    We entrust Tom’s spirit to God
    for we know the merciful Judge of all the earth will do right.
    We entrust Tom to our God
    in the sure and certain hope of the resurrection
    to eternal life through our Lord Jesus Christ,
    who will transform our frail bodies that
    they may be conformed to his glorious body,
    who died, was buried, and rose again for us.
    To Him be glory for ever.
    Amen.

    Jesus said, “Everyone the Father gives to me will come to me;
    I will never turn away anyone who believes in me.”  

    He who raised Jesus Christ from the dead
    will also give new life to our mortal bodies through His indwelling Spirit.

    My heart, therefore, is glad, and my spirit rejoices;
    my body also shall rest in hope.
    You will show me the path of life;
    in Your presence there is fullness of joy,
    and in Your right hand are pleasures for evermore.

    We commend to Almighty God our brother Tom. 
    Lord bless Tom and protect him.
    Lord smile on Tom and be gracious to him.
    Lord show Tom Your favor and give him Your peace.
    In the Name of Your only Son, Our Lord and Savior, Jesus.
    Amen.

    Thursday, May 20, 2010

    Discover

    Have you ever caught a father watching his small child and seen an expression of absolute pleasure, joy, and pure overflowing love?

    Have you ever seen a child discover that father in such a moment?

    Did you see assurance—a sense of place, security, serenity and love—wash over that child in that moment?

    Remember?

    That's what God wants for you:

    "The Lord bless you
           and keep you;
    the Lord make his face shine upon you
           and be gracious to you;
    the Lord turn his face toward you
           and give you peace."
                                             
    - Numbers 6:24-26

    What are you waiting for? (That voice in your head telling you all the reasons you can't? That isn't God—just tell it to shut up.)

    He's already turned toward you. (Really.)

    Isn't it time you turned to Him?

    (Walk to talk about next steps? Give me a shout.)

    Posted via email from Ferndale Tonight

    Tuesday, May 18, 2010

    Book Review: Plan B by Pete Wilson


    It’s one of life’s little ironies that my reading of “Plan B” by Pete Wilson was interrupted by an uptick in symptoms from a chronic life-threatening illness. “What do you do when God doesn’t show up the way you thought He would?” (the subtitle of the book) is a great question to consider when you’re in an infusion clinic waiting for the IV to finish running. Yeah, I’m living “Plan B.”
    I have to confess that I approached “Plan B” with an arms-crossed, show-me attitude. Still in the midst of an 18-month (so far) journey that’s involved (so far) betrayal, rejection, unemployment, financial collapse, life-threatening illness, chronic pain, disability, and adjusting to dependency on my care-giving wife and friends, I was curious what Wilson could offer that some well-meaning Pollyanna hadn’t said already.
    So let me say that Wilson gets it right at every turn. Plan B” is the product of a heart informed by a deep faith in God and tempered by a committed pastor’s exposure to real life. No empty platitudes or cheesy slogans here, Wilson writes about reliance on who God really is, as revealed in the Bible and 21st Century experience.
    Wilson’s “Plan B” isn’t your typical sugar-coated “Kumbaya, My Lord,” better-by-and-by advice book. Wilson quickly and repeatedly points out that most often what really causes us to question God is a matter of timing or method or some other choice of details. Here God is God – the loving, just, Almighty, All-powerful, King of the Universe. And I’m not.
    Peppered with anecdotes drawn from some of life’s hardest questions – the one’s that inspire the roughest “Where is God now?” moments – Wilson provides an always relevant and extremely honest practical book that goes beyond mere happy thoughts to answer the “but what do I do now?” that lingers over every “Plan B.”
    Oh, and Wilson’s book didn’t seem at all out of place in the infusion clinic. It stood up even there – which makes me confident that it’ll stand up for your “Plan B” as well. Get this book.

    Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from Thomas Nelson Publishers as part of their BookSneeze.com book review bloggers program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

    Wednesday, May 12, 2010

    What I Did In The Navy

    For the friends and family who've dreamed up all kinds of explanations, here's the best explanation I've run across for what I was doing all that time in all those odd places:

    Hostile Intent

    The determination of hostile intent is the single most difficult decision that a commander has to make in peacetime.

    —Admiral Frank Kelso

    For more than 75 years, cryptologists and cryptologic technicians have been the single greatest Navy contributors to the commander's understanding of our adversary's intent.
    Thanks, Captain Lambert!

    Sunday, May 9, 2010

    I Know Such a Woman


    I recently read “Three Cups of Tea” by Greg Mortenson and ran across three passages where the subject is Mortenson's wife, Tara, that really hit home...
    From Chapter 22:
    “How many women would have the strength and vision to let the father of their children work in such a dangerous place for months at a time?…Tara not only allows it, but supports it, because she believes so strongly in Greg's mission. If that’s not heroism I don't know what is.”
    I agree. I know such a woman.
    From Chapter 23 where Mortenson is trying to stay out of a firefight:
    “I stopped thinking about escape and started thinking about my kids…trying to imagine how Tara would explain the way I'd died to them, and wondering if they would understand what I was trying to do  how I didn't mean to leave them over here. I decided Tara would make them understand. And that was a pretty good feeling.” 
    I understand. I know such a woman.
    And, finally, from the Acknowledgements:
    “Most of all, I owe immeasurable gratitude to my incredible wife, Tara. I'm glad we took a leap of faith together. You are an amazing companion, confidante, mother, and friend. In my frequent absences over the…years of our marriage…your love has made it possible for me to follow my heart.. I love you.”
    I know – I also love such a woman.
    And 21 years ago she became my wife, only asking for my love, not seeking guarantees of prosperity or security. Willing to walk with me wherever our Lord and our lives would take us. Making it possible for me to follow my heart in following my Lord and His calling, a prototypical military/ministry wife.
    Happy Mother’s Day, Anne.
    I'll echo Mortenson's testimony to the rarity of such women. I've seen too much of life to ignore those who got going when the going got tough.
    I was already in the Navy when she married me, and already stationed too far from home. She had to wait four months after the honeymoon to even be able to catch up with me in Japan. Later, she released me for military service in two combat zones at times when no one was sure what was coming next. The second time with two small children at home and us stationed in a foreign country.
    And, of course, there were all the times both military and ministry when someone asked, “Can we borrow your husband for a bit?”
    As a pastor, I hear about too many ministry families where that pastor does everything he can to duck the inevitable emergency phone calls because it will only cause trouble with a wife who thinks her “white-collar professional” husband should only work 9-5. When the phone rings like that at our house, this "woman God gave me" has clothes laid out and my stuff ready before I’m off the phone.
    She walked readily with me into the unknown country of Parkinson’s Disease, sure that God would somehow resolve this blazing furnace, knowing that “the God we serve is able to save us from it, and he will rescue us… But even if He does not…"
    And I could go on, talking about how she’s swallowed her concerns and let me spend time in homeless camps (sending food along from her pantry, trusting that God would make it up) and on missions trips; freed me for racetrack chaplaincy and the extra time it took to attempt bilingual preaching…
    How she’s thrown herself into ensuring that even the most underfunded weddings were made the most of (more faith from her grocery budget). Sending me to hospitals and funerals and all kinds of other time-with-the-family draining events – even when it had to have made her feel like a de facto single parent – because it’s what we do.
    And how now, once again, she’s faithfully walking with me into this time of sickness and disability and lost income. Taking on the burden of watching over the kids, running our household, driving us all where we need to go, and generally keeping track of me.
    Not to mention that she’s an “eyes on the prize” “worth far more than rubies” woman of faith who remembers (most of the time) that this all doesn’t matter anyhow ‘cause she’s just passing through on her way to that City God is building for us.
    So what does all that have to do with Mothers Day, you ask?
    Wouldn’t you want your children to have such a woman for their mother?

    Wednesday, May 5, 2010

    Consumer debt is not your friend

    From Seth Godin:
    Here's a simple MBA lesson: borrow money to buy things that go up in value. Borrow money if it improves your productivity and makes you more money. Leverage multiplies the power of your business because with leverage, every dollar you make in profit is multiplied.

    That's very different from the consumer version of this lesson: borrow money to buy things that go down in value. This is wrongheaded, short-term and irrational.

    A few decades ago, mass marketers had a problem: American consumers had bought all they could buy. It was hard to grow because dispensable income was spoken for. The only way to grow was to steal market share, and that's difficult. Enter consumer debt.

    Why fight for a bigger piece of pie when you can make the whole pie bigger, the marketers think. Charge it, they say. Put it on your card. Pay now, why not, it's like it's free, because you don't have to repay it until later. Why buy a Honda for cash when you can buy a Lexus with credit?

    One argument is income shifting: you're going to make a lot of money later, so borrow now so you can have a nicer car, etc. Then, when money is worth less to you, you can pay it back. This idea is actually reasonably new--fifty years or so--and it's not borne out by what actually happens. Debt creates stress, stress creates behaviors that don't lead to happiness...

    The other argument is that it's been around so long, it's like a trusted friend. Debt seems like fun for a long time, until it's not. And everyone does it. We've been sold very hard on acquisition = happiness, and consumer debt is the engine that permits this. Until it doesn't.

    The thing is, debt has become a marketed product in and of itself. It's not a free service or a convenience, it's a massive industry. And that industry works with all the other players in the system to grow, because (at least for now) when they grow, other marketers benefit as well. As soon as you get into serious consumer debt, you work for them, not for you.

    It's simple: when the utility of what you want (however you measure it) is less than the cost of the debt, don't buy it.

    Go read Dave Ramsey's post: The truth about debt.


    Dave has spent his career teaching people a lesson that many marketers are afraid of: debt is expensive, it compounds, it punishes you. Stuff now is rarely better than stuff later, because stuff now costs you forever if you go into debt to purchase it. He's persistent and persuasive.

    It takes discipline to forego pleasure now to avoid a lifetime of pain and fees. Many people, especially when confronted with a blizzard of debt marketing, can't resist.

    Resist. Smart people work at keeping their monthly consumer debt burden to zero. Borrow only for things that go up in value. Easy to say, hard to do. Worth it.

    True and clear. Put down the plastic and wait until you can afford it. Our national pain will pass and future will be brighter but the words "I can't afford that right now" have to re-enter our vocabulary.

    Saturday, May 1, 2010

    If Communications Training Came In Fortune Cookies...

    It wouldn’t be any more bite-sized than the Twitter feed from @CDC_CERCCrisis & Emergency Risk Communication (CERC) at the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta. CERC handles CDC’s communications and media relations in the event of a public health emergency.
    Combine that mission with Twitter’s 140-character message format and you end up with concise, high-value advice in chunks most of us can easily digest. If you’ve ever had to deliver unwelcome news, you know just how tricky that can be. These folks are the experts. Some examples:
    When people are stressed, images may have more impact than words. Simple messages with impactful, accurate images help reinforce the message.
    Uncertainty is harder to manage psychologically than bad news. Uncertainty eats at our very core and we will go to extremes to reduce it.
    Crisis Plans: Plan with worst case scenario in mind first. Know what you need for the worst and you will have what you need in any scenario.
    Just go down the list and it won’t be long before you’ll read something that will have you nodding in agreement. And like all good training it’s as much about reminding you of valuable experience as it is about providing you with new insights.
    Now you and I will probably never have to announce a pandemic with causing a panic, but almost all of us experience moments when we have a message that we absolutely must get across. Here’s help for the next time you’re in that spot.
    What advice would you give someone who needs to get their point across?

    Wednesday, April 28, 2010

    Just Unbelieveable

    From The Daily Telegraph (UK), this is an unspeakable tragedy on so many levels:
    The 22-week infant later died in intensive care at a hospital in the mother's home town of Rossano in southern Italy.

    The mother, pregnant for the first time, had opted for an abortion after prenatal scans suggested that her baby was disabled.
    However the infant survived the procedure, carried out on Saturday in the Rossano Calabria hospital, and was left by doctors to die.

    He was discovered alive the following day – some 20 hours after the operation – by Father Antonio Martello, the hospital chaplain, who had gone to pray beside his body.

    He found that the baby, wrapped in a sheet with his umbilical cord still attached, was moving and breathing.

    The priest raised the alarm and doctors immediately arranged for the infant to be taken to a specialist neonatal unit at a neighbouring hospital where he died on Monday morning. . . .


    The increasing number of babies surviving below 24 weeks, partly because of advances in medicine, has led to widespread calls for the legal upper limit to be further reduced.

    Attempts to lower the limit failed in Parliament in 2008.

    In 2005 a baby boy in Manchester was born alive at 24 weeks after surviving three attempts to abort him. He is now a five-year-old schoolboy.
    Is this what we've become, that we can tolerate this?

    Monday, April 26, 2010

    When Mom Said Don't Talk to Strangers...

    ...I don't think she had this in mind:

    Don't talk to aliens, says Stephen Hawking

    THE aliens are out there and Earth had better watch out, at least according to Stephen Hawking. He has suggested that extraterrestrials are almost certain to exist — but that instead of seeking them out, humanity should be doing all it that can to avoid any contact.

    The suggestions come in a new documentary series in which Hawking, one of the world’s leading scientists, will set out his latest thinking on some of the universe’s greatest mysteries. . . .

    Hawking believes that contact with such a species could be devastating for humanity.

    He suggests that aliens might simply raid Earth for its resources and then move on: “We only have to look at ourselves to see how intelligent life might develop into something we wouldn’t want to meet. I imagine they might exist in massive ships, having used up all the resources from their home planet. Such advanced aliens would perhaps become nomads, looking to conquer and colonise whatever planets they can reach.”

    He concludes that trying to make contact with alien races is “a little too risky”. He said: “If aliens ever visit us, I think the outcome would be much as when Christopher Columbus first landed in America, which didn’t turn out very well for the Native Americans.”

    Now to say that Stephen Hawking is bright doesn't quite do him justice. He's an applied mathematician and theoretical physicist. But I still find this a bit startling and apparently I'm not alone--this was all over the media on Sunday.

    Yet when you hear Hawking's logic, it doesn't seem so strange. He basically says to just do the math. There are so many planets in the universe that it doesn't seem strange to him to anticipate life out there. Maybe it's his risk assessment that throws me off.

    My philosophy prof assigned a paper on how the discovery of alien life would impact our worldview (weltanschauung for the pretentious philosophy majors). I was a sophomore so it was probably pretty lame but I do remember observing that the total destruction of our planet would definitely alter my perspective. Fortunately, the professor had a great sense of humor.

    So do you think that by the time the get here they'll have seen Independence Day and be afraid to mess with us?

     

    Posted via web from Ferndale Tonight

    Sunday, April 25, 2010

    "Salient Points"

    Author, speaker, venture capitalist and fellow Posterous blogger Guy Kawasaki is looking for examples of "salient points" for for his next book, The Art of Enchantment. He asks that you leave them as a comment on his Holy Kaw Alltop blog post:
    A salient point takes the truth or the fact and makes it communicate the impact of your decision. All salient points are truthful but not all truths are salient points. For example, imagine if a label on the cheeseburger you were about to eat said, “Eat this, and you’ll gain half a pound” instead of “Total calories: 1,500.”
    Do you have other illustrations of how companies illustrate the salient point and therefore do good marketing? As opposed to providing factual points that don’t…
    Kind of like the difference between data and information, don't you think? That "1,500 calories" is a fact but that "half a pound" sure leaves you informed!
    I know it was parody and I know Volkswagen sued (and National Lampoon removed it) but just for fun this ad from July 1978 comes to mind...
    (Tom McMahon has the full story.)