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Mom of the Year

Some friends sent this to Tisha. Hilarious!

He Blew It!

At the Frisco RoughRiders game last night, their starter pitched a really good game. He gave up one run on three hits through seven innings. Going into the 8th, the RoughRiders were up 2-1. A set-up man came into pitch the 8th. He gave up no runs and allowed only one hit. Then in the 9th the RoughRiders brought in their closer who threw 95 mph heat! He gave up 5 earned runs on 4 hits. Ouch. The lesson is…one bad outing can mess up 8 innings worth of greatness.

The same rings true for us in life. All it takes in one slip of the tongue, one outburst of fury, or maybe even keeping your mouth closed when something should be said to ruin a situation. In the end, fixing things is 10 times harder and more arduous than messing them up was. While contextually James seems to be addressing an attitude we should have toward the word, maybe, “Know this my beloved brothers: let every person be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger; for the anger of man does not produce the righteousness of God” (James 1:19-20) can speak to us in a broader sense about why its important to be on guard at all times?

Feeding the Poor of Honduras

A while back I posted concerning an effort by my friend Trey Morgan to raise money to feed the impoverished of Honduras. You can read several of Trey’s recent posts here and here.

Today he will be coordinating an effort to raise money to help feed the people who look for food at this particular dump. $20 will feed them for a day. If you would like to help, visit Trey’s site today and you can find out how.

Thanks!

A Thought About Stereotypes

Several days ago, I read a review of Kevin Roose’s book The Unlikely Disciple by John Dobbs that so intrigued me that I had to go to Barnes & Noble the next day and get a copy. It’s an amazingly well-written book that captivates the reader in a number of different ways. What’s most intrigued me has been his concessions about stereotypes.

I am not going to go into the nature of Roose’s experiment. You can read John’s review to get the jist of it. Or you can watch the YouTube video below to get an idea about what the book’s about. But I will say that, insofar as I’ve read, Roose reveals an inherent danger in buying into certain traditional stereotypes. Sometimes things aren’t as we might expect, nor as they might seem. That’s the danger in making irrational judgments about people without considering the authenticity of a person. Formulating opinions of people based upon ethnic, gender, socio-economic and religious stereotypes is shallow, lazy and inconsiderate.

Jesus crushed the complex ethnic and religious stereotypes of both Jews and Samaritans by engaging a Samaritan woman at Jacob’s well (John 4) and telling a parable of a Samaritan who helped man, presumably a Jew, left for dead (Luke 10:25-37). He sought to change conceptions of how Kingdom people looked at others. Stereotyping disrespects others and leaves us in the dark about the reality of people.

If you are a person who gets no further with people than a silly stereotype, think about what you might be missing! You may miss out on the opportunity of affording one the “good news.” You may miss out on your own personal elucidation concerning people about whom you are misguided. Get to know people deeply. Try to understand where they’re coming from. If we do, we’ll be more effective as salt and light to the world (Matthew 5:13-16).

The Unlikely Disciple

Prayer

Yesterday I was ill, but I am feeling somewhat better today. Apparently, there’s a stomach bug going around that I contracted. Fortunately for me, it wasn’t nearly as bad as some I’ve heard about.

For a while now I’ve been thinking a lot about prayer. Yesterday, I was afforded a considerable amount of time to think about it. The jury is still out on whether it did much good or not. ;>)

I tread lightly around the subject of prayer because of its nature. I often listen to people who struggle regarding its efficacy. I listen, advise, and am forced to admit my own struggles with the subject. Do I pray enough? Is there real substance to my prayers? Or am I just uttering words I’ve heard all my life included in prayers and passing them off as something meaningful when they aren’t?

Will God answer? When will God answer? Does God care? Why? Why? Why? I suppose for this reason, the subject of prayer in particular strikes an uneasy nerve in many of us. So here’s a quote worth considering. Maybe it will cause you, too, to reflect.

“The self-sufficient do not pray, the self- satisfied will not pray, the self-righteous cannot pray. No man is greater than his prayer life.”

Leonard Ravenhilll

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