For the last two years our oldest has been homeschooled for Kindergarden and First Grade. It has been a good experience for both her and my wife. Addison has grown to be a passionate reader during this time. While still in Clinton she went to a school on Fridays that was specifically for homeschooled kids. She loved it. She’s such a social bug.
In the transition from Clinton to Oxford, there was the five month stop in New Albany that was just a crazy time for us. So she continued her home schooling there. But now that we are in Oxford, we have been chewing on the possibilities of Addison going to school each day. We’ve checked into a local private school and also the public school that is in our district.
Now we don’t have the notion that all public schools are quagmires of debauchery and evil. On the contrary. But it had been important for us in the early years to do some intentional teaching and development of our children. And it looks like Addison will be attending public school starting next month. We’ve heard great things about the school system, and I’ve met with the principal a couple of times. Addison got to meet her too and take a tour of the school and meet a few teachers.
She is pumped! We excited for her. But it will also mean some adjustments for us as we’ll have to be making sure she’s up and ready for school (and whoever is taking her to school as well) each morning. Do we make lunch or eat the caf food? Make sure we go to bed earlier. All the things that most home probably do already.
But as the final decisions are made, keep us in your prayers. Change can be good.
The 40 Day Fast is a collaborative effort of 80 bloggers to equip and inspire other to take action on behalf of those in need. Today Stephen and I are the two bloggers for July 21st. Be sure to visit him as well.
I first heard of Charity when my wife was looking through a magazine and asked me if I’d heard of Charity: Water. I’d not. But she thought it would be a nice idea to give as a gift. She said we’d pay $20 for a bottle of water and have it sent to friends and family. At first I thought, “Twenty bucks? For a bottle of water?!?”
But as I began to read and research, I was hooked on them. Their site is very well done and tells the story of what they do and why they do it. And 100% of all money donated goes towards building a well. They have separate donors who buy the water. So that means if you pay $20 for a bottle of water, all $20 goes to well building. We bought a handful of bottles of water for Christmas, and plan to continue to do so in the future.
Unsafe water and lack of basic sanitation cause 80% of all sickness and disease, and kill more people every year than all forms of violence, including war. Many people in the developing world, usually women and children, walk more than three hours every day to fetch water that is likely to make them sick. Those hours are crucial, preventing many from working or attending school. Additionally, collecting water puts them at greater risk of sexual harassment and assault. Children are especially vulnerable to the consequences of unsafe water. Of the 42,000 deaths that occur every week from unsafe water and a lack of basic sanitation, 90% are children under 5 years old.
Scott Harrisonbegan Charity: Water after working in the club promotion scene in New York. But he realized that there was more to life. That all the excess and “fun times” really didn’t bring fulfillment. So he remembered where the Bible tells us to server the poor. So he found out where the poorest people in the world were at the time and sought out a way to server them. He was going to give a year of his life.
So he ended up applying to be a photographer with Mercy Ships, a humanitarian organization which offered free medical care in the worlds poorest nations. Scott took photos to document the experiences as a photojournalist. He saw the lack of water and the effects it was having on the health and welfare of the people in Africa.
And from what Scott saw and experienced as a photojournalist with Mercy Ships changed him. When he returned to New York and went to the same parties, he realized that the money spent on a bottle of bubbly in NYC would provide life changing water to hundreds of people.
So he threw a fund raiser, invited all his friends and contacts, and Chairty: Water was born.
In 18 months Charity: Water has raised over $3 Million Dollars and funded over 600 water projects. View the wells by country. You can view the wells on Google Earth too.
In many places in this world, Jesus is waiting for His mom to come back from her long walk and wait at the well to bring back some dirty water. We can make a difference in helping make sure that clean water is available for all people on Earth. I know that there are many different organizations and ministries that are working towards that goal. And I firmly believe that Charity: Water is making a huge difference in hundreds of thousands of lives.
This Saturday was when the $200 instant rebate ended on the Canon 40D. I had been looking at it over and over and over…and pulled the trigger. It will be in sometime this week. I’m both excited and nervous. I sometimes have a hard time making decisions on purchases like this.
But I think I”m going to be more than happy after I learn my way around the controls. Now it’s time to get a lens.
Two weeks ago I traveled to Tupelo to be a part of a church planters school. It’s a group of people who have been together for a little while, but I was able to sit in on it because it was held at our sister church. Darrin Patrick was in from St. Louis. Darrin is the pastor of The Journey, a church he started a few years ago.
He was quite interesting. Pretty conservative in his theology, but not at all in methodology and practice. I know you can’t take everything a person says and take it as “the way to do everything you do”. But he had some really interesting insights into different things.
I took notes. And here are a few things I scribbled down:
“The local church is the hope for the world”
denominationalism is decaying, but networks are rising. they need to partner together
Worships is contextualized for the areas of the city that The Journey is in. And yes, they do hymns.
They do celebratory worship at the end of the service because “they’ve met God and now respond to Him.”
People who did not grow up in church are anchorless…so they need anchoring.
Only 2% of churches reach 800 people in attendance.
Edit
Of church plants that “make it” after 3 years: the avg. attendance after 1 year is 40, 2 years is 80, and after three years is 120ish.
Who is Jesus? What did He come to do? :: Never stray away from that!
Determine what is in your closed fist and your open hand. Make sure the Truth is in your fist, and the methodologies are in your open palm.
Mobilize the church to serve the city. The goal of your church is not to put butts in the seats.
Spiritual warfare is MASSIVE upon church plants. So guard against it. And protect your family as well.
The gospel has to penetrate your heart.
To break the 150 barrier you have to be innovative.
Repackaging how you present small groups.. Are we pushing small groups as a program, or the value we seek to find in small groups (community, discipleship, belonging, serving.) Cast the vision on the Biblical value. Show them Jesus, not a program to count numbers.
People want something more than a program. They want to be able to see a holistic vision.
Don’t substitute days off for Sabbaths.
You don’t want your church to be a mission in community, but a community on mission.
Confront sin where you see it happening in your church following Matthew 18. Might have to remove membership & communion privileges.
Contextualization: Not giving people what they want. It’s giving them God’s answers – which they may not want – in forms they can comprehend.
-What are the questions of culture?
How do we clearly display Christ so that people can accurately accept or deny His claims.
Here are some general observations I made on vacation:
For some reason I don’t shower as much as I usually do when I’m at home. I guess since I spent so much time in the clorinated pool it seemed to suffice.
Sometimes I think getting a tattoo might be cool. But then I see a lot of bad examples of tattoos, and I rethink things.
Just because a restaurant has a lot of cars in the parking lot doesn’t mean it is good. We at at Hazel’s the first night. I’d rather eat rice cakes than go back there.
Even when you’re gone for a while, it seems there are things you don’t get done.
Movies seen on vacation seem to be more special.
I still don’t sleep late on vacation. But I didn’t want to anyhow.
Driving down the entire state with three kids isn’t that bad if you leave late enough for them to sleep most of the way. I was tempted to give them Benadryl, but it wasn’t needed.
Internet access on vacation seems wrong to some. It’s comfy to me.
You will go with out a lot of clothes in front of extended family at the beach and it’s not awkward. There is no way I’d walk into a Thanksiving dinner or Memorial Day cookout dressed only in nylon shorts and dripping wet and have normal conversations w/ my wife’s aunts. But on the beach? Straight from the pool? Who cares?
You can get burned quickly at the beach.
If you go to the pool about twice a day for five days, you’ll see some really interesting people there and think you know a lot about them.
Outdoor pools usually trump indoor pools.
Ground floor condos trump upper level condos. Sure, there’s not quite the view. But the access to everything makes such the difference.
Early this morning we roll back into town. We’ve been gone on vacation for the last 5 or 6 days. Orange Beach, AL! So I’ve got a few stories to tell. A few observations. And tons of pics. It was good.
I absolutely loved crawling into my own bed in the very dark hours of night/morning. But when I work up this morning I missed being able to look out of my bedroom and see the pool and the ocean.
It seems they might try to sometimes. I don’t really know if it’s true or not. You could tell me they come in 2’s or 5’s and I could make it fit just as well most of the time.
But on the old (not ole, but old) iBook G4 I usually use the dc-in board had gone out. Don’t know what a dc-in board was? Me neither til I did some research. It’s a thing inside the computer that accepts the charge from your power cord and gives it to your battery. So no dc-in board, no workie. But I ordered a new used one off of eBay Monday. Should be here any day now. But then I’ll have wifi and be portable again. As it stands now I can actually get about 5 minutes of charge for every hour it’s plugged in.
Then the refrigerator started clicking and humming. Soon our ice cream was all melted and the Flavo-Ice was nothing but juice. Something was keeping the compressor from turning on. Turns out the fridge was still under warranty! So some nice guys from the University of South Panola came today and replaced a circuit board, plugged it back into a nice little whirl and hum of a compressor and were on their way. All it cost me was a handshake.
Then the check engine light came on last week in my Hoe (it’s what I call the Tahoe). Then things started shimmying and shaking a lot when driving. Turns out my plugs and wires needed replacing. I don’t know what that means, but it drives better now. Thought the light did come back on that tells me to service engine soon. Probably that O2 sensor. Blast it. And this cost me much more than a handshake.
So my fear now is that this postpones the purchase of a DSLR again. Drat!
So Wednesday night when a friend was at VBS with her Nikon D80, I was able to try it out. Liked it. I’d held one in the store before. And a friend in Clinton had had one and I snapped a few pics one time with theirs too. But this was the first time I was actually able to walk around with one for a bit. It further fueled my itch to get a DSLR soon.
But for some reason I keep looking at the Canon’s more. I really don’t think there’s a bad decision to be made. But the Canon 40D is where my heart is I think. It’s a touch heavier/bulkier than the Nikon D80, but is a step above better camera too I think.
If/when I take the dive, it will be with a bit of financial commitment, but I think I’m going to love it. I can spend hours on Flickr if I’m not careful. And I’ve found a few photography forums too. Great resources, all of them. And some great places to show off your work and get help and critiques .
The other night at VBS a friend wo is a local photographer took lots of pics of the kids. At the end we got her to take a pic of my famikly since our pic on the church’s website was really old and only had four of us in it. It turned out really good!