Check out this YouTube video of an amazing teenager. Ike scores a touchdown for his team.
What’s the big deal? Time Magazine has the story:
Check out this YouTube video of an amazing teenager. Ike scores a touchdown for his team.
What’s the big deal? Time Magazine has the story:
Man, I love Chipotle. Goodness wrapped in a burrito. Chipolte has been very successful creating a niche for their products. Chipolte started as a humble company, but it quickly grew into a national chain. They have a very simple menu, store, and concept:
“Food with Integrity” is our commitment to always look closer, dig deeper, and work harder to ensure that our actions are making things better, not worse. It’s our promise to run our business in a way that doesn’t exploit animals, people or the environment. It is the philosophy that guides every decision we make at Chipotle.
Chipotle shares a special place in the hearts of poor college students. For only about $6, you can get something to eat that tastes great and is fresh. Chipotle has turned this idea into a multi-million dollar business.
Why do some stores or brands fail and other succeed?
A new report this week has left many mainline churches scratching their heads and wondering why church attendance has dropped. The four major mainline churches, the Episcopal Church in the USA, United Methodist Church, Presbyterian (PCUSA), and the Evangelical Lutheran Church of America (ELCA), have all experienced double digit drops in worship attendance. What is even more puzzling is that the ELCA has seen an increase in giving in the last 10 years.
Churches increased attendance in the last decade but lost in attendance numbers in this decade. What gives? The economy?
Check out the Q&A blogger piece in today’s Times Union on my blog. Thanks to Michael Huber at the Times Union for asking me to do it.
We have an incredible opportunity this Sunday to experience God in new ways at the First Baptist Church of Ballston Spa. This Sunday, October 3 is World Communion Sunday. What is World Communion Sunday? The National Council of Church explains:
The day has taken on new relevancy and depth of meaning in a world where globalization often has undermined peace and justice – and in a time when fear divides the peoples of God’s earth. On this day we celebrate our oneness in Christ, the Prince of Peace, in the midst of the world we are called to serve – a world ever more in need of peacemaking.
Churches from every denomination are taking part in this celebration of oneness in Christ. At FBC, we do communion a little differently this Sunday. We have four stations for communion, representing the four corners of the world, and we invite worshipers to visit one or all of the stations. The communion bread consists of different ethnic breads from around the world.
In addition, we have a special quest preacher from the American Baptist Churches International Ministries:
In a recent Pew Religious study, atheists scored highest on a survey asking basic questions regarding religion. Even more surprising is the fact that some answered questions incorrectly when it came to facts about their own faith. The New York Times reports that on average respondents answered half of the questions incorrectly.
Atheists and agnostics scored the highest out of all respondents. Jews and Mormons scored the highest out of all religious groups. White Protestant Christians scored in the middle range.
How could Atheists out score all other religious groups in this simple religious test? It had to be the questions. The questions were too hard, right? Well, there were some basic questions like, “Where was Jesus born?” “Whose writings inspired the Protestant Reformation?” “Which Biblical figure led the exodus from Egypt?” The respondents answered in multiple choice form.
What conclusion can we reach about this study? Atheists know more about religion?
A plan for the future is always a challenge, especially when it deals with money. The former CEO, Alan Schwartz of defunct investment bank Bear Stearns was apparently delusional in March 2008 when he stated that things were going fine with the faltering investment bank:
“Bear Stearns’s balance sheet, liquidity and capital remain strong… Our liquidity position has not changed at all, our balance sheet has not changed at all…
Less than two days after Schwartz spoke these words, Bear Stearns filed for bankruptcy.
How can someone be so off, delusional, and even dense? No wonder nobody wants to trust governmental or business leaders these days. With stuff like this going on, who wants to? When things are going well or when things are going bad there has to be a plan for the future.
Many of us like to think we have a plan, but do we really have a sound plan for our futures? Continue Reading…
In the last 30 years, age-segmented worship was an unforeseen effect of the contemporary worship movement within Christianity. What has developed in many (not all) churches are two worship services. A traditional service with older adults and a commentary service with younger adults. This results into a type of age segregation in congregations.
Rev. Tullian Tchividjian the pastor of Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church, TN is one successful example of a leader who end years of age-segmented worship in his churc.h This process was not easy for Tchividjian, but he gives us an important reality of age separation in worship:
The primary reason, though, that stylistic segregation in worship shrinks our souls is because it prevents us from knowing God deeply. The only way to know him deeply is to have many different types of Christian people in your life, since each person will help to reveal a part of God that you can’t see by yourself. This means the great tragedy of segregation isn’t so much that we see less of each other but that in separating from each other we see less of God. All of us need other lights than our own to see more of his myriad facets.
Will we see a reversal of age segregation in worship services in churches in the United States?
Most likely, we will not see a drastic change. However, you will see a large minority of churches in the next 10 years beginning to have blended worship. Robert Webber, considered the father of modern blended worship, proclaimed in several books that the way to enrich our worship is through both the proven practices of our shared historical Christian heritage and modern approaches to worship.
Leonard Sweet, professor and author, continues to speak about the four keys to worship that is passionate and connects the people. No matter what the worship tradition, churches that are reaching people are doing four things “EPIC”:
At my church, we continue to slowly employ various forms of authentic Christian worship and music. We sing contemporary songs, hymns, responses, pray printed prayers, pray in silence, pray informally, gather, hear the word, use multimedia, use different ways to receive communion, use organ, piano, guitar, bass, choir, song leaders, and use a diverse mix of worship styles. It is a tension of beloved methods of worship and new.
The future of American churches depends on how church leaders can adapt and worship in authentic ways and not use gimmicks. Remember, Christ commanded us to make disciples, not converts. The glam of emotionally charged, arm twisting, and entertainment based worship tends to produce converts. We need richer worship practices.
People want to experience God. People want to have spiritual encounters with God and that can be done by including everyone: young, old, youth, children, black, white, gen-X, gen-y, and Baby Boomers. Let us end the segregation in worship by having a rich, diverse, and authentic worship that praises God and feeds the worshiper.
We had a great time at our Fall Festival @ FBC Ballston Spa this past Sunday. Check out some pictures from the event. Thanks to Kristen Champion Terrell and her crew for making it a dynamite event!
Jon Stewart and his Daily Show crew are on to something. Just as Glenn Beck had his “Restoring Honor” rally in Washington D.C., Steward is holding a “Rally To Restore Sanity.” http://www.rallytorestoresanity.com/ on October 30, 2010. Just days before the mid-term elections. Stephen Colbert is holding a counter rally, “March to Keep The Fear Alive” http://www.keepfearalive.com/ on the same day. This is all very funny and will no doubt draw cheer and jeers from conservatives and liberals.
Clearly a farce on Glenn Beck, Stewart and Colbert are masterminds at political and social comedy, however they are missing one essential element in this rally. The clergy. Glenn Beck had his “Black Robe Regiment” with his rally and Jon Stewart needs clergy. Actually, he needs me. I propose that Steward build a Black Robe Brigade. I wrote about Beck’s Christian aspirations and open theism in my Times Union blog post and Stewart needs some clergy support.
So, what can I do for you Jon Stewart?
This Sunday, September 19 from 11:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. bring your family to the First Baptist Church of Ballston Spa for a fun Fall Festival. There will be food, ice cream, games, and a bounce house for the kids. This is a FREE event and we invite everyone to come by and enjoy some food and fun. Parking is available in the church lot and on the street.
202 Milton Ave. Ballston Spa, NY 885-8361 http://www.fbcballstonspa.org
In 1833, an employee at the Patent Office in Washington, D.C., wrote the following letter:
Dear Sir:
Because everything that can be invented has already been invented, it is inevitable that this office should go out of business. Inasmuch as I shall soon lose my position, I hereby resign to look for work elsewhere.
Sincerely,
Up to that point, less than 500 patents had been applied for in the United States; but by the time World War I was over, more than 60,000 patents had been issued. Today the number runs in the millions.1
Clearly, that guy lacked vision. He could of used Lasik for his brain. We read something like this and think, “Wow, what an idiot.” How could someone look into the future and believe that there is nothing for them. This guy did not even give himself a chance to wait to see what happens. He just gave up.
There has to be a better way of planning, but who can plan for every possible outcome?
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