graduation season

every graduation i have ever been to has been the exact same. being a youth minister i go to quite a few commencement ceremonies each year. i love being there for the people who are graduating but i pretty much hate all the ceremonies that i’ve been to. it’s that time again – time for the boring ceremonies that i write notes while sitting through.

elvis miniseries celebrity

hey guys & girls watch real closely when you are viewing the end of the elvis miniseries wednesday night (after church of course) because one of our own is an extra within the made for t.v. movie. audrey fort (who graduated last year and is now a student at tulane) is an extra within the movie. keep your eyes peeled for her.

SIDE NOTE – this is post number 366 which means i am now working on my second year’s worth of posts (365 posts equalling one year’s worth).

the kitchen

cabinet doors
pam and i have been remodeling our kitchen for awhile and today we took another step closer to being finished. tonight i installed our glass doors. these doors didn’t used to have glass in them – nope they had boring panels. we took them into to a local glass company and asked if they had any cool glass we could put in them. the owner said if we had a little time he could gather glass from the old windows they replace and insert that glass in our doors. it took over a month but we finally were given doors that have glass in them from the early 1900s. how cool is that?

okay, maybe this is boring to most of you but i love it. i think they look great and i enjoy the fact that we are recycling the glass from older homes.

the real id act

tomorrow (tuesday, may 10, 2005) the senate is scheduled to vote on the “real id act“. here’s what sojourners had to say about the “real id” act within their april 13th issue of sojomaill.

The United States’ long-standing history as a beacon of hope to people around the world fleeing political, religious, and other forms of persecution is under assault in Congress. A bill, soon to be considered in the Senate, contains provisions that will make it impossibly difficult for refugees fleeing persecution to seek safety in the United States by obtaining asylum.

Under the bill, known as the REAL ID Act, trivial details – like a woman’s failure to recall her date of high school graduation – could be used to deny her asylum, even though she has fled from genocide, rape, forced abortion, severe domestic violence, or the threat of honor killing. Another provision of the bill would allow a torture survivor to be delivered back into the hands of his persecutors; the bill prohibits a U.S. federal court from preventing his deportation back to his oppressive home country while his case is still pending.

The REAL ID Act is based on the false argument that asylum laws in the United States are open to exploitation by terrorists. Current law already bars people who present a security risk from getting asylum – asylum seekers already undergo rigorous security and background checks from the time they apply until their cases are resolved.

basically, aside from quite possibly messing around with the civil liberties of american citizens, the act will make it much more difficult for political refugees to find asylum within the united states. so much for the “give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free.”

you can let your voice be heard by going to this link.

they better not screw this one up

i can’t wait until december 9th because not only is it four days before my youngest son’s birthday but it is also the release date for the theatrical interpretation of c.s. lewis’ book “the lion, the witch, and the wardrobe.” here’s the trailer for it. i believe it looks pretty good but of course, it’s only a trailer and the quality of a trailer doesn’t always reflect the quality of the movie.

CITIZEN-TIMES.com: East Waynesville Baptist Church pastor says nobody ousted for political beliefs

CITIZEN-TIMES.com: East Waynesville Baptist Church pastor says nobody ousted for political beliefs
this is absurd – just in case you haven’t heard about this click the link and read the article. there seems to be some dispute concerning whether or not the pastor of this church kicked members out of the church because they voted democratic. yet to me it is blatantly obvious that there was a republican agenda was pushed within the church.

first statement – why do they always have to be baptist?

    every time i hear a news report concerning CHRISTians doing something stupid all i can think is “please don’t let them be baptists!” i don’t really want any CHRISTians getting bad press (or more particular doing anything stupid in the first place) but it just seems like my denomination has more than it’s share of bonehead moments.

second statement – when are we evangelicals going to be more concerned with doing what GOD wants within politics rather than just being pawns of a political party – republican or democrat?

    it simply blows my mind to think of how we american CHRISTians have sold ourselves to political parties instead of standing up and speaking prophetically to all involved within the political process.

stop the insanity!

who would i be?

today i got the chance to go worship at the church i went to in college. i loved that church and still do. it was an incredible church of people who loved each other and it still is. it is a fantastic church and i am incredibly thankful that i’m not there. about four years ago i seriously talked with the pastor about interviewing with the church to become their youth minister. i really liked the pastor. he was a great guy to talk with and i knew that i liked the church. yet, pam and i felt that it wasn’t what GOD wanted for us and therefore we ended the conversations with the pastor (the youth minister there now is a great guy who came over and did our disciplenow for us at parkview).

when i went to the church today all i could think of was how thankful i am to be at parkview instead of the church from my past. i have been in baton rouge for four and a year years and pam and i have grown in some new directions since being here. my ideas on social justice and worship have changed dramatically during my time in baton rouge. these were both concepts that i had been dealing with before coming to parkview and in fact i would not say that the staff or church have been major influences within the shifts in my thinking. yet it has been here in baton rouge that my view of what worship is and a growing emphasis on social justice as an important part of CHRISTian faith have developed.

while i was visiting the church from my past i just kept on thinking what i would be like if i had ended up there.

elvis, elivs, let me be

i’m presently watching the elvis miniseries on cbs and thirty minutes into it they have already used the following stereotypical elvis sayings:

  • “thank you, thank you very much”
  • “elvis has left the building”

i’m thinking this is going to be a little cheesy.

anyhow, pam, the boys & i spent the weekend in mobile celebrating our mothers (hi mom). it was a great weekend. for those who were a part of this year’s disciplenow you will remember andy neely. pam and i ate with andy and ellen and they say “hey.”