Trying Out Blooom

I kept hearing about Blooom on a few financial podcasts that I listen to (particularly “Stacking Benjamins which is one of my two favorite – the other being Clark Howard who I love – seriously Clark Howard is the best, if you aren’t listening to him you should, like right now, stop reading this and listen to Clark) so I thought I would try it out. I really like what they have recommended with my retirement account and the fact that it automatically re-balances my funds 4 times a year is wonderful. Anyhow if you go here and try it out you get a deal and I get a referral Amazon credit of $10 It is a win-win.

https://mbsy.co/w2ntm

Blooom is a roboadvisor that manages your employer based 401k. They look at your funds and within your 401k provider balances your funds to to match your financial goals and comfort with risk while looking for the lowest cost funds within your 401k provider. A human advisor would take a percentage of your fund total. Blooom is a set fee.

Thus far I really like Blooom.

This World Has Nothing For Me … Except For This

Adam just introduced me to the Instagram account PreacherNSneakers which is basically just an account of the price of certain celebrity preachers’ (I can’t believe this is a category now) shoes and their various other clothes.

In Steve Martin’s classic movie “The Jerk” there is this great scene where Steve Martin’s character proclaims again and again how he doesn’t need anything. Well sort of.

When I see the photos and price tags attached on PreachersNSneakers I have a hard time not imagining these preachers singing a “Jerk” paraphrased version of anyone of a number of worship songs that basically say “this world has nothing for me”. I’ll mention “This World” by Caedmon’s Call because I believe it is one of the better ones.

Anyhow the paraphrase I hear in my mind when i see these photos goes something like this.

This world has nothing for me … except THIS.

Proud to be Paid in Full as of Today

I’m going to brag about a family accomplishment that took place today.

One of the things that has been very important to Pam and me has been for our boys to be able to go to college, if they wanted to, without accruing a huge amount of debt. I am not opposed to debt, I think Dave Ramsey goes a little wacko with his anti-debt thing (I’m honestly not a big Ramsey fan – he’s great for getting out of debt but I think much of his other advice is suspect). I am however opposed to bad debt. Good debt helps you accomplish good goals and therefore has reasonable debt ceilings. Bad debt burdens you and keeps you from being able to do what you want and feel called to do because you have to make a serious student loan payment each month. So it was important to us that our boys education be done in a manner that they were enabled to do whatever they felt called to do. If they felt called to work in job that didn’t pay much it would be much easier to do so if they weren’t burdened with a large student loan. So the whole family made sacrifices to make sure that they were both freed from large student loans as a result of their undergraduate degrees.

When I say the whole family I mean the whole family. Both boys were a part of this. They both worked hard to cover their own expenses and earn scholarships. Adam worked in the woods of Minnesota to earn scholarships from the Conservation Corps and Noah worked as a Resident Adviser to get free room and board. Both boys also understood that they needed to pick a good regional school for this to work. I know they both would have enjoyed going to flagship universities. We told them that we would pay for a good regional school and anything beyond that was on them, though we hoped they would choose to not have any debt. They both earned wonderful degrees from the University of Wisconsin – Eau Claire. They made wise choices and that made this possible.

Pam and I also have made choices that helped to accomplish this and sometimes we have also just been lucky. We both worked hard for the extra income to pay for tuition but we also got lucky with opportunities occurring when they did. For example, Pam worked as much as possible during the Summer semesters at UWSP and took up opportunities that provided extra income that enabled us to pay towards the boys’ school. She has worked extra committees and completed non-necessary projects to help us achieve this goal. In addition, my job with Corporate Chaplains of America popped up at a time when I was looking for some extra income to cover college expenses. A notice concerning it appeared on a friend’s Facebook page right when I was looking. Turns out that I love being a chaplain as much as I love being a pastor. I work hard at chaplaining and pastoring but I didn’t control seeing that Facebook Ad. That was luck. and the privilege of knowing people who would post such ads. I was just able to take advantage of the circumstances that occurred. The reason I say this is because while Pam and I have worked hard to make sure that the boys’ school has been paid for. We earned extra income and cut many unnecessary expenses. Still I also recognize that it hasn’t been all by our work and effort. Others, often, don’t have such opportunities. Much has happened for us because of God’s blessing and some has occurred because of some of the privileges that I have had that others have not had. We didn’t get here just by our hard work.

I need to say that our circumstances now are quite different than they were in the past. For most of our marriage and for most of the boy’s lives we have been a family with one primary income and, at best, a small side income, and often no side income, from the other spouse. This was a purposeful choice on our part. We went through many years of living paycheck to paycheck and not paying certain bills at certain times because our cash reserves couldn’t handle the payment. We had the opportunity to make this choice, while others don’t. I am thankful for that opportunity and I recognize that it was a gift. In addition much of our professional time was spent with the primary income being a traditionally low paying job. Televangelists, and some mega-church senior pastors, might make it look otherwise but ministerial positions aren’t typically high paying positions. The same is true with Pam’s position. She could leave her professorial position and receive a pay raise instantly. Income has never been our primary motivator. Still our circumstances over the past 5 years have been vastly different from our circumstances in the past, and that made paying for school possible. We made choices to put ourselves in as good of a situation as possible but we were also lucky that the extra income came at the right time and that we didn’t have catastrophe’s happen at the wrong time. Once again what we did with our choices mattered, but we were also blessed and privileged.

So why do I write about this today? Even tough Noah walked in his graduation two weeks ago he still has one class he needs to finish. He will finish it next Friday and be officially finished with his undergraduate degree. Today Pam and I paid for that class and therefore both boys will have graduated with their Bachelor of Science degrees without a bit of debt.

This is seriously one of the prouder moments of my life. I am so proud of our family. All four of us working together made this possible. I also recognized that so much of this has been freely gifted to us.

Noah Graduated from UWEC Today

Today Noah graduated from the University of Wisconsin – Eau Claire Cum Laude with his Bachelor’s Degree. Now he prepares for new adventures. I am very proud of him and so is Pam. He is one really cool young man.

Redemption Stories

The Uptown Theater was amazing and a midnight movie in Minneapolis is a very interesting experience.

This past weekend Adam, the oldest son, and I went to the Uptown Landmark Theater in Minneapolis to see the Black & Chrome edition of Mad Max: Fury Road. I have seen Fury Road at least three times before but there was something about watching it at the Landmark that helped me to see elements that I hadn’t seen before. Maybe it was the Black & Chrome version of the film (it was seriously awesome in black & white) or maybe it was seeing it on the big screen for the first time that helped me to see these elements (wow the chase scenes were incredible on the big screen). I’m not sure which. What I know is that the movie went from being a movie that I like to being a movie that I love. One of the things that I loved about the movie was its redemptive aspect. This really stood out as Adam and I watched it. I hadn’t noticed before how much of the story was about redemption.

At the moment Pam and I are watching PBS’s version of Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables. If you have ever read the book, watched this wonderful version of Hugo’s book, or watched the musical adaptation of the book then you know this too is a story of redemption. It is such a good book.

There are redemption stores all around us. We are desperate for them.

Unfortunately often in the church we become fascinated with holiness stories. Actually outside of the church we do the same thing, we just don’t call it holiness. Instead outside the church we just focus on people’s faults, rather than calling them sin, and specifically the faults that aren’t like ours (because our faults aren’t really that bad, are they?). So both in the church and outside of the church we often focus on telling people to follow the social norms, the law, the unspoken customs, or doing the proper religious actions. When people don’t do those we jump in, call them out, and revel in the fact that we are briefly “better” than whoever we just called out. Pointing out someone else’s sin or fault give us a brief, perverse feeling of superiority.

Holiness is good, please don’t think I am saying otherwise. It just isn’t the center of Christianity. Redemption, specifically redemption through the death and life of Jesus, is the center of Christianity. God is holy and a part of His holiness is that He consistently redeems those who He has called to be holy but who unfortunately haven’t been able to be holy like He is holy (Leviticus 11:44). All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God (Romans 3:23), BUT God so loves us that He gave His only begotten Son that we might not perish for our lack of holiness (John 3:16). To be a follower of Christ is to be someone who claims the ultimate redemption story. In a world that loves to tell redemption stories in our media (books, film, music, etc) but doesn’t actually want to allow for the sacrificial forgiveness of redemption in real life (what do you mean that I am supposed to love the one who hurt me?) we followers of Jesus need to be the people who actually believe in and practice real redemption.

Real redemption is costly. Real redemption is difficult. Real redemption is messy. Real redemption is beautiful. Real redemption is what the world longs for and what we in the church have through Jesus.

Pam Knows Me

In one of the ongoing message threads that Pam and I have with the boys, the incredible woman whom I love once again proved that she knows me. Here’s what she sent.

And here is the actual tweet/video that she was referencing.

You see I have a bit of a problem with Medical Doctors co-opting the title Doctor. 1st being a minister and understanding where the title “doctor” came from (i.e. “doctor of the church”) will do that to you, and 2nd being a workman’s compensation adjuster at one point in your life also has a tendency to do that to you (MD: “I am a person of science!” Me: “Nope your a technician who basically just wrote the report that I asked you to write.”)

I have great respect for Medical Doctors and I trust their advice when it comes to medicine. I don’t go down the whole “I don’t trust traditional medicine” route. I trust the experts. I am just not a fan of how the term “Doctor” has come to mean “Physician”. That isn’t what it actually means and it shouldn’t be the generally understood meaning (don’t go down the route of language being socially constructed – you’ll interrupt my rant 🙂 ).

I’m not much on titles but if you are going to expect people to refer to you with your co-opted title outside of your professional setting (I understand the need for the title in the hospital setting) then you should do the same for others who have earned their doctorates. When you greet my highly-intelligent PhD Professor wife you should either acknowledge that you will be on a first named basis with her or refer to her with the honorific of either “Doctor” or “Professor”. While we are at it I prefer that people call me by my first name but if you are going to be picky then the name is Reverend Doctor Terrell, thank you very much. Realistically just use my first name and I will use yours.

I do tend to get a little worked up over this. Anyhow Brooklyn 99 is awesome!

Obi Wan/Vader “A New Hope” Fight Reimagined

In my opinion if you are a Star Wars fan you should watch this reimagining of the fight between Obi Wan and Darth Vader in Episode IV: A New Hope. It is wonderful.

As the oldest boy child pointed out this Vader connects so much better with the Vader of rage and power shown at the end of Rogue One.

Christianity is for Beginners

I recently started reading Karl Barth’s “Evangelical Theology: An Introduction” and it has been a wonderful reminder of why he is considered one of the greatest theologians, if not the greatest, of the 20th century. He is so good.

I used this quote from Barth a couple of week’s ago at Tapestry.

The invocation “Our Father,” and all the Christian life and ethos implicit in this invocation, can never at any stage or in any form be anything but the work of beginners.

Karl Barth, The Christian Life – Page 122 

I think it is a great reminder that there are no experts in the Christian faith. We don’t move from Christian apprenticeship to a Christian journeyman to finally a Christian master craftsman. We are always beginners because we claim to be followers of God incarnate. We will never master what it means to follow Him. This should produce a great deal of humility within us.

As beginners we should always be open to learning and correction. As scripture says we should be “quick to listen” and “slow to speak” (James 1:19). This doesn’t mean we don’t speak and don’t confront, but it does mean that when we do we do so with great humility. “Pride goes before destruction, a haughty spirit before a fall.” (Proverbs 16:18). Our pride makes us want to be quick to speak, to think that we have mastered some aspect of faith and life. Pride leads to accusations and anger. Humility leads to questions and understanding.

If you call Jesus Lord then you have enter of faith of beginners. I’m not sure that this will ever change, even when we one day see our Lord face to face. Then we will know even as we are known (1 Corinthians 13:11-13) but that doesn’t mean we will have mastered anything.

Into Your Hands

HAPPY RESURRECTION DAY!

As a church during Lent we have focused on the seven last words of Christ. For holy week we are sharing some artwork by Scott Erickson inspired by the traditional seven last words of Jesus from the cross.

Today is Jesus’s words, “Father, into Your hands I commit my spirit.”

Jesus trusted the Father. So should we. Our Father has good hands and we can trust Him, even when His will seems odd to us.

SIDE NOTE – If you don’t have a home church in the Stevens Point Area we (Tapestry) would love for you to join us for worship today (Sunday) at 10:30 am at Washington Elementary School (3500 Prais Street, Stevens Point)

Finished

As a church during Lent we have focused on the seven last words of Christ. For holy week we are sharing some artwork by Scott Erickson inspired by the traditional seven last words of Jesus from the cross.

Today is “It is finished.”

Jesus completed the Father’s will and all that is necessary for us to be a part of the Kingdom of God. He declared it all to be accomplished. We have to learn to trust that He completed all that was necessary for us to receive and live in God’s grace.