When faith gets subtle...
As I have grown over the years I have always been amazed by the many subtleties that make up a lived faith in various contexts.
As I have grown over the years I have always been amazed by the many subtleties that make up a lived faith in various contexts.
I have been involved in this project since 2005. It is now starting to take shape, and as the article from our sister seminary, Duke Divinity school shows, the new Methodist seminary is very likely to come into being in 2009. So, keep your eyes on this space!
Here's the article from the Duke Divinity school Magazine:
John Wesley College in Pretoria, South Africa, a Divinity School partner since 2000, will be replaced by a new institution - the Seth Mokitimi Methodist Seminary - 300 miles away at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in Pietermaritzburg.
Construction of the new seminary is scheduled to begin this year. Plans call for the first-year class of 2009 to begin study in Pietermaritzburg. John Wesley College will cease intakes and graduate its last class in 2010.
The change reflects a new policy approved by the Methodist Church of Southern Africa that requires students spend three years at seminary, rather than the current one or two years. The extended residency will require additional accommodations and other facilities, says Peter Storey, Williams professor emeritus of Christian ministry and chair of planning for the new seminary. John Wesley's old mission institution campus outside Pretoria is deteriorating and has limited space for expansion.
"As South Africans wrestle with crime and corruption, poverty and disease, we need a 'second liberation,' a moral and spiritual revolution led by unselfish, transformative leaders at all levels in our society,” says Storey. "Seth Mokitimi's life and ministry model the qualities we will seek to form in the ministers we will train."
Mokitimi’s election as president of the Methodist Church of Southern Africa in 1963 was a direct challenge to apartheid authorities, who had threatened to confiscate all M.C.S.A. property in 'white areas' if a black person were elected.
As a child, Mokitimi was a cattle-herder in the Lesotho mountains. He attended school on alternate days with his brother because they only had one set of school clothes between them. Offered secondary and tertiary education by the church, Mokitimi entered the ordained ministry and became one of Southern African Methodism's most transformative preachers and educators.
Ivan Abrahams, presiding bishop of the Methodist Church of Southern Africa, said that it is his "hope and prayer that the values and example of Seth Mokitimi will become a living legacy in theological education, and that all ministers who must pass through the new seminary will do justice to the memory of this gallant, passionate, visionary servant-leader."
The new seminary will join existing Catholic, Lutheran, Congregational and Evangelical communities, all linked with the University of KwaZulu-Natal's School of Religion and Theology. Storey described the School of Religion and Theology, which is known for theological formation rooted in Africa, as in tune with Methodist training goals.
"The presence of other seminaries creates synergies in shared faculty and library resources, and opportunities for cross-registration," adds Storey. "A compromise between a fully ecumenical seminary and a denominational one, the location provides a strong united front in relation to the university."
The campus will include a chapel, library, lecture theatres and offices built on land offered by Epworth School, a well-known Methodist institution near the university campus. Construction costs are estimated at $6.5 million. An $8.5 million residential village is also planned with cottages designed to house single students or families.
The Divinity School's relationship with John Wesley College is expected to evolve as the new seminary develops.
The chance to build a Methodist seminary as part of an ecumenical cluster of existing seminaries is rare, says Dean L. Gregory Jones, who met with Methodist leaders in Johannesburg last September. "This chance will not come again."For more information about Seth Mokitimi Seminary, e-mail Peter Storey.
Technorati tags: Seth Mokitimi, Seminary, Theology, Duke Divinity School, Peter Storey
For years I have heard Christians debate what kind of worship God truly 'prefers'. Some suggest that God has no time for hymns, other say that God cannot stand any music that incorporates drums.... I am impatient with such simplistic arguments. These positions say a lot more about the 'tastes' of those who arguing, than the God they should be thinking about.
I think God is blessed by who we are when we worship. God is blessed by the joy, life, transcendent perspective, and closeness to one another and God that our worship creates.
Yes, of course, there are right and wrong ways to enter into worship, but they may not be a simplistic as musical taste. They may not be the difference between traditional music and contemporary music, between extemporary prayer and liturgy...
Here's a well written article on worship.
What is worship? Our English word comes from the Anglo-Saxon weorthscipe, which means "to honor" or "to ascribe worth." It is interesting that, in this regard, the Book of Common Prayer, 1662, includes within the vows for the solemnization of matrimony: "with my body I thee worship." That is a fairly succinct statement of the biblical understanding of sexuality.
The Old Testament Hebrew word used for worship means "a bowing down." Keep this in mind. For the Hebrews, worship was a verb, something you did. The same idea is behind the New Testament Greek word for worship which means "to serve." In anticipation of what I will be saying later, let me suggest this to you: the difference between a biblical and a pagan understanding of worship lies in the difference between a verb and a noun. For the person of the Bible, worship is something you do. For the pagan, worship is a state of being.
What is it, then, we do when we ascribe worth to God and bow down and serve him on Sunday morning? I believe we engage in a ritual drama. By ritual, I mean we use certain fixed forms of words, i.e., sermons, prayers, hymns. By drama, I mean that the telling of a story is woven throughout those rituals: the story of God's mighty acts of salvation in Jesus Christ.
Let me give you an example of what I mean from popular culture. When we worship God, we do essentially the same thing I did when I watched on television last month, for the eleventh time, a replay of USC's great 1974 victory over Notre Dame. For those of you who are unfamiliar with this bit of Heilsgechichte (sacred history), that was the game in which USC was down seventeen points at half-time. Anthony Davis of USC received the second half kickoff one yard in his own end zone and ran it back 101 yards for a touchdown. For the rest of the second half USC totally dominated Notre Dame with Davis' runs and Pat Haden's passes to J. K. McKay. The final score: USC 55, Notre Dante 24.
"But," you protest, "you know everything that is going to happen. Why have you watched it so many times?" My answer: That is precisely the point. I watch it over and over again because I know what will happen. Certain values I have are confirmed and reaffirmed. Once again, good triumphs over evil, light over darkness.
You do the same thing whenever you watch your favorite television program. Dramatized, in story form, will be certain values and beliefs you hold to as an American. They will be about life and what it means, its problems and its solutions. Some social analysts call popular television programs, especially the interminable series variety, ritual drama. That's because they, like my favorite USC/Notre Dame game, reaffirm what we believe. They are like worship services. For many Americans they are worship services in that they are weekly, and sometimes daily, confirmations and reaffirmations of the core of values we hold in common as citizens of this country.
The Bible is filled with ritual drama. Revelation 5:9-10 is a good case in point. The multitudes of heaven are gathered around the throne of God. At his right hand stands the Lamb who has just been declared worthy to take the scroll in God's right hand and open it up. The scroll is of immense importance because it contains the decrees of God for the future of the planet Earth. The occasion is one of great joy for the congregation of heaven, so they break into a service of worship of the Lamb singing:
Worthy art thou to take the scroll and open its seals, for thou wast slain and by thy blood didst ransom men for God from every tribe and tongue and people and nation, and hast made them a kingdom and priests to our God, and they shall reign on earth. Ritual drama: that is what we are witnessing in this spectacular heavenly worship service. The story of salvation is in some way retold and its values upheld, all as the worshipers offer thanks and praise.
A pivotal question must be asked here, the answer to which takes us to the heart of what happens in truly Christian worship. In this ritual drama, who is the audience and who is the performer? Clearly, the answer is that God is the audience and the congregation is the performer. As Soren Kierkegaard put it, in Christian worship God is the audience, the congregation the performer, and the minister, choir, and other leaders are the prompters.
If just this one fundamental truth were to sink into the consciousness of Christians, worship would be transformed. The overwhelming majority of Christian congregations have the roles reversed. The congregation regards itself as the audience, while regarding the prompters and God, I suspect, as the performers. The congregation comes to have a "worship experience." That is not only idolatrous in its reversal of worship roles, but pagan in its understanding of worship itself. Worship theri becomes a noun, a state of being, an experience induced by God or the choir or the pastor. Biblically, however, worship is a verb, something the congregation or performer does.
At least three implications flow out of this understanding of worship as ritual drama. The first has to ! do with history. God is the God of history: of the past, the present, and the future. The Lamb was slain, and has made us free and we shall reign, say the words of the hymn in the Revelation passage.
Christian worship is essentially an act of remembrance. That is what the Lord's Supper does. It remembers the Lord's death, even as it celebrates his resurrection presence and looks forward to his return. There they are again: past, present, and future.
One of the fallacies and conceits of our times is that God has done little or nothing since the death of the last apostle until right now. We place great stock in the New Testament and first century i church, and in our own. In my congregation there I are those who want to sing only the new songs and those who want to sing only the old songs. What is funny about all this is that the "old songs," at their oldest, may date back to nineteenth-century revivalism.
The God of past, present, and future whom we worship in ritual drama was just as active in the fourth, eleventh, or seventeenth centuries as he is now. Our songs, prayers, sermons, and confessions should recognize this in worship. Besides making us a more biblical people, it would give us a perspective on ourselves and relieve us of a bit of our conceit.
The second implication has to do with preparation. Because we are the performers, we must come to worship prepared. Can you imagine your chagrin if you paid twenty dollars to hear a performance of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony and the orchestra came into the concert hall late? What if the director stood before the audience and said something like this: "Wow! Have we had a busy month! Lots of travel, several recording sessions, and now here we are, and we haven't had a chance to rehearse tonight's concert. Listen, I have a great idea. Everyone here is an accomplished musician. What do you say we just have a jam session for the next ninety minutes? Just let it flow. Be spontaneous!"
You would be angry if the orchestra arrived late and unprepared because you paid a lot of money for the performance. What did God pay for our performance? The blood of his own Son. What does this mean pragmatically? It means things like a good night's sleep on Saturday. It means things like arriving on time. I believe Sunday morning tardiness is a theological issue. It means things like prayer and Bible study on the days leading up to Sunday morning. Howard Rice has said that reformation worship assumed of the congregation that its individual members had spent an hour a day through the week in Bible reading and prayer!
All of this contradicts what Tom Howard calls the "myth of spontaneity." It is a very appealing myth. It says we would all be free, direct, and spontaneous if we could just dismantle tradition, structures, and conventions. Unfortunately this contradicts everything else we know in human experience. It was hard work, austerity, and discipline that produced the Dialogues of Plato, the B Minor Mass, and the Theory of Relativity. Should it be any different in our relationship to God? Just as not much that is worthy, substantial, and noteworthy proceeds from mere spontaneity in other forms of human endeavor, so it is in Christian worship. I believe God is, at the very least, unimpressed with merely spontaneous worshipers.
A good metaphor for the true freedom of disciplined Christian worship can be found in the dancer's art. Nothing looks more free and spontaneous than a great dancer performing. But beneath all of that freedom and spontaneity are years of drills, repetition, sweat, strain, and more drills.
Sunday morning worship is to the rest of our lives what cultivation is to a garden. We weed, prune, water, and feed to the end that the garden may be beautiful—spontaneous gardens are not; disciplined gardens are.
The last implication has to do with focus. And with this I close, because it sums up everything.
Christ is at the center of Christian worship, not us and our experience. We are not there to get, but to give. The question we should be asking ourselves on the way home on Sunday morning is not, "What did I get out of it?" but rather, "How did I do?" For when all the sermons have been preached, all the anthems sung, all the worship renewal workshops conducted, and all our innovations come and gone, that is all that will have mattered: that we said with our whole being, "Worthy is the Lamb who was slain, to receive power and wealth and wisdom and might and honor and glory and blessing!"
Technorati tags: Worship resources, getting it right, contemporary worshop, traditional worship, worship as a verb, worship as a noun
Days like these are rare! It is a Saturday morning and I don't have a single meeting to go to.
I woke up a little later this morning - normally Liam will have Megan and I awake at around 5.30am. I am quite an early riser so I am often awake a little before that. I then make breakfast for the family and get ready for the day's work. This morning I got little Liam out of his cot and came through to the lounge to play with him so that Megie could sleep in a little longer. Courtney is awake now and is watching Cartoon Network and keeping Liam busy with some toys...
It is wonderful to think that there is a whole day ahead of me with not a single meeting or fixed appointment!! Ahhhh...
I think that rest, relaxation, and some free time, are part of God's plan and desire for humanity. The Aboriginal cultre of Australia has a saying that says (something like) - When you have walked for days you must stop so that your soul can catch up with your body.
I feel a little like that at times!
The monks of the scholastic era, whose lives were structured according to the rules of their abbey (most often along the lines of study, prayer, and work) would speak of such free time as otium sanctum (translated from Latin it means 'Holy leisure'). This concept is, of course, derived from the biblical notion of sabbath. The sabbath (which we read about in Genesis) came into its full swing (i.e., popular acceptance, rather than just an injunction in the law), as far as I can remember, when the Israelites were in Exile in Babylon (Genesis 1:1-2:3 was written during the Exilic period, in fact the grammatical structure and use of phrases most represents Psalm 137). Of course the notion of sabbath had existed since a much earlier period. However, as with many things in culture and religion, they only gain prominence when they make sense to us!
During this time (the Exile) the Israelites were subject to their Babylonian masters, their lives were beyond their control (hence the emphasis upon God's sovereign creative control in Genesis 1), they had no time to relax, let alone worship God (hence the 'priestly' injunction in Genesis 2:1-3 to hallow the Sabbath). If one takes Psalm 137 and Genesis 1 together one can see the Genesis 1 could be an answer to Psalm 137's question 'how can we sing a song to the Lord in this strange land?'. Well, Genesis 1 says, even though the land may be strange, God created it, even though you may feel like animals, God created you seperate from other species (in God's own image), even though you may think that God is far (on the Mount of Zion, Jerusalem, or in the temple) God is speaking creation into being all around you, so RELAX, take some time out to remember the Lord who creates and recreates all of reality.... Yup, that is the etymology of 'recreation', it literally comes from the creation motif!
Today shall be my Sabbath, my otium sanctum, today I shall recall that when my life seems out of control the God of order speaks into it. Today I shall recall that the God of flowers, the God of binary, the God of life, the God of Israel, the God of Africans, the God of ALL CREATION has not stopped re-creating me! Ah, what a thought!
We all need a little free time to just be in a world that seems structure along the lines of doing rather than being.
So, what will I do today? Well, I think I'll spend as much time as I can with my family. I'll give my Vespa a little spin. I'll take an hour or so to read (just for fun)... I'll surf the web and hopefully find a few useful things to post to my blog, and who knows, I may even get a chance to go for a haircut!
What do you do with a 'free' Saturday?
I read this post with great interest. It starts with a sad reality and ends with some measure of hope.
How I wish, however, that Joel not only learned to forgive, but the live within God's loving forgiveness... But, that is a post for another day.
Here's the meaningful, and helpful, post from Joel!
Technorati tags: Forgiveness, Christian, no longer Christian, Hannah MooreI'm not a Christian anymore. Perhaps I got a raw deal when God was passing out churches - mine was shaken apart in my late teens by a pastor who got busted for sneaking a few hundred thousand out of the offering plate to buy Nazi war memorabilia, not to mention banging a few dozen women who came to him for marriage counseling - but I've made my peace with the Prince of it.
One particularly Christian principle has apparently stuck with me over the years. It wasn't until recently that I rediscovered it. (Not animal sacrifice, which I never abandoned.) And whether Jesus of Nazareth existed as a real meat person or was the product of a coterie of desert sci-fi novelists, one thing he taught has been helping me a lot lately.
It’s awfully nice to forgive. read more »
Every now and then when I am talking to someone about the things that get my pulse up a few beats I can see their eyes glazing over.
Why is it that others don't find massively parallel neural networks as interesting as I do? Why is that some simply don't care that there are equations that Euclidean mathematics simply cannot solve? Why don't my friends understand that it is only right (and in fact God honouring) to be passionate about your Apple Mac!
Well, if you're a wife, a friend, a parent, or a child, of a nerd, then here's a resource that could help you to understand your 'significant [nerdy] other'...
Technorati tags: understanding nerds, geek, human psycheAn insightful essay on understanding geeks called "The Nerd Handbook" isn't a life hack for you, it's for your family and friends. If you're reading Lifehacker, chances are you're a nerd, and technologist and software manager Michael Lopp articulates the workings of your psyche to the tee. The Nerd Handbook explains to nerds' loved ones how the geek thinks, the importance of the nerd's "Cave" and our chase for "The High" that comes from solving problems, our finicky attention span and our insatiable appetite for information. If you're a nerd, print this out and give it to your non-nerd spouse to teach 'em "advanced nerd tweakage."
The Nerd Handbook [Rands In Repose]
Yup, it has finally happened. It is an abomination of the highest order! Surely the Bible says something about this?
What am I talking about? Well, today I was alerted to UNIX tools for Windows Users!!!
That's like fitting a Porche motor to your lawnmower! Why would you do it!?
Why not just buy a Mac? It comes standard with UNIX under the bonnet! Heck, if you MUST use a beige box, then why not install Ubuntu Linux (it's free, it works fantastically, and it is virus free and powerful!)
Anyway, if you're a windows user who has been longing to show of some GNU (UNIX) skills then take a look at this:
Windows only: So you keep typing ls
at the Windows command line instead of dir
? Miss grep
, wget
, and tar
on your PC? The open source UnixUtils project offers ports of "the most important" GNU command line utilities, including those listed as well as over 100 others. Usually we recommend using the Unix emulator Cygwin to get *nix command line goodness in Windows, but UnixUtils doesn't depend on the whole Cygwin layer to run—they're tried and true Windows executables. UnixUtils is a free download for Windows only. Thanks, Vijay!
Technorati tags: UNIX, UNIX in Windows, perversion,
This is hilarious! It just goes to show that the best part of a joke is anticipating the the ending.
Unashamedly copied from The just plain Breakfast blog and the 'Stuff Blog'
Jannas wrote: -
When you have an 'I Hate My Job' day, try this:
On your way home from work, stop at your pharmacy and go to the thermometer section and purchase a rectal thermometer made by Johnson & Johnson - Be very sure you get this brand. When you get home, lock your doors, draw the curtains and disconnect the phone so you will not be disturbed.
Change into very comfortable clothing and sit in your favorite chair. Open the package and remove the thermometer. Now, carefully place it on a table or a surface so that it will not become chipped or broken.
Now the fun part begins. Take out the literature from the box and read it carefully. You will notice that
In small print there is a statement:
'Every Rectal Thermometer made by Johnson & Johnson is personally tested and then sanitized'.
Now, close your eyes and repeat out loud five times, 'I am so glad I do not work in the thermometer Quality Control Department at Johnson & Johnson.'
HAVE A NICE DAY AND REMEMBER, THERE IS ALWAYS SOMEONE ELSE WITH A JOB THAT IS MORE OF A PAIN IN THE ... THAN YOURS!
I can recall a time when a person with good computers skills was an asset to society. Back in the early 1990's I used to teach computer literacy classes to the cleaning staff at Rhodes University - it was a deliberate act to subvert the fairly rigid promotion options for the predominantly black unskilled cleaners at the University (in return I was taught Xhosa). It was a wortwhile exchange!
Now, however, persons with exceptional computer skills are a dime a dozen... In fact most 8 year olds can decode a 128 bit encryption key in less than two minutes, set up a high powered Unix apache server, and find that lost database entry that is causing your year end report to get stuck somewhere in the SQL server...
I feel that my _geek_ is under threat... There are just too many _geeks_ on the planet...
Yes, I'll admit the reason that Eskom is cutting power is because I've been praying that those little 1337 h@xors (that is 'leet speak' for 'elite hackers') will have less net time and more 'lights out' time...
Anyway, it was just a matter of time before something like THIS (see left) was to happen...
Show off! [Nice hair though...]
It has been a long day - we drove to Newcastle for a very moving funeral for the Rev Godfrey Baqwa. It is not so much the drive as the emotion of the day that has left me a little flat this evening.
However, my spirit was lifted when I came across this post from Steven Jones. I was pleased because he said a few kind things about me (wait until you get to know me Steve, you'll find that I am a lot better in text than in person!) But even more exciting than his kindness was his 2 page Lectionary resource for preachers.
Here's part of Steve's post -
[This is an extract from a little pamphlet I (Dion) wrote on exegesis]...Technorati tags: lectionary, exegesis, preaching, resourcesAllow me to make a case for the lectionary as the first port of call in the search for texts from which to preach Sunday by Sunday. There is no substitute for systematic, ordered preaching which has a long term purpose and structure to it, ensuring that the congregation becomes well informed, is exposed to the main themes of Christian belief and Christian life and, over a period of time, is guided through all the main sections of the Scriptures.
Moreover, preaching the lectionary will ensure that you are willing to wrestle with the Biblical text, rather than just choosing a few well-known passages to support your own theme. Remember that the task of the preacher or teacher is to discover and communicate God’s will and desire to God’s people, not simply to present his or her own ideas or ‘hobby horse’.
A well-coordinated preaching and teaching team can only accomplish this high calling through the use of a well-constructed Lectionary! Working to a lectionary relieves the preacher of the anxiety of deciding what to preach on. It also ensures that what is preached is indeed an exposition of the Scriptures rather than an exposition of the preacher’s favourite opinions, vaguely supported by some craftily selected Biblical texts!
Be careful of trying to find ‘proof texts’ to make a point. Rather, study the scriptures to learn everything you can about God’s character and will, and our relationship as God’s creation to this wonderful God.
The full text of Dion's exegesis notes can be downloaded here....
The Methodist Church of Southern Africa publishes each year's lectionary on its website, as well as in the Yearbook. However, their version runs to nine pages, and since I have developed an aversion to killing trees as a result of the message delivered during my trial service, I decided to put my rudimentary Microsoft Word skills to the test and see if I could reduce it to fewer pages.
I managed to get it down to two pages, which is about the limit to which one can take it down without having to resort to using a magnifying glass. If you have one of those fancy photocopiers that does everything short of making you coffee in the morning, you may be able to even print it double-sided on a single page - handy for the jacket pocket or to slot into the back of your Bible.
You can download the 2-page version of the 2008 lectionary here.
This evening we held an Ash Wednesday service in our College Chapel.
It was a truly significant end to a wonderful day. The service itself was extremely meaningful. We used a magnificent liturgy (chosen by the students) from John van de Laar's 'Sacredise' website (he has many exceptional worship resources to aid Churches - many of them are free).
Ash Wednesday marks the start of Lent. It marks the start of the 40 days that lead up to Easter. In many less traditional Christian Churches these festivals in the Christian calendar are not celebrated. However, I have come to appreciate the rhythm of memory that is created by celebrating these significant events that mark important events in the life of Christ, and in the lives of Christians.
Central to the Ash Wednesday service is a moment in which one has Ash (normally from a burnt palm branch) placed upon one's head and the ministers says From dust you came, to dust you shall return. Turn from your sin and follow Christ.
It serves as a rich reminder that life is short... It cannot be wasted on inconsequential things. It must be spent in honour of Christ and in fulflilling Christ's will for your life. Life must be spent in dedicated and loving service - service of God, and service of the people whom God loves.
Today's service was significant for because since we last met in the College Chapel for this very service (Ash Wednesday 2007) I have numerous encounters with death. Tomorrow morning I shall awake at 3.45 AM to drive to Newcastle to participate in the funeral of one of the students who studied at the seminary last year, the Rev Godfrey Baqwa. He was a great student! He did 9 subjects last year, he passed them all and passed some with distinction. He was killed just over a week ago in a motorcar accident on his way back from a Church meeting - life is short.
My father passed away 4 weeks and 6 days ago. Indeed, life is short.
During last year I had to undergo surgery and treatment for cancer. It was a wake up call. Life is short.
However, the Ash Wednesday service also reminds me that life God's gift! It is a gift from God and can be given back to God as a gift!
I have recently been wrestling with the text of Mary and Martha (Luke 10:38-42). In this text Martha is engaged in work. She is preparing a meal for Jesus who is visiting her house. Her sister Mary is washing the Lord's feet. Martha complains to Jesus that Mary is doing nothing. Jesus tells her "Mary has chosen what is better, and it shall not be taken from her".
I was struck by a few things in this narrative.
1. Neither Mary, nor Martha, are going against Christ's will! Both know the needs of Jesus (for Mary it is to serve and worship him, for Martha it is to serve and care for him).
2. However, while both KNOW the Lord's will, only one of them seems to UNDERSTAND the Lord's desire. Only Mary knows that Jesus needs, what he truly needs.
I have spent the last few years like Martha - very busy. I have been engaged in ministry (ministry of oversight, education, and care within the Church). However, I have often felt like Martha, worn out, tired, abused, and neglected. I have faced incredible challenges and pressures... I know it is God's will that I work hard, work creatively, work diligently, and work well. But, I think have been misunderstanding what God may be wanting for my life...
This lent I realised that I need to do more than just KNOW God's will, I must UNDERSTAND it, and in doing so, I must serve and bless the Lord.
This was the third thing I realised:
3. Do you realise that this is the ONLY account in the New Testament of anyone serving Jesus? I mean, there is no other account of anyone sitting down to bless the Lord. Jesus is normally the one who does all the blessing.
I want to bless the Lord. I have come from dust, and to dust I shall return. Now, I shall turn to follow Christ more faithfully.
It is Lent. I shall remember that Christ's journey for my life was a journey of struggle, hardship and pain. But beyond the crown of thorns is a crown of life!
A blessed Lent to all.
Today was special for another reason. I had the great chance to meet with two new friends, Andy and Glen, both elders at the 3Ci Church (Capitol City Christian Church) in Pretoria. They are oustanding guys! I first met Glen when Liam was in hospital last year and Glens daughter was also there (Chloe). She is doing great! Andy and Glen came and prayed for us in a time when we truly needed care.
Today I got to visit them and find out about their incredible ministry and their passion for Christ. They are doing great work, Gospel work! I look forward to seeing them again.
I'll confess... I have at least one of the T-Shirts on this list.... (click the link if the pictures don't load on my page - I've noticed that they don't load all the time).
Technorati tags: geek, nerd+fashion, facebook friends, facebook vs myspace, geek t-shirts, SYN, pwner