I’m in Mark reading for our small group challenge before and after work today, and it is interesting to me how Christ spends his time in the first few chapters of Mark, as best as I can sum it up, he’s explaining how to live according to the kingdom of God. Deep theology being taught as a part of how we should live our daily lives. Not explicit theology or doctrine 101, but implicit in how we are commanded to live out our lives.
American Business .vs A Bakery
A great quote I found recently that I liked concerning business and life…
American business at this point is really about developing an idea, making it profitable, selling it while it’s profitable and then getting out or diversifying. It’s just about sucking everything up.
My idea was: Enjoy baking, sell your bread, people like it, sell more. Keep the bakery going because you’re making good food and people are happy.
—Ian MacKaye, member of Fugazi and co-owner of Dischord Records
(from Salon.com People | Ian MacKaye)
Thanks to 37signals for pointing out the great quote!
“the magic of living below your means”
The Magic of Living Below Your Means
“One of the reasons people give for not giving gifts is that they can’t afford it. Gifts don’t have to cost money, but they always cost time and effort. If you’re in a panic about money, those two things are hard to find. The reason these people believe they can’t afford it, though, is that they’ve so bought into consumer culture that they’re in debt or have monthly bills that make no sense at all.
When you cut your expenses to the bone, you have a surplus. The surplus allows you to be generous, which mysteriously turns around and makes your surplus even bigger.”
- By Seth Godin in “Linchpin”
Why I Blog
I don’t blog because I’m brilliant or because I necessarily have some bright new ideas that no one else has been able to come up with I blog because it forces me to collect my thoughts and think specifically about something. It’s Lso an opportunity to help me determine how to write out my thoughts in a slightly more cohesive and comprehendable manner. So I may post bad ideas, incorrect thoughts, and frequently boring material, but I’m not doing it to gain an audience but rather to improve myself.
Another year ending
As another year comes to an end, I’m excited about the things I’ve accomplished and I’m looking forward to what is to come. I’ve made some great friends and deepened other existing relationships. I’ve had an amazingly fun year with my wife, enjoying life in the city of Chicago. We took our first vacation to North Carolina, Virginia, Washington DC and back to Chicago again on a week long road trip.
Jessica successfully started the preschool at Chicago International Academy, and I was able to launch a new website for them (www.ciacademy.org).
I’ve got big dreams for this next year and I am looking forward to what God will do in and through me. I’m looking forward to the adventure!
Merry Christmas Everyone & A Happy New Year!!!
Didn’t buy it…
I realized that I hadn’t posted an update on here saying that we didn’t end up buying the house. When we had the inspection done we found major foundation problems and decided it wasn’t the house for us with the amount of work and major investment it would have been. We’re now taking a break from the house search till after the holidays, and I’m hoping that we’ll have better luck by then.
my twitter posts from this past week…
- Even trivial decisions can become important if we believe that these decisions are revealing something significant about ourselves. #
- What you buy when you buy a lottery ticket http://bit.ly/K9SMC #
- it’s rewarding to see new students get interested in a school based on the website I built for them this summer. #
- Dunbar’s Number isn’t just a number, it’s the law http://bit.ly/wJYbX (via feedly) #
- The $300 Million Button, how usability testing increased sales by $300 million http://bit.ly/3QTarD #
Conversion and Following
We talk a lot about the “conversion process” as Christians, but it seems Christ spends just as much time talking about following Him and how that would look.
Then He said to them all, “If anyone desires to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow Me. For whoever desires to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for My sake will save it. For what profit is it to a man if he gains the whole world, and is himself destroyed or lost? Luke 9:23-25.
In no way do I want to ignore the concept of coming to Christ, but I’ve heard many conversations on “assurance of salvation” (especially through youth groups), hypothesizing about potential situations of potentially lost souls. A friend of mine started the process of shaking up my thinking on these concerns when he said his response to people asking about these things was always, “Are you following Jesus?”.
“Follow Me” is a phrase Christ repeated over and over again during his time on earth. What does it mean to follow Him? It means to do what He did, live how He lived, and be who He was, right? That’s how a rabbi and his disciples worked as I understand it. Not sitting around drawing lines in the sand about who is in an who is out. In fact, within the inner twelve disciples was His eventual betrayer, Judas. Christ, who knew all of their hearts, intentions, and futures, didn’t reject or seperate out Judas or try to label him as a non-disciple. (don’t misunderstand me as trying to reject labels of any type.)
The questions get thrown around all of the time about salvation and sin. What if someone did X unmentionable sin, could they still be saved? Really, what does asking and answering that question help? Wouldn’t Christ’s response to such a situation be to call it sin, and challenge the person to turn from it and follow Him. I’m thinking of the woman at the well, Zacheus, and several others, who were obviously in sin, and Christ isn’t afraid to confront it.
A friend who claims to be a Christian, and is doing X, doesn’t need his salvation questioned, but a true friend who will call him to follow and pursue Christ, and through that to see how his life contains things aren’t right (sin). Christ makes it clear that salvation is a necessary part of following him, and if that’s the step that my friend felt he needed to do in order to follow Christ then great. If he felt that he had already accepted Christ, then great, repent from your sin and follow him.
Please don’t get offended by what is quite possibly my mind’s oversimplification of a complex topic, I’m simply trying to help myself and others follow Him.
Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-10-25
- Helpful article explaining the float css property: http://bit.ly/43b7GO #
- RT @ChicagoGDesign: New article:16 prepress tips for graphic designers: http://bit.ly/4o4u6b #
- meeting this morning to continue discussion on metrics based on "Web Analytics: An Hour a Day" by Avinash Kaushik. Good material #
- personalized learning on an ipod touch? blog on the topic:http://bit.ly/iLvkb #
- …saturdays… #