A Quick Update

Through my meditations in the Force, I sense my writer’s block slowly fading. I’m not sure where my writing will be led next, but I do know that the first post after the FBC Starbucks reposts will be a Beliefbusters post. And I already know exactly what the topic will be. I’m going to tackle the myth of human “free will,” as it is commonly described today. Don’t be surprised; those of you who actually read your Bibles ought to be able to discern exactly what I’m getting at! Here’s a few verses for you to look at; I won’t provide the text, I’d like for you to actually open your Bible and read it! Please withhold all judgment and knee-jerk reactions until you have actually read both the Scriptures and what I have to say.

John 8:34
Romans 6:15-22
1 Corinthians 7:21-23

Thanks for your patience as I deal with writer’s block, and join us as I re-start the engines soon!

Tuesday Tidbits

Here’s a few things that have been happening recently, for those interested:

  • I finished my review of David Wells’ The Courage to Be Protestant, chapter 6 yesterday. The chapter is entitled “Christ.” Look for it over at Said at Southern next Monday. I do plan to post it here as well for those of you too lazy to click the link.
  • Things appear to finally be slowing down life-wise, so that may herald the return of more regular blogging. As always, said blogging is subject to Providence, so stay tuned.
  • Speaking of blogging, the divorce post has been going very slowly due to the aforementioned real-life. All I’m gonna say is it’ll get here when it gets here. Hey: it’s my blog. If you don’t like it, go start your own. ;)
  • Speaking of Providence, I was given a flyer advertising jobs opening at a certain plant here in Louisville. If my wife could get a job there, we’d be financially secure until I could go full-time at UPS or the Lord moves me to a full-time ministry. We’ll be praying for God’s guidance on this, since it is extremely difficult for Deaf people to get good jobs here in the ‘Ville.
  • On going full-time at UPS; I’m going to start the process of enrolling at the University of Louisville to pursue a business-related degree. UPS will pay full tuition and most of the books. If I want to move to a good full-time position (not necessarily the next level of management, full-time supervisor), I need a business related degree. Counseling degrees can only take you so far.
  • Wonder of wonders, I learned just last night that one of my best friends from high school is moving to Louisville. He is also a minister, a graduate of Asbury Seminary near Lexington, KY. He’s been in youth ministry for his entire ministry and will be serving as young adult minister (ages 18 to 30) for the first time in a Methodist church somewhere in town. I’m excited ’cause I haven’t seen the guy in 10 years! Incidentally, he’s also prettier than I am - he’s got more hair.
  • In other wonderful news, we learned that our tax rebate will arrive this week. That’s fantastic because all the little bills from Grace’s birth that keep popping up unexpectedly will finally go away. We’ll take care of that, gas up the cars, and then use the rest of it to take a major chunk out of our student loans.
  • I’m reading D.A. Carson’s The Cross and Christian Ministry in my downtimes at work. I have God’s Secretaries: The Making of the King James Bible by Adam Nicolson as well as Worship Matters by Bob Kauflin as my bathroom readers. See the sidebar to see which Puritan Paperback I’m reading this month.
  • Grace bought me The UBS Reader’s Greek New Testament for Fathers’ Day. I must be raising her right for her to get me a Greek New Testament. :)

Well, that’s it for a while. Just wanted to make sure you knew I wasn’t dead or drowning in a pool of baby diapers and spit-up. :D

The Two-Cent Update

The two or three of you who are regular readers have noticed the silence descending over the ‘Cron lately. Well, I may be a blogger, but real life trumps blogging any day.

UPS is very busy these days, which means I am getting to bed later each morning and sleeping longer. That usually means less time for blogging, since I need to be spending time with Grace and Tricia. We are also in the process of getting Tricia back into the workforce, since it has become necessary to have two incomes once again.

I’ve also been doing a lot of counseling (formal, informal, and pastoral), which has led me to seriously think through a couple of issues biblically. I’m going to do a short series here on divorce (which has been one of the major issues that I’ve been encountering). I want to get these thoughts out of my head before the interest fades. Long story short, I have been a part of several divorce preventions in the past couple of months and have seen several divorces and potential divorces. The majority of my church members are divorced as well (I’d guess at least all but 8 of our 30-something members). I’m no stranger to the issue — both my parents are divorced, remarried, and divorced again — but I don’t think I’ve ever sat down and figured out exactly what my position on divorce is. It has certainly evolved over the past 10 to 15 years and I think that now I am ready to figure out a biblical position on divorce, much like I did with marriage. I have a strong feeling that these posts will not make me any friends, and will likely get a few friends and family mad at me. But then again, Jesus’ perspective was that whoever values friends and family more than Him can’t enter the kingdom, so I guess they’ll just have to be mad.

I will still post on Deaf ministry and finish reporting on Together for the Gospel, but not quite yet. I’ll focus on writing the divorce posts and letting real life calm down first. Meanwhile, avail yourself of my updated blogroll in the sidebar; especially the Bible links I’ve added.

Know When to Walk Away, and Know When to Run

Today I have made a decision that I hope will be one of the most significant decisions I will ever make. After going through more than four months of denial, I have broken down and honestly admitted to myself that I’m woefully out of shape. As such, I have decided to do something I once swore I’d never do: I am going to take up running.

This decision was not made in a vacuum. Ever since learning my wife was pregnant with Grace, I have been bombarded with thoughts about the future. I had all the usual thoughts — how we’re gonna afford a kid, what I need to do to make sure Tricia is okay throughout the pregnancy, where the best schools in town are and how much it costs to live there, and so on. But towards the end of her pregnancy, I started thinking about my parents and how they were going to be grandparents. Unbidden, the thought hit me: I wanna be a grandparent one day, too. Then the reality set in — I’m fat. Not only am I fat, I’m what my doctor back home in Tennessee once warned me I could become; I’m a fat preacher.

Don’t misunderstand me, I’m not as fat as I could be. There are tons of preachers out there (some of whom I went to seminary with or know personally) who are twice as big as I am. I once had a fellow student in seminary who actually had 300 pounds on me! Of course, I felt for the guy and consoled myself that I’d never be like that. But that’s no excuse.

I used to be an athlete. In fact, there was a time when I was a star baseball player. Oddly, I hated running then. Growing up the only place I liked running was on the basepaths (or playing football at recess), and it showed. I couldn’t run anywhere other than on the baselines. In practice, I was usually near the end of the pack on our daily 1 mile conditioning runs, though I was an extremely smart runner and stole bases with ease. I swore after hurting my knee in high school — and realizing I couldn’t run well anymore — that I’d never run on purpose again. I was never a skinny kid by any measure, but I was always doing something athletic — I lettered on the varsity tennis team and played varsity golf, where we had to walk the course every day. I entered high school at 180 lbs and graduated at a robust but mostly out of shape 225.

I began to put on weight in college, while mired in a nasty relationship that took me away from all sources of physical activity. I graduated at a round 245, and upon entering seminary proceeded to bury my nose in my books and ignore the excellent gym facility. As you might imagine, the result isn’t all that pretty. I’ve frequently had to deal with illness and other annoyances, I can no longer climb stairs without being winded, and I’ve become a couch potato.

I’d been in denial most of this year but had taken baby steps towards actually doing something about it. I started paying attention to friends who encouraged their friends (including me) to take up running. I read their blogs and the resources they recommended. I looked at walking/running shoes. I discovered running specialty stores and clubs in town. My wife and I started walking more frequently after Grace was born, and now that we’ve moved to the new place we walk to the stores and restaurants. I even went so far as to pick up a book on how to run (yes, I have obviously turned into a complete geek). But nothing kick-started it. With the lingering Sinus Monster I’ve had to deal with this week, I finally got sick and tired of being sick and tired.

There are two major reasons for this radical shift I want to make:

The NewellsI want to take more pictures like this when I’m in my 70s and 80s.

Big Laugh!I want to be able to keep up with her when she starts running around in a year or two, and I want to be around to play with her kids.

So, this week I will be visiting a doctor to first try to get rid of Sinus Monster, and second to maybe get a thorough evaluation before I begin my undertaking. We need to find a new doctor anyway, so this would be a good way to start fresh and do it right. I have been cracking open that running book (Runner’s World Complete Book of Beginning Running) and actually reading it. Perhaps next week (after seeing the doctor) I will invest in some good shoes.

I don’t expect it to be easy. Like my Granddaddy said after he was admitted to the hospital after over 50 years of smoking, “I did this to myself.” If I’m to be an obedient believer and a good husband, father and pastor, I need to get myself out of the physical hole I’ve dug myself into. By actually blogging this, I leave myself no real way to get out of taking care of it.

So, I will be off to the doctor, and then the trial will begin. I’ll walk at least daily for the first two weeks to build up leg strength, then I will start some sort of running program, likely the one in the book if the doc approves. I will be holding onto a singular promise from the Lord as I begin this: “Being confident of this, that he who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 1:6)

I challenge each of you, dear readers, to examine yourselves to see whether you are honoring God with your bodies. The greatest, most besetting sin in the Southern Baptist Convention is not alcohol, but obesity.

We’re Baaaaack!!!

After raised blood pressure and a temptation to sin, we have officially dumped AT&T for Insight Broadband for all our household communications: TV, phone, and internet. That’s right, the ‘Cron is now powered by cable internet. BellSouth was a great company until AT&T took over. It’s very sad. But I shed no tears cause we’re saving $30 a month on services.

Blogging will resume tomorrow with a T4G post and then Friday with a Deaf ministry post. Meanwhile, I will be catching up on my Puritan Challenge reading as well as preparing for a collaborative book review for Said @ Southern I am participating in over the summer. Stay tuned for news on that.

Also, I may be cashing in some WordPress credits and getting a domain for this blog so it can stand on its own as my personal website. I’ve had my own website in the past but scrapped it for lack of attention. Since I work on this blog fairly regularly (weekly at the most), it makes sense to use this as my personal homepage from now on. It’s a lot cheaper than shelling out for the domain and server, so I’ll be investigating this for the next week.

In the interim, please pray for me and my family. The ugly Sinus Monster has reared its head and is threatening to lay me low; my wife has a really bad cold and is afraid she may have given it to our 4 month old daughter. Grace may also have started teething, so screaming banshees are conceivably in our future. ;-)

Thanks for your patronage and stay tuned for more and hopefully better content from The Silent Holocron!

Gone Fishin’

Gone Fishin\'

It’s my birthday, so we’ve gone down to ol’ Rocky Top to see the folks. We will be taking Grace to where it all started. Hopefully she’ll come back with an accent.

Once I’ve taken my fill of real sweet tea (not this junk they call sweet tea here in Louisville) and eaten my Granddaddy’s fried chicken and Mom’s home cookin’, I’ll sit down in between and write a couple more reflections on T4G. They’ll be posted on Monday. Meanwhile I’m going to bask in the real South and read a Puritan Paperback.

See you Monday.

The ‘Cron is at Together for the Gospel!

My vacation started Saturday. Tomorrow I get to do what I’ve waited 2 years to do. That’s right, Tuesday I get to attend…

Together for the Gospel
(Photo by Timmy Brister)

I will also be attending the Band of Bloggers fellowship prior to the conference.

This will be the best vacation ever. NOT counting my honeymoon or the trip to Williamsburg I took as a kid. I’ll be bringing home a suitcase full of free books. I’ll try to remember to take a camera and I hope to take lots of notes. There will be a Deaf group there as well, so I will be in the best of both worlds!

There will be no blogging this week while I meet and fellowship with several thousand of my brothers in Christ!

Together for the Gospel 2008

Curses, Tagged Again!

Well, it seems I’ve been tagged by Terry to do a reading meme. You gotta answer 5 questions:

  1. What are you reading on Spring reading days?
  2. What do you wish you had time to read?
  3. What have you decided NOT to read that you were assigned to read?
  4. What is one great quote from your reading?
  5. Why are you blogging? (You’re supposed to be reading!)

So here are, I guess, my answers.

1. I am reading Jeremiah Burroughs’ The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment, as well as working on What Love Is This? by Dave Hunt, and trying to finish Eric Van Lustbader’s The Bourne Legacy.

2. I wish I had time to read Eric Johnson’s Foundations for Soul Care as well as going through a Greek grammar.

3. I haven’t been assigned any reading (I’ve long since graduated, nyah nyah nyah). But I have decided not to try reading through my library until I’ve finished the Puritan Challenge (see sidebar) in hopes of curing the reading ADD I seem to have contracted since graduating from Southern.

4. I have to pick only one? There have been hundreds if not thousands. Okay, let’s try this one from Thomas Watson’s The Godly Man’s Picture (p. 201): “If men were not besotted, if their fall had not knocked their brains out, they would see that it is the most rational thing in the world to become godly.”

5. I’m blogging because I just got home from work and needed to wind down.

Okay, people to tag. I tag Ryan Hall, David Graves, Rick Mansfield, Scott Lamb, and Tim Ellsworth.

There, now I’ve satisfied the taggers. Now I am off to bed to get some much needed rest before tackling What Love Is This?

Milestones: Post #500

milestoneWelcome to post #499 on The Silent Holocron! The very next post will mark a milestone, my 500th post. It is amazing to see that it took me more than 3 years to reach a milestone that only took several months for some. Hopefully that means my priorities are a little bit more in order than some of my blogging brethren. ;-)

The last time I reached such a milestone, I held a small contest that resulted in a post which remains one of my favorites, Towards a Theology of Baseball. I had so much fun with it, and I hope my love for the game really showed forth in using The Game as an analogy for the Christian life.

I toyed briefly with holding a similar contest and putting up a couple of books as a prize (especially now that Timmy has shown us how to do these things the right way), but my finances won’t make that possible. I have pondered for the past week what exactly I wanted to post on, and it dawned on me that there is an aspect of the Christian life that is quickly becoming the framework by which I examine everything: marriage.

I’ve made no secret that I believe Ephesians 5:22-33 is the gold standard for marriage. It is the mission statement in my own marriage as I seek to be a godly husband to my wife. You can read the wedding liturgy I wrote around this here, where you will get a pretty good explanation of what I believe about marriage. I may need to go back and update the posts listed, but at this time there is little change to be had.

As I’ve reflected on marriage, and especially the marriage metaphor that Scripture seems to love using to describe our relationship to God, it dawned on me a few months ago that the process by which a couple comes together in marriage is similar to the way God saves us. I really hope some of you are scratching your heads; likely some of you are having “light-bulb” moments as I did, also. Bear with me and I will explain all. So the 500th post is in draft form right now (and has been for that same few months), with a working title of “Marriage as a Picture of God’s Grace.”

Come back later this week for our 500th post!

The ‘Cron Is In the “Blog Dance!”

The Silent Holocron has “received” an “invitation” to participate in the first ever Said at Southern Seminary Blog Madness! I was given the #6 seed in the SAS South bracket, pitted against the likes of (in order of seeding) Michael Spencer (Internet Monk), Alex Leung (Six Steps), Peter Beck (Living to God), Power of Change (Reid Monaghan), and the ACFAR Blog (John Divito). I must say that I am unique in my division as I am the only Deaf blogger in the bracket, indeed in the entire “tournament!”

Take a few minutes and vote for me. The top 3 vote-getters move on to the next round of the “Blog Dance”. I led the division early before the Dark Side of the Force pushed me into third place behind the IMonk and Reid.

This may be the nudging I need to start blogging more about deafness and Deaf ministry. Perhaps that will do what is needed!