I love having a tree in front of our house. Not only does it give me a place to have a bird feeder, but it's nice to see the change in seasons through the tree. I took this picture of the front of our house and you can see our tree is in full bloom now - so it'd definitely springtime!
Monday, April 25, 2011
Easter @ Verizon
For the past few years our church has had our Easter service at Verizon Wireless Ampitheatre so that we can have one service instead of multiple services. This year was our 3rd year having Easter @ Verizon and each year it just gets better and better. We have egg hunts and bounce houses set up for the kids to enjoy. This year we added a mini concert by the band Need to Breathe and we also included a baptism during the service as well. The weather was absolutely PERFECT this year too - sunny and warm with a nice breeze too. I love our church so much and I'm so thankful that we can offer something like Easter @ Verizon for our community! Here are some pictures from this year's Easter @ Verizon - including Chad going down one of the kids inflatable slides!
More cat pictures
Sandy & Roxy soaking up some sunshine.
A close up of Sandy in the sun.
This is Roxy's "give me a treat" look.
Sandy lounging around the house.
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
New Bookcase
When we were going to try to sell our house we packed up our 3 bookcases of books and some other things to try to de-clutter our house. So, now that we're not going to try to sell our house we're revamping some things to make our house nicer. We bought a new bookcase, so we had to weed 3 bookcases worth of books down to 1! It was VERY hard and we are thinking of getting another smaller bookcase to keep more books in another room. Anyway, here are some pictures of our new bookcase:
Full of books now!
Roxy wanted to be in the new bookcase picture too!
April Cat Pictures
Here are some recent pictures of Sandy & Roxy:
The cats enjoy sleeping on Chad's robe.
Roxy decided to hang out INSIDE their toy box.
More robe snuggling!
Dehydrator
Chad has been wanting to get a dehydrator for a long time. You can dehydrate food and then re-hydrate them to use in soups or other cooking. You can also make fruit and veggie "chips" that make great snacks. So far we've only done fruit, but I'm looking forward to trying to make some zucchini "chips" especially after our garden starts producing. Here are some pictures of our new dehydrator:
Bananas going into the dehydrator.
The finished banana "chips".
A heart-shaped strawberry we dehydrated.
Monday, April 04, 2011
Putting Away Childish Things: a Tale of Modern Faith by Marcus J. Borg
I recently read this book and it was so horrible that I felt compelled to blog about it. I read a LOT and so every once in awhile I read a book that sucks and it's no big deal, but the reason that this book was so bad was that it attacked the Christian faith and being a believer I felt I needed to talk about this book. Based on the title and a review I read I thought this book would be an interesting look at "modern faith" - WRONG. Here is the synopsis from Amazon:
In Putting Away Childish Things, Marcus Borg weaves his insightful teachings on Christianity into a new form—fiction. In this compelling tale, we meet Kate—a popular religion professor at a liberal arts college in a small midwestern town who thinks her life is right on track. She loves her job, is happy with her personal and spiritual life, and her guilty pleasure consists of passing her afternoons at the local pub with a pint of Guinness and a cigarette. Life is good.
Kate is up for tenure when it all starts to go wrong. A colleague warns her that her books are too Christian and too popular. She is offered a visiting professor job at a prestigious seminary, which sounds like the perfect solution except for one complication—it is the same seminary that employs the professor she had an affair with years ago. Kate now has to face her past and watch as the ramifications unfold in ways she never imagined. In the classroom, students ask for her views on Jesus, the Bible, and homosexuality, controversial topics that Kate candidly addresses until outraged parents start campaigning for the school to get rid of her. Through it all, Kate faces the toughest challenge yet—a crisis of faith that leaves her questioning what she believed so strongly before.
Putting Away Childish Things is an engaging way for readers to learn about the important issues dividing Christians today. Along the way, we join with the characters to ask the hard questions such as what does the Bible really teach? Who is Jesus? What is the nature of faith today?
This is a story that promises to leave us different in the end than when we started, as we learn how even in the twenty-first century, God works in mysterious ways.
Sounds interesting right? Well, the author's view of "modern faith" is that you can call yourself at Christian and basically not believe the Bible. Throughout the book multiple characters make the case of the Bible being "wrong" about issues, that important events in the Bible are merely "myths" that were fabricated to make a point about God, etc. The main tenants of Christianity are that there is one God, the Bible is His inspired Word, Jesus was God in human form, Jesus died and rose from the dead, and salvation comes from faith in Jesus. I don't know why you would claim to be a Christian and deny almost all of these tenants, but that is what this book was pushing. The author does note at the beginning of the book that this is his first fiction book and it is intended to be didactic, but it is VERY heavy-handing with its message. Also, on a more minor point the writing is TERRIBLE. Like I said before, I read a lot and this was very hard to slog through even if I had agreed with the message.
The main reason that I felt so compelled to blog about this book is that as a Christian I feel that people like this author diminish the Christian faith by watering it down to nothing. In our society today it is socially acceptable to not be a Christian or practice any kind of faith or whatever faith you choose, so I don't understand why you would want to call yourself a Christian when you don't believe any of the main tenants of that faith. And as someone who does believe in the tenants of Christianity it insults me that someone who doesn't believe the Bible is true wants to call themselves a Christian.
I was also insulted because I think the author was trying to make a jab with the title as well. 1 Corinthians 13:11 says "When I was a child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things." To me the author is trying to say with the title of the book that if you believe the Bible is absolute truth then you're an immature child - not an adult.
I finished reading this book on a Saturday night and I was so irritated by it! Then ironically at church the next morning it was like the whole service was an answer back to this book. At the time our church was doing a series on the Bible book of John and the message focused on the miracle Jesus performed when he raised Lazarus from the dead. Below are some words from one of the songs in the services that I felt were especially relevant to this book's message:
"What If" by Nichole Nordeman
What if you're right? / And he was just another nice guy / What if you're right?
What if it's true? / They say the cross will only make a fool of you / And what if it's true?
But what if you're wrong? / What if there's more? / What if there's hope you never dreamed of hoping for?
What if you jump? / And just close your eyes? / What if the arms that catch you, catch you by surprise?
What if He's more than enough? / What if it's love?
You've been running as fast as you can / You've been looking for a place you can land for so long
But what if you’re wrong?
So, anyway my main response to Marcus Borg with this book is that as a Christian I don't appreciate the message he's promoting at all. And maybe if he would open his mind and heart a little more when reading the Bible he would find that there is a LOT more offered by God that what he's proposing.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)