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Personal

Extreme Shepherding

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Christianity Personal

On Holiness

If you’ve never read or heard D.A. Carson, there’s huge resource of his sermons and message here and a bio with books he’s written here. My wife showed me this quote by him that I thought was profound:

“People do not drift toward holiness. Apart from grace-driven effort, people do not gravitate toward godliness, prayer, obedience to Scripture, faith, and delight in the Lord. We drift toward compromise and call it tolerance; we drift toward disobedience and call it freedom; we drift toward superstition and call it faith. We cherish the indiscipline of lost self-control and call it relaxation; we slouch toward prayerlessness and delude ourselves into thinking we have escaped legalism; we slide toward godlessness and convince ourselves we have been liberated.”

- D.A. Carson, For the Love of God

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News Personal

Orange Juice and the Immutability of God

If you haven’t seen the new ads or container for Tropicana orange juice, then the following thoughts will make no sense to you. Be sure and view the side-by-side photo here, and the billboard ad here.

The first time I saw the new marketing ads for Tropicana I was honestly upset. The logo looked weird and no longer unique, the new container just looked like a basic store brand — like “Safeway Select,” and I missed the little red and white straw coming out of the orange. In fact, I voiced my opinion to my wife and brother-in-law in the car as we passed a billboard one day, but they didn’t necessarily agree with me. Since I work in the marketing world a bit (with product packaging and design) I figured my thoughts may have been exclusive to me and other design people, but still as a consumer it just wasn’t flying with me. As it turns out — I’m wasn’t alone. According to the New York Times, Tropicana is ditching their new product container design and implementing their old one. Why the sudden change? Apparently enough people called, emailed, faxed, sent Morse code, pony-expressed (you get the point) their outrage over the new packaging that Tropicana decided it would be best to scrap it.

I’m not trying to make more of it than should be made, but I do believe people feel a connection between a product and it’s package. There’s something familiar about it, something consistent, or maybe something special and when it changes so dramatically it actually feels a little wrong. I still remember the commercials where they would stick the red and white straw in the orange and start drinking — I think I even tried doing it as a kid (though finding a red and white straw is tough). Even though the orange juice on the inside is the same as it was before, the change in packaging makes it seem as if the product itself has been altered. Thankfully, not everything changes like orange juice and product packaging — like God. God never changes.

The Bible says God (or Jesus Christ) is “the same yesterday, today, and forever” (Hebrews 13:8). The Bible says God’s Word never changes (Psa 119:89). The Bible says that God’s love never changes (Jer 31:3). And the Bible clearly says that God never changes: “For I the LORD do not change…” (Mal 3:6). Theologians call this attribute of God His immutability. Unlike meaningless orange juice packaging, I never have to worry about the one and only God changing who He is or what He says. It’s for that reason that I can trust Him completely and trust in Him alone, because he’s the only One that is like that. This truth about God could not be more relevant than today. In the midst of great economic uncertainty, constant changing laws and lawmakers, new clothes, new cars, new technology, and even a new look for my orange juice, I can trust in a God who is always certain, whose law is always the same (the Bible), who never looks different, who never gets an upgrade, and who will always be the same for eternity.

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News Personal Photography

America’s Favorite Pastime

“Dad, your Dodgers are pretty good this year,” to which my dad replies, “I haven’t followed baseball since they decided to go on strike!” Well, that may be my dad’s sentiment, but those feelings are definitely not mutual. Baseball’s spring training opens today and I am of course rooting for my home team — the Los Angeles Dodgers. Obviously, no one knows what the season may hold for the Boys in Blue, but we’ll definitely try to make some games this year and cheer them home. If you didn’t know, the Dodgers have a new spring training facility near Phoenix, AZ (click for pics) and I’m sure many from the L.A. area are going to make the rather short 5 hour trip for a few weekend games. But in honor of today’s events, I figured a few pics from America’s favorite pastime would be appropriate. These photos — along with the above photo — come to us straight from the Library of Congress’ Flickr account and should suffice for getting us all in the baseball spirit:

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Personal

Newsweek

I’ve been a subscriber to Newsweek for the past 5 years. In the middle of my college years I decided that I needed some way of accessing the news since we didn’t have televisions in our dorms and internet news wasn’t what it is today. If I were able to get a quick snapshot of the week’s news that would be a huge help to me to actually know what’s going on and not feel like I was on an island when it came to current events. Though they’re a pretty liberal publication, I’ve enjoyed having their print edition delivered to me on a weekly basis. It’s been a good way to inform my mind as well as challenge me to be discerning with what’s happening in our world and what people think about it. Obviously (and this is true in general) the news isn’t just simple, objective information anymore. It’s an account of the incident, event, person, idea with commentary by the writer on not just what happened, but how and why. So with that in mind, Newsweek has challenged me to think on my own two feet and not always take the author’s opinions or analysis as fact, but to discern for myself what the issues are.

Unfortunately, with their continued liberal swing it’s been a conversation between my wife and I whether we should continue to pay for their publication. But Newsweek actually helped us make that decision with the publication of their cover story a few weeks back called “Gay Marriage: Our Mutual Joy” The article — which started a lot of conversations among Evangelicals — attempted to argue that the Bible doesn’t teach against gay marriage and those who believe it does may have missed something. I heard about the article before my Newsweek even arrived in my mailbox and upon reading it I realized what all the talk was about — it wasn’t really a news article, it was an opinion piece. Essentially, it was one writer’s opinion on what the Bible says about gay marriage and it really wasn’t well researched. In fact, I would say it was more like a fancy blog post from a professional writer’s website. Nevertheless, for a cover piece it was pretty unfortunate and we decided that wouldn’t renew our subscription to Newsweek. It’s with that in mind that I thought what I read this morning was so interesting.

I came across a New York Times article yesterday titled “Newseek Plans Makeover to Fit a Smaller Audience.” Basically, they are going to re-brand themselves from the inside out by focusing on opinion pieces as opposed to current events, changing the paper type of their printed version, and in general refocus their style and brand to fit their core readers who News claims “…are its best-educated, most avid consumers of news, and who have higher incomes than the average reader.” More than anything, I thought this tidbit from the Times article was telling (my emphasis in bold):

Starting in May, articles will be reorganized under four broad, new sections — one each for short takes, columnists and commentary, long reporting pieces like the cover articles, and culture — each with less compulsion to touch on the week’s biggest events. A new graphic feature on the last page, “The Bluffer’s Guide,” will tell readers how to sound as if they are knowledgeable on a current topic, whether they are or not.

Newsweek is going to teach it’s core, “best-educated” subscribers to fake it. All I can say is: awesome [strong sarcasm]. That’s just what those subscribers want, a cheap way out. Maybe I’m assuming too much, but I would think if I were a higher educated subscriber of Newsweek’s magazine — not to mention a reader — then I’m probably going to take that concept as a hit to my intelligence. Furthermore, the whole change in general is kind of bizzare. For a magazine to go from a sixty six year history of providing the weekly news to an all out opinion piece is pretty sad commentary of our times. I read that as “stop telling them what’s happening and let them think about it for themselves” to “we’ll tell them what we think and how they should think.” I fear that their writing will now become like the gay marriage article I mentioned above, as opposed to a well-researched, balanced jounralism. Change is good, that’s a fact. I understand that weekly news is a little hard to deliver these days as people get the news very quickly. And Newsweek may be having it’s share of struggles as a news company — many are, but this doen’t mean they need to throw their own history out the window and reduce their publication to a bunch of opinions.