Peeling and chopping

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Knives a wielding and peelers a peeling.  That was this afternoons engagement!

As Jill and I prepare for a day off tomorrow, we worked on preparations for our Tuesday seniors luncheon.  That means St. Patrick’s day stew!

Carrots, potatoes, celery and turnips.  All needed to be cleaned and peeled.  The meat needed to be browned.  And all of that done in three hours.  Not a record time, but not too shabby.

I’ve almost gotten a blister out of it.  Had I listened well, I would have used a different peeler.  Nevertheless, there is a certain satisfaction in a job well done.

Now we just have to wait until Tuesday to see who agrees with us!

Short – and sweet

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For some years the church has been trying to speak to people.  Trying to impress them with truth.  Trying to persuade them.

Unfortunately this has evolved to the point where a preacher is expected to speak the truth, and others are invited to just listen in. 

But things are changing.

More and more of those who have brought people to listen are becoming the ones who walk with others, talk with them, live with them moment by moment as living examples of Jesus.  Intentionally using this as the platform from which people hear about Jesus.  Not that a preacher is a bad thing (I’m one!).  But the preaching is done on the street as much as on the platform.

So, here is the saying I heard recently.  We are no longer looking for “a sage on the stage,  but a guide by my side.”

Not a bad thought.

The demise of the Sword Drill

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When I was a youngster, one of the great competitions was the sword drill.

Deriving from the idea that the Bible is the sword of the Lord, we would then drill into the Bible in competition to see who could find a verse first.  Favourites like John 3:16 could be found in a matter of seconds.

So, when asked to lead a sword drill for our Grades 4-7 class, I was will to lead the drill.

Except some of our students had brought their ipads and Blackberries – with the Bible on them.  Now, the smartest and quickest of the paper Bible crowd was the one who wanted the sword drill.  He thought he could match those with electronica!

So, I started with a fairly hard verse – in the middle nowhere as far as  Bible verses are concerned.  The studious one found it fairly quickly.  But not quickly enough.  The electronica gang had merely to click three times and in a matter of a second the verse was found.  Attempting an easier verse fared no better.

And so, the sword drill may become a dinosaur!  Perhaps we can now ask the students not only to find the verse quickly (which will not take much), but now, because they will have no problem finding the verse, we can ask them to explain the verse in their own words.  Competition and content – not a bad idea!!

Darkness – a sign of the times

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You may have been told that you need to be quiet as a way of knowing God.  Usually that meant shutting out noise and not being noisy yourself.  Works well in a worship service to shut off all the instruments, quiet the vocals and let silence reign. 

Very uncomfortable for people who live in a busy world.

Today I was reading about our shifting culture.  In a day and age when worship services were mostly done through reading and music, this was an easy thing to accomplish.

Now, in a day and age when media is king, the newest concern is to be dark and know who God is.  We have been so overcrowded with images and visual noise that we need to include darkness in our services.

At first I was adverse to the thought that we, the people of the light, would seek God in darkness.  And I still struggle with this being a fad.

But, at the same time, I wonder how many of us close our eyes when we pray.  If you have ever prayed with your eyes open, you know that there is a different feel to your prayers.  When you go to the dark in prayer, there is a certain meditation and concentration that happens.

So, maybe there is something to this idea that in darkness we know God.  What do you think?