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Sunday, July 31, 2011

Selective SIns

I have a pastor friend who got an admonition concerning a supposed violation of the Sabbath. It seems he helping cutting the church's lawn on Sundays, but there's more to the story. The person helping him was a neighbor of the church who was not a member. In fact, he felt he wasn't worthy since he was dealing with certain issues, and Sunday was the best time for him to cut the grass to help the church. My friend obviously wanted to help him, not just out of gratitude for giving of his labor and time for free, but to get a chance to minister to him.

However, word got around, and an elder chastised him in an email about working on the Sabbath. Although he is a pastor, and as a result, always working on the Sabbath, his sin was for appearance's sake. Never mind the neighbor is giving his time (would the people who objected step up and offer to mow the grass in his place?). It is also sad that his authority as spiritual head of the congregation is compromised by this kind of communication.

I believe Jesus answered the question posed by the Pharisees regarding the Sabbath, stating the Sabbath was for man, and not man for the Sabbath. It is ironic when we turn away people in need who volunteer their time because of the letter of the Law, and not its Spirit (including Holy one). As Matthew 12:9-13 states:
"9 And when he was departed thence, he went into their synagogue:
10 And, behold, there was a man which had [his] hand withered. And they asked him, saying, Is it lawful to heal on the sabbath days? that they might accuse him.
11 And he said unto them, What man shall there be among you, that shall have one sheep, and if it fall into a pit on the sabbath day, will he not lay hold on it, and lift [it] out?
12 How much then is a man better than a sheep? Wherefore it is lawful to do well on the sabbath days.
13 Then saith he to the man, Stretch forth thine hand. And he stretched [it] forth; and it was restored whole, like as the other."

It's strange how selective we are in dealing with sins. We condemn people for going into bars on the premise that weaker brethren might stumble. However, they have no problem serving rich foods full of empty calories and cholesterol inducing deserts around people susceptible to overindulging and heath issues at church dinners. Smoking and drinking is wrong because we are to treat our bodies as temples, but the gluttony of overeating and gossip is often ignored. I wonder if the same people who criticized my friend  for breaking the Sabbath are the same people who cause others to work on Sundays because of their love after church buffets at restaurants?





Friday, July 29, 2011

Confessions of a Pew Warmer

I've heard the term "pew warmer" as a derogatory way of calling people who do not participate in church functions. As someone who can be called that, let me offer my perspective on how to add more "pew warmers".

1. Overload on programs and events with auxiliary duties not related directly to evangelism. Sunday morning. Sunday nights. Wednesday nights. Cook offs. Missionary Tuesdays. Mowing. Nursery duty. Vacation Bible School. And don't forget Saturday morning prayer at 7am.

2. Forget that we don't live in a 1950's culture. A generation or two ago, we had the father work as the breadwinner, and the mother took care of the children. Today, people work more in a service economic sector that requires work at nights and weekends, what with the disappearance of manufacturing jobs. With single parent and dual income households, leisure and family time is at a minimum, and helping your kids with their homework takes precedent over washing dishes at Youth Pastor Appreciation Night.

3. Schedule corporate prayer time at an un Godly hour. I've heard of a couple scheduled at 7am, one by a pastor with no kids to take care of, and wondered why attendance was sluggish. Some people have other priorities, such as being at a job on time. If certain pastors had to punch time clocks, maybe they would appreciate this more (but the Pastor was already at his place of work, so no problem).

4. When people are unable to attend functions and services, use it as a velvet wedge of disapproval. It creates an us versus them: the saints that are present at every church function, and the heathen who only come to church at their convenience. After all, if the widower Jones can make Sunday evening service, it's just too bad that Mary with two kids ages five and three couldn't make it, but I guess she has other things to do besides attending church three times a week, bless her heart. But she is praying for her.

5. Treating visitors special while neglecting regular members. Visitors can be treated very special in churches, Songs sung to them, gifts, handshakes, and dinner invitations. How well do you treat a fellow member? Are they having a hard time? Are they feeling overwhelmed? It's hard to be in Church whenever the doors are open when you have family issues and work two jobs. People going through such issues when judged according to their attendance are eventually called former members. Wouldn't it almost be nice if you could not accept visitors because the church was too full with regular members.

6. Call people "pew warmers." Alienate more people with names and judgment and give them a reason to hate church and not come back.

Saturday, July 16, 2011

A New View on Term Limits

Term limits for politicians came into vogue in 1994 with the advent of the "Contract for America," the political marketing plan of the Republicans to take over Congress. I was initially opposed to the idea, thinking it was a lazy way to circumvent citizen involment. After all, every politician is term limited, and must run for reelection when it expires. If voters think he is not doing an adequate job, they should mobilize to displace him come election time. The Republican wanted term limits, until they got elected, and found that staying in office was to their liking, and the term limits pledge quietly drifted away.

But another factor has come to sway my opinion on the matter: seniority. We are all supposed to be equal in the United States. However, in such bodies as the Congress, members with more seniority have more power than their less tenured colleagues. Although the Constitution gives Congress the right to set its own rules, I feel it violates the overall spirit of the Constitution. US Senators have been known to serve for decades, faithfully bringing home the pork because of the number of years served in the institution, not because of the actual need for the project. This in turn puts voters in an uncomfortable position: vote for the candidate with new ideas and energy (and loss of seniority and plum committee assignments), or vote for the multiple termed Senator whose only credentials are how much federal monies he veered to his state. It becomes  a self-perpetuating cycle of reelection and the ensuing pork, and candidates with something new to contribute are therefore shut out and left in the political periphery, and their talents going no further usually than city council and the private sector.

One reason I think we are in such a financial mess we are in is because pet projects ear marked for states and districts, and thereby ensuring reelection. Although many public works need tended to, there are some that are really just not needed for public (such as festivals) use and protection, and at the expense of worthy projects in districts not represented by poiticians with the necessary time in office. These projects are usually named with the incumbent's name attached to it, providing free campaign publicity and making a newcomer's bid that much harder.

Another reason some have against term limits is experience is necessary to properly perform governmental functions. While I don't underestimate the virtueof experience, experience can come from other venues, such as from other elective and appoined offices, working in nonprofit groups and charities, education, as well as critical thinking. Institutional memory is good, but long term staffers can provide that to, as well as advice from former members.

Recently, an incumbant who's been in office since the Carter administration was defeated, and essentially lived in Virginia, a couple thousand miles from the state he was supposed to represent. How involved was he with the daily lives and concerns of his constituants beyond town hall meeting? Another Senator passed away recently with five decades of service, and was known as a king of pork spending. The people who elected him might claim that term limits rob them of their ability to choose who they send to Washington. Perhaps so. But this was a United States Senator, not a state senator. The laws he advocated and wheedeled affected the entire country, not just his state. The money he earmarked were paid by taxpayers of the fifty states, not just his.

Whiule we want politicians to to be accountable to our needs, and it happens when they run for reelection because they want to keep the job, it can sometimes be detrimental as well. Take Medicare and Social Security. These programs are going broke, and the answer is to wait, or let other politicians worry about it when it comes to it, because by then they will be out of office anyway. Social Security is a program based on 1935 demographics and actuarial tables (18 workers to one retiree ratio, and life expectancy of 65 years of age). If Social Secuity will be bankrupt in thirty years, do you want to wait twenty eight years to fix it? Or, in other words in your own case, do you want to wait two years before retirement? With these programs cosidered the third rail of politics, don't wait for career politicians to fix them.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

From Olde English to txt lol!!!!

There are some words and phrases that should be banned from the national lexicon and discussion. Today as our society is becoming more dumbed down, it is hard to believe that the Federalist Papers, considered by many hard to read due to the extensive vocabulary, was written to mainly New England farmers. Here are a few that should be eliminated. They are either flat out annoying, worn out, or just unoriginal. Maybe you say them and think they're funny or cool, but not so much when your a recipient of them. Remember, our language descended from Shakespeare. So let's start setting an example.


"That is sooo...." Actually, that phrase is soooo old and tiresome.

Using z instead of an s to end a word, i.e. bad boyz, skullz, and the like. It was cute in the eighties when heavy metal musicians did this, but middle aged men writing this way is over the top and trying to hard to look hip and young, just like wearing your baseball cap backwards is.

"Oookaaayyy...." Funny when Johnny Carson said it thirty five years ago, today its just grating.

"Hellooo?" Don't expect a response, because I'm ignoring you like a door to door salesman.

"D'ya think?" Yes, that's why I said it (how about thinking of a new response).

OMG! I think my bff and I need to slow down and write intelligibly lol. :) Text messages and emails have created so much  poor spelling and grammar, I fear we will create a generation that cannot communicate with one another effectively. I believe it is just sloppy and inconsiderate not to slow down a little to proofread your text to see if you are coming across as literate person, or a teen texting while driving.

Administrative assistant. Whatever happened good old secretary? Why do titles today have to be a mouthful and cumbersome. The same with flight attendant. Stewardess is better (and if a man, steward). I think its just political correctness, or an attempt to inflate one's status (remember sanitation engineer?). Brevity is usually always best, and easier to say.

Using initials or first syllable to describe a place or person. A-Rod? Did anyone call Joe DiMaggio JDM? Babe Ruth BRuth? Granted, I'm contradicting myself from the preceding sentence concerning brevity, but let's give the players some dignity by giving their proper names, especially if you're supposed to be a professional broadcaster. And "Cali,"as in California sounds like a girl's name instead of a state.

"Puhhhleeeezze!" Even more irritating in a print forum when someone includes it as a response. Puhhhleeeezze try start coming across as an intelligent person.