Home
Advanced Search

News & Announcments

29. 08. 2008 - 
  • Young Adults

Last Summer BBQ this Sunday!!!

Sunday Aug 31st is the Last summer BBQ!!!Thank-you to everyone who has come out to weekly BBQ's,they have been a great opportunity to hang out and keep connected thorough the summer. Just a reminder that this is the last formally planned BBQ. It would be great if we could have a large turnout so that we can celebrate this final BBQ together.Salads and deserts are still potluck style, and rumor has it there will be a cake this week!Date: 29 Aug 2008

  • Login or register to post comments
  • Read more
24. 06. 2008 - 
  • Young Adults

Don't forget your towel !!!

Hey YAs, don't forget to bring your swimsuit and towl to the BBQ on Sunday (June 29th). We have a pool available and it looks like the weather is going to be great!!!Date: 24 Jun 2008

  • 2 comments
16. 04. 2008 - 
  • Young Adults

New photos!

Perhaps this will count as news. I don't really want to start bumping down the blog entries so I'll use the "News & Announcements" piece to tell everyone that there are new photos up on the site. I just posted the photos from the Easter Baptism. Go take a look. Seriously. Go look now! Don't just take a look though. Comment on the photos. Don't be invisible here.

  • 1 comment
View more news

Events

01Jan

SFU UNDERGRADUATE SEMESTER IN DIALOGUE - "DESIGNING THE FUTURE"

UNDERGRADUATE SEMESTER IN DIALOGUE
"DESIGNING THE FUTURE"

Are you an undergraduate at SFU looking for an exciting and
innovative way to learn? Are you interested in learning with students
in departments outside your own? Apply now for the spring 2009
semester:

Designing the Future

We will use MetroVancouver to explore the multiple dimensions of
sustainability as they relate to the city, region and the global
context. "Designing the Future" brings together writers, policy
makers, and leading thinkers, as well as designers, artists, business
and community leaders to examine how the decisions we are making
today are significantly altering the region. We will use a systems
approach to pose some fundamental questions examining urban
sustainability:
- Do we really know what sustainability is?
- What ideas shape the way we currently live?
- What ideas are the most important for living on the planet -
in and out of cities?
- What is sustainable urban development for the 21st Century?
- Do our conceptions of urban systems (water, energy,
transportation etc) predispose us to unsustainability?
- How do we understand and balance competing forces in order to
turn visions for the future into reality?
- How do we move forward with hope and optimism?

Plan to be excited, confused, mesmerized, optimistic, and
disenchanted while engaging deeply with leading experts in
sustainability, green design, community planning, cultural change and
social responsibility.

The course will be co-taught by Janet Moore and Duane Elverum. Janet
is a faculty member at the Centre for Dialogue at SFU, collaborator
with the SFU Centre for Sustainable Community Development and leader
of a social network of sustainability educators
(walkingthetalk.bc.ca). Duane Elverum is an Emily Carr faculty member
where he teaches in Design, Foundation, and Critical Studies as well
as develops coursework in sustainable systems. He sits on the
President's Sustainability Task Force at the university. He is
personally responsible for emitting 5.4 tonnes of CO2 per year into
the atmosphere. He has crossed the Pacific Ocean in a sailboat five
times.

Details: January-April 2009, full-time Monday-Friday, 15 credits
Extended Application Deadline: October 31, 2008

For further information visit our web site www.sfu.ca/dialogue/undergrad

Or contact Janet Moore (jlmoore@sfu.ca, phone
Filed Under:
  • Young Adults
Add to calendar
View more events

Latest Discussion

  • 02. 07. 2008
    Corporate Prayer

    I think our hesitancy to pray aloud comes out of fear and trying to compare how we pray to others and how they prayer. I was guilty of this myself in the passed and now I don't concern myself with that, since its not about me its about Jesus. He cares that we are communicating with him and that it is honest and sincere. There are also some that don't pray aloud that are probably praying to quietly.

    If we did pray more on our own it could give us more confidence in praying aloud when we get together. But do we actually know what prayer is and do we want to put the time and effort into praying all the time?

    As I pondered the question, How can our group move onto maturity in the area of prayer?, I thought:, Is us praying together more, a sign of maturity when we get together? I would tend to say yes, since we would be putting God and others before ourselves. Thus becoming more like him.

  • 22. 06. 2008
    Deep and wide

    Talked to a friend tonight, and their thought was, "I'm not sure what 'wide' could refer to unless it included others." To me it means our depth refers to our relationship with God and it speaks to the width of our relationship being inclusive of other people. A healthy "wide" person is inclusive of their depth with God. On an academic level, our knowledge of God and study is of many things, but we go beyond the textbook and have a deep relationship. It isn't just words any more.

    We don't exclude people like the monks that become hermits to a fault. Our faith isn't hidden inside or exclusive to others, it isn't something we hold on as our own inside. The depth of our relationship speaks to how we love all people and have the depth to show that our love doesn't evaporate.

  • 19. 06. 2008
    Running the Race being Selfish

    I too was apart of the group that posed that question. I think it was put out there to make us think.

    Since God ordained for us to do this it is not possible to be selfish, since we are obeying what he is telling us to do. An athlete practices to make himself better while we as believers must practice self-denial and self control(dying to self). The prize for the athlete is, as NKJV puts it, a perishable crown and we an imperishable crown thus our focus is not of something that we won't be able to take when we go to heaven but on one that we can have forever.

    Without prayer, Bible study and worship, which are essential, we won't grow spiritual that much. When doing these things we are running with strength and stamina.

  • 18. 06. 2008
    Benevolent Trees

    I think I see what you're saying.  That wasn't all that clear to me.

    You describe the tree as so very kind and generous.  I like that.

    I also enjoyed your point about the Desert Fathers, although their breadth of influence upon Church history is quite extensive.  

     What might it look like to be deep AND wide?

  • 18. 06. 2008
    clarification

    I was part of the group that made that comment. I think it was more of a statement about the analogy of the runner in the race compared to that of the tree. The runner trains and runs to win a prize. He doesn't do it to help anybody necessarily. The tree, on the other hand, is almost solely there to help others. From the air we breath to the fruit that grows on its branches it utilizies the nutrients and sunlight to create things for others.

    It wasn't really meant to be saying that the Christian 'race' is a selfish one. Not to say it can be. Think of those who spent their lives in solitude, far away from the "world". There you have the opposite of the North American christian: an inch wide and a mile deep.

    That's all I have for now 'cause I'm supposed to be working.

  • 18. 06. 2008
    Is "running the race" ultimately selfish?
    A good question was asked on Monday concerning the motive of our spiritual pursuit. In reference to 1 Cor 9:24-27, someone inquired regarding whether "running the race to get the prize" is selfish. What are your thoughts? I have been pondering this significant question and would welcome more insights and perspectives from the group if you have the gusto...or time.
  • 16. 04. 2008
    a new concept

    Dave,

    I guess I was a little surprised at how new a concept 'solidarity' seemed to our group. And maybe we were all a little out of it on Monday...I sure felt like I was.

    Speaking with Dave McKay afterwards, he threw out the possibility that I was walking in solidarity with the YA leaders. Many of our leaders are stressed, sick, grieving, fatigued, and dealing with other challenges. Not that my own life isn't feeling full of its own stressors (ie. moving!!), but that I am connected and vulnerable to others in our community.

    Do you think it's possible that we are more connected to each other than we think? What if it's true that when one part of the body suffers, all parts suffer (cf. 1 Cor 12:26)?

     

Visit forum

Poll

Should we consider May long weekend for Spring Retreat 2009?

View results

  • Login
  • Register
  • Contact
  • Directions
Go To Peace Portal Main Site
  • Home
  • Community
  • News
  • Events
  • About
  • Blogs
  • Forum
  • Groups
  • Photos
Home » Community

Blogs

Oct 21
  • Young Adults

Final Thoughts on "Resisting the Devil"

Dear Friends,

After last night's dialogue at iMAGE relating to "Resisting the Devil" (James 4:7), two thoughts have come to mind:

1) If you have not or do not experience "times of temptation," why not?  Is it that you do and you are unaware of them?  Or is it possible that the devil does not see you as a threat or worth his energy?

2) On our own (apart from Christ), we are far weaker than our Enemy, Satan.  But GOOD NEWS! Christ has overcome death and the devil and He has been given authority over him.  We must understand that Christ in us is the only way we can resist the devil.  In our weakness, Christ is strong.  It is in our acknowledgement of our own powerlessness that we experience the power of God.  Through the Spirit of Jesus, invoked by prayer in the Name of Jesus, we intend to stand firm and resist.     

Jesus, lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil!

Keep the faith,

Sandy

  • sandyc's blog
  • Login or register to post comments
Aug 13
  • Young Adults

Summer, where did you go?

Is it just me or did anyone else find that summer seemed to go by pretty quickly this year. It might've been the ridiculous weather but there's no sense complaining about that. We live in Vancouver and it really is amazingly beautiful here.

 

So what did everyone do over summer? Did you go visit friends and relatives? Did they come to see you? Did you go to a park or a suspension bridge or another country? How about going to a quay? Those are always nice. Maybe you took a day and wandered Granville Island and its art galleries. I'm sure a lot of us went to White Rock beach a number over the summer. Or did you stick with Crescent Beach because of the annoying parking at White Rock beach?

 

Try a new restaurant that people should know about? Maybe there's an awesome place to get ice cream or something. What about a local attraction? Anybody get to see the new Baluga whale at the aquarium? Perhaps you just found the best place in the lower mainland to get a sunburn. That'd be cool to hear about.

 

I said that the summer went by quickly but when I think back I realize that I believe I did all the things I talked about. Leave a comment and let's hear what you guys did. Do you still have a few things planned for the remaining weeks? Perhaps you just want to get upset that we don't have any medals in the olympics. Let's hear what you have to say.

  • dpiechnik's blog
  • Login or register to post comments
Jun 25
  • Young Adults

"I ask only for the sunshine of Your face."

Elisabeth Elliot's quote above, as well as Numbers 6:24-26, have prompted me to invite you to learn how to desire the sunshine of God’s face even more than the sunshine outside. 

Hear the heart of the Psalter:

-Ps 4:6-Let the light of your face shine upon us.

-Ps 31:16-Let your face shine on your servant.

-See also Ps. 44:3 and Ps. 80

-Check out Revelation 21:23 (“The city does not need the sun or the moon to shine on it, for the glory of God gives it light, and the Lamb is its lamp”) and 22:5 (“There will be no more night.  They will not need the light of a lamp or the light of the sun, for the Lord God will give them light.)

 In Christ, we have a Light shining in our hearts that the people of this world do not have.  And this light is not of this world, but of heaven. 

I write this, not to downplay how stoked I am that the sun is shining outside today (!!), but to challenge you, young men and women, to be heavenly minded. 

I agree with the science that sunshine causes chemical reactions in our bodies that are most helpful.  However, I have noticed a consistent complaining spirit regarding the weather in the people around me and I hope that you are given the grace to overcome it.  May we learn to perceive goodness no matter the weather, and call to mind that "...God, who said, 'Let light shine out of darkness,' made his light shine in our hearts to give us the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ" (2 Cor 4:6). 

May we together be salt and light in our community for the glory of God.

  • sandyc's blog
  • Login or register to post comments
May 12
  • Young Adults

Identity in Christ and with the world

There are so many questions, concerns, doubts, and difficulties that arise when you discuss identity. Some people are firm in who they are and they seem to understand themselves completely. Others are lost and confused and aren't sure what to think about themselves. People travel the world trying to "find" themselves. Where do you fit in to this?

 

Tonight we covered a number of questions about our identity and what it means to us. The difficulties we face in trying to discover what our identity is and what can happen when we try to learn about ourselves. Perhaps we have two identities, the one when we're with our Christian friends and the one we have when we are at work or out with other friends. Maybe we have a difficult time letting people get to know our true identity and a secondary face is put on as a protective barrier.

 

There's an awful lot that can be talked about regarding identity and there's no way we covered it all last night. We could even talk about society and the identities that are placed upon us, or even the ones that are not put on us in the North American culture. We are almost forced to forge our own identity as apposed to some cultures that affix an identity to a person at a certain age.

 

Let's talk about this, folks. There's a forum set up and it's ready for your words of wisdom and your discussion.

  • dpiechnik's blog
  • Login or register to post comments
Apr 15
  • Young Adults

Solidarity & Life

I just wrote a beautiful little blog entry about life and solidarity and all sorts of fantastic but then internet explorer refreshed the page (don't ask why. it's stupid) and I lost it all. I'd love to write it again but let's just summarize by saying that it's a hectic time of year for some of you school folks and some of us may not have been all there on Monday night... I know I wasn't. Because of this I have decided to set up a forum for our weekly discussions. I started a posting for a solidarity discussion that I hope we will all take part in. Let's talk about this stuff outside of Monday nights. Everyone up for that? Good. Discuss!

  • dpiechnik's blog
  • Login or register to post comments
12next ›last »
Web Design by IMAGEX MEDIA