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
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
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.
Comments
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.
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.
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?
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.