Category: Church

  • how can i pray for you?

    this weekend, i am sharing my thoughts on blogging community at the lifechurch.tv internet campus. something i am talking about is how this community here on flowerdust.net has formed over the last few years and how we truly do cover each other in prayer, support, advice, and even discuss the questions of life. we even fight a little bit. all signs of healthy relationships!

    so, with that…i think it’s time to have another post dedicated to how we can pray for each other. i will be checking in over the weekend and praying for you, and encourage you to come back and do the same for others.

    i’ll start.

    chris & i could really use your prayers about our finances. we have cut back so much, but like some of you shared, similarly, we have made poor decisions in our past that we are paying for now. there is also quite a bit of medical debt that we were able to defer but it is now staring at us in the face and is making a tight situation tighter. i could identify with much of what anonymous had to say earlier this week.

    please pray that we are sensitive to areas we are able to cut back on so we can build more margin into that area of our life. and for god’s protection. we don’t have any room for emergencies!

    wow, that was hard to share!!!

    your turn…

  • the decline of christianity??

    it started last week when i was watching the today show. matt lauer was quietly peering through the door of a buddhist temple. the monks, quietly chanting. matt left his shoes at the door to respect the sacred space, and took a step or two in.

    “it’s nothing like anything you’ll ever see,” he said.

    a friend sent me some stats. it confirmed what i was questioning.

    the mainline protestant church is NOT REALLY growing.

    from the report:

    Mainline Protestant denominations continued to decline, according to the 2006 Yearbook of American and Canadian Churches. The United Methodist Church, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the Presbyterian Church USA, and the United Church of Christ, all reported slight decreases in membership in 2005. For the first time in many years, the Southern Baptist Convention, a conservative evangelical denomination, also showed a decrease of 1 percent.

    i am by NO MEANS a historian, or a theologian. but from what i’ve read, other, non-protestant religious sects are growing much faster than protestants.

    so then i wonder…what are we doing differently?

    my gut reaction came kind of easy…too easy…so that is why i wanted to run it by you.

    none of these other faiths are really “modernizing church” the way the west is doing it. (and please humor me; this is just me wondering out loud rather than any stance i am taking).

    when we (the modern, western church) are blending into our culture by appearances, other religions still keep to many of their sacred traditions, even to the point where it does not make sense at all.

    but the christian church is barely scrapping by statistically…the growth has come to a near-screeching halt, and less people are hearing about their one true love.

    your thoughts??

    [PS – this is simply going off statistics. this is not a reflection on spiritual growth. we’ll save that topic for a rainy day!]

  • my thoughts on boobies

    did you know?

    –there is a female feature we call breasts. they can also be referred to as “boobies,” or “the twins,” or “the rack,” or “jugs,” so on, so forth.

    –most men find this particular feature interesting. tempting. and amazing.

    –upon catching a glimpse of said feature (regardless of how much is actually exposed), it is likely for a man’s mind to go to places it shouldn’t.

    –with above knowledge, women, you now are educated and have no excuse.

    –PLEASE USE WISDOM WHEN YOU DRESS YOURSELF.

    aside: call me a prude. call me whatever. i don’t really care. and as much as this may seem like “casting judgment” (said in a very, scary, echo-y loud voice) on members of the female gender, please get a freaking clue.

    i was doing some bloggy-clicking-around during my lunch and it amazes me how many “nice christian girls” (some who are even in church leadership – gasp!) show quite a bit of skin. in the office, at church parties, whatever (oh, and then post them ALL OVER THE INTERNET!)

    please forgive me if it seems i have something stuck, as they say, where the sun don’t shine.

    I DO.

    it’s called modesty.

    and if you are supposed to be living examples of godly women…you should too!

    that is all.

    sermon over.

    please, carry on.

    [this is also part of watercooler wednesday!]

  • an atheist’s response to “things you can’t say in church”

    my friend hemant, aka, friendlyatheist, reposted monday’s blog about keeping your mouth shut.

    his readers have left some interesting comments.

    one comment in particular, caught my attention.

    greta writes,

    I gotta say, I don’t know if I could say anything harsher or more critical than the comments people actually made on the original post. I’m actually sort of impressed. A lot of them sound more hard-line atheist than me. I just can’t figure out why half of them keep going to church if that’s how they feel.

    The one that made me want to cry:
    Raising my hand: “Umm, pastor? I have a question.”
    Damn. If that’s the thing you can’t say in church, there is something seriously wrong.

    now, don’t get me wrong. that post wasn’t there to make everyone feel guilty or anything. i just wanted to know deep down, what some of your thoughts were and how you felt.

    why do we feel that way? thoughts?

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  • from the mailbag: tithing and debt

    i get a lot of email asking for advice. and sometimes most of the time i think you guys would do a much better job answering this stuff than i would.

    here’s an excerpt from someone who would like to remain anonymous.

    “This tithing thing. My wife and I have been Christians and going to church for some time. We recently started tithing 10%. This is a huge step for us because of the amount of debt we are in from our past. Every month since we have started tithing, we have also bounced checks and been overdrawn. If you look at our finances, every penny (and some) is accounted for before we even tithe. But we thought we’d “test God” like so many people say about tithing. We really don’t spend any on extra things. We don’t eat out, or buy clothes, or spend much on excess at all. I’d be happy to show anyone my checking account statements any day.

    But now we are getting far behind on our bills because we would rather not pay them than be overdrawn. I don’t want to sound cynical (really) but it is hard for me to continue tithing when I see that our home church has all the fancy stuff like big TVs and the staff always seem to have the latest gadgets and wear “hip” clothes when we have to be so careful when we get groceries. It’s not cheap feeding two adults and two little ones.

    What do you think is more important? Tithing or being personally responsible with our money?”

    dig in you guys…what do you think?

  • Guest Blogger: No Girls Allowed?

    Today’s post is from my friend Crystal Renaud. She is a strong woman in ministry (which you’ll be able to tell from this post!) and it has been really cool to see her grow and mature since the first time I met her (as a wee-barely-out-of-high-school-student). This is her second time guest blogging here. (Read her first guest post here).

    ======

    Crystal writes:

    My post today reflects my personal opinion and in no way reflects my employer or any particular church or denomination.

    Without further ado, here it be.

    The Good Ole Boys Club

    Confession: I am a bit of a feminist.

    Don’t get me wrong, I am not an extremist or going to lead a new suffragette movement, but I definitely have opinions when it comes to the power of women and dare I say it, their power in The Church.

    I have coined the phrase, ?Good Ole Boys Club? to refer to male leadership in The Church. As a woman, you can imagine this is a very difficult club to join. There?s a certain lacking anatomy that is against us. And because of this, being a woman in ministry is a lonely existence. These women are often unfairly silenced, their pay is considerably lower than their male counterparts and their hiring in these positions comes few and far between.

    How do I know this? Because I am one of them.

    Without a doubt, there are women all over this very blogsphere called to lead, and who are strong and equipped to do so. But in this male-dominated field, they are simply not accepted. You know who you are.

    Now, I am not a believer in women as senior pastors – however women do have a ton more to offer The Church and even to the men they are following than given the opportunity to prove.

    All over the Bible, there were women like Deborah (Judges), Esther, Martha and Phoebe (Romans) who were all leaders in their own right (and even so over men). Not to mention the various other seemingly nameless deaconesses and prophetesses, oh and Christ Himself appearing to women first to spread the news that He had Risen. Somehow these men were not afraid of women having a say and a platform to lead from.

    I am not going to claim myself a theologian; you can throw at me all your Timothy & Titus descriptions of an elder all day long, but that still doesn?t explain the inequality among men & women in ministry today.

    So tell me, in a country where women have overcome great oppression, have reached the top in business, juggle full-time jobs and/or full-time homes, why is ministry leadership still a clubhouse with a wooden sign saying ?No Girls Allowed??

  • weekend thought: what is influence?

    a friend of mine was talking about mother theresa yesterday…how she was significantly influential, but “to influence” was never her pursuit…” she only wanted to love and care for the sick, the unloved, the least, the dying. to allow the actions of jesus to be expressed in her everyday life.

    it made me think of this quote from an oswald chamber’s sermon:

    “The people who influence us the most are not those who detain us with their continual talk, but those who live their lives like the stars in the sky and “the lilies of the field”? simply and unaffectedly. Those are the lives that mold and shape us.

    If you want to be of use to God, maintain the proper relationship with Jesus Christ by staying focused on Him, and He will make use of you every minute you live? yet you will be unaware, on the conscious level of your life, that you are being used of Him.”

    i pray to be this kind of influencer.

  • the fifty hour challenge…can you do it?

    what if everyone in the city of detriot died?

    that’s the impact malaria has on the world EVERY YEAR. around one million people, including 750,000 children, die from malaria. and what sucks is that it’s completely preventable!! because of poverty, families can’t afford to buy nets or pay for treatment.

    today, 3,000 children died from malaria…while we were all talking about what we’d do with an extra ten bucks.

    but with ten bucks, you can make a change. you can bite back.

    ten dollars provides a mosquito net that will protect a child from mosquitoes for THREE YEARS. it also provides education and treatment for those who have malaria.

    i’d like to present a challenge to you. april 25 is world malaria day. and i want to see at least 50 people from this blog community donate at least $10 to buy a child a net in the next 50 hours (by 7 pm CST on Friday).

    50 nets in the next 50 hours.

    super easy.

    Malaria Prevention

    FIRST…

    click HERE to donate through compassion international’s malaria fund.

    SECOND…

    click HERE to leave a comment and let me know you’ve donated.

    THIRD…
    spread the word. post about this on your blog. steal the graphic!

    here’s the code:

    50 hours. 50 nets. let’s do it!!

  • churches that rob each other??

    ever since returning from africa, i’ve wondered something.

    is it just me, or does THE CHURCH seem to have its funds distributed fairly unequally?

    if we are all THE CHURCH (made up of individual, local churches)

    and, if we are shown an example in acts 2:44-45:

    All the believers were together and had everything in common. Selling their possessions and goods, they gave to anyone as he had need.


    then why:

    is there a hard working children’s pastor making $75/week and who gets his office furniture from the side of the road because his church can’t afford to buy him any?

    are churches closing because they don’t have enough money to sustain ministry?


    edit: and i won’t even go into listing things that are broken in churches around the globe and in impoverished countries.

    when:

    other churches are building multi-million dollar facilities…in the same town, on the same road, right across the street from each other?

    …i could make this list longer, but i am sure you get the point.

    like really.

    why?