Category: Hmmmm

  • a decade ago and payday

    10 years ago i was a manager at a family christian store in the dallas area. we had our annual sales conference in grand rapids and went to visit the FCS home office.

    little did i remember, the FCS home office and zondervan’s offices are in the same building. so yesterday, when i walked into zondervan, it was like a crazy flash back. who would have known i would be back?

    today i spend most of my day in meetings with all the people who have worked so hard on mad church disease – my editiors, designer, marketing guy, and a few others in different departments as well. it has been so awesome to see the inner workings of a publisher!

    also today, most of us GET PAID!

    we are almost at 4000 shoes on the 50,000 shoes website. i challenged the facebook group of 1000 members to all give 5 bucks today (at least!) and so i am challenging you to do the same as well. some of you have already given and i appreciate that, but since it’s payday (and someone suggested the great idea of reposting the need on payday!) here i am. i am going to go donate a few pairs.

    The 50,000 Pairs in 50 Days Challenge

    it’s my goal to you guys and the facebook group to get it to 8000 shoes by the weekend. i know we can do it…especially if all of us just do our small parts.

    visit the site here to see how many shoes we have donated and how much time we have left!

    see you guys soon. and thank you.

  • search engine enjoyment

    i was on my couch all day saturday. really.

    my “thankful it’s not a full body ache cold” turned into “well, at least it’s not pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis yesterday.

    and as such, i’ve been bored out of my mind.

    read a book. watched four movies. slept a lot. and checked in on my search engine stats. just what has brought people to flowerdust.net lately?

    *what if you dont poop for a whole month? (i suggest you talk to my friend)

    *can you get a dui on a golf cart (have you seen this video?!)

    *the daddle (oh yes. who could forget the daddle?)

    have a great sunday. i know you are much more enlightened now.

  • there are a lot of lazy church staff people

    “the reason a lot of people choose to work on a church staff is because they’re too lazy or too afraid to get a job in the real world.”

    wow. that was pretty harsh. i didn’t mean for it to come out so bluntly.

    so at the lunch table with some friends, i backpedaled just a little bit and added,

    “of course, that’s a very broad statement…not everyone who works in a church is afraid or lazy…i’m just saying there are a lot of people who take jobs in churches because a church can be a really easy place to work.”

    emphasis on can be.there are a lot of people floating along in life by working at a church.

    sure you may get paid a little less or not get as many benefits, but it’s so easy…why would you stop?

    you want to know why some people get burned out in ministry? it’s not because they’re working too hard. it’s because they’ve set their level of expectations (both spiritual and pragmatic) so low that when something actually happens that causes them to rely on god’s strength rather than their own strength, it freaks them out. and then there’s no accountability in place, so even more chaos ensues.

    let’s face it: there are so many things you can get away with working on a church staff that would never happen in the real world, and many of us take advantage of it. i know i have before. and if we ever expect anyone outside of this little bubble we’ve created to take us seriously, we’ve got to stop.

    like it or not, pretty much everyone else can see straight through it. how do i know? because i have had more than one person outside the bubble tell me this in recent days. and our behavior is setting a terrible example of so many things: stewardship of time, money, relationships, to name a few.

    the fact that there is even a bubble to speak of says there’s something seriously wrong.

    when i interviewed bill hybels for his contribution in mad church disease, i asked:

    what are some of the diseases you see plaguing the church today?

    he said,

    I see twin towers of concern. One is burnout; the other is complacency. There are a lot of Christ-followers who haven?t taken the time to figure out what their holy discontent is, and so they?re doing a gradual slide into apathy and complacency?and that is unconscionable in a broken and lost world. I?m as concerned about Christ-followers? apathy as I am about other believers who are borderline exhausted. I would hope we could find the kind of energy that comes only from the Holy Spirit so that we can sustain productive, Christ-honoring ministry over the long haul.

    bill’s a smart guy.

    so, if you’re currently on a church staff i want you to take a good hard look inside and ask yourself why you’re there. is it because you’ve been called and are fulfilling god’s dream for you? because you see the brokenness in the world and you absolutely MUST do something about it, and the local church is the place you’re supposed to be?

    or is it because you know you can’t get away with half the stuff you do if you were to get a “non church” job? because you don’t know how to relate to people outside the bubble? because you’re afraid that you might actually have to be stretched and grow outside of a safe, christian comfort zone?

    ====
    note: i really battled posting this for fear that it was too negative. ministry is hard work and there are a lot of great people out there kicking tail. at the end of the day (and after reassurance from a couple of people who got a sneak peek) i decided to go ahead and let it roll. so know that i’m working on how to communicate the things in my head a little more redemptively. in the mean time, thanks for hanging in there with me as i learn.

  • my prayer for you this weekend [and for me]

    Lord, make me an instrument of Thy peace;
    Where there is hatred,
    let me sow love;
    Where there is injury,
    pardon;
    Where there is error,
    the truth;
    Where there is doubt,
    the faith;
    Where there is despair,
    hope;
    Where there is darkness,
    light;
    And where there is sadness,
    joy.

    O Divine Master,
    Grant that I may not so much seek
    To be consoled,
    as to console;
    To be understood,
    as to understand;
    To be loved
    as to love.

    For it
    is in giving
    that we receive;
    It is in pardoning
    that we are pardoned;
    And it
    is in dying that we are born to eternal life.

    Amen.

    St. Francis

  • how do you say goodbye?

    i don’t like talking on the phone for one reason: i don’t know how to say goodbye.

    “see ya?”

    “mmmkay, bye?”

    “…awkward silence…”

    am i the only one with this problem?

    on the flip side, i’ve noticed some people say the exact same thing whenever they say goodbye. after playing phone tag with a particular person for a while, this person always closes with:

    “seeya later, bye”

    which doesn’t make since because he and i:

    a) have never met

    and

    b) will likely never see each other

    how do you say goodbye?

  • the starry clay pot

    the knock on the classroom door took nobody by surprise. in between defining the X and the Y axis, ms. gibson strolled over to let the visitor in. it was shirley, the school’s office assistant. at least, it looked like shirley. curly ribbons covered her arms like thin, plastic bracelets and balloons floated up and down, hiding her face. but it was shirley alright. her blue-gray hair peeked out just enough to identify her.

    after she handed ms. gibson the balloons, she closed the large metal door as quietly as one could. even with her extra effort, the slam echoed down the empty hall, vibrating off lockers and the shiny tile floor.

    ms. gibson looked down at the card sticking out of the vase where the balloons and a few flowers had been planted.

    “it’s for you, jannelle. for your birthday. from your dad.”

    blushing, yet secretly proud, jannelle walked to the front of the class to retrieve her gift. she didn’t like knowing every kid in her fourth grade class was watching her, but she couldn’t help but feel the swelling in her heart, knowing her dad remembered her birthday. he may not have been around much, but this yearly tradition always was a perfect reminder that she was loved.

    while the rest of the class continued on to geometry, jannelle stared at the vase. it was short…more like a pot, really, than a vase. there were glittery moons and stars painted on the dark, midnight blue ceramic. it was just like the sky she would look out at every night from her front yard.

    eventually, the balloons deflated and the flowers died a few days later, but jannelle held on to that pot like it was her most valued possession. she placed it prominently on her dresser back in her bedroom, using it as a container for jewelry or candles or other knick knacks that she picked up along the way.

    and then jannelle grew up like most fourth graders do. she found her own two feet and started out on her own. the starry clay pot went along the journey with her.

    from her first apartment to her first condo, through various rooomates and even different cities, the starry clay pot was like a quiet whisper of affirmation from her past. she got married, and as she unpacked her belongings in her new home, she carefully unwrapped the pot and placed it on the ledge above her kitchen sink.

    she took a step back and stared at it. twenty years later, it was still in perfect shape. yet her heart grieved, knowing her relationship with her father and her family hadn’t traveled as well as this clay pot had. in fact, they hadn’t spoken to each other in quite some time.

    one quiet, sunday afternoon, jannelle walked through the front door. casually, her husband said,

    “you know that blue pot with the stars on it? i hope that wasn’t very important or anything.”

    she could barely catch her breath.

    “why?”

    “it got bumped off the ledge. it shattered.”

    the grief she felt earlier traveled from her heart into her stomach and then back in her throat again. there was a sad irony about the pot breaking. maybe it was time. time to embrace the fact that life and love looked different now than they did in the fourth grade. that family doesn’t always mean flesh and blood, but those who surround you and care about you and support you during all the seasons of your life.

    no doubt there was something sentimental about a starry clay pot. and even though what’s left is now thrown out with empty cereal boxes and soda cans, jannelle can take a deep breath and let go. because she knows that outside, a real midnight blue sky with swirls of stars and a sparkly moon are waiting for her. and under that moon and those stars are people that love her.

  • help me pick a domain name

    there is a real estate agent who owns annejackson.com and won’t sell it, even though i offered her everything i own. which isn’t much. which is probably why she won’t sell it.

    so…

    i need to get a main “author” site up and running soon and already have a fab designer working on it. i just have no idea what to do about the domain.

    should i stick with a version of my name? (i already own annejackson.org) or should i use something writer-ish and clever?

    shaun is going through this identity crisis too. i am glad i am not alone.

    so…you creative and wonderful people…please help…

  • churchy wordisms that confuse me

    why do christians say “we love people where they are?”

    think about it….

    where are they…compared to where we think we are? and why do we make it sound like such a feat of accomplishment?

    i’ve had too much caffeine today. please excuse me.

  • why is it…[common sense]

    that the wrong choices seem better than the right choices?

    that it’s really easy to be selfish even though you know it’s wrong?

    that you know you can choose to forgive and move on, but still hang on to past hurts? even though you know you’ll be so much better off if you just let go?

    common sense eludes me often.

    you?