For her eleventh birthday Maryallie got a Guinea pig. He's black and white with cowlicks all over his little rodent body. He lives in a cage beneath the aquarium containing Shelly, the ornate box turtle that the kids found in the back yard a year ago.
She had a hard time deciding what to name him and we were all asked for our opinions. Since I'm almost certain that Guinea pigs were originally bred to be eaten, I suggested "Snack." This idea was rejected, as was the suggestion that we put the turtle and the pig in the same cage and watch them fight. What could be better than Reptile vs Rodent cage fighting?
Instead she named him Pippin, after her favorite hobbit in the Lord of the Rings.
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Saturday, September 27, 2008
Happy Eleventh to the Triplets
I'm a couple of days late but I've been catching up on work after Ike. The triplets turned 11 on the 25th. No big parties this year, just a couple of sleepovers and some cake and icecream. Here's a recent pic of the Big Three, plus various siblings and neighbors on the first day of school.
And now we're off to three soccer games, two volleyball games, and a makeup lesson for piano - a typical Saturday.
Friday, September 19, 2008
Update on the Aftermath
All the members of the church are being contacted and needs are being met. Only a few families had major damage done to their houses and no one was injured during the storm. Special kudos to Sally and Bob Mitchell's small group who showed up to clean after their home took on water. If we have missed a need, please let us know!
Due to the school being closed, we are worshipping this Sunday in room 300 of Copperfield Church at 9:30am. We will be having our own service led by both choir and band. Special thanks to Pastor Larry Womack and the members of Copperfield Church, who continue to bless our young church.
Our Men's Ministry has also been postponed another week because our hosts, Calvary Community Church, took on water after their steeple blew off and put a hole in their roof! They are hopeful that things will get cleaned up quickly as soon as they have power.
If you are interested in making a financial contribution to aid the hurricane relief, my suggestion is Somebody Cares America. http://www.somebodycares.org/ They are amazing.
Due to the school being closed, we are worshipping this Sunday in room 300 of Copperfield Church at 9:30am. We will be having our own service led by both choir and band. Special thanks to Pastor Larry Womack and the members of Copperfield Church, who continue to bless our young church.
Our Men's Ministry has also been postponed another week because our hosts, Calvary Community Church, took on water after their steeple blew off and put a hole in their roof! They are hopeful that things will get cleaned up quickly as soon as they have power.
If you are interested in making a financial contribution to aid the hurricane relief, my suggestion is Somebody Cares America. http://www.somebodycares.org/ They are amazing.
Monday, September 15, 2008
Paging Michael Compton.....
Michael,
You left me a message on our office voicemail......with no call back number. I don't have your number or a current email and you seem to be unlisted. So, since you mentioned that you are reading the blog on a regular basis, I'll use it to say: send me an email escott@lifepathHouston.com
Elliott
You left me a message on our office voicemail......with no call back number. I don't have your number or a current email and you seem to be unlisted. So, since you mentioned that you are reading the blog on a regular basis, I'll use it to say: send me an email escott@lifepathHouston.com
Elliott
After Ike
There is still no power at our house but the office is already up and running, which allows me to make this post.
Our home suffered no damage save the loss of two fences and some downed limbs. But if you know my wife Allie, then you know that by now the fence debris has been removed, our yard is cleaned up and actually looks better than before the storm hit.
Worship with the Copperfield Church was good. Larry preached a great sermon on forgiveness and asked me to give a prayer during the service. I was pleased to see so many of the Lifepath people were in attendance but I worry, of course, about everyone who wasn't there. The lack of phones and email access really gives one a helpless feeling.
Greg has begun calling people, trying to find out if anyone needs help. So far everyone has been OK. We will be setting up a system to get people the help they need. I believe there is already something up on the website. I look forward to us helping people in the community as well as the people of Lifepath Church. It is a great opportunity to begin living the "Inside-Out" vision.
God has been good and we continue to pray for the rapid recovery for all affected by Hurricane Ike.
Our home suffered no damage save the loss of two fences and some downed limbs. But if you know my wife Allie, then you know that by now the fence debris has been removed, our yard is cleaned up and actually looks better than before the storm hit.
Worship with the Copperfield Church was good. Larry preached a great sermon on forgiveness and asked me to give a prayer during the service. I was pleased to see so many of the Lifepath people were in attendance but I worry, of course, about everyone who wasn't there. The lack of phones and email access really gives one a helpless feeling.
Greg has begun calling people, trying to find out if anyone needs help. So far everyone has been OK. We will be setting up a system to get people the help they need. I believe there is already something up on the website. I look forward to us helping people in the community as well as the people of Lifepath Church. It is a great opportunity to begin living the "Inside-Out" vision.
God has been good and we continue to pray for the rapid recovery for all affected by Hurricane Ike.
Friday, September 12, 2008
Getting Ready
Like many of you, we spent this morning getting ready for the storm.
My parents, grandmother, and their dog and four cats have arrived from Clear Lake to escape Ike's storm surge.
Well, we've done what we can. The windows are boarded, the supplies are ready, the family is gathered and the prayers have been said. I'm not looking forward to tonight.
Blessings on all of you.
Thursday, September 11, 2008
Worship at Copperfield Church
The school called us and told us that they are shutting down and we won't be able to worship there this Sunday. So instead we'll be worshiping with Copperfield Church at their 11:00 service. If you need a map, their website is http://www.copperfieldchurch.org/
They have a nice huge atrium with lots of light so it will be possible to hold a service even if there is no power.
Blessings to all of you in your preparations for the storm.
They have a nice huge atrium with lots of light so it will be possible to hold a service even if there is no power.
Blessings to all of you in your preparations for the storm.
Wednesday, September 10, 2008
An Unwelcome Guest
Here are the current computer models for Ike. They are predicting it to be a cat 4 and to make landfall at 8:00 am Saturday morning.
Now is the time to make sure you are ready:
1. gas in your car.
2. food
3. water - fill up the bathtubs before the storm hits.
4. medical needs
5. things picked up outside
6. materials for boarding up the house
7. batteries/generators for flashlights, radios etc.
8. pet needs
9. rain gear
That's not a comprehensive list but just what comes to my mind from a lifetime of living on the Gulf coast. For more and better resources, check out the following websites:
Weather Underground at http://www.wunderground.com/ provides resources for tracking.
The National Hurricane Center at http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/ provides all kinds of information including some steps to being prepared at http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/HAW2/english/action.shtml
At the moment we are definitely planning on church for Sunday, but if that changes we will be sending folks an email and posting on the church's website.
Now is the time to make sure you are ready:
1. gas in your car.
2. food
3. water - fill up the bathtubs before the storm hits.
4. medical needs
5. things picked up outside
6. materials for boarding up the house
7. batteries/generators for flashlights, radios etc.
8. pet needs
9. rain gear
That's not a comprehensive list but just what comes to my mind from a lifetime of living on the Gulf coast. For more and better resources, check out the following websites:
Weather Underground at http://www.wunderground.com/ provides resources for tracking.
The National Hurricane Center at http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/ provides all kinds of information including some steps to being prepared at http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/HAW2/english/action.shtml
At the moment we are definitely planning on church for Sunday, but if that changes we will be sending folks an email and posting on the church's website.
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
The Shack
The Shack, by William P. Young is a bit of a phenomenon.
Until recently its only publicity was an enthusiastic word-of-mouth campaign as devoted readers said the magic words to their friends: "You have to read this book." I first heard about it last spring from a pastor friend who couldn't stop talking about how great it was.
I don't know how many copies it has sold but it was recently reviewed in both Time Magazine and Christianity Today. I'm bumping into people right and left who are reading it.
It's being compared with Pilgrim's Progress which was an enormously influential book in its time and shaped several generations of readers. I figured I'd better give it a look so I read it while I was on vacation.
My reaction was a bit more qualified than some of my friends.
I thought it was extraordinarily creative in its approach and very courageous in many ways. The writer takes all of his pain and tries to work through it in print. He largely succeeds in what he tries to do. He addresses the issues of human evil and the providence of God and answers some big questions in a tender, open-eyed, and biblical fashion.
I love the things The Shack says about forgiveness - what forgiveness is and what it is not and why it is vital if you want to overcome the evil that has been done to you. For that reason alone it is probably worth reading.
But there are several things I see as weaknesses.
The major plot device in the book is that the main character is summoned to meet with God in the shack where his daughter was murdered. God appears in three human forms representing the three Persons of the Trinity. While this enables the writer to break some typical Western stereotypes (God is a Grumpy Old White Man With a Beard), it guarantees he's going to replace them with brand new stereotypes (God is an Old Black Woman Who Likes to Hug).
I suppose if you have to choose between the stereotypes, Young's is better than what we're used to, but there is probably a good reason why the Bible forbids us to portray God visually. If nothing else God loses some of his transcendence. In the Scriptures no one, not even Moses, gets to look God straight in the face. Even the angels in God's presence cover their faces with their wings. Young's main character sits down at the table with Father, Son, and Holy Spirit while they swap jokes. While I understand that the writer was trying to make God seem more approachable, I can't help but think he sacrifices too much of God's majesty and holiness.
Still, I realize why he did it. He is writing out of his pain and wanting to reconnect with a God who has seemed distant, cold and uncaring. The fact that he goes a bit too far in the other direction is understandable.
A bit more distasteful is the writer putting words in God's mouth which dismiss religion, politics, economics, and the church. He says these are all "institutions" and God doesn't like them and didn't invent them. Instead we are supposed to focus on relationships - with God and each other.
Of course the problem is that when people get together and have relationships they look like.....politics, economics, and religion. Politics is simply people getting together to get things done. Ecomics is people cooperating to make a living. Religion is people of faith cooperating to serve God. These things aren't bad. They are a part of the way God set up the world. But each of these things gets twisted by human selfishness and used to abuse others.
Instead of avoiding them (and how can one avoid them really unless one hides in a cave?) or cynically dismissing them, a true Christian calling is to participate in God's redemption of them. There are honest politicians who put the good of the public first. There are compassionate businessmen who use their wealth to bless others. And, as for the church, yes people in positions of authority within it often abuse their power to hurt others, but it is still God's means for extending redemption to a fallen world.
In sum, the book's strengths are its weaknesses. The writer's pain enables him to address some of the mysteries of faith with great authority and depth and humaness. In other places his pain seems to short circuit his capacity for hope, causing him to dismiss aspects of human life which God intends to redeem.
I don't know if The Shack is the Second Coming of Pilgrim's Progress, but many people have already found it helpful as they wrestle with the sadness and pain of life in a broken world.
Until recently its only publicity was an enthusiastic word-of-mouth campaign as devoted readers said the magic words to their friends: "You have to read this book." I first heard about it last spring from a pastor friend who couldn't stop talking about how great it was.
I don't know how many copies it has sold but it was recently reviewed in both Time Magazine and Christianity Today. I'm bumping into people right and left who are reading it.
It's being compared with Pilgrim's Progress which was an enormously influential book in its time and shaped several generations of readers. I figured I'd better give it a look so I read it while I was on vacation.
My reaction was a bit more qualified than some of my friends.
I thought it was extraordinarily creative in its approach and very courageous in many ways. The writer takes all of his pain and tries to work through it in print. He largely succeeds in what he tries to do. He addresses the issues of human evil and the providence of God and answers some big questions in a tender, open-eyed, and biblical fashion.
I love the things The Shack says about forgiveness - what forgiveness is and what it is not and why it is vital if you want to overcome the evil that has been done to you. For that reason alone it is probably worth reading.
But there are several things I see as weaknesses.
The major plot device in the book is that the main character is summoned to meet with God in the shack where his daughter was murdered. God appears in three human forms representing the three Persons of the Trinity. While this enables the writer to break some typical Western stereotypes (God is a Grumpy Old White Man With a Beard), it guarantees he's going to replace them with brand new stereotypes (God is an Old Black Woman Who Likes to Hug).
I suppose if you have to choose between the stereotypes, Young's is better than what we're used to, but there is probably a good reason why the Bible forbids us to portray God visually. If nothing else God loses some of his transcendence. In the Scriptures no one, not even Moses, gets to look God straight in the face. Even the angels in God's presence cover their faces with their wings. Young's main character sits down at the table with Father, Son, and Holy Spirit while they swap jokes. While I understand that the writer was trying to make God seem more approachable, I can't help but think he sacrifices too much of God's majesty and holiness.
Still, I realize why he did it. He is writing out of his pain and wanting to reconnect with a God who has seemed distant, cold and uncaring. The fact that he goes a bit too far in the other direction is understandable.
A bit more distasteful is the writer putting words in God's mouth which dismiss religion, politics, economics, and the church. He says these are all "institutions" and God doesn't like them and didn't invent them. Instead we are supposed to focus on relationships - with God and each other.
Of course the problem is that when people get together and have relationships they look like.....politics, economics, and religion. Politics is simply people getting together to get things done. Ecomics is people cooperating to make a living. Religion is people of faith cooperating to serve God. These things aren't bad. They are a part of the way God set up the world. But each of these things gets twisted by human selfishness and used to abuse others.
Instead of avoiding them (and how can one avoid them really unless one hides in a cave?) or cynically dismissing them, a true Christian calling is to participate in God's redemption of them. There are honest politicians who put the good of the public first. There are compassionate businessmen who use their wealth to bless others. And, as for the church, yes people in positions of authority within it often abuse their power to hurt others, but it is still God's means for extending redemption to a fallen world.
In sum, the book's strengths are its weaknesses. The writer's pain enables him to address some of the mysteries of faith with great authority and depth and humaness. In other places his pain seems to short circuit his capacity for hope, causing him to dismiss aspects of human life which God intends to redeem.
I don't know if The Shack is the Second Coming of Pilgrim's Progress, but many people have already found it helpful as they wrestle with the sadness and pain of life in a broken world.
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