Archive for the ‘current issues’ Category
Seth Godin's Linchpin takes a look at the artist inside of all of us. Nothing short of sparking a revolution in the way we think about our daily lives and work – Godin challenges the reader to become indispensable by engaging our work with passion instead of becoming the dull, monotonous "cogs" in a corporate nightmare.
I'll be completely transparent here: I love Seth Godin's writing/speaking/blog/etc. You may or may not be a fan, but in my view every person who's ever had a dream and not taken the next step (dream to shipping as Godin would say) then you need to run and get this book now. It's a quick read at just under 250 pages and it might just alter your success trajectory for life.
Painting our current grim corporate situation akin to Orwell's dystopian society in Nineteen Eighty-Four, Godin casts a vision for a world where people are paid to do what they are passionate about instead of what they've been trained to do or what they think will generate the most cash for them.
I felt that Godin's perspective was a compromise of Pollan and Levine's Die Broke from several years ago. Pollan and Levine proposed that your job was just a cash-generator, you need not associate yourself or self worth with what you do. Rather jump to the job that pays the most and has the best benefits. Once you've found something better jump, because who you are has little to do with what you do for a living.
Godin, I think, would rather encourage his tribe to jump to something they feel like they are passionate about. He does however make the point that we can find purpose and meaning in our current job – often it is more about our perspective. He strongly encourages the reader to not think of their skills as who they are, because skills can easily be replaced with someone with the same or better skills.
Rather, to become indispensable one must be willing to work within a broken system, not be content with the present, but remain optimistic about the future. Godin tells the reader "we" (meaning all of society) need artists, independent thinkers, and people that realize our primary ability to connect with others is the paramount virtue. Our society has taken the process or system and removed the humanity in an order to provide consistent, cheap, and automated solutions.
In Godin's mind this is the antithesis of progress. The artist creates, gives his gifts away, and goes back to the drawing board to create once again. Sometimes this may be profitable, other times it may be done at a loss, but the end result is art given freely.
Reminds me of another good book by my favorite author, "Freely you have received, freely give."
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An increasing trend among my fellow pastors on facebook is the collaboration during message preparation. Often I’m the one asking for help with a text or thoughts on an illustration.
This week a friend posted a need for info on the topic of the “uniqueness of Jesus” in the context of faith. I offered my humble and probably insufficient words but as others add to it one has several thoughtful beginning points.
I wonder how many messages could be improved by use of other ideas, research, and viewpoints if we all took time each week to ask the tough questions?
I’ll be honest many times my in-depth study is frustrating as the more I study the more questions I have. Sometimes Sunday creeps up and I’m still mid-struggle and up to my ears in research without a clear victor.
That’s why you’ll hear me offer options and sometimes say, “I don’t know” – because the simple fact is as I approach the interpretive task many times the questions are haunting.
However I don’t see the message as a mountain-top experience – it’s just another step on the journey, another opportunity for us to talk about what it looks like to try to describe the undescribable.
Sometimes in my life I’ve been afraid to ask the tough questions – it seemed easier to just bury my head in the sand and pretend they didn’t exist. I’m sure I could have done much more good by authentically trying to answer those questions – even when the answers might never come.
Clive Staples Lewis once wrote, “We all want progress, but if you’re on the wrong road, progress means doing an about-turn and walking back to the right road; in that case, the man who turns back soonest is the most progressive.”
Are you ready to ask the tough questions? What if doing so meant “loosing” some things that you’d “bound”?
This song provides the backdrop for our new series @ FBC in April! Join us this Sunday @ 8:30 am or 10:45 am as we explore what it means to “Live Like You Were Dying”
-pastor clark
Clay Shirky spoke a few years ago about communication and distributed work coming to the forefront due to emerging technologies.
This shift along with culture molding its values to the possibilities that technology creates has opened the door for less institutionalism and more cooperative work to be accomplished.
His 18 minute talk makes me wonder – could this be the nail in the coffin on the relevance of institutionalized denominations? As those formerly marginalized enter the work of leading the church and leadership becomes decentralized this could be the age where Baptist distinctives like priesthood of the believer and church autonomy take root once again.

When it comes to capital crimes I’m not a big fan of sophistry. I understand differnet classifications exist when it comes to murder – what the mental state of the criminal is and what the surrounding conditions are (i.e. was it intentional, etc.).
However, one difficulty that I am having and would love someone who has a logical mind to explain to me is the scenario driven home by tonight’s report of a recent murder in Oklahoma City.
The sad story is that of a murdered girlfriend that was discovered by medical examiners to have been pregnant. The child inside of her died as a result of the mother being murdered. I find this disgusting and fully support the District Attorney in pursuing a double homicide charge.
If the state posits that purposely killing an unborn child is homicide, how can the state deny an abortion is a homicide? Where is the justice for the unborn children of this country?
Is the problem that 48 million murder cases might be a bit much to process? (Number of U.S. legalized abortion homicides since 1973’s Roe v. Wade.)