Broke Phi Broke Ministry

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

It's a whole new world (for the Gaston Gazette)

Wow, I can't believe the Gazette has finally changed its Web site. And KE has started a blog. It'll be interesting to see where all this goes. Be sure to check it out! www.gastongazette.com.

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

I'm back y'all

Sorry about the hiatus. It's been crazy, what with starting my lawn from scratch, planting flowers, finishing my decorating jobs and painting to get ready for an open house. This house never looked so good. My roommate has already started packing. She found out she can move on campus at GWU by the second week in June. So as not to feel left out I started packing, too.

So you still want to know about New Orleans? Other than a few telltale signs, the suburbs seem normal. In the habitable parts of the city, there are still a lot of empty, boarded up buildings and houses, but traffic is definitely up. But the uninhabitable places are still just that -- uninhabitable. Hopefully, with the mayoral race out of the way (and a most surprising outcome), the areas of recovery that have been dragging will pick up, especially with the new hurricane season just days away.

As for my family, they've never been so blessed. Almost everyone has way more now than they had going into the storm. New or renovated houses, new cars, money in their pockets. Talk about the people of God being blessed.

Ben and Amanda just went down there last weekend with a group of Ashbrook seniors, their adviser and school principal. They were just a hop, skip and jump away in Pass Christian, Miss., so they traveled the extra miles to see New Orleans. Those kids raised $30,000 to help the graduating class of Pass Christian High School. Amanda did a couple stories and Ben e-mailed back some photos. It was pretty neat. Wish I could have gone with them, except for the charter bus.

And now for an interesting read that I picked up a couple weeks ago and couldn't put down. It's called Hinds' Feet on High Places by Hannah Hurnard. It's actually an allegory about what it's like to really walk with God. Do read it. You'll really be blessed by it.

K-

Sunday, May 21, 2006

Blogs, Beaches, Lockdowns, Memorial Day, etc.

MoJo,

Yeah, I heard about the lockdown. Jonathan and others were talkin' bout it over the weekend. It seems like I spent the weekend with about a third of the N&R staff.
Jonathan invited me and a few other folks to his parents' beach house in Emerald Isle. It was fun. There was Jonathan and Jamie, their dog Wilbur, High Point reporter Kory Dodd, Maggie Mae, and Rockingham County reporter Sonja Elmquist. An N&R beach bash and certainly a journalistic retreat!
We even played Scrabble! hahaha. Such journalists.
I plan to hang out with 'em next weekend when I'm in the Triad for four days for Memorial Day weekend! I can't speak for your main office bretheren, but the bureau folks are cool peeps.
See ya next weekend! What church we going to?!?!?

-GG

Friday, May 19, 2006

No GG, you are not the only one using this thing...

The school meeting went fine; we stayed civil and didn't have to do the whole "agree to disagree" thing. I just finished reading another finance book called "Using Your Money Wisely" by Larry Burkett which was very good (written in 1985 but still timely). I would recommend hitting up your local library and checking it out.

Covered a school lockdown today, that was pretty interesting. Getting my hair wrapped for $10 tomorrow and checking out a Beautiful Black Women Festival. That really should be interesting.

I sure will be glad when I meet some friends. It gets kinda lonely going to festivals by yourself.

Anyway, toodles!

Ten Things I Hate About Commandments

Ten Things I Hate About Commandments from youtube. This is pretty funny. Warning though, an f-bomb is dropped toward the end. You also have to have seen the movie "Ten Things I Hate About You" to really understand the humor in the clip.

-GG

Thursday, May 18, 2006

Am I the Only One Using This Thing?

hehehe. Come on peeps. Step it up. While I await some posts from the other BPB ministry core folks, i'll make a few more observations/comments:
K-Young, saw the final teen page. Well done. Way to pull that content together and make lemonade out of lemons or something like that. Are you glad to be done? You should be proud of the four months of producing a stellar product! Kudos to you.
MJ, how'd the big meeting with the school peeps go?
And to keep this thing on a Christian tip, I'll let y'all know I went to one of my old church in Durham's small group bible studies last night. That was nice. It's nowhere near as good as the BPB ministry bible study of course but it was good to get my group prayer on again.
Looking forward to the Chapel Thrill festivities in June with Brother Bill and Brother Chuck. "The Cosby show" so to speak should be hilarious. :) Amen.

-GG

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

"God's Calling. You Need To Connect"

Here's an interesting article from the LA Times:

God's Call Comes by Cellphone
Bible verses on a BlackBerry, sermons on an MP3 -- an explosion in digitalized spirituality is making true believers of online e-vangelists.

By Stephanie Simon, Times Staff WriterMay 16, 2006

A recent national poll found just 17% of adults view the local church as essential for developing faith.Small wonder.
Sitting in a pew on Sunday morning seems almost embarrassingly old-fashioned in an era when you can watch a video recreation of the Last Supper on your Palm or get God's word text-messaged to your cellphone.Bored with your pastor's ramblings? Select a peppier sermon from among hundreds of "godcasts" online. Just pick a topic: Christian dating? Old Testament prophets? Then download it to your MP3 player.Finding the old leather-bound Bible a bit cumbersome? A quick download from Olive Tree Bible Software and you'll be able to search Scripture on your BlackBerry.
"At first blush, it may seem a little peculiar to connect with God on your cellphone," said Christopher Chisholm, a TV-executive-turned-digital-evangelist. He recently helped launch FaithMobile, a service that will send a daily Bible verse to your cellphone for $5.99 a month.In this harried age, he asks, how else are you going to "get in touch with the Word?"The explosion in digitized spirituality might seem likely to make the traditional sanctuary obsolete. But pastors are not giving in. They're fighting back with some high-tech tricks of their own, turning to the Internet to save souls, renew faith, inspire hope — and, not incidentally, to fill their pews.An evangelical church in Granger, Ind., put up billboards a few months back showing a rumpled bed, entwined feet and the address http://www.mylamesexlife.com/ . That site linked to an artsy mini-movie with shots of a seedy motel and a man sunk in morning-after regret."Is your sex life a bore? A chore? … Why does it seem like everyone else is having all the fun?" the text asked. As the movie ended, viewers for the first time saw the logo of Granger Community Church, which was sponsoring five weeks of sermons on sex, lust and porn. The tagline: "We're not afraid to talk about it."Pastor Mark Beeson credits the campaign with boosting attendance 70% the week he gave a sermon entitled "The Greatest Sex You'll Ever Have." Six weeks after the series ended, weekly church attendance still topped 6,000, up from 5,000 before the ad campaign."We dare not change the Gospel. But the method of delivery? We better change it for each new generation," said Beeson, who preaches in front of a floor-to-ceiling video screen. His latest sermon series, which starts next week, is called "Finding God in Your iPod;" he promises to analyze spiritual yearnings in songs from Coldplay, Kenny Chesney and other artists.Like Beeson, many of the pastors leading the push for high-tech evangelizing run large, non-denominational churches. Several big-name ministries also support the effort; they include Focus on the Family, Campus Crusade for Christ, Promise Keepers, the Billy Graham Center, and associations of Southern Baptists and Pentecostals.Those groups formed the Internet Evangelism Coalition, which offers advice on using the Web to spread the Gospel. The coalition's top tip: Don't sound preachy. Avoid "churchy jargon" — words like ministry, salvation, redemption, even faith. Draw nonbelievers to Jesus (or attract "unchurched" Christians to your specific congregation) by presenting the church as an upbeat, uplifting community of friends.Mark Batterson, the pastor of National Community Church in Washington, D.C., posts zany video blogs on his website; one shows him tap dancing in the reflecting pool in front of the Lincoln Memorial. Other pastors post MTV-worthy clips of church bands. Many offer free downloads of their most popular sermons, including PowerPoint presentations."People often think the church is boring, judgmental, not relevant," said Richard Reising, president of the Dallas firm Artistry Marketing, which specializes in church advertising. "New media's a great way to reposition ourselves."Nearly 60% of Protestant churches have websites now, up from 35% in 2000. More than half use e-mail blasts to communicate with their congregation — and 12% let the faithful tithe online, according to the Barna Group, which conducts research for Christian ministries.In the sanctuary itself, more than 60% of Protestant churches spice up their services with video clips shown on oversize screens.Even the tradition of praying for your neighbors has gone high-tech. No more waiting for your pastor to announce who's suffering from kidney stones and who just had a baby.Log on to http://www.worldprayerteam.org/ and you can intercede for the parents in Singapore who want their son to practice violin; for Christine in South Africa, who needs to sell her house; for Bill in Nevada, who'd like the Lord to send him a sympathetic auditor from the Internal Revenue Service.Andrew Careaga, a youth pastor in Salem, Mo., welcomes some of these advances. Yet he worries that when spirituality migrates to cellphones, it becomes just another item to check off the to-do list — "a five-second spiritual fix, you've seen the verse of the day and you're done.""Technology always seems to be a Faustian bargain. It encroaches on our ability to unconnect with the world and connect with God," said Careaga, the author of "e-Ministry: Connecting with the Net Generation"Theologian Philip Kenneson voices another concern: When churches measure success by how many times a sermon is downloaded, Christianity becomes just another consumer product."There's a danger that it encourages people to see the church as a service agency, there to meet their particular needs" rather than to help them serve God, Kenneson said."It's easy to reassure yourself that you are, in fact, a Christian because you're … consuming Christian products," he said. "Then I don't have to love my neighbor or pray for my enemy or … take on any of the messy, difficult demands of the Gospel," said Kenneson, an associate professor at Milligan College in Tennessee and co-author of "Selling Out The Church: The Dangers of Church Marketing."E-vangelists respond that the church, and its mission, survived the advent of radio ministry in the 1920s and the televangelism boom of the 1970s, and will no doubt make it through the iPod era as well.They see the gadgets of the 21st century not as distractions, but as a vital means of broadening Christianity's reach."You can sit in an ivory tower and whine all you want about 'This isn't the way it was done in 1500,' " said pollster George Barna, who runs the Barna Group. "We're here to help people. If there's a tool out there that can help us reach them, why wouldn't we use it?"Barna's firm is a partner in FaithMobile and also sells Christian images and videos for churches to use in multimedia sermons.Barna's survey on religious trends turned up the statistic that only 17% of adults see the local church as a key factor in spiritual growth.But he has also found that such cynicism doesn't mean empty pews. In fact, the number of adults who attend weekly worship services has been on the rise in recent years.There's something special about face-to-face fellowship that no website can replace — at least, "not until they come up with a device that will squirt water out of your computer and baptize your kid," said John P. Jewell, an assistant professor of ministry and technology at the University of Dubuque Theological Seminary in Iowa."A basic principle of Christianity is incarnation," Jewell said. "The word became flesh. It didn't become digitized."Out on the plains of Oklahoma, Pastor Craig Groeschel aims to update that ancient principle.He's the senior pastor of a church that's so high on high-tech, it built the concept into its name: LifeChurch.tv. Groeschel founded the church 10 years ago in a two-car garage.The congregation outgrew a middle-school cafeteria and a bicycle factory in quick succession.These days, Groeschel preaches to 6,000 people a week in a traditional Oklahoma City church.Those sermons are then broadcast by satellite to 12,000 far-flung members of his congregation, who gather in a middle school in Texas, an office building in Arizona and several other venues in Oklahoma.It's common these days for mega-churches to have suburban satellite campuses, but just a few spread their congregations across several states. Last month, LifeChurch.tv cast its net wider still by launching an interactive online campus. More than 160 people from as far as Vermont, California, Pakistan and Indonesia logged in to watch the inaugural Internet service Easter Sunday.Among them was Terry Vallandingham, who gathered his wife and their three kids, still in their pajamas, to worship in front of a flat-screen computer monitor in their home in Shawnee, Okla.When Groeschel asked questions, the Vallandinghams responded by clicking an icon. When the band struck up, they all sang aloud, right there in their study, sprawled out on the leather couch. After the last "Amen," they surfed into the online "lobby chat" to wish the pastor a good holiday.The only thing they missed were the free Krispy Kreme doughnuts at the church door."It was amazing," Vallandingham said. "My wife even said, 'Church doesn't get better than this.' "Nineteen virtual congregants were so moved by the service, they clicked an icon to indicate they were accepting Christ, or being "born again."At FaithMobile's office in Sherman Oaks, Chisholm hopes to inspire the same spirit of transformation — via text message.His cellphone service sends out sermon clips that subscribers can use as ring tones (his favorite is a stern voice demanding, "You need to decide: Is Jesus Christ my friend?").He also offers Christian-themed computer wallpaper (a crucifix glinting in the sun, a hand resting on a Bible) and video reminders to stay on the straight and narrow ("Put God's work first and do what he wants")."Christians aren't known for being on the cutting edge, but we think this is a slam dunk," Chisholm said. "We want to remind people: 'God's calling. You need to connect."

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Back in Class

Today was my first day of class at summer school at UNC. It was weird being back in the classroom after five years. Since I'm taking an introductory stat class, I'm mostly with a bunch of undergrads in my class.
I had a few "first day" woes. Since i've been out of school for several years, the information for my account to access email and computers at UNC had to be re-entered. i had to go to the computer help people THREE times because they couldn't get it right. Kinda frustrating.
And my parking pass didn't open the deck either.
Oh well. Those are minor inconveniences.
Everything else about campus was great. I went and worked out at this new fitness center that's on top of my parking deck. It has three basketball courts, a suspended track, a climbing wall and cardio equipment. Very NICE.
Chapel Hill is a beautiful place and it's nice to be back in Tar Heel land for the summer. It's a good warm-up to UGA!

-GG

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Can anybody say church?

I found this site on shopping which I find quite amusing. Can I get an amen somebody?

Monday, May 08, 2006

Amen to that!

What? That was it.

BPB Weekend Shoutouts!

What a fun weekend! I wanna send some shout outs to:

-Las Palmas Columbian restaurant in G-Town. That's some good, fillin' eatin'.
-"OG"-Original Gospel music- Kirk, Hezekiah, Fred and such
-Springfest
-Tony's Ice Cream: At long last, I've finally eaten there. Joy!
-United 93- what a powerful film
-Tabernacle Baptist Church
-K-young. You been holdin' out. You can SING! Nice solo with the church choir. You go girl! :)
-MoJo: What a busy but enjoyable Saturday. Hope you had a good time back in G.C.
-Hosana- just cause I got that song stuck in my head now
-NOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! (Rev. Hinton knows how to drive home a message)

That's about it. I'm off to pack. TTYL.

-GG

You Take the Jello and the Pudding and the Ay Ay Ay

I bought three tickets today to....

The UNC School of Journalism and Mass Communication proudly presents “An Evening with Bill Cosby,” Saturday, June 10, at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall in Chapel Hill, N.C. Tickets go on sale May 8 at 10 a.m. at the Memorial Hall box office or by phone at 919.843.3333. Prices range from $25 to $50.
All proceeds from the show will benefit the Chuck Stone Citizen of the World Fund, honoring Professor Stone, who retired from the School’s faculty in 2005. The fund will provide a deserving School student with the opportunity to study abroad or pursue an independent international learning opportunity related to journalism and mass communication.
The School will host a reception for Chuck before the show at the Morehead Planetarium and Science Center from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. A ticket purchase is not necessary to attend the reception.

Holla!

-GG