Thursday, March 13, 2008

Giving back through the Salvation Army

Canada's Advertiser recently ran an article about Bill and Marilyn Francis, the highest-ranking Salvation Army officers for the Canada/Bermuda territory. In the article, Marilyn talked about God's role in her joining the Salvation Army:
It wasn't until she met Commissioner Bill that she became involved. She was a schoolteacher, but says God spoke to her in a dramatic way, reminding her of the job he had for her.

'If you have everything for yourself, and you have a heart for people who have nothing, you know there has to be some way to give back but you don't know what to do,' she said. 'At least for my own heart, I was longing for that. God knew it and revealed that to me as I prayed and asked me to join the Salvation Army.'

Although their jobs are demanding, the couple has found it to be very rewarding to be changing the world and turning around hopeless situations.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

The Southern Baptist Convention and global warming

Al Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth" brought light to the issue of global warming. Still, there are people and organizations out there, such as the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC), that say that global warming has not been proven. In a TIME article, Jonathan Merritt, a seminary student with the SBC, talks about his efforts to get the SBC to change its stance:
'I was an enemy of the environment,' he says. 'I approached it with disdain. And then I was sitting in a classroom and I felt like God spoke to me and put this idea in my heart.' The idea — encapsulated in the 'Southern Baptist Declaration on the Environment and Climate Change' — is a strikingly potent challenge to his denomination's official stance on global warming and to his own previous scorn. Yes, he says with a chuckle, 'You could say the scales fell from my eyes.'

Merritt's declaration already has 44 signatories including the current SBC president, two of his predecessors, and the heads of three well-known Baptist-affiliated colleges and divinity schools.

Monday, March 10, 2008

A restaurant that is making it

The restaurant business is well-known for being a very difficult business in which to succeed. But there's a restaurant in Mount Dora, Fla., that has a very unique business model: it accepts donations and prayer requests as payment. There are no set prices for the dishes on the menu. There are just small wood boxes with slit openings for donations.

So far, according to an article in the Orlando Sentinel, things are going well for Gary Hagen's Hollywood Cheesecake Cafe:
Hagen said he attracted 6,000 customers in nine weeks.

'So, guess what? The bills got paid,' he said. 'Everything's been paid for.'

Hagen's menu includes a long list of gourmet-style sandwiches as well as salads, omelets, pancakes and a wide variety of cheesecakes. His restaurant is open for breakfast and lunch daily. On Fridays and Saturdays, he serves dinner too.

Hagen had prices on his menu when he first launched the restaurant.

'I was thinking it's just a restaurant,' he said.

But then Hagen said he became enlightened.

'God told me to take the prices off the menu, and that it was to show people we are not in control of our lives -- he is,' Hagen said.

Hagen plans on opening another restaurant in nearby Eustis in the coming months.

Sunday, March 9, 2008

Love one another

This past weekend's hermitage retreat at Pacem in Terris was relaxing. While God did not audibly speak to me (I guess that I cannot force Him to do that), I received a general feeling about something that I need to work on in my life.

I specifically need to work on the second great commandment: loving others as myself. God loves us and we love each other through our relationships.

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Off to a hermitage retreat

Tomorrow I head off to Pacem in Terris in St. Francis, Minn., for a solitary weekend retreat. I have only done this once before, in 1999.

I believe that I will encounter God during my time there, but I'm very curious about how He will meet me. Will He audibly speak to me again? That would be so cool.

I am really looking forward to this time. I plan to relax, focus on the Word, and contemplate my life, relationships and future plans.

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

God's blessing in a refinery disaster

On Feb. 18 there was an explosion at Alon Refinery in Texas. Thanks to God, that disaster turned into a miracle -- no one was killed and only five people were injured. Bill Burchett, who was working at the refinery the morning of the explosion, recalled his experience for the Big Spring Herald:
'I heard someone on the radio tell us there was a propylene leak ... and I looked out the back door of the lab and saw what looked like steam or a cloud,' Burchett said. 'I ran back inside the lab and told everyone we needed to evacuate.

'As I stepped out the door, the explosion occurred, knocking me and everyone else to the ground,' Burchett added. 'At first, I was fearful ... but God spoke to me and told me he loved me ... and we made our way out of there.'


To give thanks, hundreds of residents recently attended the "Refinery Miracle Thanksgiving Service" at First Baptist Church in Big Spring.

Sunday, March 2, 2008

God softens my heart

My wife and I saw "U23D" this past weekend. It was an excellent, visually cool film. We were talking about the movie afterwards, and she applied some of the lyrics from "One" to her experience in our marriage:
You say
Love is a temple
Love a higher law
Love is a temple
Love the higher law
You ask me to enter
But then you make me crawl
And I can't be holding on
To what you got
When all you got is hurt

After she quoted that part of the song, I realized how much I had hurt her. Ever since my parents divorced when I was a child, I have hardened my heart and have not let anyone get close to me. This weekend I realized that it's time to let go of that hurt and be there for other people emotionally -- especially my wife.
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