A digital commonplace for a Regular Guy called Charlie Pharis

Month: October 2005 (page 1 of 5)

Time Is of the Essence…

1 Corinthians 7:29-31, from The Message

I do want to point out, friends, that time is of the essence. There is no time to waste, so don’t complicate your lives unnecessarily. Keep it simple–in marriage, grief, joy, whatever. Even in ordinary things–your daily routines of shopping, and so on. Deal as sparingly as possible with the things the world thrusts on you. This world as you see it is on its way out.

Yesterday I went with the family up to Amicalola Falls and around north Georgia. It was the first Sunday “off” we’ve had in a long time. While I enjoyed the trip, the hikes, the apples, the falls, and the people, I did an awful lot of thinking about a lot of things. Then I came back home, fired up the computer and saw the news about Kyle Lake.

This morning, I woke up and started my day with the passage I quoted above. And since then, I’ve been thinking that time is indeed of the essence. We need to be busy fulfilling the work we’ve been called to do. We never know when that last opportunity is here. We never know, so we need to be fully engaged wherever we are.

I got to the 1 Corinthians passage via a Bible Gateway search for “work” after reading in Titus 1 this morning…

I left you on the island of Crete so you could complete our work there

And that led me eventually to the New Living Translation of the 1 Corinthians passage…

Happiness or sadness or wealth should not keep anyone from doing God’s work. Those in frequent contact with the things of the world should make good use of them without becoming attached to them, for this world and all it contains will pass away.

My prayer for my life – for your life – today is that we will be found faithful to complete, fulfill, perform, accomplish, and finish our work here.

Unbelievable…

Just got this in my Inbox a minute ago…

Associated Baptist Press October 30, 2005 NEWS ALERT: Waco pastor Kyle Lake killed, electrocuted in baptism accident By Greg Warner WACO, Texas (ABP) — Kyle Lake, pastor of the innovative University Baptist Church in Waco, Texas, was killed by electrocution Oct. 30 while performing a baptism during a worship service. Lake, whose age was not immediately known, had been pastor of the church for more than four years. The congregation, made up mostly of Baylor University students, is best known as the home church of worship leader and songwriter David Crowder. Lake and a baptismal candidate reportedly were in the baptistry when the accident occurred, reportedly caused by a microphone. Lake was taken to a nearby hospital by paramedics. He was pronounced dead at 11:30 a.m., according to the church’s website. The baptismal candidate reportedly was not seriously injured. Lake and his wife, Jen, have a daughter and twin sons. Lake is the author of two books, Understanding God’s Will and [Re]Understanding Prayer. University Baptist was founded in 1995 by Crowder and Chris Seay, an author and now pastor in Houston. The Waco congregation, which attracts about 600 worshipers each week, is known not only for Crowder’s music but for its emphasis on the arts and multimedia worship. A special service for prayer and counseling of UBC members was held at nearby First Baptist Church in Waco Sunday night, Oct. 30. Funeral details were not yet available.

I don’t know quite what to say, except prayers for Kyle Lake’s family and the University Baptist fellowship…

Whittling Down That Stack o’ Draft Posts…

Here’s some more from the Draft Post Stack o’ Stuff…

Unloading: Random Links from the Draft Pile…

I’m having one of those “tie up the loose ends” days today. It’s cool, bright, and I’m just in one of those thinking kind of moods. I cleaned up my office at the church last night, and now I’m cleaning up some other stuff.

I’ve got a bunch of Windham Hill stuff playing in the background. My Moleskine has been open on my desk. I’ve finished reading two books I’ve been stuck in the middle of. I opened up my “edit posts” tab, and discovered close to 100 draft posts that I’d intended to blog about dating back to March.

Some of the links don’t even work anymore. I can’t remember exactly why I noticed some of the others. But at any rate, here’s the first pile o’ links from the loose ends pile…

Stay tuned, if you want. More on the way this evening…

Wisdom That Was Validated Once Again Yesterday…

It was the American educator and philosopher John Dewey who said…

There is all the difference in the world between having something to say and having to say something.

The “Just Charlie” corollary is this…

It is a wise man who understands that difference and who knows when it’s time to shut his mouth.

Let’s just say we finished about 20 minutes earlier than we normally do. Let’s just say, as one of my guys used to say…

We beat the Methodists to lunch today!

Of Books and Covers and Basketball Players…

This just in from the NBA…players will be required to abide by a dress code this season. Says the story over at Breitbart.com

Players will be required to wear business-casual attire when involved in team or league business. They can’t wear visible chains, pendants or medallions over their clothes.

Of course, this policy is racist and racially motivated, according to those expert social scientists who make up the NBA players’ association. Check some of their responses to the league’s policy.

Indiana Pacers’ guard Stephen Jackson – who, by the way, was suspended for 30 games following that attack on the Detroit Pistons’ fans last fall –

…said the league is afraid of becoming “too hip-hop.” In protest, he wore four chains to the Pacers’ exhibition game against San Antonio on Tuesday night.

Philadelphia’s own paragon of virtue and resident model of class and restraint, Allen Iverson (if Iverson is “The Answer”, it must be a really stupid question) chimed in with this gem…

I don’t think that’s still going to help the image of the league at all.

Golden State guard Jason Richardson summed up his thoughts…

Just because you dress a certain way doesn’t mean you’re that way.

Hey, a guy could come in with baggy jeans, a do-rag and have a Ph.D., and a person who comes in with a suit could be a three-time felon. So, it’s not what you wear, it’s how you present yourself.

Well said, Mr. Richardson. It is all about how you present yourself.