Twitter in plain English

The folks at CommonCraft have put together a great basic video explaining Twitter in plain English.

Great stuff. I know my mom reads my Twitter feed (per some of the questions and conversations she brings up) but I think she reads it via the Casa de Blundell news feed – not going to the Twitter site per-say. Wonder if I can ever get her to sign up and start Twittering during the day…..

If you’re interested, I’m jdblundell on Twitter.
My best friend, (that doesn’t live with me) Matt, is Medicmml.
My buddy Thomas is headphonaught.
My good friend and pastor Brian is at Brian12345678 (although you won’t get much out of him).
You can get encounter news via encounterthis.

Anyone else out there that I should be following?

BTW – I love the simple video CommonCraft did as well. Nothing with fancy computer graphics – just fun paper images moved around with their hands and fingers.

Interesting thoughts from Moby

Moby’s blog is always a fun read. You never know what you’ll find. Some stuff I agree with, some I disagree with (especially his gripes against Mike Huckabee :-))

Anyways, here’s some of his recent thoughts from SXSW in Austin re: an Oklahoma State Rep:

hi, i’m here in austin and enjoying the fact that it’s warm and i’m also checking the news and lo and behold i find this little gem:

AP – OKLAHOMA CITY – A Republican member of the Oklahoma Legislature, Rep. Sally Kern, stated recently that “the homosexual agenda is just destroying this nation” and poses a bigger threat to the U.S. than terrorism or Islam.

“According to God’s word that is not the right kind of lifestyle,” Rep. Sally Kern of Oklahoma City said during an appearance before a group of Republicans.

Kern says in the recorded comments. “It is not a lifestyle that is good for this nation.”

ok, where to begin…

how about this simple question: what did jesus(presumably sally kern’s god)say about homosexuality? let’s see…nothing? yup, nothing. dear sally kern: jesus never mentioned homosexuality. allow me to put it a different way, perhaps in question form…how many times did jesus mention homosexuality? oh(to be conversational), none? yup none. never. not once. zero. he did mention divorce(saying it was bad), and capitalism(ditto: bad), and judgementalism and intolerance(again: bad), and forgiveness(good). but homosexuality? never mentioned by jesus in the gospels. so why are the religious right in the u.s so utterly obsessed with homosexuality? and how is the homosexual agenda(whatever that might be)destroying the nation? i mean, if evangelicals call themselves christians shouldn’t they sort of base their evangelical agenda on the things that christ actually said?

ok, back to sxsw in sunny austin.

moby

From Sunday

Unfortunately there was some sort of weird problem with our audio recording of Sunday’s encounter service. So the podcast hasn’t been posted yet. Hopefully we’ll get it fixed and post the podcast within the next week.

Brian did find the video we watched Sunday over on YouTube. Here it is. Good stuff…

“…when I say share I’m not talking about every tactic you’ve used on me in the past, like judging my every move, telling me I’m a bad person, pointing fingers, giving me disgusting looks. And my favorite is when you tell me that I’m lost. I don’t even know what it means to be lost. Do you really think judging me is going to make me change? Would it make you change?”

From the encounter blog:

The video was part of the conclusion to the “inverted” series at encounter sunday. the ultimate inversion happens when our life is given away completely for the sake of Christ and demonstrated in giving ourselves away completely for the sake of the gospel.

The fact that we have to be reminded of the needs that exist beyond our own life shows how quickly and easily we default to self. We think its all about us. Inversion calls us out.

The one who inverts his life to this degree discovers a new meaning and joy to life. He does so out of love for Christ and others and not out of duty or demand. He finds great delight in serving instead of being served, going last instead of first, giving instead of taking, being humble instead of proud, forgiving instead of holding on to bitterness.

God, invert us!

The Screwtape Letters

“The best way to drive out the devil if he will not yield to texts of Scripture, is to jeer and flout him, for he cannot bear scorn.” – Martin Luther

Well – I finished two books over the last few days, Brian McLaren’s challenging Everything Must Change and Brennan Manning’s Ragamuffin Gospel. Both great reads and I also thought they were complimentary of each other in many aspects.

I don’t typically read more than one book at a time but ended up doing that this time around. With the books complimenting several ideas between the two, it made remembering who said what that much harder.

Now that these books are done (and I’m still chewing on them) I decided to pick up an old favorite, C.S. Lewis’ Screwtape Letters. I think I read this 10-15 years ago, about the time Bono came out with his McPhisto character and Mirror Ball Man.


It was suggested in the Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me video that the McPhisto character was based on several ideas from The Screwtape Letters (Bono confirmed this in later interviews) – so naturally, I had to read it.

The book is written from the premise of an unusual correspondence between Uncle Screwtape and his nephew Wormwood. Both can be pictured as demons, or spirits or servants of the Devil if you will. The letters are advice from the senior tempter, Screwtape, to his nephew or apprentice, Wormwood, on how to handle one of his “patients.” (read more from Wikipedia)

As I read this morning, Screwtape advises young Wormwood on how to handle the patient’s relationship with his “un-saved” mother. It reminds me of the idea of living an Inverted lifestyle that we’ve talked about so much at encounter recently.

Screwtape suggests several ideas for Wormwood:

  • Keep his mind on the inner life… You must bring him to a condition in which he can practice self-examination for an hour without discovering any of those facts about himself which are perfectly clear to anyone who has ever lived in the same house with him or worked in the same office.
  • It is impossible to prevent his praying for his mother… but make sure that his prayers are always very “spiritual,” that he is always concerned about the state of her soul and never with her rheumatism… His attention will be kept on what he regards as her sins which can be induced to mean any of her actions which are inconvenient or irritating to himself… His ideas about her soul will be very crude and often erroneous, he will, in some degree, be praying for an imaginary person, and it will be your task to make that imaginary person daily less and less like the real mother… I have had patients of my own so well in hand that they could be turned at a moment’s notice from impassioned prayer for a wife’s or son’s “soul” to beating or insulting the real wife or son without a qualm.
  • …it usually happens that each has tones of voice or expressions of face which are almost unendurably irritating to the other. Work on that… Let him assume that she knows how annoying it is and does it to annoy.
  • See to it that each of these two fools has a sort of double standard. Your patient must demand that all his own utterances are to be taken at their face value and judged simply on the actual words, while at the same time judging all his mother’s utterances with the fullest and most oversensitive interpretation of the tone and context of the suspected intention.

Any of that ring true for you? Anyone else see themselves painted in this picture?

For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me and for the gospel will save it. – Mark 8:35

Everything Must Change


Finished reading Everything Must Change today on the way into work.

Excellent. I think as several others have pointed out in our book club – Everything Must Change… but it must begin with ME.

“another world is possible, available now for all who believe.”

referring to those who would rise up against the common framing story we find ourselves currently surrounded by McLaren rights…

“they would seek to be the revolution they wished to see in the world… This kind of group would be the current expression of Jesus’ original band of disciples. It would be the church as Jesus intended. Groups like this wouldn’t need buildings, pipe organs, rock bands, layers of institutional structure, video projectors, parking lots, and so on… What they would need would be simple: a passion to understand Jesus and his message and a commitment to live out that understanding in a world in which everything must change.

I’m teaching from this book now over the next several weeks for our community group. I’m basically putting together some “curriculum” as we go – I’d love to share it and get input from others who have read the book (or are reading it) but haven’t decided yet what format to use. Should I simply post a PDF of what I have or would others be interested in adding to it, making notes etc and make this a community effort using a Wiki of some sort?

7 innovative church buildings

Maybe I just love encounter too much. Or maybe I just really love that we don’t have our own building. Or maybe I just like the intimate feel at encounter. I don’t know – but I just can’t see myself going to a church like this and enjoying it:

inovative church

See the other 7 churches noted as “most innovative buildings” in Ministry Today.