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The cruise was great until the boat caught on fire...

DSCN0795 As many of you are aware, Debbie and I were aboard the Royal Princess cruise boat when it caught fire just off the coast of Port Said, Egypt.  While it was happening, I twittered what we saw and experienced…many of you have asked me to elaborate a little more on the story, and so I will.

I will apologize in advance for this post…it will be a bit long.  I will try to do two things:

1.     Be relatively brief.  Relatively is the key word.  As an observer and analyzer of human nature, it is my habit to wax painfully long at times.  I will attempt to stick to the details.  I’d love to get behind the scenes a bit, but we’ll save that, perhaps, for a chapter or two in a book I’m currently writing.  I’ve highlighted sections in this post, so, for example, if all you are interested in is the fire, you can easily jump to that section.

2.     Avoid spiritualization.  Again, as a nature of what I do, I like to take spiritual lessons from everyday situations…and, trust me, we observed several of them.  I’ll save that for a sermon I’m sure I’ll preach sometime this summer.  If you don’t attend Seacoast and so desire, you can probably catch that bit of profound pontificating in a podcast at Seacoast.org. 

So, let’s jump in…

Background

About a year ago, the church gave us a 12 day cruise in appreciation for 20 years of service.  We were humbled and excited at the same time.  This cruise represented the dream of a lifetime for us.  We would be flying to Rome, then boarding a ship that would make stops at various points in the Mediterranean, including several in the Holy Land.  Having never been to that area, it had great appeal to us.  We would be porting in Italy, Egypt, and Israel…as well as tracing some of Paul and John’s journeys to Ephesus in Turkey, Isle of Patmos in Greece, and finally ending in Athens before a flight home.

We haven’t traveled much together.  In fact, we’ve only been overseas one other time together in our 30+ years of marriage…a teaching trip that Debbie agreed to accompany me on in Germany a few years ago.  She is reluctant to fly and has been very involved with the raising of our children as well as working at the church.  So, when this opportunity came, we were like kids on the night before Christmas.  It couldn’t come soon enough.

Rome

DSC_0018 The travel agent arranged for us to fly to Rome and spend a few days exploring the city before we embarked on the cruise.  Lots of cool stuff to see in Rome:  the Forum, the Coliseum, the Vatican (honestly, mixed emotions on my part with that one…maybe another post). And, one of my favorite things to do, eat.  They definitely know how to do that in Rome.  We were a quick study…after a few rounds with the fork, I think we did fine!  We also walked more in 3 days than I have in the last year…a great time.

On Saturday, June 12th, we boarded a bus and headed for the coast to embark on the adventure.  The first day was a time of discovery as we roamed the ship and keep saying to each other that we couldn’t believe we were actually doing this.  At dinner we were introduced to four couples that we would share evening meals with.  I’d love to unpack that, but I’ve promised to be brief.  I’ll just say that we had a great bonding experience, not unlike a small group, that became especially intense later because of what we experienced together.

Sorrento

DSC_0002 The first stop after “cruising” through the night was in Sorrento.  It’s a beautiful city, perched on the edge of a cliff over looking the Mediterranean Sea in southern Italy.  Debbie and I did a little shopping then boarded a non air-conditioned, graffiti covered train toward the ruins of Pompeii.  We could have taken an official “excursion”, but we didn’t for two reasons:

1.     I’m basically cheap.  We arrived at the ruins, hired an English speaking (kind of) guide and paid entry fees for less than half of what those who took the cruise sponsored trip paid.  Did I mention I am cheap (and kind of proud of it)?

2.     We love an adventure.  I maintain that you never really see behind the curtain of a place until you take public transportation.  I love riding the subway in New York City and the “El” train in Chicago.  Down and dirty and real.  You see things you would never see from the safety of the highway.

It was a great day, followed by tales of adventure with our small group at dinner.

At Sea

DSCN0732 The next two days were at sea as we headed for Egypt.  That was a whole nother level of relaxation.  Sleep in, leisurely breakfast on the deck, ½ hour workout in a great gym, a couple of hours alternating between a salt water hot tub (no kids allowed!) and laying on a deck chair in the sun.  Afternoon writing in a beautifully decorated library, a quick shower, then dinner with our group.  I could get used to this.  In fact, I think I could do it professionally.

At night, before we went to sleep, we would talk about how blessed we felt, and how we hoped this wasn’t a dream.  We were enjoying our days, but really looking forward to the meat of the trip for us, the Holy Land.

Alexandria

DSCN0772 On the fourth morning we found ourselves ported at the Egyptian city of Alexandria, founded by the Greek conqueror, Alexander the Great, and later evangelized (according to tradition) by St. Mark, the writer of the Gospel.  Alexandria was one of the strong centers of Christianity in the early years of the church.  It is now a sprawling port city, mostly Islamic with a scattering of Coptic Christian churches.

We boarded buses for a 3 ½ hour trip through the desert toward Cairo to see the Pyramids, the Sphinx, and the Egyptian museum.  Lots of interesting stuff.  Amazing ingenuity in building the things they built 4500 years ago.  The King Tut exhibit was very cool.  Dude had some bling, now! 

After lunch in a nice hotel and a trip to the museum, we boarded buses for the ride back.  About 20 million people live in Cairo, and most of them seemed to be on our road.  I can now see why Jesus family only spent a short time there.

Many of us agreed that we were glad we went once, but probably wouldn’t want to go again anytime soon.  We didn’t realize that we would reluctantly be back in less than 72 hours, most of us on our way home from the aborted cruise.

Port Said

DSCN0820 That night we cruised down the coast a bit to Port Said, Egypt, a dusty shipping port at the mouth of the Suez Canal.  Not much to do in Port Said if you are a tourist.  The main reason for the stop was to pick up a few passengers who had paid extra for an overnight excursion in Egypt.  We stayed on the ship, repeated our routine from the two days at sea and watched a TV show 2 or 3 times on what we could expect at our stop in Jerusalem the next day.  To say we were pumped is an understatement. 

We showered, watched the ship pull away from the port, and started to head out the door to meet our group for the 8:15pm dinner that never happened.

The Fire

DSC03100 A few minutes before we left our cabin, we heard the captain, over the loudspeaker, summon the “assessment team” to a planning station.  We didn’t think anything of it, other than maybe they had a team to assess the plan for tomorrows excursions in Jerusalem (that’s all we were thinking about, so we figured they were consumed too).

Just before we opened our door, we heard another announcement, asking certain other personnel to join the “assessment team” immediately, followed by the sound of people running through the hallway.  Debbie opened our cabin door and heard a child screaming for her parents.  I walked out into the hallway in time to see some ship personnel moving quickly toward the stairway halfway down the hall.  I asked the people entering the cabin next door what was going on?  They said they had been told by dining room servers to go to their cabin immediately and wait for further instruction.  Soon after that, we all got an announcement over the loud speakers saying the same thing.  I then heard someone say they thought there might be a fire.

We went immediately back into our cabin and I went out onto the private balcony to see if I could see anything.  We were on the 7th floor and I saw smoke pouring out of one of the upper decks toward the front of the boat.  Later I found that there was a fire in the engine room on the 1st floor and the smoke was going up through a stack to the top.  It looked as though there was a red glow from possible flames, but my angle was such that I couldn’t be certain of that.

The next thing we heard was a loud series of blasts from the alarm horn, followed by the Captain asking everyone to grab their life jackets, warm clothes, a hat, and any necessary medications, and head to the 5th floor muster station.  We had had a drill in the same location before the cruise began, but this seemed a bit more urgent.  I grabbed my camera and went back onto the balcony to get a few shots before leaving the room.  They were starting to lower the lifeboats.  Not a good sign.

The Muster Station

DSC03089 By the time we got to the muster station (actually the show lounge), all of the seats were taken, so Debbie and I stood with a few others, leaning on the bar in the back of the room.  One of the crew was on the stage, barking out orders through a megaphone and trying desperately to keep order.  There was an obviously concerned group of people in the room and occasionally children were crying, not knowing what was happening.  I could tell by the look on the crew’s faces that this was serious.

Shortly after we arrived we lost power, the room went completely dark, and then the emergency lighting came on.  About three hours into the ordeal the emergency lights went out, leaving it completely dark, until some crew members shined flashlights on the ceiling to give some light.

Every 20 minutes or so the Captain would come on the loudspeaker to give an update as to what was happening.  There had been a fire in the engine room, they were working hard to put it out, stay calm, etc.  Between announcements, the man on the bull horn, speaking with a decidedly British accent, would implore passengers to be “completely silent, no talking”.  There was an eerie silence, interspersed by whispers, then this voice coming thru the bull horn scolding us again.  Honestly, it felt a little like I was back in elementary school and the teacher was monitoring naptime.  He had his job to do, and I certainly wouldn’t have wanted to be him at that moment, but it got on your nerves after 4 hours of the same back and forth.

While the crew did their best to keep us comfortable, you could tell they were a little unsettled as well. Some passengers were higher maintenance than others, if you know what I mean.  At one point someone had a medical emergency and had to be carried out on a stretcher.  The air conditioning stopped working when we lost power.  It was hot and stuffy.  People were shedding the “warm clothing” they had been instructed to bring.  Half the boat had not eaten dinner yet. It was definitely tense at times.  The crew managed to throw together a few sandwiches and some bottled water and passed them through the crowd.  That seemed to calm unruly spirits for a while. 

About 3 ½ hours into the adventure, the voice behind the bull horn decided to line the “smokers” up and take them 20 at a time out on the deck for a quick cigarette.  I thought seriously about bumming a smoke from someone and getting into line…anything for some fresh air.  Shortly after that, some in the nicotine free crowd were grumbling that “you had to be a smoker to catch a break around here”, so a plan was devised to take everyone out, in single groups of 20 for about 10 minutes each.  With about 500 passengers in the room, I quickly  did the math in my head, and decided I’d be better off to stay seated on the floor and hopefully catch a breeze from those walking by to get into line.  (By that time Debbie and I were leaning against the bar, sitting on the floor on our life jackets for a little added cushioning.)

Fortunately the Captain came back on the speaker about 20 minutes later, announcing that they were gaining on the fire, and that they were going to allow us to move to the 9th and 10th floor, which were open decks around the pool, so we could get some fresh air.  Since it was now after midnight, most passengers made makeshift beds out of the deckchairs, benches and patches of floor.

I began to get a faint signal on my phone from Port Said, located about 7 miles away at that point.  The signal would come and go, but I had just enough to begin to text our kids, and let them know what was happening.  I also decided to use Twitter so I wouldn’t have to send out so many individual texts to friends and family.  Little did I know that that decision would gain me hundreds of new twitter friends, including quite an assortment of cruise industry lawyers J.  The twitters were retweeted and became the source of information for not just my family, but families of others on the boat.  Cruise industry blogs started following the tweets and posting the information on their sites.  Not as earth shattering a use of social media as what is going on in Iran, but effective at getting the story out, none the less.

As you can imagine, we were quickly approaching a sanitation nightmare.  The toilets operate on electricity on a cruise boat, so there was no such thing as flushing when the power is off.  With just a few public toilets on the floors we were confined too…this was not going to be pretty. Toilets were already starting to over flow.  Fortunately the Captain announced that we could go to our cabins at about 2am.  There was no air conditioning and the toilets in the cabins didn’t work either, but at least there were fewer people there…if you know what I mean.

Can you give a brother a lift?

DSC03105 About mid morning the next day the Captain announced that we would be given a tow to Port Said by a team of tug boats.  He said that they were flying a group of engineers and inspectors in to see what they needed to do to get the ship running again and find out what caused the fire.

As I stood on the deck and watched the tugs work I had two prevailing thoughts:

1.     We are very fortunate that this happened just 7 miles from shore.  I’ll leave it at that…
2.     We are not going to the Holy Land anytime soon…and probably not anywhere else for that matter.  The chances of them working a miracle on a disabled ship in the next few hours were slim and none.  We were just 100 miles from the Israeli port, but we aren’t getting there.  I felt a bit like Moses, getting a peak at the promised land, but knowing it’s not to be. 

At dinner that night, at around 9:30pm, we heard the Captain make the dreaded announcement.  Even though we had our suspicions that it would end like this, it came as an abrupt shock to the system:  “Damage worse than we thought, cruise is over, we will be disembarking tomorrow.  Have your bags packed and outside your room by 7am.  We are sending you back to Cairo and we will fly everyone home tomorrow.”

Bummer.

The next morning we quickly told our new found friends goodbye and made the 3 ½ hour bus ride back to Cairo (the trip that we said, just a few hours earlier, we’d rather not make again).  We were actually closer to Jerusalem, but things are complicated by the fact that the Israelis and Egyptians don’t play well together.  You can’t even catch a plane from Cairo to Tel Aviv.  The route doesn’t exist.

Princess Cruises

IMG_0743 All in all, I think Princess did an admirable job of handling an extremely adverse situation.

The crew was great.  Many of them operated on little or no sleep for 36-48 hours.  They were gracious and understanding of the needs of the passengers.  For the most part the passengers went with the flow.  We were all extremely disappointed.  Some chose to verbalize their frustration in less than constructive ways, and often times the target was a crew member who probably had never been in this situation before, and was doing the best they could, under the circumstances.  I heard very few curt responses.  Mostly just a reminder that we were very fortunate to have endured such an event without a single injury.

The company made a generous offer of reimbursing the cost of the cruise.  In our case, it is my understanding that it will include airfare, since it was all a part of the package.  They also offered a 25% discount on a future cruise.  We will see if they follow thru on their promise.  I have no reason to believe that they won’t.

If there is a learning for the company, at least from a passengers perspective, it’s that they could improve communication just a bit.  That’s always a challenge during crisis mode but, communication is golden to those are craving information.  Early on, my children in the USA knew more about what was happening than I did, by monitoring the Princess website.  My son texted me that the fire was out several minutes before we got that information from the Captain.  It was reassuring to know.  There were other pieces of information that were available on the web that we weren’t immediately privy too.  They knew that we would be staying in Port Said while specialists examined the boat, for instance.  After a while though, the Princess website quit updating and, unfortunately, my twitters became the only source of info.  Perhaps the company should take a look at how they could leverage similar social networks in situations like this.  It may be a lawyer thing, I don’t know…but I would suggest taking a look at it.

I’ve been asked, “Would I sail on Princess again?”  My answer?  “Yes, I think I would.”  The service was great, even after the crisis.  They flew in people from all over to answer our questions and help us make travel arrangements.  They booked us into hotels in Cairo, escorted us to the airport, held our hand thru the entire process.  Their ability to disperse that many people so quickly from a bit of an obscure port in Egypt was nothing short of amazing to me.

If this can be proven to be a fluke malfunction, not a systemic problem, I’d have no problem sailing on Princess again.

I’m not sure we’ll personally get a do over on this particular cruise…and that’s kind of sad, but life is full of disappointments.  You just adjust your big boy panties and move on.

Epilog

DSC_0012 As I mentioned before, the sudden end of the cruise and the thought of flying straight home the next day came as a shock for Debbie and I.  We discussed our options thru the night and decided if we couldn’t go to the Holy Land, at least we could go to Athens, spend a few days, maybe even catch a boat to Santorini (one of the cruise destinations).  Some of our kids are staying in our house back home and aren’t expecting us for 6 more days.  Princess is giving the money back…we can find a cheap flight from Cairo to Athens…with our travel history, we may never get back this way.  Might as well take advantage of being this close.  Sounded good at the time.

So we flew to Athens. 

On the first night in this wonderful, romantic city we had a major meltdown.  The quickness and severity hit us as unexpectedly as the termination of the cruise.  Debbie seemed a little off…so I lovingly and sensitively called her a grouch.  The tears started to flow…I’m not good with that…don’t quite know what to say.  As we processed it later, we found that we were both feeling the same things.  We were grieving what we’d lost:

1.     The dream of seeing the Holy Land

2.     The abrupt end to the cruise

3.     The sudden disruption of a small group of people whose company we were beginning to really enjoy

4.     We didn’t want to be in Athens…we wanted to be in Jerusalem, and Bethlehem, and Nazareth, and the Jordon River, and the Temple Mount, and Ephesus, and Patmos.  That’s what we signed on for.  That’s what we dreamed about.  Not five days in Athens…in a hotel room…with the only station on TV that we could understand being CNN International…giving cricket scores…and playing the Iranian crisis over and over.  And taxi drivers demanding more and more Euro’s.  What’s a Euro?  How much is it worth? How much am I being cheated because I don’t speak the language and don’t know the customs?

And we felt guilty that we felt bad. 

We’d had a wonderful trip…even if it didn’t include the Holy Land.  After all lots of people never get to go anywhere nearly as nice as this.  Truthfully, a lot of people wonder where their next meal is coming from.  We should be more grateful.  Grief?  What about the Jewish family on the boat that were going to have a Bar mitzvah at the Western wall in Jerusalem?  They’d planned it for months, maybe even years.  They’d purchased tickets, rearranged schedules, dreamed of going to Jerusalem.  And now they are on their way home.  Lots of people were worse off than us.

But we felt bad anyway.

Athens was nice…but now we just wanted to go home.

And so we did…the next day. 

I am writing this on an airplane. 

Tomorrow I’ll go to Target…pick up a pair of big boy pants. 

I hope they have them in size 36 J.

 

My favorite Italian Cajun with South Carolina roots...

My friend, Dino Rizzo, recently wrote a book called Servolution and I wanted to enthusiastically endorse it.  It's a fun read and kind of a text book on how churches can make a difference in their communities.  Seacoast is all about community transformation, so it's really energized a bunch of us who have had the opportunity to read it. 

Dino asked me to participate in a blog tour to promote the book.  So here's a question for my favorite Italian Cajun:

Dino, how do you see Servolution as a tool that can be integrated into a small group study?

 

"Greg - you’re such a great friend and I’m extremely thankful that you’re taking time to talk about Servolution during this tour.

 

One of the great things about Seacoast is your passion for small groups.  We have included at the end of each chapter in the book a section called “Servolution Strategies” designed to help people ask themselves questions and to give them some ideas how they can start a servolution in their own lives.  These can be used for small group study and discussion, for sure.  But, we are also already working on putting together a small group curriculum for Servolution, which will take all of it to another level for small groups.

 

It is probably worth pointing out as well that during our 7 Days of Servolution at HPC, and even during an average week at HPC, much of our outreach is done by small groups.  Sometimes it is a small group choosing to find an outreach to participate in or organize themselves, and many times it is outreach that actually is the reason a small group is created.  Cooking for Christ is a great example of that - a small group meeting with Cooking for Christ might look like six dudes standing by the smoke pit and jambalaya pot prepping food for some local community event, and as they cook, they’re sharing life together, encouraging each other, growing in their walk with Christ together.

 

So yeah, small groups and Servolution go together really well.  Thanks for asking."

For more info you can click here: http://servolution.org/book

It was hotter than hell as their wallets melted into the asphalt...

With the release of Geoff Surratt's new book "Ten Stupid Things That Keep Churches From Growing", I thought I would share a few of our "great ideas" that didn't work.

One of our first attempts at fund raising was exceptionally stupid.  I will take full credit for this one:

We had about 295 people coming to our church in 3 weekend services in an auditorium that seated 145 bodies.   We needed to raise about $400,000 to finish out a larger meeting space. I thought, "We will do a four week series on giving, and on the final week we will meet all together, outside, on our property.  I will present the opportunity, and then, together we will give a generous offering that will hopefully more than meet the need."

There were two things I didn't factor into the planning:

  1. The 4th weekend landed on or about July 4th.
  2. It get's rather hot in Charleston in the middle of the summer.

We arrived early on that Sunday morning, set up 300 chairs in the parking lot, a stage on the sidewalk, and began praying for God's blessing.  (We probably should have prayed for God's wisdom a few weeks earlier when we were thinking this up.)

People started to arrive (fewer than we expected, because of the holiday), we began worship, and the sun started to rise in the hot, hazy, humid South Carolina summer sky.  By the time I began to preach the temperature had passed 90 and the humidity was approaching unbearable.  We are sweating like iced tea on a summer day.  During the message some older people began to pass out (in some circles that may have started a revival).  Others, who were, let's say, "calorie challenged" began to see their chairs sink into the by now warm, gooey asphalt.  By the time we passed the plates for the offering, most of the already sparse crowd had taken shelter inside the building, desperate for some water and a little air conditioning.

The offering that day came to somewhere south of $10,000.  Not exactly what we were hoping for.

Dumb?  Yes.  Fatal?  No.  Failure seldom is.  We lived to see another day and try another stupid idea.  More on that tomorrow...

10 stupid things...

My brother Geoff's new book, 10 Stupid Things Churches Do to Keep From Growing, was just released today on Amazon.


It's a great book that identifies the most common mistakes pastors make that keep churches from reaping the harvest that God may have for them.  It's got stories from Craig Groeschel, Chris Hodges, Perry Noble, Mark Batterson, Dave Browning, Dave Ferguson, Scott Chapman, Ron Hamilton, Dino Rizzo and, yes, your's truly (that alone may thrust it into the best seller list).

Ed Stetzer even calls it "pithy".

In honor of the release, I'm going to write about some really stupid things we've done at Seacoast over the years, starting with tomorrow's post.  Seriously, this could be a year long series...but I'm going to limit it to just this week.

If you are a pastor, what's the dumbest mistake you've made?

If you are a Seacoaster, what's the dumbest thing you remember us doing?  (Be nice...I reserve the right to censor :-)

Just for fun...

Here is my "bad to the bone" grand daughter, Addison, at her 1st birthday party.  Little boys of the world, watch out.

5% with a bullet ^

Last week the ARC (Association of Related Churches) planted our 100th church. It looks like we are on track to plant another 70 NEXT YEAR!

Some lessons:

1. It's okay to dream oversized dreams. 7 years ago, 2000 seamed impossible. Still does, actually, but I doubt we'd have planted 100 without the XX dream.

2. Oversized dreams attract over achieving people. When I had the vision I didn't even know Billy Hornsby, Chris Hodges, Dino Rizzo, the Bezets and the rest of the ARC posse. They were attracted by the vision.

3. Over sized dreams stimulated out of the box creativity. Everytime Billy latches onto a new way of moving forward, he ties it back to the original dream. "Just trying to plant 2000 churches".

You know, I'm beginning to believe we just might be able to do this...

The best of times…

The announcement of the impending birth of a new Surratt is usually accompanied by all the intrigue and creativity of a good mystery novel. There's always twists and turns in the story line, and of course, an element of surprise. The future parents try to keep the news a secret until they can spring it on the rest of the family with some kind of creative bent. An ultrasound picture wrapped up as a birthday gift (Miles), a piece of paper saying "it's gonna happen" (Addison), a tee shirt that announces the fact that "I'm going to be a big brother". You know the drill. The first hint is usually a hastily called family gathering. We had one just a few weeks ago, at my favorite Mexican food restaurant following a Sunday service. As I was chewing on a half eaten fajita, Lisa, my daughter-in-law, asked me how I liked being a grandpa. I bit, telling her that Miles and Addison were the joy of our lives…a pleasant transition from an empty nest that hasn't been all that easy to traverse. I went on and on, until she finally interrupted with, "How'd you like to have another?"…revealing a "big brother" tee shirt on soon to be sibling Miles.

We all screamed and hugged and made a scene…everyone that is except Jenna, my other daughter-in-law. She had a puzzled look on her face and was soon involved in a side conversation with her husband Jason. I thought that was kind of weird, until she announced that there would not be just one new Surratt, but two. She was pregnant also, and she and Jason had planned to surprise the family with an announcement in just a few weeks, but this seemed like as good a time as any. Oh my… come to find out, they are due within 3 days of each other…and neither of the girls knew about the other's secret.

Needless to say, the Surratt family had church that day at On The Border.

But underlying the celebration there was a kind of lingering sadness. No one said anything about it, we never do…it's just there.

See, my youngest daughter Jennifer, and her husband Ben were the first of our children to make one of these announcements. Before there was a Miles, there was a little Mayer in the oven. We were all so excited…the first grandchild. But unfortunately that joy ended with a tubal pregnancy, followed by another. After two surgeries we were faced with the fact that Jenny's body could no longer handle a "normal" pregnancy. An attempt at invitro-fertalization also failed. These disappointments, coupled with the loss of Ben's dad in a plane crash, left us wondering how much more this young couple could handle. There were many nights that Debbie and I cried together, asking God to spare them more pain. It's hard to see your kids hurt. Honestly, they often handled it better than us. Jenny joined an infertility group in the church and Ben has been a picture of faith in the midst of sorrow.

There have been many times over the last 3 years when I felt as though we were living the first words of the Dickens novel, Tale of Two Cities. For us it seemed that "it was the best of times, it was the worst of times".

When I announced a 21 day fast for our church in January, Debbie and I immediately knew what the focus of our prayer time would be. At church we lit candles together and prayed that somehow God would bless their home with the desires of their heart. With all the needs in the world, I decided to let God sort out the selfishness or importance of that prayer. We are learning to trust him with the results, even if they aren't what we've always wanted. My part is to pray…He handles motives and details.

You can imagine our joy and surprise when, earlier this week, Ben and Jenny came into my office and interrupted my study for the weekend message carrying two little bundles wrapped around the picture at the top of this blog.

Twins…scheduled to make their arrival just a few weeks after their brand new little cousins.

Wow.

To quote the great theologian, Forrest Gump: "That's all I have to say about that".

Pray for us.

Coffee with a friend

I love getting coffee on Saturday mornings at Starbucks. Today I brought a special friend (Miles) for the first time. The first of many I hope. Coffee with a friend

The fast was great, but...

Breaking it's not bad either!The fast was great, but...

21 things I am learning about fasting...

I am learning:

  1. I can do it!
  2. I can survive on less. 
  3. I can overcome temptation. 
  4. I'm less fond of salad than I was before. 
  5. I feel closer to God. 
  6. My prayers matter. 
  7. I'm at peace about requests that are currently open ended. 
  8. It's easier to fast when most of your friends and family are doing it.  
  9. I feel closer to the church. 
  10. I've discovered some interesting ways to do veggies. 
  11. Caffeine has had a pretty serious grip on me. 
  12. The scriptures are coming alive again. 
  13. A headache is not the end of the world. 
  14. Looking for ways to eat differently has been fun to do with my wife.  
  15. I'm gaining a fresh respect for the church. 
  16. I can loose 15 pounds. 
  17. I've encountered a lot of resistance.  
  18. I have a greater respect for Jesus.  
  19. Water's really not too bad. 
  20. I don't do this enough.  
  21. Let's do this again.  
What are you learning? 

Church Planting with the ARC

June 2009

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