Wireless Page To TV Magnifier

As easy to use as a computer mouse, this device scans written materials and sends them wirelessly to your television set in real time, magnifying them up to 25X for easy viewing of fine print.

Link

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Bag of Randomness

  • Heheheh . . . a sea horse.
  • Most of the time in tonight’s class will involve presentations from my students.  This class has been very proactive about it, calling and emailing me questions.  I’m expecting good stuff, and hope they are open to some constructive feedback.  Most of the time, students are a bit of surprised with the amount of feedback I provide them.
  • Avril Lavigne was a horrible judge last night on American Idol.  And my goodness, she talked like a valley girl.  Katy Perry on the other hand, was great.
  • It was absolutely amazing that there was yet another man pulled alive from the rubble in Haiti two weeks after the earthquake.
  • Perhaps the best Darth Vader costume I’ve seen a kid wear.
  • Everyone is familiar that Massachusetts’ newest senator once posed nude in Cosmo, but this comparison made me laugh.
  • The person that comments as ‘The Dude’ intrigues me, I think I would like to have a conversation with him one day.
  • A collection of artsy posters about the television show Lost.
  • Everything John Locke Said on Season 5 of Lost
  • A Stanford study about geek behaviors during conversations – maybe my wife will finally understand me.
  • Some days I can’t wait to become a father, other days I’m absolutely terrified.
  • Hey GM, Toyota is giving you a head start, spotting you ten, or whatever you wanna call it, just take advantage of it.
  • What’s more outlandish, saying that George W didn’t fully serve in the military or saying that Obama wasn’t born in the U.S.?
  • We still haven’t registered for things, I’m sure we can put that off again this coming weekend.
  • I enjoy having a little bit of a commute to work, it’s good down time and I think everyone needs a little bit of solitude.
  • The Rangers have been sold, I think that’s a good thing.  Maybe one day I’ll actually follow the team.
  • The NBA All-Star Game will be at the new Cowboys Stadium, but it will be televised at the same time as the Winter Olympics.
  • For all my pastoral friends out there, have your loved ones get you a gift certificate to this place.  The shoes are a must.
Posted in Personal | 2 Comments

Coexisting in North Texas

Years ago a friend of mine sent me an article from a young adult Christian magazine about Bono and how he was saying that all faiths lead to Heaven during the Vertigo tour.  In particular, the magazine referenced this part of the concert in which Bono says (in his over-dramatic kind of way), “Jesus, Jew, Mohammad . . . it’s true . .  all sons of Abraham.”  As you can tell from the footage Bono was not saying that all faiths lead to Heaven, but was stating how the Jewish, Christian and Islamic faiths have Abraham in a progenitor role, how Abraham is considered the father of the people of Israel.  In short, he just wanted people of these faiths to get along, you know, coexist.

It’s funny, but that article lead me to the author’s website where I engaged in some interesting conversations in a comment forum, and out of that mess I ended up creating an invaluable friendship with someone who lives half a country away.  Heck, now it’s one of those as iron sharpens iron friendships. But that’s a story for some other time.

I’m reminded of all this because one of my faithful readers was nice enough to inform me that the pastor of his church put together a multi-faith weekend with his church, Temple Shalom in Dallas, and the Islamic Center of Irving.

My first thought . . . man, this guy has balls, big giant brass balls.  Maybe I didn’t have a ‘typical’ evangelical experience, but I always felt that evangelicals really didn’t think it was a good idea to mix and mingle with other faiths, and for those that did, many frowned upon them if they did so without the intent of  leading them to Christ.  I may not be explaining myself real clear here, but I think you get the general idea of what I’m saying.

But I keep thinking about this pastor and the extreme risk he is taking, and I applaud him for it.  I’m sure many of his fellow brothers and sisters in Christ at first may have been worried or skeptical about this, but the man is clear about the overall  intent of attending two different non-Christian services as evident by this blog post of his that I slightly edited:

First, it wasn’t an interfaith worship service.  Last night was the Jewish worship service and we Christians and Muslims watched – and, where we were comfortable, participated.  If we wanted that, we would have one service – but that would not be honest to who we each were.  I LOVED the music, the recitations – keep in mind they use, for us Christians, the Old Testament – so obviously I was OK with that.  So whether I read Psalms in my church or in their synagogue – it touched me.  I’ve never been to a synagogue – so watching people worship in the faith of my ancient roots and history was very moving to me.  I did feel a connection.

Second, the people were so gracious at Temple Shalom.  They went out of their way to welcome us – I felt like they probably felt overrun by us – we had a few hundred there – not sure how many – but lots.  They kept coming up to our members and introducing themselves to us.

They thanked us for coming – I was told again and again they never dreamed an evangelical pastor from Dallas would ever enter a synagogue let alone with his congregation.  It made me sad – what impression have we given these people?

Third, this was about our 3 congregations members – not religious leaders, theologians, etc., so the conversation was so different from what I’ve experienced when we bring together religious leaders of different faiths.  Everyone wanted to get to know one another.  No one was positioning for anything – they’d probably never see one another again – they simply wanted to talk.  And talk they did – asking every conceivable question possible before the service and then during the Q & A.

Fourth, we positioned it as multi-faith.  So it was not impolite to disagree and anything was up for grabs.  They started with me – the first question was do I believe in eternity and how do you get there?  My answer: yes – and Jesus.  The Imam – yes – heaven or hell – and you believe in one God, and follow the teachings of the Prophet Mohammed.  The rabbi – only 1% in the Bible talks about life after death – if you were living in the past you offer sacrifices.  We all disagreed and no one got upset or uptight.  They asked about the Bible, the Trinity, why do think we can’t get along.  It was more of a “relational” conversation than a “theological” conversation – I believe that’s what’s been missing and is exactly why religious leaders on interfaith can’t make much headway.  We need to live with the differences and be OK with them.

Full Blog Post

It’s amazing what can happen when you decide to extend a little grace.

If you are interested, here’s a Dallas Morning News article and a CBS11 television report about the event, and here’s Pastor Roberts’ blog where he details more about the event and other services.

I’m sure some of you will also applaud this effort, and some of you may frown upon it, but I think it’s important to actually reach out, extend grace, show respect towards one another, and despite any differences, love one another.  This stuff wouldn’t have meant much to me when I thought the whole world existed only around Mineral Wells and Abilene, but now that I’m in a culture pot, I’m learning the importance of not only extending grace, but respect, despite any differences.  Perhaps by acting like Christ, I can draw them closer to Christ.

Posted in DFW, Spiritual | 6 Comments