Bag of Randomness for Monday, March 4, 2019

 

  • This post may have the title of a “Bag of Randomness” but it’s not going to contain much randomness. It will focus on my retiring pastor, I’m just too lazy and not creative enough to come up with a title. This post is more for me, not you. It’s a bit like therapy, a chance for me to think through the past and to embrace another change, another season in my life.
  • I’ll be honest. While I love and admire Dale, I don’t think I had as personal or as close a relationship with him as I hoped. That’s not a fault of his. I’m an introvert and created some boundaries for myself. However, I don’t think I’ve been as transparent and open with another pastor. I love how he made me feel comfortable to express my thoughts, and while we may have disagreed about certain things, unlike many other pastors I’ve encountered, I never felt he judged me. He some ways he was a father figure to me. He was and is resolute in the faith. But perhaps the highest compliment I can give him is that he made me want to be a better man after every encounter.
  • I always thought Dale had a gifted with a great voice. He’s no James Earl Jones or Morgan Freeman, but he had a good preacher’s voice if that makes any sense.
  • I notice a lot of little things about Dale I’m not sure others do. For instance, he parks furthest away from the church. Some pastors have a saved or designated parking spot close to the entrance. Dale, in an act of humbleness and maybe servitude. His flock got the better park spots and he always gets a chance to “walk the halls” and be accessible. I also loved how he always stood at the door as everyone left, providing an opportunity to be accessible and shake hands. You don’t see that at megachurches in the area, and I’m afraid that’s all which will be around in the next 20 years.
  • I didn’t think I would cry, but a surprise at the end of the service got me. A lot of people in the area have complained about how the surrounding area is full of people from India. The demographics have changed dramatically in the past ten years. In a leadership meeting, Dale once mentioned how many churches pull up stakes and move to another neighborhood. He said that was an option, but also said we could choose to minister to those God has brought to the neighborhood. A church of Indians who have accepted Christ was seeking a building for worship services and Dale made things work out so they could use our building. There was a split in their church but a good number of them have stayed. To honor Dale and his wife, towards the end of the service, they honored both of them in a special Indian custom, placing garments and flowers on them. They addressed the congregation. It didn’t matter to anyone that their English was tough to understand, we could see their appreciation on their face and in the tone of their voice. I had no idea they valued him as much as they did.
  • He and his wife will donate their bodies to a local medical school. The first time I hear of that being done was when my driver’s education teacher mentioned it while driving around Mineral Wells. The second was reading an obituary about a former college professor and it stated in doing so “he was a teacher until the end”. I think that’s a very noble thing to do.
  • When we first started to attend this church, it had two services, a traditional one in which he wore a black robe and classic hymns were sung, and then a contemporary one with more modern church music and he was sans robe. Eventually, we simply started to have one worship service and he never wore the robe. Yesterday, he wore the robe, it was a nice touch. And, in an act of symbolism, he removed it when he stepped off the altar for the last time as pastor of our church.
    • I learned the robe is actually called a Geneva gown. The roots go back to John Calvin who suggested clergy to wear one, in all black. It’s supposed to show a lack of personality because the attention should not be on the person, but God, and it was an observance of the law and education. Later, a stole was added as a symbol of the yoke of Christ. Later, for those with a doctorate, you would see stripes on the sleeve, and that’s mostly for purity and vanity.
      • Our pastor’s grandkids were visiting from out of town and it was the first time any of them have seen him wearing the Geneva gown. One said he looked like Darth Vadar.
  • I learned a few “celebrities” have worshiped in the church or were members, such as Steve Pelluer and Russell Maryland. Dan Dean of “Phillips Craig and Dean” and Chuck Swindoll had a powerful moment together. But the most interesting was Janine Turner who visited when ‘Northern Exposure’ was popular. Her mother was a member and there was a certain member who was absolutely smitten by her.
  • His last two sermons were title “Baccalaureate and Commencement” and “Benediction”. The former was more of a traditional sermon and goodbye, focusing on Paul’s goodbye and charge, his baccalaureate address to the Ephesians. The latter felt like a trip down memory lane and thank you, with the focus still being on Paul.
    • He started off by telling us that “baccalaureate” means nothing more than a bachelor’s degree, by definition, but it has taken on the notion of a farewell ceremony such as leaving high school or leaving college. It’s like a Christian service for graduates. There is also a thing called a “commencement service”. They happen much more than they should – preschool, kindergarten, high school. They all relate to conferring of a degree, diploma, an acknowledgment of moving on to something new, the beginning of a new chapter. His sermon was his baccalaureate and commencement to the church he founded more than three decades ago.
    • “I’m going to try to draw some parallels between my life and ministry here at Hackberry Creek Church and the Apostle Paul throughout his ministry but certainly to the Ephesians. However, I cannot compare the joys and challenges of my 30-year pastorate here among you with the hell that Paul went through repeatedly throughout his ministry. One of the slim analogies; however, is that Paul and I did not only seek Jesus Christ but to make him known to any who would listen.”
    • “Now, I have been rebuked, I’ve been challenged, there have been times when I’ve been misrepresented or lied about. I’ve never been beaten, or stoned, or left for dead in the middle of the road like Paul had on too many occasions.”
    • “So the reason Paul is leaving Ephesus is that he’s awaiting a showdown. He’s been forwarned by God that it’s not going to be a retirement celebration at some fancy golf club. Instead, it’s going to be a painful confrontation. The reason I’m leaving is to visit my grandkids, ride my motorcycle, I’m going to sit and worship Sunday mornings beside my wife for the whole service, basically the first time in almost 40 years.”
    • Theologically, many of you, especially those in Baptist and Evangelical related circles, will disagree with this statement; and, I’m sure you can produce a plethora amount of scripture and scholarly material to support your belief and convictions. Let’s save that for another time for a constructive conversation, but I found much comfort in it as a recovering-Baptist and a somewhat onboard reformer.
      • “Now, I am a Reformed Christian. I’m a Presbyterian, and, believe it or not, that has some effect not only on my view of who God is, but what are my responsibilities toward that God as a follower of Jesus Christ. In some Christian circles; however, not in mine, but in some Christian circles of thought, there is a notion that if you fail to do your duty to bear witness to Christ, that somehow other people’s lives are not their responsibility, but your responsibility. In other words – their souls are on your back. Hear me, I do believe that we are duty-bound to share the hope of Christ with all the world, to share that hope with anyone in earshot. I do believe that. but neither is another person’s soul attributed to my effectiveness, my faithfulness, or my failures. You see, there’s only one life, one soul, for whom I’m responsible, and that’s this one [points to himself]. And that’s true for you too.”
    • “Now, 31 years here, there are things that I have done well as the pastor of this church, and there are things that I freely confess that not only have I botched up, I was just wrong. I failed.  I am probably more familiar with those than you are, successes and failures. And I’m sorry for those where I’ve faltered, disappointed you, or failed. But let there be no mistake, I have told you about Jesus Christ. I told you about the hope of the world, and that is your only hope. It’s your response. Anyone’s response is on their back and no one else’s. I haven’t always been at peace with that but I am now. I’m at peace with my failures and my successes.”
    • “Effective March 6th my pastoral duties and office will end. Why is that is because the rationale behind that is to honor the office and the authority of the incoming pastor and not to undermine the proper line of authority, and it’s a good thing. Because there are occasions when that has not worked well for a church and I pray it doesn’t happen here. Weddings, funerals, baptisms, all matters pertaining to professional ministry, the duties of a pastor – those are not mine, those are the Reverend Jonathan Tony’s. He is the pastor, not me. I will honor that and I asked you to do likewise. I will send a letter out this week to the members of Hackberry Creek Church and to our friends reminding us of this transitional necessity. I must decrease he must increase. I will not be worshipping at Hackberry Creek Church for at least six months. Grace Presbytery has been more than generous by modifying their policy of one to two years and said we think the relationship between you and John going to be very good and so you will discern what’s best but for 6 months. I will not be here if there is some matter that may cause you to say, “Oh, Dale would do it better or I wonder what Dale will think about that ?” You need to. Be glad because it’ll probably be better. Please do not seek my consultation because I will not give it. In fact, I will refer you back to the pastor or the Session. So, if you do seek out my opinion, to do so will make us both uncomfortable and perhaps embarrassed. My friendships, my relationships with you, with discretion and respect to the church, and its pastor, my friendships will continue I suspect for a lifetime.” 
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Bag of Randomness for Friday, March 1, 2019

  • That’s a picture of me, probably around the first grade. I don’t remember ever owning or wearing a Scooby-Doo shirt.
  • Jason Witten is leaving the ESPN ‘Monday Night Football’ booth to return to play for the Cowboys. I’m not sure who broke the story, but shouldn’t it have ESPN? I think he would owe that to them for backing out of his contract.
  • I wish I had video evidence of this, but DogGeedingII moved the big fluffy dog pillow across the living room to directly in front of the fireplace and proceeded to take a nap in front of the fire.
  • Not too long ago I posted about ThisPersonDoesNotExist.com which uses artificial intelligence (AI) to create human faces which look like the real thing. There’s a new website which uses those AI created faces and lets you choose if you find them attractive or not. It reminds of that old timewaster of a site back in the late Nineties called HotOrNot.com. However, since this is based on AI, I can’t help but think there’s a conspiracy theory behind all of this. Like, maybe AI has advanced so much that computers want to collect data on what humans find attractive and use that information against us.
  • Local broadcasting legend John McCaa will call it quits at the end of the 10 p.m. newscast tonight. After 35-years working at WFAA and living in the Dallas area, he and his wife will be moving to McAllen, Texas where she has family. Believe or not, the straight-laced McCaa used to be an R-rated comic.
  • My pastor will preach his last sermon on Sunday and will officially retire after preaching in the area close to the same amount of time McCaa has been at WFAA. Both of my parents have been gone for over a decade, Mom for 13 and Dad for 20 years, and I’m still in my early forties. But these two men are about to retire and both of their fathers are still living. That amazes me.
  • It’s going to be a big weekend for SpaceX and for Americans and this will get us really, really close to no longer having to rely on the Russians. This article is pretty concise and informative.
Posted in Personal | 3 Comments

Bag of Randomness for Thursday, February 28, 2019

  • I don’t know what was more shocking to me. Robert Kraft going to that massage parlor or Hugh Grant dating Elizabeth Hurley and hiring a prostitute.
  • I thought Jon Bon Jovi died earlier this week. In a 40-minute drive, I heard “Livn On A Prayer” on three different radio stations.
  • When we take our six-hour road trip next month for DaughterGeeding’s state competition, I hope we see a lot of bluebonnets. I’m also willing to bet WifeGeeding is going to make us stop at a burger place called Health Camp.
  • BoyGeeding has perfect attendance this year but will most likely miss a day as we’ll be traveling for his sister’s competition.
  • I took BoyGeeding to get a haircut yesterday. About 30-seconds after using the clippers on him, the stylist asked if I could pay with cash because the card machine was broken. That put me in an awkward situation, I didn’t want to leave my son by himself as I walked across the street to the ATM.
  • You’ll never hear me refer to it as an “ATM machine” because the redundancy kills me. In essence, “ATM machine” means “automatic teller machine machine. And this is where I go on my rant many of you long time readers will recognize:
    • I won’t say “cheddar cheese” because there’s no other type of cheddar.
    • The same pretty much goes for “tuna” and “tuna fish sandwich”. No one really knows there’s a prickly pear which is rarely referred to by the same name. You don’t hear anyone state they are going to eat “salmon fish” or “tilapia fish”.
    • A “hot water heater” is simply a “water heater”. If the water is already hot, you don’t need to heat it.
    • There’s no need to say you are going “down South”. Hey, you, yeah, you, get your head out of the gutter.
    • “A free gift” – Aren’t all gifts free?
    • It’s okay to say “ink pen” because in the south and southwest, “pen” and “pin” sound the same. I’ll also excuse “PIN number” but not “HIV virus”.
    • I don’t find “frozen tundra” redundant, maybe dramatically descriptive, but not redundant.
  • Must have been mild salsa – Tennessee man accused of dipping testicles in customer’s salsa
  • I never really thought about it before, but sleep is a form of surrender.
  • This CNN list is broken into Delux, Moderate, and Value – The best Disney World hotels, ranked
  • When Topher Grace’s wife was out of town for a weekend, he edited all 10 Star Wars movies into one super trailer called “Star Wars: Always” and I think it’s great and posted it below. He also has an 85-minute edit of the prequels which is rumored to be exceptional.
    • What’s most shocking is that with only 85 minutes of footage, Topher was able to completely tell the main narrative of Anakin Skywalker’s road from Jedi to the Sith. It should be noted that the Star Wars prequel trilogy is almost 7 hours in total length. What’s better is that the character motivations are even more clear and identifiable, a real character arc is not bogged down by podraces, galactic senates, Jar Jar Binks, politics or most of the needless parts of the Star Wars prequels.
    • And this Topher Grace tidbit from the IMDB Trivia section of BlacKkKlansman
      • Actor Topher Grace said in an interview with IndieWire, that portraying David Duke left him feeling depressed, so as an act of catharsis he took on the project of editing Peter Jackson’s trilogy of films based on The Hobbit into a single two hour movie.
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