After two weeks of a toothache getting progressively worse, I finally went to the dentist on Monday. I'm thinking I'll probably get a filling and be back at work by noon. Instead, two hours later I'm waiting to have an oral surgeon remove my upper two wisdom teeth. Sedation in oral surgery is a wonderful thing. The last thing I remember is asking the dentist where he went to school and then I went night-night. You might have played leap frog as a kid. I wouldn't recommend it for those over forty; you might pull a muscle in the process. Then again, it might just be the next big YouTube moment. As adults, we still play leap frog, only the jumps are different. We start down one thought process only to have God point us in a different direction. We leap frog over where we thought we would be to…
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While doing research on Google, I came across a link to Bat Cave Baptist Church. At first, I thought it was a parody site -- but it's real and located in Bat Cave, NC!
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For people who are disconnected and distant from God, there is good news: Jesus offers a map back to God. John 14 begins with Jesus teaching his followers about heaven ...what it will be like. I don't know about you, but I've noticed that heaven is a topic that comes up at every funeral I've attended. As much as we don't like to talk about death, heaven is another matter. Talk of heaven gives us a sense of hope. For Christ-followers, we believe that hope comes through what Jesus did for us. It is Jesus who provides hope and offers reassurance. It's founded in a belief that Jesus will come back for them. All this talk of heaven prompts Thomas to ask this question ... "Lord, we don't know where you are going, so how can we know the way?" (John 14:5) That is essentially the question of our day. …
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An interesting op-ed in the New York Times over the weekend: The Gospel of Wealth by David Brooks. It's essentially a review of a book called “Radical: Taking Back Your Faith From the American Dream" by David Platt. A few snapshots from the column: Maybe the first decade of the 21st century will come to be known as the great age of headroom. During those years, new houses had great rooms with 20-foot ceilings and entire new art forms had to be invented to fill the acres of empty overhead wall space. People bought bulbous vehicles like Hummers and Suburbans. The rule was, The Smaller the Woman, the Bigger the Car — so you would see a 90-pound lady in tennis whites driving a 4-ton truck with enough headroom to allow her to drive with her doubles partner perched atop her shoulders. Jesus, Platt notes, made it hard on his…
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As the light changed from red to green to yellow and back to red again, I sat there thinking about life. Was it nothing more than a bunch of honking and yelling? Sometimes it seemed that way. Jack Handy
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