One of my favorite chapters in Primal by Mark Batterson is called "The Tribe of the Transplanted." It begins by discussing the topic of heart transplants and how the recipients are changed. Those who received new hearts spoke of having new desires, new passions. They spoke of having a sense of responsibility to the men and women who donated their hearts. Taking it from physiology to spirituality, Batterson then writes, "When you give your heart to Christ, Christ gives His heart to you." We become a part of the tribe of the transplanted. Having the heart of Jesus within us should move us to act and feel differently. Unfortunately, many Christ-followers are often viewed as heartless. And this is where Batterson talks about approaching our culture heart-first instead of head-first. He calls compassion the "ultimate apologetic." "If you are in Christ and Christ is in you, you cannot be okay…
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I've been privileged to review a copy of "Primal" by Mark Batterson. It's about how today's church needs to rediscover what the Great Commandment means: "The most important one," answered Jesus, "is this: 'Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is one. Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.' The second is this: 'Love your neighbor as yourself.' There is no commandment greater than these." (Mark 12:29-31). As Batterson points out, we're not only not great at the Great Commandment, we're sometimes not even good at it. The book examines the four ways we are called to love God: Heart: compassion Soul: wonder Mind: curiosity Strength: energy The modern church often went out head-first into the world. Primal encourages us to go heart-first into the world. Loving God with all of…
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One of the guys I follow on Twitter is Brad Lomenick, a fellow who works with Catalyst -- a movement of young Christian leaders. Recently he passed along a link to an article at Fast Company that compared tap water and bottled water. Though I did buy the girls stainless steel water bottles, I'm not heavily invested in stainless steel. This graphic, however, is quite enlightening: To see a larger version, visit onlineeducation.net.
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While reading my book about the brain, I came across this quote in the "how the brain hears" section: "Cocktail party: A gathering held to enable forty people to talk about themselves at the same time. The man who remains after the liquor is gone is the host" (Fred Allen). The quote was in a tip section about how to hear better on your phone when you're in a noisy environment. The tip: cover the mouthpiece while listening. The brain can filter out background noise, allowing us to focus on a single voice -- even in a noisy environment. Not covering the mouthpiece allows background noises and voices to pass through the microphone and return through the ear piece (something called "Full Duplex", where both parties can speak naturally and be heard at the same time). This makes it more difficult for the brain to distinguish the voice that needs…
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From the Seattle Weekly: Lawyer Uses "Starbucks Defense" for Client Who Ran Over Two Washington State Students On Monday, the 31-year-old financial analyst was spotted weaving in highway traffic. He then reportedly steered his Grand Am on to the main drag of the Washington State's campus, where he twice violated the driver-pedestrian code of honor by hitting two Cougar students while they were in the crosswalk. According to police, when they finally caught up to him Noble was rambling and uncooperative. So they had to Tase him. Friends and family say Noble's behavior is totally out of the ordinary. They say he's been stressed, overworked and not sleeping well. Noble's lawyer, however, says on top of being tired his client was also under the influence of a dangerous narcotic: Caffeine. He told a Whitman County judge that Noble's coffee intake was so high he might be suffering from "caffeine psychosis."…
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