Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Other’ Category

I went to Barnes and Noble on Saturday and bought a copy of Alice In Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass.  I grew up first reading the book, then seeing the movie, but I suspect that for my children and grandchildren, if they read the book, it will be after they see the movie—and why not? I hope our children can grow up without feeling like there is competition between these very different media.  Ice cream and strawberries are not in competition.  Anyway, I’ll let you know about the books later; for now, let’s continue looking at what to talk to kids about after seeing the current movie. 

Disney’s animated Alice was based on the first book when Alice is a very young girl and full of spunk. Tim Burton’s story finds Alice engaged to be married and torn between what she wants and what others want for her—not an unusual situation for young women.  The following ideas may be more for parents of young girls to think about and parents of older girls to talk about. Use your own judgment!

1.       “Whhhooo are you?” This, for me, is the defining question about this Alice.  Her adventure in Wonderland is all about a search for the “real” Alice.  I just heard Scott Adair at Harding University give an extraordinary lecture on our own adolescents and emerging adults, all of whom are engaged primarily in trying to figure out who they are going to be.  What would happen if we parents were to occasionally simply ask , “Who are you?”

2.       “You’ve lost your Much-ness.”  I can’t forget this moment of truth! That our culture encourages girls to lose their muchness is well documented. Strength, intelligence, independence, imagination, basic integrity are abandoned in favor of popularity, faux dependence, and physical sexuality at the expense of emotional sexuality. (If you want to read more on this, you might try the classic Reviving Ophelia by Mary Pipher.)

3.       Six Impossible Things Before Breakfast!  As Alice begins to define herself more clearly, she discovers strength in this adage she remembers from her father.  She begins to believe that she can do things that she previously thought were impossible. What are the “impossible” things that your kids could do if they believed they could?  Adding a sincere belief in what God could do through them would be even more defining, wouldn’t it.

4.       The Courage to say “No.”  The most important word here is probably courage, but one of the most difficult expressions of courage is saying “no” to what friends expect them to say “yes” to. Alice’s ultimate expression was rejecting her arranged marriage and launching out on her own voyage. Maybe your starter questions would be: Do you ever have to tell your friends you don’t want to do something that they want you to do with them? . . . . What do you say to them? 

I raised the question at the LST office a couple of weeks ago as to what today’s younger children confront in which they learn that because they are Christians, they will have to say no and be different from some or all of their friends. When I was a child, we had long lists of things we couldn’t do, but almost all of those taboos are gone now. Nevertheless, somewhere, somehow, kids need to learn to step out of the crowd and make strong Christian choices.  How do you teach your children to be strong?

I’d love to hear your stories of teaching, preserving, nurturing “much-ness” in your children/grandchildren.

Read Full Post »

Sherrylee and I took our oldest granddaughter and her friend to see Alice In Wonderland on Saturday. I was reminded that any time you take someone you care about with you to a movie, you see it through more than 3D colored lenses.  (My sister-in-law just told me a story of innocently and blindly taking her mother to see The Piano.  Afterwards she apologized to her mother, quite certain that her mother had barely avoided apoplexy, but Mom replied, “Oh, well, I’ve had three children. . . . “)  Anyway, back to Alice.

Overall, we enjoyed Alice a lot. It was clever, great design, well-acted, and full of interesting characters.  As in most dramatic productions, the villain was probably the most interesting, so let’s start with her, the Queen of Hearts.  Here are four ideas for talking with your kids about this film.

1.       People with big heads usually do not get along with other people.  Noticing the Queen’s unusually big head provokes a talk about how movies use costume and design to develop characters. It has always made sense to depict people who are too proud of themselves as having big heads (Notice even the innocuous Jimmy Neutron.) So don’t get the big head.

2.       Some of the biggest laughs from the kids were when the Queen was using the pink flamingo for golfing and the pig’s belly for her footstool.  Much of what makes us laugh is at the expense of others. People who use other people for their own benefit are not usually nice people—even if they are being used just for a good laugh.

3.       “Off with their heads!” The Queen was a person of judgment, not grace. People who always find punishment as the solution to their displeasure find that others  may obey them out of fear, but they will never be loved for who they are. Mercy triumphs over judgment.

4.       Beware the Jabberwock!  The Queen’s power depended entirely on her weapon of mass destruction!  We face people like this all the time who demand something from us OR, they will fire us, they will divorce us, they will throw a big tantrum, they will do something extreme  that will “destroy” their victim. Take away their WMD and they have nothing.  People whose power over others depends on WMDs are not nice people.

It is always good to have some conversation starters after movies with the kids. Maybe these will help you—and them—and you!

Next:   A Few Thoughts on Alice and the Mad Hatter.

Read Full Post »

I woke this morning to the report that Bill Gates is no longer the richest man in the world. Carlos Slim Helu of Mexico, worth 53.5 billion dollars, edged Gates out by just $500 million dollars. Also, Forbes reported that there were 1,011 billionaires in the world, with 40% of them being in the U.S. . (http://www.cnn.com/2010/BUSINESS/03/10/forbes.list/index.html?hpt=C2)

That news left me thinking about budgets, mostly our personal budget which is really tight this month with way too many days left.

Early in our married life, Sherrylee and I were committed to making the major decisions of life on the basis of what we believed was right, and the financial impact was not relevant to the decision.  This attitude was the result of compartmentalizing our financial decisions and our spiritual decisions, which we both believe now to have been a mistake.  God made that very plain to us.

We now have a new set of principles that we work under.  I believe that they represent a much integrated approach to faith and life.

  1. Everything belongs to God. Every financial decision is framed with the words, “It’s God’s_____, so what does that mean we should do?”  Includes money, time, energy, health, children—yeah, everything!
  2. God is lavishly generous.  I don’t believe God is conservative.  Look at the descriptive words in Ephesians 2: God’s “…great love for us, who is rich in mercy . . . that He might show the incomparable riches.”  I would like to be lavishly generous like God. If I were, I would be godlier.
  3. The purpose of wealth is to do for others.  The sin of the rich fool was that he thought his barns and wealth were for himself to enjoy. Wouldn’t it be a different story if he had said he was storing for the benefit of the poor and needy?  “You will be made rich in every way so that you can be generous on every occasion, and through us your generosity will result in thanksgiving to God. 2 Cor. 9:11.
  4. We walk by faith and not by sight.   This is the litmus test, i.e, what makes Christians different from just good accountants.  Help me figure out what this looks like though.  I do believe it means making financial decisions based on what God can do, not what Wall Street did last year; I do believe it means taking financial risks for the good of others; I do believe it means prayerfully attempting what seems to be crazy to auditors!  This one gets me into trouble sometimes with the powers that be.  (I still think I’m right !)

I’ve heard Irene Johnson Gatewood, long-time early missionary to Germany,  tell the story often of how she marched into the banker’s office in Germany to ask for a loan of thousands of German Marks to purchase property which is now Camp Gemϋnden.  She was a foreigner, had no collateral, no personal wealth at all, and was making a ridiculous request by anyone’s standards, and yet she believed this was important for the advance of the kingdom, so she did it. The banker believed in her—even more in her faith in God–and made her not only this loan, but continued to help her with the camp’s finances for many years.  Camp Gemϋnden has been the birthplace of faith for many people and continues now almost forty years later to be strategic for the work in western Europe—because one woman walked by faith and not by sight.  That just feels like the right answer to me!

Question:  What are the financial principles you use in making decisions?

Read Full Post »

My wife and I watched the whole first season of Flashforward over the last few days, and I admit being captured by it. The characters are well-developed, the actors are good, and the drama is centered on the human dilemma.  For those not familiar with it, all of the story threads revolve around how people’s lives were/are changed by a global blackout, lasting 2 minutes 17 seconds, during which time everyone saw  themselves six months later doing whatever they would be doing in those 2 minutes 17 seconds. For some it brought hope, for others despair, but for everyone the question became what to do about now.

Today as I was walking, I was thinking about the young character that has learned that he will be murdered on March 15. That led me to the question: what would I do if I knew that in thirteen days I would die? There’s no time for a Bucket List kind of response; there is no illness to usurp mind and body over these last few days as in The Notebook. What would I do if I knew that March 15 I would die suddenly?  Here are my thoughts:

Things I would not do

  • I would not panic spiritually. I would be fearful of the process of dying, but I am confident in a gracious God.
  • I would not feel “robbed” of future days; I’m a strong believer in “All the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to be” (Ps. 139:16)
  • I would not publish this on FB, Twitter, or a blog—that’s just me.
  • I would not join the March Madness office pool or prepare for the fantasy baseball draft.

Things I would do

  • Get my will and financial affairs in order for my wife’s sake.
  • Make appropriate arrangements for the LST ministry to minimize the effect of my sudden absence.
  •  I would once again do something proactively to mend relationships with a few people.
  • Yes, I’d probably do some kind of video for the grandkids—they are so young that they would scarcely remember me. I would not want to be maudlin, but maybe tell them stories from my life. (I have a cassette tape of my Granddad telling stories of homesteading in Arizona in first years of the 1900s, and it is much of what I remember about him.)

What would you do/not do?  Having made my lists, I have now decided that I need to take care of all of this as if my last day were right around the corner.

And by the way, if this kind of conversation makes you uncomfortable, you might try to figure out why because as Shakespeare’s Hamlet says, “If not today, then tomorrow….”

Read Full Post »

Just this week, I received word that Outreach Magazine, a leading evangelical magazine with a readership of 80,000 people, had selected the Let’s Start Talking Sycamore Series as the #1 small-group curricula for 2009 (See www.outreachmagazine.com .) Since most people do not know about Sycamore yet, I thought I’d use this opportunity to share with you enough to tempt you to investigate more. I believe it has the potential of being a game-changer –but then I am totally biased—so I’ll let you decide.

For 30 years, LST workers have been trained to “let the Word be the Teacher, and you be the illustration,” also, that faith begins with the story of Jesus (“These things are written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God—John 20:30,31). Working this strategy creates a very non-threatening, natural relationship between two people in which a Christian can easily find natural words for sharing  faith with another.   About five years ago, returning LST workers began asking for materials to use here in the States with their family and friends. All LST materials prior to Sycamore used a person’s desire to improve their English as the starting point for the relationship; what our workers wanted was something they could use with anyone.

As we sat down to work on this project, we set the following goals for this new material:

  • It would continue to be Word-centered, starting with the story of Jesus in the Gospels.
  • It would assume no faith on the part of Readers (LST jargon for a Christian’s conversation partner).
  • It would be for a post-modern culture, which meant that it would not be linear sequential, i.e, logically building upon biblical truths in order to reach a rational conclusion.
  • It would nurture authentic relationships.

We currently have three workbooks published, titled The Life, Encounters, and Stories, but have six more in progress. In addition, we produced a valuable training DVD with a training guide that is essential in order to use Sycamore most effectively.

Finally, let me say as a father how proud I am of our daughter Emily, the author of the series, who bears with my ideas and intrusions and whose love for Jesus and sensitivity to those who seek is found on every page. And she is great on the DVD too!

If you would like to know more about the Sycamore Series, go to www.sycamoreseries.org .

Read Full Post »

The First Time in 40 Years!

Mark Woodward

Over forty years ago I wrote a weekly column for the Harding Bison called “Faith, Facts, and Fun.”  (Please don’t attempt to find those articles. I think a review of the movie The Graduate (1968) got me into big trouble!) Although I have written much in the ensuing years, I have not attempted weekly writing since then. So with just a little trepidation, I must confess that I’m pretty excited about starting this blog.

                Here’s the direction I would like to go and the promises I am willing to make (This feels like the scene in Citizen Kane when Kane buys his first newspaper company…)

  • I will be honest and truthful, but not blunt.
  • I will try to limit myself to what I know about and not write about things I don’t know about.
  • I will try to be helpful to you the Reader rather than just cathartic for my own benefit.
  • I will stop when I’m finished.  

In addition, it seems that blogging is better with a focus, so here is my current thinking. The areas I feel most comfortable in, where I believe that you might be interested as well, are as follows:

  • Christian missions –especially foreign missions, and even more narrowly short-term missions.
  • Christian culture – especially juxtaposed to western culture, and even more narrowly in family cultures.
  • Bible study – I really want to share regularly things I learn about the living Word—it’s just who I am.

I look forward to the conversation with you.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts