Wednesday, August 18, 2010

A New Home for the Pile

I propose that we move the Plunder Pile from Blogger to WordPress because over there potential authors will no longer need a Gmail account to join us and WordPress has a lot to offer (despite its annoying "Just another…" tagline at the top).

I've created a slimmed-down Plunder Pile over at the new venue. Please share any ideas or concerns about the proposed new location.

All old post will show up under my account until the authors move over to WordPress, at which point their usernames will automatically reappear on any previous posts.

http://plunderpile.wordpress.com/

Friday, August 13, 2010

CCA Community is extended a 20% discount to Shepherd Press East Coast Marriage Conference, Rejuvenating the Gospel inYour Marriage and Family, being held right here in Harrisburg on Oct 1 & 2 (~ 47 days away from this post ). Use Discount Code TCM when purchasing tickets.

Dave Harvey, Tedd Tripp (with all new marriage material never heard publicly before-plus a bonus breakout) along with 5 other authors; Ed Welch, Rick Horne, Margy Tripp, Jay Younts and John Crotts for you to customize your conference experience.

Shepherd Press will also be giving away a free book for those who register before Sept 1st and a second free book to those who stay at the Hilton overnight for the conference (at a discounted rate).

It should be a meaningful time in which marriages will be strengthened and families will have healing and/or purposeful direction through the Gospel.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Horse Play


One of the items auctioned off last fall at our school auction was the opportunity to go horseback riding with Mrs. Stucky.  The three winners hit the dusty trail tonight at Prairie Fire Farm.


After getting matched with a horse, 



getting a few lessons on steering


and stopping,


they hit the trail!




Riding off into the sunset.

Thanks to Emily and the girls at Prairie Fire Farm for making this night possible
and for supporting the CCA Scholarship Fund.

Do you have pictures from an auction outing?  We'd love to see them.
Send them to Natalie at natalie.martin@ccahbg.net


 CCA 's "It's a Wonderful Life" Auction
Saturday, November 13, 2010


Watch this blog for more details!

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Join us for the next Spirit Night on July 27

It's time for our next Spirit Night at Hoss's in Hummelstown on Tuesday, July 27.  You can stop by this Hoss's location anytime between 11:00-9:00 that day, present the flyer that you print off from the CCA Web site and 20% of your check will be donated to CCA.  Please note that you must present the flyer when you order for CCA to receive the 20%.

It's that easy!  Food, fellowship, and funds for CCA. 

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Kohl's Cares...About CCA!

In celebration of Kohl's 10th Anniversary, they are donating $500,000 to 20 schools each for a total of $10 million.  The winners will be determined by a vote taking place on Facebook.  Each person gets 20 votes, but you can only use up to 5 votes on a single school.

So use the handy link and go straight to our page and vote for CCA to win the $500,000.  While you're there you are encouraged and list some ways that CCA could use the money.

Then after you are voted, make sure you share this great opportunity with all your friends on Facebook and encourage them to vote for CCA.  If you haven't taken the plunge into Facebook, well then this just may be the time to do so. 

If we ban our Facebook resources together, we just may be able to be the Hickory High School of 2010!!




Friday, June 25, 2010

Celebrate America


Looking for something to do this weekend that's fun, free and family-friendly? Then come CELEBRATE AMERICA this Sunday beginning at 4pm at Christian Life Assembly in Camp Hill.

This FREE event will feature fun stuff for the kids: 8 inflatables, 20 games, petting zoo, pony rides, face painting and live entertainment. Did I mention it is all FREE??!!

There will also be 60 arts and crafts vendors, Blue Moon Cruisers specialty car & motorcycle display, rock climbing walls, and local fire, police and food vendors.

Also, you can enjoy two Patriotic Celebrations in the Indoor Main Stage at 5:00 & 7:00 PM featuring former American Idol Finalist PHIL STACEY and the Celebrate America Vocal Solo Competition. The day ends with a 23-minute fireworks display set to music at dusk

At the last Celebrate America, over 8,000 people came out to take part in the fun.  So come early and bring a friend.

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

My husband has a few favorite feeds and sent this to me from one of them. I thought I'd pass it along. It is a constant, ongoing conversation Dan is having with our children (and with ourselves).



Thursday, June 10, 2010

A Classical Education: Back to the Future

This opinion piece was written by Stanley Fish and printed in the NYT on June 7.  Great explanation of classical education and its significance in the modern world.  Good discussion in the comments also!

Chris Perrin responded to Fish's piece with an essay of his own that points out although Fish is an ally of classical education he is lacking one important element in his educational foundation.

Monday, June 7, 2010

Mother/Daughter Book Club Keeps the Reading Bug Alive

Next year's third graders have made room in their busy summer schedules for a special event every two weeks...a Mother/Daughter book club!  The moms and girls are reading Little House on the Prairie over the course of the summer which is a great follow-up to Little House in the Big Woods which is what they read during the school year. 

Eight moms and their daughters read the first six chapters and then engaged in a great discussion on the author, life in the 1800s and their favorite scene in the book so far at their first get together.



Of course, there was plenty of snacks and lots of fun...for both the girls and the moms!



Our fearless leader!!

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Summer Break

I'm taking a break from the Plunder Pile for the summer, but anyone can feel free to use or revamp it in any way that they'd like. Prizes for the 2009 to 2010 school year go to Dan for the post with the most views, Natalie for the longest post with the most links (a category snatched out of my hands at the 11th hour), Mr. Kearns for the best line (Who wouldn't want to fly into the sunset with a warrior queen at his back, leading and protecting his people from the skies and sleeping in a gigantic tree?), and Donald Miller for generating the most non-virtual community dialogue. I've heard exciting rumors of others planning to join the authorship next year. I'm so glad Sarah, Dave and Natalie managed to keep this past couple months from being a complete theological geek fest.

With the summer upon us, seeing some of our alumni hanging around the school has been wonderful. Ben Brown recently sent me a link to this frisky post by Doug Wilson: "It is assumed that where creation is thick—where the music is glorious, the beer stout, the women beautiful, the lawns rich, the architecture splendid, and so on—it presents a greater temptation to idolatry than where someone has mixed the paint thinner of ascetic striving into the created order in order to avoid the idolatrous distractions. But this does not work."

This means, I think, that enjoying your rich lawns as God's good gift is the best way to prevent idolatry.

Friday, May 28, 2010

The Most Miserable Day of My Mother's Life

I appreciated reading over this essay by my wise Dad. Please check it out and leave a comment or two.

"Marriage is the deepest relationship between human beings: it is also the most difficult. My wife told me, the day after our wedding, that it was the most miserable day of her life…"

I also like that my Dad enters the online world about as hastily as an ent moots: "This was not knocked off last night at two a.m. This has taken shape slowly in my mind and heart over the last forty years."

menandwomenbook.org

Does God Tamper With Evidence?

A great post, quite concise and accessible, from the anonymous man moving to Elfland on some of the various presuppositions of the creation/evolution argument. The question raised is, why do we automatically preclude supernatural intrusion in the act of creation? We accept the miracles of raising people from the dead and the feeding of the five thousand and assume "that God would never suspend the 'laws of nature' to create the world..."

That said, I am still a little closer to Kline's position, which is covered briefly in the article.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

101 Things to Do this Summer in Central PA

With summer break beginning in just 48 short hours, I thought I'd pass along some summer fun ideas that I posted on our family blog several years ago.  Some ideas are specific to Central Pennsylvania and the surrounding region while other ideas are for activities that kids can do anywhere.

Did I forget something? Let me know in the comments what are your family's favorite activities.

1. Make an obstacle course with sidewalk chalk and time each other on how long it takes to complete the course.
 
2. Teach the kids how to decorate cakes and let them experiment with a few cupcakes.
 
3. Plan a scavenger hunt. All you need to do is list 20 or so items that are frequently found in nature. Then distribute the list to each of the kids. The first person or team to find everything and bring them back wins a small prize.

4. Bike or walk the Capital Area Greenbelt Trail, a 20-mile loop around urbanized portions of Harrisburg, linking many city neighborhoods, parks and open spaces. It provides recreational opportunities such as hiking, biking, birding, walking, and jogging for visitors of all ages and can be accessed at multiple locations...including just over the hill from CCA.

5. Tour the Martin Guitar FactoryThis free tour showcases the 500+ workers who craft about 90% by hand. The tour lasts about an hour and then you can head over to the free Martin Guitar Museum in the same building.

6. Take the kids to a free movie at the Palmyra and Camp Hill Cinema Centers on Tuesday mornings. Hoyts Theater in Harrisburg offers a G and PG movie every Tuesday and Wednesdays at 10:00am.  Check their web sites for a complete listing of the movies.

7. Keep your kids reading this summer with the summer reading program at your local library. The program runs June 1 - August 31 and gives your children the opportunity to win prizes and attend great events and activities. For teens ages 13-19, Metamorphosis is their summer reading program. Check out your local library for more details and to pick up your reading log.

8. Introduce your kids to the theater through the Popcorn Hat Players. Shows running this summer are "Aesop's Fables" and "Princess and the Pea". Tickets are $7 for adults and children and shows are performed at the Gamut Theatre in Strawberry Square.

9. Go tubing down the Yellow Breeches.

10. Have lunch or just browse the booths at the Broad Street Farmer's Market or at the West Shore Farmer's Market.

11. Bike the many rail trails in Central Pennsylvania. These biking trails are great for beginner riders because they are always flat or with minimal incline. My favorite is Stony Creek in Dauphin.

12. Catch fireflies.

13. Put the PJs on the kids, pop some popcorn, and load into the mini-van for a nostalgic night at the drive in movies. Haar's in Dillsburg still has the magic.

14. The Children's Garden at the Hershey Gardens is filled with surprises at every turn. This magical world of whimsy provides a self-guided learning environment designed specifically for children. Kids of all ages are enchanted as they scamper, climb and dance throughout the 30 colorful theme gardens. The Children's Garden even makes it fun to learn the ABCs, colors, counting and math!

15. Have your kids help you wash the car. Or let them wash their bikes.

16. Set up a lemonade stand.

17. Go outside during a summer rain and play.

18. Play miniature golf: Adveture Sports in Hershey, Challenge Family Fun Center in Hummelstown, Bumble Bee Hollow in Harrisburg, Water Golf at City Island.

19. While they call it the "Children's Lake," visitors of all ages will also enjoy sharing a rest with the ducks calling the Boiling Springs Lake home. Take along some bread or buy some food for the ducks at the cafe on the corner.

20. Children tend to marvel at it and adults tend to marvel at how it intrigues children! It's Strawberry Square's three-story clanging, clinging, ball-dropping, kinetic clock. Its playful whimsy is pure enchantment. And it tells time to boot!

21. The largest one-day street-fair on the East Coast takes place in Mechanicsburg. Admission to Jubilee Day is free and so is the fair's non-stop entertainment.

22. Sway to the beat of reggae, soak in sounds of jazz or country's latest hits. Harrisburg's free summer music festivals at Reservoir Park offer great musical entertainment, as well as an excuse to walk the grounds of a city park recently receiving $1.6 million worth of improvements.

23. On Sunday nights, Italian Lake in Harrisburg is the place to be for free summer concerts that will have included in past years the Harrisburg Symphony, American celtic and Latin Jazz music.

24. Get lost in Cherry-Crest Farm's Amazing 5-acre Maize Maze in Lancaster. Travel 2.5 miles through an elaborate corn maze and collect clues along the way to find your way out. It was listed in Sports Illustrated Kids as one of the "25 Coolest Things to do this Summer."

25. Even if you're not interested in the Maze, you can still enjoy great family fun at Cherry-Crest farm. They have a Pumpkin Slinger, Hay Chute, Singing Chicken Show, Barnyard Jump, Lil’ Farmers Playland (Play House - Coloring Barn - Sand Box - Bean Toss - Climbing Structures), Cherry Crest Farm Tour Wagon, Petting Zoo, Big Ball Play Area and general store.

26. Ride the Millersburg Ferryboat.

27. Learn about some of the Indians that first settled in the Susquehanna Valley at Indian Echo Caverns.

28. Plant a vegetable or flower garden together.

29. Decorate flip-flops with puffy paint, beads, foam shapes or even small toys to make a one-of-a-kind fashion statement.

30. Slip n' Slide

31. Enjoy a Summer Concert on the lawn of the Fredrickson Library. Concerts include the Baltimore Steel Orchestra, The West Shore Symphony, Greater Harrisburg Concert Band and Voxology.

32. Take a ride on the Hershey Trolley Works. This memorable excursion delivers good, old fashioned fun as singing trolley conductors dressed in period costumes entertain and inform you on an enchanting ride through CHOCOLATE TOWN, USA.

33. The Pennsylvania State Capitol building is supposed to be one of the nicest state capitol buildings in the US. It was "architecturally inspired" by St. Peters Basilica in Rome and dedicated by President Teddy Roosevelt in 1906. Guided tours of the Capitol are offered every half hour Monday through Friday.

34. For the lil' fireman in your family, consider visiting the Pennsylvania National Fire Museum in Harrisburg. The Sights, sounds and history of firefighting come to life in the 1899 Victorian firehouse Reily Hose Company No. 10. The museum houses an outstanding collection of artifacts from the hand-drawn equipment of yesterday to the modern tools of today.

35. The Pride of the Susquehanna Riverboat is an Authentic Paddlewheeler that sails the Susquehanna River. The Riverboat is docked on City Island. The island is a lovely park where there are walking areas, a free playground, a miniature golf course, and places for children to play and eat lunch.

36. Have you ever wondered how chocolate is made? Take a trip to Wolfgang Candy in York or Wilbur Chocolate in Ephrata to see how your favorite treat is concocted.

37. For the budding journalist in the family, show them what it takes to put out a paper by visiting the Upper Dauphin Sentinel. Visitors tour the various departments of the newspaper and learn how the paper is produced from start to finish. Demonstrations of cameras, computers and printing presses are included.

38. Food and snack makers are in abundance in the Susquehanna Valley. Martins Potato Chips, Snyder's Hanover, Seltzer's Lebanon Bologna, and Utz all offer tours so you can see what it takes to make a bag of your favorite snack food.

39. Unleash your child's inner artist at The Crayola Factory. You can color, draw, paint and create with the latest Crayola products without the worry of cleanup afterwards. Each creative space invites you to play and explore while learning and having lots and lots of fun. See how Crayola Crayons and Markers are made.

40. Lake Tobias, located in Halifax, offers safari tours, petting zoo and a reptile building to see various kinds of animals up close.

41. Ranked among the top 5 children's museums in the US, Port Discovery in Baltimore provides experiences which ignite imagination, inspire learning, and nurture growth through play. Less than two hours away, Port Discoversy allows kids to learn about life on a real farm, explore a three-story urban treehouse, create in the art works gallery or take part in running a 50s diner.

42. A rainy day is the perfect day to explore the many hands-on type houses in the area. Locally, Curiosity Connection in Harrisburg are great choices or you can travel to the Hands On House in Lancaster or Explore n' More in Gettysburg.

43. All Aboard! The Choo Choo Barn is a one-of-a-kind hand-uilt display of miniature trains. This unique experience for your train enthusiast will enjoy over 1,700 square feet, with 150 animated figures and 22 operating trains.

44. Show your kids the kind of fun we use to having by going to The Castle Roller Skating rink in Lancaster. This family-oriented rink is the perfect place to do the hokey pokey and turn yourself around. Every Wednesday night is Christian music night.

45. A recent birthday party took us to Color Me Mine and I realized how much fun this place can be for the entire family. Create your own one-of-a-kind masterpiece. Choose a piece of pottery, paint it and then have it fired. Great for all ages.

46. For just $1, kids can enjoy the sounds of the Gretna Music summer concert series. Experience theatre, comedy, jazz, pop and our signature classical chamber music concerts in the beautiful Mt. Gretna Playhouse.

47. After the concert, head over to The Jigger Shop. A lot has changed about the Jiggershop over the years, but their generous serving sizes and incredible ice cream treats haven't. Introduce your kids to a Mt. Gretna landmark while enjoying the beauty of the area.

48. A summer's not complete without a trip to the zoo. In our own backyard is ZooAmerica featuring its exhibits of animals native to North America.

49. If you head south, you'll find The Maryland Zoo in Baltimore. Currently the Zoo’s animal collection encompasses more than 1,500 animals displayed in natural settings replicating their native habitats.

50. The Philadelphia Zoo is America's first zoo, established just after the Civil War. This 42-acre Victorian garden is home to more than 1,300 animals, many of them rare and endangered.

51. Visit one (or more!) of the 18 State Parks are in the greater Susquehanna Valley. Camping, swimming, boating, hiking, canoeing, fishing, nature trails, rock climbing, biking, picnicking and wildlife watching are just some of the activities offered for free at the parks.

52. Letterboxing is an intriguing pastime combining navigational skills and rubber stamp artistry in a charming "treasure hunt" style outdoor quest. A wide variety of adventures can be found to suit all ages and experience levels. Visit the Letterboxing web site to learn more about this growing pastime.

53. Take your kids to their first ball game! The Harrisburg Senators or Lancaster Barnstormers, the area's newest farm team, are great choices for even the smallest fans.

54. Attach a note to a helium balloon and ask the finder to send you a postcard and let you know how far it travelled.

55. Make a home fire plan and have a surprise fire drill.

56. Research your family tree.

57. Clean out your closets, host a yard sale and donate the earnings to a charity.

58. Make ice cream in a bag.

59. Tie-dye tee shirts.

60. One of the highlights of the summer is the Smith Barney Harrisburg Mile that takes place every year on Front Street. Thousands of people come to run in the largest race in our area. It's a great event to take the kids and watch or if your kids like to run, they even offer a half-pint half mile and a fun run/walk.

61. Keep the kids' reading skillz sharp doing MadLibs.

62. For the older kids, a little adventure is probably what they want. Treat them to a wild White Water Rafting trip.

63. Take advantage of those clear summer nights to expose your kids to the science of astronomy. Head out to your local observatory for programs and viewings especially designed for the your astonomer.

64. Teach your kids how to make a daisy chain.

65. Start a new tradition at Celebrate America  on Sunday, June 27 at Christian Life Assembly in Camp Hill. This local church puts on a huge patriotic celebration that includes inflatables, arts and crafts, petting zoo, and carnival games for the kids. Also on hand will be Fire Trucks, Police Cars, Blue Moon Cruisers, Black Dog Motorcycles/Harley Davidson Display, a 30 Foot Rock Wall, and a 45-minute multi-media Celebration will feature patriotic music, a Salute to the Armed Forces with full color guard, and a performance by former American Idol finalist, Phil Stacey. Oh, and Fireworks!!! And the best part...it's all FREE.

66. Build a time capsule.

67. Mix 2 cups water with a little food coloring, add 6 cups of cornflour/cornstarch to make goop.

68. Go pick your own strawberries.

69. Take the kids to breakfast at a diner.

70. Everyone enjoys a good amusement park and we've got lots to choose from in Central Pennsylvania. The obvious first choice is Hersheypark.

71. Dutch Wonderland in Lancaster is a great choice if you need an amusement park that's scaled to young kids. With over 30 kid-friendly rides, including coasters, water-play, miniature golf, and live entertainment, Dutch Wonderland provides many of the first and most memorable moments of childhood.

72. Knoebels is the home of free admission, free parking, free entertainment and free picnic facilities. Is there really anything else to say?

73. Clyde Peeling's Reptiland, along Rt. 15 in Allenwood (north of Lewisburg), has alligators, tortoises, snakes and much much more. With interactive exhibits, multimedia shows, touching sessions and programs running five times a day, this fun adventure is not to be missed.

74. Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater house is Come visit one of the world's most significant architectural structures. The key to the setting of the house is the waterfall over which it is built. Entrusted to the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy in 1963, Fallingwater is the only remaining great Wright house with its setting, original furnishings, and artwork intact.

75. Vacation Bible Schools are a staple of any kid's summer---and don't believe the myth you can only attend the one at your own church. VBS's are plentiful and usually offer crafts, drama, games, and, of course, Bible truths for kids that follow a fun theme. Held usually in the morning or the evening, age requirements will differ from VBS to VBS. Call around or watch your local newspaper for VBS's offered in your area.

76. For those football punks in your house, take them over to Carlisle late summer to watch the Washington Redskins practice. Yep, you heard me right. The Washington Redskins hold their pre-season camp in Carlisle in August.

77. I'd like to think that this next idea is a no-brainer for anyone who lives here, but just in case there's a newbie out there, a trip to Hershey's Chocolate World definitely needs to be on your short list for the summer. Cute music, fun "ride", free chocolate. Any questions?

78. The Doll House Museum in Harrisburg is an extraordinary collection of dolls and toys displayed in a life sized Victorian doll house. There are ten rooms filled with over 5,000 dolls and toys from 1840 to present day.

79. Hike a portion of the Appalachian Trail.

80. Visit Boyd's Bear Country in Gettysburg, the world's most humongous teddy bear store. Adopt a bear, visit the free museum, sample some vittles, or make your own bear to take home.

81. Get up close and personal with miniature horses at the Land of Little Horses and their farm animal friends. Races, displays, and special events are sure to delight the kids and "kids at heart."

82. The Battle of Gettysburg was a turning point in the Civil War. It also provided President Abraham Lincoln with the setting for his most famous address. Give your kids a tour of the battlefields and be sure to stop by the brand new visitor's center. Whether you choose a guided tour, audio tour or you do it on your own, your kids will love walking with history.

83. Teach your kids about Amish culture with hands-on projects at the Make-A-Friend Workshop in Lancaster. Kids can choose to make an Amish doll or become a craftsman and build a wooden Lancaster County barn, steam train, or tractor and wagon. The workshop supplies everything you'll need to build your special creation.

84. Have the kids write a letter to grandparents the old fashioned way---with a pen and paper.

85. On a rainy day, host a Brady Bunch or Little House on the Prairie marathon. Check the library for the complete seasons of both show.

86. For the kid who likes to concoct new delicacies in the kitchen, they might enjoy getting their hands dirty at The Kitchen Shoppe's in Carlisle's Cooking Classes for kids.

87. Got a kid that can't keep his feet on the ground? Head on over to the Climbnasium in Mechanicsburg. Climbnasium is an indoor rock climbing facility that caters to first timers as well as advanced climbers. Kids as young as six can climb 40 feet walls.

88. Build an art farm.

89. Teach your kids how to speak pig latin.

90. Have a picnic on the lawn of the State Capitol.

91. Take a bike ride along the Harrisburg side of the Susquehanna. Head down to Shipoke. Stop at the park.

92. Play flashlight tag at night.

93. Camp out in the backyard.

94. Fly a kite.

95. Get an appliance box from a store and let kids turn it into a space ship, house, fire engine, or store.

96. Wade in a creek and try to catch fish with your hands.

97. Visit a local nursing home and have your kids play an instrument or sing, pass out pictures colored by them or simply sit and let residents tell them stories of yesteryear.

98. Organize a neighborhood pet parade.

99. Make popsicles.

100. For several years, the Rachel Carson building in Harrisburg has been home to falcons who nest there.  This year there are three nestlings that hatched in May. Visit the falcon cams perched on the building to watch these beautiful birds as they grow.

101. Visit the Peter J. McGovern Little League Museum in Williamsport, a tribute to Little League baseball and softball past and present. Check out the Hall of Excellence, where you can throw a swing or a pitch and watch your instant replay, and do your own play-by-play on a World Series game.

Monday, May 24, 2010

What is Art? Is it "Sitting with Marina"?

In the great debate about what art is and is not, an article about performance artist Marina Abramovic, currently "sitting" (literally) on display at New York's MoMA.

Talking to the World (About Sex)

Tim Keller looks to Immanuel Kant and Wendell Berry for ideas about how to talk about sex with unbelievers. "I think that in our contemporary society, Christians' beliefs about sex and gender will be one of the biggest points of conflict with our culture. We will need to co-opt some of our culture's own baseline narratives (the importance of human dignity and community) in order to gain any hearing at all for our beliefs."

Christians should listen constructively to what unbelievers (or believers--as if we really need to figure this out every time) say. Listening earnestly allows Christians to develop and maintain normal human relationships with people in the world around us. We can then engage naturally in conversations that express love, shed salt and light, and testify to the hope that we have in Christ. This sometimes invites persecution and sometimes attracts people to our churches where they see and hear Christ preached and worshipped.

Pornography—The Difference that Being a Parent Makes

A contribution form Jen White:

Steve Jobs is a businessman of unquestioned ability, a technological wizard, and one of the greatest orchestrators of "cool" in world history. Nevertheless, he has not been known as a critic of pornography . . . until now.

Read the full article by Albert Mohler.

This too Shall Pass

An idea for keeping the kids busy this summer!




via Dana Kenny on Facebook

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

New Readership and New Readings

Fun videos from two other authors on here took readership numbers to record heights. With a current average of about 30 pageveiws from 9 unique visitors (IP addresses) per day, the recent video posts inspired one day with 61 pageviews from 23 unique visitors. It's great to have others contributing.

Here are some readings that I enjoyed over the past couple weeks.

Toddlers who tell lies early on are more likely to do well later, researchers claim. A Canadian study of 1,200 children aged two to 17 suggests those who are able to lie have reached an important developmental stage.

Police crackdown on hate crime across London: Raids across London have been carried out by the Metropolitan Police as part of an operation to crackdown on hate crime. Between March 2009 and April 2010 there were 51,839 domestic violence offences, 9,914 racial offences and 1,336 homophobic offences committed in London.

Many Christian bloggers responded to this post: Does God delight in non-Christian art? It's a thoughtful article. However, I would have asked: how does God delight in non-Christian art? God's love for art seems obvious. What isn't so clear lately is if God has much to delight over in Christian art.

Hunter, Crouch, and Colson on To Change the World: Christians need to abandon talk about "redeeming the culture," "advancing the kingdom," and "changing the world." Such talk carries too much weight, implying conquest and domination. If there is a possibility for human flourishing in our world, it does not begin when we win the culture wars but when God's word of love becomes flesh in us, reaching every sphere of social life. When faithful presence existed in church history, it manifested itself in the creation of hospitals and the flourishing of art, the best scholarship, the most profound and world-changing kind of service and care—again, not only for the household of faith but for everyone. Faithful presence isn't new; it's just something we need to recover.

Here's a lovely and godless recognition of something terrible and glorious about humanity: "Might not the human brain, that most complex object known to exist in the universe, have undergone a qualitative change as well? If my metaphor only suggests the possibility that our species is more than an optimized ape, that something terrible and glorious befell us—if this is merely another fable, it might at least encourage an imagination of humankind large enough to acknowledge some small fragment of the mystery we are."

Several Christian bloggers responded to this article where Kathleen Parker used her column in The Washington Post to take on Franklin Graham and his belief that belief in Jesus Christ is the only way of salvation.

Justin Taylor appreciated that "Doug Wilson has been interacting with some of John Piper's thinking on Christian Hedonism—not disagreeing per se, but taking it 'further up and further in.'" Wilson reflected on our relationship to God's gifts: "I have to think about the fact that my feet are not cold anymore, that it is time for dinner, that one of my shoulder blades itches, and so on. To use Lewis' conceit from the toolshed, I have to spend a lot of time looking at the sunbeams, and a fraction of my time is set aside for direct worship of God, looking along the sunbeam. The temptation we have is that of treating all this as a zero-sum game, assuming that any time spent on the gifts is necessarily time away from the Giver. But though this sometimes happens, it does not need to happen. Rightly handled, a gift is never detached from the one who gave it."

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Role of Art in Education and Life

If any of you (like me) missed Christine Perrin's talk about the role of art in education (given at CCA's most recent PTF meeting), much of the material is available at her Art of Poetry blog. (Note: CCA's web server seems to block this page, and I can only access it from home.)

Also, take a moment sometime to explore this 360 panoramic tour of the Sistine Chapel recently made available by the Vatican (accompanied by one of their a cappella choirs if your speakers are turned on).

Monday, May 10, 2010

When the Contemporvant Church Leads to Growtivation.

"Sunday's Coming" Movie Trailer from North Point Media on Vimeo.

Here is a great video showing the extremes of when a church strives too hard to be and overshoots relevance...if this made you chuckle, leave a comment.

Comments from a fellow on vimeo.com, Craig Wilson, are insightful:

  • I understand why some of you are upset...I get that what matters is not the medium in which the message is delivered, but the heart of the people and is the service spirit filled.

    What happens though is a bunch of church leaders go to a conference and are told "this what cool church looks like, so do this." It may not be who they are, who God has called them to be or even who their community is. We should not ignore culture and even popular culture, but there is no "Cookie Cutter" stamp for all churches. If this is who you are or if you truly believe God has called you to be about these things, then by all means do it.

    For all the "cool" stuff we can do in a church with lights and media it will never be as good as the "Cold Play" or "Muse" concert I go to...but you know what the world cannot compete with when it comes to the church? True Love, True Grace, and True Community. They will alway fall short in that arena. I feel like we will always fall short competing with the world's culture and sometime we may look silly trying.

Came across this through Nathan W. Bingham's blog.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

How is Harrisburg's Gospel Ecosystem?

A bosom buddy of mine from college who is church planting in Providence, RI attended a Tim Keller conference a while back and came home excited by Keller's concept of gospel ecosystems. Strong schools form an important part of the picture. My friend gave a summary of Keller's ideas and closed with these paragraphs:

With these elements in place, a Gospel Ecosystem is up and running. You will know that it is working when you see two tipping points pass.

The first is a tipping point in the churches. That is when you see growth happening all over the city spontaneously, not just in one or two churches or movements. That is when you will start to see the percentage of Christians in the city grow (and not simply move around).

The second is a tipping point in the city. That is when, at some point, the percentage of Christians in the city actually gets big enough to make the cities look different. (Maybe 10%, as Chuck Colson suggested is the tipping point in prisons.) At this point the change is unmistakable, and even those who don't like the Gospel message like what the Christians are doing in the city.

Keller closed the talk by making an important point for church planters. He said that he wants to "raise your eyes beyond the current horizon." The first horizon for a church planter, he noted, is usually simple: he doesn't want to be a failure! The second horizon is when the church planter has succeeded long enough that he wants to start another church, or a network or movement. The true horizon for our work, Keller says, should be the existence of Gospel Ecosystems in our cities.


Now, for some more of the usual potpourri... I also appreciated these reflections on The Death of Embarrassment:

Far from dividing people, embarrassment "can be a peacemaking force that brings people together - both during conflict and after breeches of the social contract, when there's otherwise great potential for violence and disorder." By expressing embarrassment we put others at ease by reinforcing our commitment to group norms. Keltner encourages us to see embarrassment as "a window into the ethical brain."

But in our nonjudgmental, individualistic culture, it is often uncomfortable and occasionally dangerous to attempt to enforce social norms. Even when people are objectively behaving badly - like the people who flout cell phone bans in trains or doctors' offices and impose their conversations on everyone else around them - it is often difficult to muster the courage to tell them to be quiet. In his book Embarrassment, psychologist Rowland S. Miller argues that, far from being inappropriate, embarrassment "is often a desirable, correct response to social predicaments." Our fleeting sense of embarrassment when reminding someone else to follow the rules is normal, and as Miller reminds us, people who are unwilling to express embarrassment mark themselves as socially suspect. "A capacity for embarrassment is a marker of normal humanity," writes Miller. Or at least it should be.


A news item from our motherland:

Dale McAlpine was arrested for saying that homosexuality is a sin and for doing so "in a voice loud enough to be heard by others."


A strong reminder (Doctrine Rightly Held from the Banner of Truth article collection):

A person who has a great grasp of the great doctrines of the Bible and yet is unloving toward people is in reality a spiritual freak and does not know what he thinks he knows.


Lastly, Werner Herzog reads Curious George: This spoof is probably funnier if you know something about Werner Herzog, but any fan of dry (and slightly dark?) humor might enjoy it. Two others exist (Mike Mulligan And His Steam Shovel AND Madeline). My wife and I thought Madeline was the most fun, but it was a little too edgy for me to post directly.

Just Because...

it makes me smile!

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

New Book: Why America Is Not A New Rome by Vaclav Smil

In light of the current Rome exhibit at the US Constitution Center, this book caught my interest. I can't yet tell whether he really has a point or is just splitting hairs. I have only read bits and pieces so far; I'd love to hear what you all think! Click here to read excerpts.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Anybody could get up and just talk

Marvin Olasky recently asked Tim Keller what it was like being in "college during those weird years of campus protests four decades ago." Keller's response speaks volumes regarding much of contemporary communication (including much of the blogosphere): "There was no school for weeks. We had huge meetings in the center of the campus with an open mic. Anybody could get up and just talk. It was really boring."

At the risk of just talking, here are a couple highlights from my CCA week and some top reads.

Donald Miller's visit to Messiah inspired several great conversations in class earlier this week. Since I've voiced ill-informed opinions about him before, I'll add that several of his ideas, as summarized by a couple thoughtful students, sounded a lot like open theism (the idea that God develops and grows alongside his creation). Along with a several serious concerns like this, there were a couple things (like his ruminations on nakedness and innocence in the garden) that I really enjoyed. To capitalize on this event, a group of CCA students will hold a Vittle Moot regarding some of Miller’s political views over lunch on May 5.

Also, I've gotten into several good conversations in the last couple days about the value of critical thinking vs. humble submission. Students need to learn loving service, wisdom and submissiveness alongside boldness, curiosity and creativity.

For two weeks, I've been experimenting for the first time with an online feed reader. It's an almost impossible tool to tame, but I think it could cut down on time wasted online if used rightly. Also, I've enjoyed a couple great article exchanges with my wife (the first two below are thanks to her):

This refreshing rant against the good life in Dubai takes moral excoriation to delightful levels.

Anyone who was interested in the recent CCA talk with Kevin Kelly would enjoy this article about posthumanism. It underscores the fact that Kevin Kelly is in a fairly narrow class of his own as someone trying to be both a Christian and a posthumanist (or transhumanist, which is typically synonymous).

This is a great reminder to vote in a couple days.

Here’s a report on some brave Christians in Iraqi (followed by some discussion what it means for Christians to avoid making graven images).

I agree that China vs. America is the most likely fight of the century, but I’m not quite as optimistic about the outcome.

CCA staff are all reading a wonderful book about sin, and here is an excellent summary of the book (by the author) in 23 pages.

Here a student of Bruce Waltke goes to bat for his old teacher.

This review of a great-looking picture story Bible mentions another one, Jesus Storybook Bible: Every Story Whispers His Name, that we've just finished in our family and enjoyed quite a bit.

There's been lots of blog talk about the two big theological conferences taking place recently:

thoughtful report
gushing report
critique of gushing report
slam of gushing report
response from gusher

My thoughts on these exchanges: Telling a fellow Christian that you think they are wrong does not constitute failing to love them. Wanting to all just get together and sing songs that we can agree upon is no solution. Given our historical situation, we'd do well to render our heavenly worship enthusiastically and faithfully within our separate churches while also coming together in love outside of church for delightful times of honest debate and creative culture-making (like building schools together, for example).

This report on the little-known Museum of Biblical Art in Manhattan makes it sound like a great field trip opportunity.

Finally, a few good words on how to write and think well (with Orwell):

Many people ... who think about the general quality of scholarly prose would admit that we're in a sorry state, and most would say there isn't much to do about it.

But George Orwell did something about it. In 1946 he wrote "Politics and the English Language," an essay that explains the connections between bad writing and bad thinking as well as the political consequences: "Modern [insert the word "academic" here] English, especially written English, is full of bad habits which spread by imitation and which can be avoided if one is willing to take the necessary trouble. If one gets rid of these habits one can think more clearly, and to think clearly is a necessary first step toward political regeneration: so that the fight against bad English is not frivolous and is not the exclusive concern of professional [or scholarly] writers."

By writing prose that is nearly unintelligible not just to the general public, but also to graduate students and fellow academics in your discipline, you are not doing the work of advancing knowledge.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

The Avalon Project - Documents in Law, History and Diplomacy

The Avalon Project is the name of Yale Law School's digital library of Documents relating to Law, History and Diplomacy.

The project contains online electronic copies of documents dating back over the past two thousand years and so it possible to study the original text of not only very famous documents such as Magna Carta, The English Bill of Rights, The United States Bill of Rights, etc. but also the text of less well known but significant documents which mark turning points in the history of law and rights.


Friday, April 23, 2010

Suggested Reading

Life After Death: The Evidence, by Dinesh D'Souza. The goal of the work, as with many of D'Souza's past efforts, is to approach a Christian idea through secular eyes. In this case, he considers the scientific and rational evidence for the religious afterlife (he doesn't limit himself to the Christian version), as though science and reason are at odds with faith. I'm only about halfway through, but it's a quick read and displays D'Souza's characteristic logic. I recommend it to anyone interested in a little mental exercise.

Our Confessedly Striking Method of Life

With the ever-present desire to keep up on gossip and stay relevant, I need to turn more often to out-of-date voices and keep happily silent. This passage from the Epistle of Mathetes to Diognetus (one of the earliest Christian apologetics) keeps coming to my mind this year and reminds me of 1 Thessalonians 4:11-12. "Make it your ambition to lead a quiet life, to mind your own business and to work with your hands, just as we told you, so that your daily life may win the respect of outsiders and so that you will not be dependent on anybody."

CHAPTER V -- The Manners of the Christians:

For the Christians are distinguished from other men neither by country, nor language, nor the customs which they observe. For they neither inhabit cities of their own, nor employ a peculiar form of speech, nor lead a life which is marked out by any singularity. The course of conduct which they follow has not been devised by any speculation or deliberation of inquisitive men; nor do they, like some, proclaim themselves the advocates of any merely human doctrines. But, inhabiting Greek as well as barbarian cities, according as the lot of each of them has determined, and following the customs of the natives in respect to clothing, food, and the rest of their ordinary conduct, they display to us their wonderful and confessedly striking method of life. They dwell in their own countries, but simply as sojourners. As citizens, they share in all things with others, and yet endure all things as if foreigners. Every foreign land is to them as their native country, and every land of their birth as a land of strangers. They marry, as do all [others]; they beget children; but they do not destroy their offspring. They have a common table, but not a common bed. They are in the flesh, but they do not live after the flesh. They pass their days on earth, but they are citizens of heaven. They obey the prescribed laws, and at the same time surpass the laws by their lives. They love all men, and are persecuted by all. They are unknown and condemned; they are put to death, and restored to life. They are poor, yet make many rich; they are in lack of all things, and yet abound in all; they are dishonored, and yet in their very dishonor are glorified. They are evil spoken of, and yet are justified; they are reviled, and bless; they are insulted, and repay the insult with honor; they do good, yet are punished as evil-doers. When punished, they rejoice as if quickened into life; they are assailed by the Jews as foreigners, and are persecuted by the Greeks; yet those who hate them are unable to assign any reason for their hatred.

Our Christian call to a hidden and private kind of distinctness becomes increasingly vital as the culture at large drifts further away from godly values. I can always use the reminder to pipe down and worship God more faithfully with my private life. Therefore, even though (or because) the number of new readers on here continues to climb a little each day, I need to back down and post no more than once a week. Hold me accountable. However, I'd always love to see gleanings from others.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

How Close We Came to Losing It: Pennsylvania, Marriage & The Courts

From the PA Family Institute Blog by Michael Geer:

I think Pennsylvanians ought to know just how close they came to seeing the long-standing definition of marriage as the union of husband and wife gone.

In a recent case involving a lesbian couple, a Berks County judge was asked to throw out Pennsylvania’s marriage laws. The legal brief argued that “it is time to change our definitions…” This was a direct challenge to how Pennsylvania’s government has always treated marriage.

...Marriage may not be paradise, but it is the proven foundation of society. Paving it over with a newer and trendier model will only further weaken that foundation, to the detriment of families, children and all of society.

[Follow this link for the full story.]

Monday, April 19, 2010

Recent Reads

This assessment is too simplistic (and lumps together lot of names, an issue in most writings on this topic), but it's helpful to note that many elements of both the emergent church and post-modernism are passing fads. Farewell Emerging Church, 1989-2010 by Anthony Bradley:

From Brian McLaren to Erwin McManus to Rob Bell to Tony Jones to Mark Driscoll and others, the theological lines have been drawn and are settled. We have all moved on. We know who fits into evangelicalism, post-liberalism, Anabaptism, Calvinism, and so on. If you are interested in the emerging movement as church history, pick up a copy of Emerging Churches: Creating Christian Communities in Postmodern Cultures by Eddie Gibbs and Ryan Bolger.

...Because post-modernism as movement is also dead as scientific realism emerged as a recent culture-shaping philosophical movement, the generation of Christians struggling to meet the challenges of post-modernism, instead of yelling at it hoping it would go way, are shifting as well to address a world asking different questions. While the effects of the emerging church movement will linger for some time we will begin to see books praising and attacking the movement go out of print.


Help Your Kids in their Faith Without Being Cheesy by Dan Bartkowiak:

Does God Exist is a DVD series from the creators of The Truth Project. The host, Dr. Stephen Meyer, plays a "philosophical survival game" pitting four worldviews against one another in the quest to decide which one gives the best answers.


A Few Good Books by Carl Trueman:

In addition to Kevin DeYoung's great little devotional commentary on the Heidelberg Catechism, The Good News We Almost Forgot (Moody), there is also J.I. Packer and Gary A. Parrett's learned and provocative argument for putting catchesis back at the heart of the church, Grounded in the Gospel (Baker). Taken together, these books are delightful, encouraging, and, for those involved in church leadership, challenging, calling us to revisit old paths in new ways, avoiding both the romantic antiquarianism of so much Reformed church life, and the consumerist eclecticism of the ad hoc approach to the past found in emergent quarters.


The Examined Life, Age 8 from the NYT:

A few times each month, second graders at a charter school in Springfield, Mass., take time from math and reading to engage in philosophical debate. There is no mention of Hegel or Descartes, no study of syllogism or solipsism. Instead, Prof. Thomas E. Wartenberg and his undergraduate students from nearby Mount Holyoke College use classic children’s books to raise philosophical questions, which the young students then dissect with the vigor of the ancient Greeks.


Veith links to this article by a Catholic artist and educator David Clayton who makes connections between science, aesthetics, classical education, and then (for good measure) liturgy:

When we apprehend beauty we do so intuitively. So an education that improves our ability to apprehend beauty develops also our intuition. All creativity is at source an intuitive process. This means that professionals in any field including business and science would benefit from an education in beauty because it would develop their creativity. Furthermore, the creativity that an education in beauty stimulates will generate not just more ideas, but better ideas. Better because they are more in harmony with the natural order. The recognition of beauty moves us to love what we see. So such an education would tend to develop also, therefore, our capacity to love and leave us more inclined to the serve God and our fellow man. The end result for the individual who follows this path is joy.


This fellow plays a tune I like. But whatever you think of his rhetoric, CCA excels at this. On Remaking Private Life–At School by Jason Peters:

I wrote in a previous piece that I have been making preparations for a future in which such disciplines as my own will be an unaffordable luxury in most liberal-arts colleges. May no fate willfully misunderstand me: I’m not hoping for the early advent of that future. I would like to continue to teach Coleridge. But not only Coleridge. Cabbage too.


Here are a couple articles on a topic that I posted about some time back.

Theistic Evolution: A Hermeneutical Trojan Horse by Rick Phillips:

I have been interested to follow the web reaction to Dr. Bruce Waltke's resignation from RTS for his Biologos video insisting that evangelicals must accept evolution or be considered a "cult", especially that which lambasts those who would criticize scholars of such eminence as Dr. Waltke. There are, however, some features of Waltke's video, as with Dr. Enns' articles on Paul and Adam, that counter this sentiment. Most significant is the fact that neither of these Old Testament scholars base their arguments on the Old Testament at all. Rather, their claims are based on evidence from outside of their academic competence - science and archaeology - and only then do they turn to the Bible, seeking to harmonize Scripture with the scientific orthodoxy. This is, in fact, the true issue that has people like me so concerned: our supposedly eminent Bible scholars are now going on record to say that we must subordinate the authority of Scripture to the higher and more objective standard of secular science.

The Stakes Have Never Been Higher by Darryl G. Hart:

According to ABC News, and its report on the resignation of Bruce Waltke from Reformed Theological Seminary, both sides agree that the stakes are indeed that high. Higher than the Scopes Trial? But to the idea that if Christians do not accept the idea of evolution they run the risk of becoming a cult, I wonder if Waltke or his supporter Enns, or ABC’s expert interviewee, Balmer, ever considered what belief in the resurrection of Christ makes the church look like before the scientifically knowledgeable world. Granted, the Genesis account of God’s creation of the parents of the human race may from a scientific perspective be hard to believe. I, frankly, am not sure that the naturalistic accounts of human origins are any easier to understand or believe. Be that as it may, do the Christians advocating evolution – and I am not going to give them too hard a time since one of my favorite theologians (sorry, Gary), Benjamin Warfield was one of them – really think the idea of Christ’s resurrection makes Christians soft, cuddly, and scientifically mainstream?


One more list:
100 Free Online Ivy League Courses You Should Take Just for Fun

Sunday, April 18, 2010

God's Temple

I occasionally collect my thoughts and pester my siblings by posting some meandering biblical-theological ruminations on our extended family blog. They generally consist of wild speculations and ridiculous over-generalizations (on a narrow set of grossly repetitive themes). I'll try sharing one on here:

We are God's temple. Cosmos, city, church, family, couple, friendship, and individual human, each entity is best understood as a temple.

Theologians often note that the Old Testament tabernacle and temple plan reflected the rest of God's creation, like a mini cosmos. Moses and Solomon incorporated motifs from heaven and earth, garden and city, land and sea into the divinely dictated layout, decorations, and utensils. Meredith Kline’s writings repeatedly emphasize our human status as priest-kings, designed to minister within God's creation as the bearers of God's glory, made in his image and likeness for this one purpose. John H. Walton (OT professor at Wheaton and author of the Ancient Near Eastern Thought and the Old Testament) argues that most cultures around Israel understood something to exist in so far as it had a divine function (i.e. served the gods) rather than in so far as it had spatial-temporal properties (as our modern minds naturally tend to think). This fundamentally different ontological perspective alters the way that we perceive and value ourselves and the world. It understands the entire universe to be, at its most basic level, a temple designed to display glory and enable worship. And God gave humans charge over it, placing us at the center of it all.

Not surprisingly, many ancient peoples had some concept of these things, but Israel received the truth regarding this Creator from God himself. As God relates it, He built the first temple, fashioning the heavens and the hearth to declare His glory. He then made us to serve him in the midst of the glorious creation, giving us the job of enjoying and bringing out the best in everything that surrounds us. As priests, we display His glory in every task and interaction that we undertake with each other or our physical environment. These principles underlie the Reformed doctrines of vocation and the priesthood of all believers. God at Work, a little book by Gene Veith, explains this wonderfully. Recognizing all of creation as a temple and we as its priests also brings to mind a string of other voguish concepts such as "redeeming everything for Christ" or "living sacramentally" or "living incarnationally." Serving as the "hands of God" (or recognizing God behind every ordinary blessing) is how Veith puts it. These priestly connections and responsibilities grow even more clear and profound as we look at how all this temple imagery plays out in the rest of scripture.

Skipping over the rest of the Old Testament (and essential material that comes to mind from Ezekiel, Daniel, Ezra, Nehemiah, and Zachariah), we'll jump straight to the New Testament for a highlights version wrap-up. Christ, in his incarnation, is identified clearly as the temple. Christ is said by John to have come down and "tabernacled among us." He promised to tear down the temple and rebuild it in three days, linking the temple directly with his own flesh and blood. And we are the body of Christ. Feasting upon him and united with him, we live, die, and are raised into the heavenly realms with him. Paul identifies each of our bodies, then, as a temple of the Holy Spirit. We are living sacrifices. Peter says that we are living stones being built into a temple upon Christ who is the chief corner stone. (Elsewhere, Christ is called the stone that the builders rejected, reminding us that a rival building project is underway.) Being members of Christ's body and parts of the Divine temple mean the same thing, further reinforcing the connection between body and temple. Finally, when John sees the New Jerusalem descending from heaven, its gates are the twelve tribes of Israel and its foundations are the twelve apostles of the church. Within that city built of living sacrifices, however, there is no sun and no temple because our triune and incarnate God will be its light and its fullness of glory.

God help us, even now, to see, speak and think as priests within our own bodies, our churches, marriages, families, schools, neighborhoods, and nation. No matter where we turn or what we touch, if it doesn't display glory and enable true worship, we haven't recognized it for what it is.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Truth Project Training Seminars

Pennsylvania Family Institute and Focus on the Family invite you to attend our Truth Project Training Seminar. At the training you receive The Truth Project 8-disc DVD curriculum and the necessary training to lead a small group through this innovative and potential life-changing experience. For more information and to register for a training near you, go to www.pafamily.org/truthproject.php or call 717-545-0600.

Sand Animation of Life in the USSR during World War II

My brother in law shared this with the family recently. Kseniya Simonova is a sand animator from Ukraine. She started drawing with sand after her business collapsed in the 2008 financial crisis, and had less than a year's experience when she entered Ukraine's Got Talent. She became the 2009 winner (and an internet sensation) with her animation of life during the USSR's Great Patriotic War against the Third Reich in World War II. It's nifty and kind of lovely (in a Ukrainian TV kind of way at the very least):

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Donald Miller has come up on the Plunder Pile here and here. I just received this poster promoting his upcoming talk at Messiah. Regardless of where you stand regarding his ministry and theology, he's being listened to earnestly by many young people and worth learning more about.

Kids Online: Some Secular Resources

Teaching About Web Includes Troublesome Parts at the NYtimes.

One resource they recommended:

Common Sense Media is dedicated to improving the lives of kids and families by providing the trustworthy information, education, and independent voice they need to thrive in a world of media and technology.

We exist because our nation's children spend more time with media and digital activities than they do with their families or in school, which profoundly impacts their social, emotional, and physical development. As a non-partisan, not-for-profit organization, we provide trustworthy information and tools, as well as an independent forum, so that families can have a choice and a voice about the media they consume.