Nov 25 2008
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Depression, Sin, Medication, Gospel, Community

Tim Chester writes a helpful post about the intersection of depression, sin, medication, gospel, and community.

Nov 24 2008
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Sleep

“Sleep!” cried Father Brown. “Sleep… Do you know what sleep is? Do you know that every man who sleeps believes in God? It is a sacrament; for it is an act of faith and it is a food.”

-G.K. Chesterton, The Complete Father Brown, p. 85, The Honour of Israel Gow

Nov 19 2008
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How to Change

“If you want to conquer a besetting sin, you need to stop loving it.”
-Matthew Elliott

Nov 18 2008
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Gospel & Culture Project

Picture_1_2I’m excited about the work The Gospel & Culture Project is doing. About The Gospel & Culture Project:

The Gospel & Culture Project (GCP) equips Christians to understand and apply the Gospel as truth capable of transforming human culture…

Dr. William Edgar, apologetics professor at Westminster Theological
Seminary in Philadelphia, developed the idea for the project more than
a decade ago. In the intervening period, he pulled together a group of
volunteers, then eventually a six-member board in 2007. During this
period, the GCP offered a number of conferences and other types of
gatherings focused on the application of the Christian faith to aspects
of contemporary culture ranging from media, justice and politics to
aesthetics and globalization.

The GCP was incorporated in 2007 as an independent nonprofit
501(c)3. In 2008, the GCP hired its first employee, Dr. Chris Simmons,
as Executive Director. The GCP currently operates gospelandculture.org
and Foray, and looks forward to launching World Meets World, The School
for Cultural Engagement and The Gospel & Culture Center, as
resources become available.

I’m also excited that The Gospel & Culture Project has asked me to turn my recent post on Facebook into a lengthier essay for them. This essay will be available in the near future.

Nov 18 2008
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Westmont Update

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Here are the most recent pictures of the fire damage (taken yesterday) at my alma mater, Westmont College. Also, some pictures from Friday which give a good overview of the damage.

From speaking with a number of my friends in Santa Barbara/at Westmont and reading the website updates, the most devastating result of the fire is that half of Westmont’s faculty housing burned down. Fourteen faculty members and their families lost their homes. I have sweet memories of gathering in faculty members homes as an undergraduate. This is a big loss for Westmont.

Nov 16 2008
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Smarter Email

This afternoon I read through a pdf of Matt Perman’s post, How to Get Your Email Inbox to Zero Everyday. I’m going to recommend our whole church staff read this. Print out the pdf and read it when you have 15 spare minutes. It will serve you.

Nov 15 2008
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Saturday Shot

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Cru had his first ring-bearer gig last weekend

Nov 14 2008
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Westmont College Update

Official fire and damage updates from the faculty of Westmont College.

Nov 13 2008
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Pray for Santa Barbara and Westmont College

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UPDATE:

I just received news of a massive wildfire burning in Santa Barbara. The fire began a few hours ago. It has already destroyed a number of homes and has caused damage to a number of buildings at Westmont College, my alma mater. All Westmont students have been evacuated. I’m still trying to get in touch with Santa Barbara friends.

It looks like the Westmont website will provide updates…

The news updates don’t look good.

Please pray for Santa Barbara residents, the firefighters, and Westmont College.

Nov 12 2008
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Thinking Biblically About Facebook

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UPDATE 2:
I've turned this post into a full length essay for The Gospel & Culture Project.


UPDATE 1:
Many of you have asked for the audio of this message and for information on accessing the complete Ten Topics study guide. Though we record my Sunday sermons, for a variety of reasons I don't record my Thursday night messages. Perhaps I'll revisit this in the future. I have now, however, posted my teaching notes at the bottom of this post (note: I don't teach from anywhere near a full manuscript, but there's enough there to give you the big ideas). As for ordering copies of the study guide, please contact my admin at cpeckham[AT]cpcfc.org

Continuing the Ten Topics series I'm teaching this fall, tomorrow night I'm delivering a message titled, Facebook: Technology and Relationships. This message explores technology's impact on how we do relationships and how followers of Jesus ought to engage technology.

Because of its extreme popularity (especially where I live), I'm focusing the discussion on Facebook.

In preparation for tomorrow night, earlier this week I took a tour of Facebook's headquarters in Palo Alto, a 15 minute drive from my front door. My friend/fellow church member/Facebook employee showed me around 3 of Facebook's buildings in downtown Palo Alto. They run a slick operation.   

Just like the Google campus, Facebook headquarters serves up tasty free meals to all employees and nearly every floor is set up with kitchenettes housing all the snacks and drinks you could want. They even had my favorite smoothie flavor in stock: strawberry-bannana.

More impressive than the food was the dry cleaning. Facebook offers a free dry cleaning service to all employees. And, more striking still–not a single Facebook employee has an office. All employees sit in rows or clusters of desks. Entry level administrators have desks next to high-level managers. When I walked past Facebook Founder/CEO Mark Zuckerburg, he was sitting at his little desk working away on his computer smack in a sea of other desks and employees.

Anyways, I'm looking forward to talking about the intersection of Scripture and Facebook tomorrow night.

If you're interested, here's the "homework" people are doing in preparation for tomorrow night:
Facebook.pdf

Facebook: Technology and Relationships. 11/13/08

The Technology Lens

  • Technology (most, not all) is neutral and can be used for good or ill
  • Cave paintings

• Art or war plans

  • The Wheel

• Drive to church or drive-by shooting

  • Internet

• Dispense truth or porn

  • Approach technology with this lens: neutral, good or ill

We’ve grown up in an age of unprecedented technological development

  • The 2-3 generations before us experienced significant technological change, but not to the same degree as what we’re experiencing.
  • Examples…
  • The technologies that have taken off during our lifetime have radically changed how we do life, relationships, family, community, work.
  • How many of you could do your job without a computer?
  • How many of your lives and relationships would radically change if you didn’t have a cell phone, email, and access to the internet?
  • How many of you go to public places and are fully present with the people you’re with and the place you’re at, never distracted by your cell phone, ipod, etc.?


We must see our engagement with technology as a discipleship issue

  • Following Jesus means letting Jesus influence all of your life, everything about how you do life
  • The 2 wrong ways to react to technology: The Bear Hug & The Cold Shoulder
  • The Bear Hug: unthinking use of technology
  • “Everybody has an iphone, I must have one.”
  • Zero thinking about the impact this technology will have on you and others
  • The Cold Shoulder: ignoring, retreating from technology
  • “Technology is worldly, I won’t be corrupted by it, I’ll stay away from it.”
  • Escape to the hills! Amish mindset.
  • Problem with this line of thinking: you’re still using technology!

• The Washing Machine vs. The Washing Board (both are technological developments)

  • The 3rd way: The Side Hug–thoughtful engagement with technology
  • Matthew 22:36-40
  • Give a Side Hug to technology and ask it this question: How can I love God and love other people through this technology?
  • Christians are called to thoughtfully engage culture as a means of loving God and loving others.
  • The concept of Leveraging
  • Rather than look at dozens of technologies today and how they affect relationships and how we’re to engage with them as Christians, we’re singling out Facebook because of its present popularity.
  • We could do a whole message on the Microwave, Netflix, the Answering Machine, Hybrid vehicles, etc.

My Facebook History

  • My Facebook 30-day experiment

9 Potentially Negative Uses/Dangers of Facebook

  • 1. The trend of using status updates to complain
  • Examples…
  • You should be honest/authentic, but not a complainer
  • 2. Measuring your worth/identity by number of Facebook friends/Facebook interactions
  • Facebook measurements are opposite of gospel measurements
  • 3. Greater concern over forming Facebook (virtual) friends rather than real friends
  • 4. Diminishment of face-to-face time with people/enjoying and working on real relationships
  • Disengaging from face-to-face time with people to check what's going on in your Facebook world
  • 5. Dual identities
  • Being someone online who you’d never be in person
  • 6. Hurting and excluding others (intentionally or unintentionally)
  • "Favorite friends" application
  • Not being invited somewhere
  • Without this technology you wouldn’t have known, or at least wouldn’t have known in the same way
  • Misunderstandings:
  • “Is he talking about me?”
  • “She wrote on her wall, but never writes on mine…"
  • etc.
  • 7. Facebook and online life can make you more distracted, changes how you think/attention span
  • Recent research
  • 8. Can tempt you away from your calling/work
  • Your heart isn’t engaged in something great and big, but constantly distracted by silly little status updates ("I'm chewing gum") and Wall writings…
  • 9. Thinking about yourself more than you already do
  • You weren't created to think about and focus on yourself. Facebook can tempt you to become a more self-focused person than you already are.

6 Facebook Opportunities: 6 Ways to Love God and Love Others Through Facebook (Leveraging)

  • 1. Can get back in touch with old, far-away friends in an easy way, showing them how you’ve been changed by Jesus
  • My story: “You’re a pastor? What changed?”
  • 2. Can use Facebook as an extension of face-to-face relationships/can be used to enhance time with people
  • Get to know people better/better love and care for people when you're with them because through Facebook you know more about who they are and what’s going on in their life
  • Examples…
  • 3. Can use Facebook to think about yourself less and others more
  • Facebook can be a tool for getting outside of yourself/your problems
  • 4. Can use Facebook to sharpen/discipline what you do with your time
  • Status updates and built in accountability
  • 5. Can use Facebook to quickly announce/make great things happen: events, face-to-face time
  • Instead of taking 45 min. to call 10 people to come over for a spontaneous evening of fun and fellowship, use Facebook
  • 6. Can use Facebook to influence other people for Jesus. Create a new culture with your status updates: use to influence, love, encourage, teach, and challenge people towards greater love for God and other people.
  • Wife’s story…
  • This is the single greatest change I’d like to see us make.

Closing Application

  • Some of you are all jacked up (Bear Hug) and internet addicted and you just need to take a fast, or permanent break from Facebook
  • Some of you are a medium-bit jacked up and need to take some time to reflect, get alone with God, and ask him how to engage this technology for his glory, your good, and the good of others. Make changes.
  • Some of you are only a little-bit jacked up (Side Hug) and just need to get creative and come up with ideas for using Facebook to greater glorify God and love others.
  • A few of you are "Cold Shoulder" technology people that need to engage the 21st century here in Silicon Valley
  


About Justin Buzzard