Sprint

Cyndi and I have Sprint cellphone service. When we moved to Richmond, we had kind of poor service (even though we had atleast a bar on our phones). We went to the Sprint store, and the guy gave us a new PRL (preferred roaming list) as a first step. He said that was the easiest thing to try.

Last night, it didn't seem to help much, but we'll give it a few days to see what happens. He also mentioned that they could check our phones. However, that would take 1.5 hours. We were chit-chatting a bit and mentioned that it may also be a capacaty issue. We explained the problem to him, and he said that it could be. I guess we will just wait and see.

I really like my sprint service. I like them as a company. I especially like the free Sprint-to-Sprint calling. So, I hope this really works out.

Sprint Home Phone “Device”

We went to the Sprint PCS store yesterday and saw an interesting device. Imagine a box with an antenna and a phone jack. You plug your home phone into it and get cell phone service. What an interesting idea. This looked really cool. I'd post a picture, but I cannot find one online. If I needed home phone service and didn't care about privacy (remember, anyone can listen in on a cell phone conversation) I would think about doing this. Imagine free sprint-to-sprint to your home.

Witnessing

God has been dealing with me recently about witnessing, and I need some ideas. For those of you who don't know, I work at the International Mission Board (IMB). I would call this a Christian environment. I wake up, go to work, come home, go to church, and have little interaction with those outside "church." I need some ideas on how to witness to people.

I'm looking for ideas that are outside the box. Ideas that show people I really care about them. How can I reach people in my daily life that shows

1.I care about them
2.I care about what happens to them
3.I want more than to just make a tick mark in a book

For this reason, I'm not considering ideas like door knocking, street preaching, etc…. I need some practical ideas.

Another Church?

SBC Life has this article on church growth and planing. Why do we need another church?

Several things hit me as I read the article:

There has been a great deal of emphasis in our Convention recently regarding church planting. The International Mission Board is talking about it. The North American Mission Board is talking about it. Our seven Southern Baptist seminaries offer courses in church planting and have professors of church planting. Our state conventions are talking about it. Our associations are talking about it. Some of our churches are even involved in planting churches. We are the largest non-Catholic, Christian denomination in the world. We consist of more than 16.2 million members and more than forty-three thousand churches. Do we really need another Southern Baptist church?

As of 2004, the estimated population of the United States was 293 million, and Canada was thirty-three million. These numbers, of course, increase when you factor in all of those who live here temporarily (legally or illegally). There are more than 386 thousand churches of all types in the United States and more than twenty-two thousand in Canada.

This means that there is roughly one church — orthodox or heretical — for every 800 people in North America. In particular, there is no Southern Baptist church in Newfoundland, and less than 250 Southern Baptist churches in the entire nation of Canada! Even more surprising, recent reports from Western Canada have revealed that there are towns with populations as high as one thousand without a single church of any kind!

Consider the following statistics: It is estimated that the unchurched populations of the United States and Canada are 195 million and twenty-four million, respectively. From the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s, the population in the United States increased 11.4 percent, but the overall church membership declined 9.5 percent. Less than 5 percent of all Canadians could be identified as evangelical

Do we care that people are dying and going to Hell? Do we really care about people? Are we too caught up in "doing the church thing" or "going" to church? People are dying without knowing Christ and His forgiveness. Let's get going!

Dr. Rankin

Every Wednesday, the IMB has chapel. Occsionally, there is a special chapel service where new employees are introduced, terms of service are recognized, etc…. Today was one of those services. As a new employee I was introduced, stood up, everyone applauded, etc…. Afterwards, I hung around to speak with some people and meet new people. Well, while I was standing there, I turned around and was face to face with Dr. Rankin. If you don't know, he is the President of the IMB. (If you want, you can find out more information about him here at the IMB website.)

We made some small talk. He mentioned that it was good to have me there. I said it was good to be there. Standard stuff. However, combined with what he said in chapel, his past, etc…, this came across as very nice and real. Here is a guy who has TONS of stuff to do–remember, the SBC annual meeting is coming up–and he takes time to show up at chapel. But not only that…he makes time afterwards to make conversation. That meant something to me. It gave me a feeling I never had at NiSource about the CEO there.

Is Church Membership Too Easy?

Baptist Press recently ran this article about church membership. Read it and let me know what you think. Is it truly too easy?

On one hand, I see the author's point? Why should I expect a church to accept me as a member just because I "do the right thing?" As the author states:

One of the easier organizations to join is a Baptist church. Not much is required. Walk down an aisle, gently grasp the pastor’s hand, nod affirmatively at his leading questions, correctly fill out the card on the clipboard, stand before the congregation and listen to their “Amen” as the pastor asks if they are “glad you have come today.” As one who once was a church member before becoming a Christian, I am aware that it is quite possible to join some churches without being a follower of Christ.

On the other hand, does the body have this right? The only person who knows if I am saved or not is the Almighty God. How can men judge that?

Right now, I'm undecided but leaning towards the "proving" part…at least in some basic way. I should have to demonstarte to my brothers and sisters that I should be allowed to join them. They should know me before they allow me to join. If they don't know me, how can they vote up or down? And, as God says: 

For every tree is known by his own fruit. For of thorns men do not gather figs, nor of a bramble bush gather they grapes.

Luke 6:44

Glory Days?

This Baptist Press article talks about the "Glory days" of the SBC. That brings up an interesting question. What made them the Glory Days? It certanly wasn't money given. It wasn't a lack of disagreement. It wasn't the Conservative Resurgance. While those things were good, the author makes the point that it was because of "Souls! Souls! Souls!"

I happen to agree with him. Christians, WAKE UP! There is a world of lostness out there! We have the answer! We need to love and care for these people enough to "Go Tell!" (Interestingly enough, in the early 1980's an evangelist came to our church in Beeville and preached a crusade entitled that same thing. I think it was Mr. Gage.)

Church, we don't need more programs. We don't need more this or more that. We need more people who CARE about the lostness of people. Go look at these IMB pictures of lost people in the world and tell me they don't need Jesus.

In my opinion dead orthodoxy has created a lack of passion for souls in our pulpits. The battle for the Bible has been won. The battle for souls has not begun.

Church, we need to start that fight! We need to get in the ring! Stand up! Be counted! Care for a lost and dying world!

SOX

If you work in IT at a publicly held company, your life was changed dramatically late last year and early this year. You know what I'm talking about…SOX. You also know how "symbolism over substance" what companies are doing is. You know it doesn't really do anything but make your life harder. It makes it harder to do your job. It makes it harder to server your customers. Everything is called SOX. Everything falls under SOX.

Cyndi found this article in the Washington Post for me about it. Their site requires a free login to access it. The URL is http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/18/AR2005051802255.html. Here are a few exerpts:

Leave the desk for 10 minutes and the computer screen goes dead. Why must I sign in all over again? "Sarbanes-Oxley," says the poor soul in the tech department.

This all-powerful Sarbanes-Oxley turns out to be a law Congress passed in 2002 after the Enron collapse to protect investors by forcing publicly held businesses to more accurately report information about themselves.

Nothing in the law specifically requires companies to turn cubicle life into a journey through the stages of hell. But that's how the law is being interpreted across the land. Sen. Paul Sarbanes, the Maryland Democrat who is retiring next year, has had to watch what he thought of as a guardian of ordinary investors' assets being transformed into a scapegoat for all things annoying at the office.

"You have some way-out requirements, and the company says that's what Sarbanes-Oxley says we have to do, but these changes are neither in the act nor in the regulations implementing the act," Sarbanes tells me. "I don't know where some of these things came from."

"It's absurd how the law is being used to justify these silly timeouts and constant demands for you to type in your password. The law is just being used as an excuse for placing restrictions on workers."

Sarbanes sighs at how his name is being taken in vain as a nation of office workers grouses about new incursions on their time and sanity. "Some people in the business world think it's unnecessary regulation," he says, "but look at the price we paid with Enron and those scandals in losses of jobs and confidence in our capital markets. We didn't set out to create onerous requirements. We were confronted with these gross abuses, and we set out to protect the American investor."

Now, Sen. Sarbanes says it isn't what he meant. It isn't what the law meant. Well, we can learn two things from this

1. The law needs to say what is meant.
2. Business will take symbolism over substance to try and comply with what the law says.

So, we need smaller government and business that thinks.