Tuesday, March 19, 2013

March 19, 2013


1. I am obviously not a Catholic, but having lived in Argentina, I am very pleased the new pope is Argentine. I wish him the best.
2. I have not seen that new series about the Bible on the History Channel, but everyone I’ve talked to who has seen it has told me it is great TV.
3. RIP, Steve Davis. I did not like watching you quarterback OU to three wins over UT back in the seventies, but you were a good player and a great person. You died too soon.
4. I’m rereading Philip Yancey’s Rumors of Another World. I’ve written about it before, so I won’t repeat that. But I am being reminded what a great book that is.
5. I just finished a book I checked out from the library. It is memoir by music icon Kenny Rogers called Luck Or Something Like It. I was never a big fan of Rogers, although I always liked his work. I intended to skim the book but became engrossed in it. Here are some highlights for me:
  • Rogers talked about the impact his mother made on him from at an early age. She had sought to instill values within him as a child. For example, as a youngster she would take him and his siblings to church three times a week on the public bus in Houston–since they could not afford to own a car. Once, when Rogers told his mother that he did not want go to church, she said to him, “Son, I want you to listen to me and remember what I say. You can never be anything more as an adult than was put into you as a child. So get a on the bus and let's go.”
  • The book contains some poignant stories as well. Rogers grew up in the housing projects in Houston. Today we would refer to his childhood as one of poverty. He remembered that as a first grader, a dance was held at his school in which the girls picked the boys to be their partners. He was picked last.
  •  At the peak of his popularity, he was performing in the Houston Astrodome back to the 1980s. The arena was filled. It was quite a homecoming. Afterwards, Rodgers encountered a girl whom he had liked during elementary school. He had tried to impress her in those early years, and had failed to do so. Now, he could not help but think that he had surely succeeded. Walking up to her, Rogers said hello. She responded with a greeting, but had a completely blank look on her face. Rogers told her, “I'm Kenneth Rogers. We went to Wharton Elementary School together. I use to pick pecans at your house." Again, the woman revealed nothing but a blank stare. She had absolutely no recollection of him from their childhood.
  • Another funny story he tells is of country music Hall of Famer Eddie Arnold presenting him an award. Arnold announced to the audience, “I like this guy. He's had so many big hits. He's done so many good things for country music.” Arnold continued describing why Rogers merited the prize, but finally confessed, “I really do like this guy, but for the life of me, I can't remember his name!” Rogers is definitely self-effacing.
  • Rogers’ first marriage was at age 18. He was, to say the least, naïve. Here is how he described his view of marriage to his father, “… I thought that having a wife just meant a guy could have sex anytime he happened to think about it, which in my case was all the time. I can still see the look on my dad’s face when I told him my all-sex/all-the-time theory of wedded bliss. He looked at me and shook his head. ‘Just know this, son. Sooner or later you’ll have to get out of bed.’” Wise words from a father.
  • Rogers advised that no one enter into the music business for the money. “Most people who set out just to make money don't last long enough to actually see the money. They get discouraged and quit. Longevity is based on your ability to accept rejection and keep trying. Most people can't do that. Those who do survive do so because they feel music is their calling. These people are hard to discourage.” That is good advice for any field.
  • There were several valleys in Rogers’ music career. One of them occurred after the group he was a part of, First Edition, broke up. Over the next two years, he hardly worked at all. He had always been part of a group, but he had to become a solo singer. Unfortunately, he did not know how to do it. He migrated to Nashville and began pursuing a new career in country music. Somebody offered him a song that sounded so depressing, the record company that was going to record him told him to forget the song. But Rogers and his manager fought for the right to record the song, and at last the record company, United Artists, relented. They recorded it. 
  • One evening shortely thereafter, on the “Tonight Show with Johnny Carson”, Rogers opened his set by singing the words of that song, “In a bar in Toledo across from the depot…” The song was called “Lucille.” By the time he was singing the chorus, the audience, both in the studio and at home, was hooked:

  • You picked a fine time to leave me, Lucille,
    with four hungry children and a crop in the field,
    I've had some bad times,
    lived through some sad times, but this time the hurting won't heal.
    You picked a fine time to leave me, Lucille.

  • That song sold over 5 million copies and launched the biggest American music act of the next decade.
  • I had forgotten Rogers’ enormous success. Nor did I remember that he had recorded songs that made top 40 lists in the 1990s and 2000s. At age 75, Rogers is still making music. Although Kenny Rogers is no Johnny Cash, you can make the argument that he belongs in the same league.


            *Thanks to Peter King for the inspiration for this title.



Tuesday, March 12, 2013

March 12, 2013


1. It’s been eight months since I left preaching and, believe it or not, I don’t miss it.
2I saw that Argo is out this week on DVD in Redbox; I want to watch it.
3. I think this is the coldest start to March I can remember.
4. I ordered the first few episodes of the old TV series THE WILD, WILD WEST from Netflix. I told Timothy I wanted him to watch, and he begrudgingly did so last night with the rest of the family. He loved it. I really enjoyed that show in my childhood. It gives me great satisfaction to know he does as well.
5. I think the Texas Rangers are going to surprise a lot of people this year: including me.

            *Thanks to Peter King for the inspiration for this title.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

February 26, 2013


 1. With colleges and universities emphasizing online courses more and more, I think my grandchildren will be much better writers than those of us educated in colleges and universities in the last half of the 20th century. By definition, online courses require more writing from students. More writing means more practice writing. More practice writing means better writing. Better writing means better writers. And come to think of it, better writers means less cheesy repetition that the readers will be forced to endure.
2. Last Wednesday night, somebody in Bible class mentioned they had read that Saturday Night Live had a skit portraying Jesus in a sacrilegious way. People everywhere were talking about it, so I decided to check it out. The skit was filmed and depicted Jesus coming out of the tomb, with guns-a-blazing, shooting up the bad guys. It was sacrilegious. And unfortunately, it revealed the way many in the world view American Christians who claim to be followers of Jesus. Consequently, they view Jesus as being somewhat like those who claim to be his followers.
3. I think the cover story in this week’s Time magazine is worth reading. It is a detailed and understandable look at why health care in the United States is so expensive. To me, the two most eye popping sentences were these: We may be shocked at the $60 billion price tag for cleaning up after Hurricane Sandy. We spent almost that much last week on health care.”
4. I was surprised but not shocked that Lincoln lost best picture to Argo. Personally, I cannot imagine anyone doing a better job than Spielberg taking an essentially dry, factual story and making it compelling—not to mention coaxing academy award caliber performances from his cast. Then again, Hollywood seems to want to keep him in check.
5. Here are my sports thoughts for the week:
            A. I pray that like Manti Te’o, Oscar Pistorius is proven innocent. I heard that Te’o has impressed many NFL scouts at the NFL Combine with his character and personality. Some say that after interviewing him they understand why he was “catfished.” They found him to be one of the most trusting human beings they have ever met.
            B. Tom Brady may have solidified his legacy by agreeing to a contract extension for far less money than he is worth on the market. He wants to win, so he left $10 million per year (or more) on the table so the team can sign more players of excellence.
         C. Something I had forgotten, Alex Rodriguez was willing to walk away from his historic $252 million contract with the Texas Rangers and sign with the Boston Red Sox in an arranged trade, but the players’ union nullified the deal. A-Rod wanted to win and make less… and the union stopped him. That says a lot about baseball a decade ago.
             *Thanks to Peter King for the inspiration for this title.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

February 19, 2013


1. NBA All-Star Game? I haven’t watched one since high school. I think it is as big a joke as the NFL Pro Bowl.
2. I have been using Office Depot for my printing needs and am very pleased. They do design, but I have chosen to devise my stuff myself.  Having said that, I let them help me with formatting. I also like their quality and their prices.
3. I recommend the movie RUNNING BRAVE to you. It is based on a true story about the great Olympic champion, Billy Mills. Mills was a native American who grew up on a reservation. He was orphaned at twelve. He has lived a very successful life and helped many people. You can find it on Netflix.
4. Tremendous quote from a corporate worker, found in the book A Spiritual Audit of Corporate America by Ian Mitroff and Elizabeth Denton (two business professors), “Organizations feel free to beat up on us 40 to 60 hours a week. Then they put the burden entirely on us to repair ourselves on our own time so we can come back for more!” That is one reason I have started a chaplaincy service to employees.
5. My junior year at ACU, I served in the student senate along with our class president, Jeff Boyd. A few years later, I helped lead a mission trip to Cordoba, Argentina that included Jeff’s future wife, Jackie Tubbs. Even though it has been years since I have seen or talked to either one of them, I think it is cool Jeff has begun serving on the Texas Supreme Court.

*Thanks to Peter King for the inspiration for this title.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

February 12, 2013


1. Listening to “Spotify”, I’ve been going back to the weekly Billboard charts, beginning in 1955, and selecting the unrecognized songs out of the top five. Right now, I’m in the year 1961. What strikes me is how many songs of that era lasted between 2 to 2 ½ minutes.
2. Good post that I’ve been seeing passed around is entitled, “Top 10 Reasons Our Kinds Leave Church.” It is written, I suppose, by an evangelical (judging by his content.) I believe many of his observations are spot on. Having said that, I warn against running too far into his direction of “catechesis.” I give him the benefit of the doubt when it comes to balance; however, let the reader beware. Having grown up in the era with the kind of youth groups that he holds up—one that exclusively emphasizes substance, doctrine, teaching, and discipline—I can assure you young people will REALLY leave in droves when they grow up. Balance is the key.
            Here is what else I think: the breakdown of the family is the biggest contributing factor to young people growing up and leaving the church.
            Postmodernism challenges us, but some philosophies and worldviews  have always challenged the church. Ditto temptations to sin.
            The variable that is different now is the disintegrated family. People who grow up in broken homes NEVER get over it. They may cope with it, but it will give them pain until they take it to their grave.
            I’m not saying people who divorce cannot go to heaven. I will even say that sometimes a Christian needs to divorce—it is the better of two bad choices. (See God when he chose to divorce Israel.) However, the better of two bad choices does not mean that those involved escape pain-free.
            I predict that future worship services will be much more predictable and much less spontaneous. Not because the Bible says so, but because more and more of these adults who grew up in broken homes will crave structure. To them, it will be spiritually liberating to have at least one place each week they can count on receiving what they expect. The other “bedrock” areas of their lives will have been too unpredictable. 
3. I saw that the Pope announced he was stepping down. Good for him, and I know that took courage.
4. Warning! If you think you are going to receive $1600 for a one ounce gold necklace, you have another dollar amount coming. I sold my old, gold necklace the other day. I figured, “Why not—prices will not get much higher and I’ll use the cash for my new workplace chaplaincy service.” Wrong—there are many factors involved with selling gold. Write me and I’ll explain.
5. I cannot even predict who will win the Oscars this week. I have not seen enough movies. I just wish ABC would stream the telecast online or even on a delayed basis.

*Thanks to Peter King for the inspiration for this title.



Tuesday, February 5, 2013

February 5, 2013


1. Well, I got one right. I picked Baltimore to win. I was glad the Super Bowl was a good game.
2. I missed the halftime show with Beyonce and Destiny’s Child. I’ve heard many say they were responsible for the lights going out.
3. I have heard more talk on Drones this week than I have since the last Star Wars movie I saw.
4. I have finally opened up to using SPOTIFY. It’s free on Facebook, and it basically places the world’s entire library of music on your computer.
5. To help me understand innovation and organization better, I recently completed reading my second biography on coaching great Paul Brown—PAUL BROWN by Andrew O’Toole. For those of you who do not know or remember, Brown coached the Cleveland Browns from 1946-1962, and later, the Cincinnati Bengals. Basically, Brown founded both teams and owned the second (although the Cleveland Browns were named after him.)            
            So what about Paul Brown? Like many people who are extremely successful, Paul Brown's years of pro football success extended approximately ten years—and no more. The years before his coaching the Cleveland Browns demonstrated a coaching genius on the ascent. He coached a high school team to a state championship; he then won a national championship at Ohio State. Both were accomplished before he turned forty.
            The genius came to fruition in his first ten years with Cleveland from 1945 to 1955. There Brown was the most innovative and entrepreneurial coach in NFL history. Inventing the facemask, the playbook, filming practice, scheduling practice, practicing how to practice, Brown changed pro football forever. It was no secret that the championships (seven!) won during those years were due to his innovation. However, unlike many entrepreneurs who founded a company and moved on, Brown chose to remain with his “company.” That was his downfall and led to his firing at Cleveland.
            Later, he started a new franchise, the Cincinnati Bengals, from scratch. To a lesser degree, he enjoyed a great deal of success. No great innovation in Cincinnati, but they were a good franchise whose early years were, at times, remarkable.
            We remember Paul Brown primarily for what he did during a decade. Based on that evaluation, he was amazing.

 *Thanks to Peter King for the inspiration for this title.

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

January 29, 2013


1. Here’s all you need to know about Jerry Jones the GM—he announces he is replacing Jason Garrett as offensive play caller… and created an environment which led the press to Bill Callahan as the next play caller. He did this the same day Callahan was accused by some of his ex-players of sabotaging the 2003 Super Bowl—because his play calling had been so atrocious.
2. I was sorry to read that former Dallas Cowboy (and Cleveland Browns) quarterback Bernie Kosar has been suffering severely from head trauma due to numerous concussions during his playing career. The good news is he believes he has found a doctor who can helped him.
3. My head—no pun intended—tells me San Francisco wins the Super Bowl. My gut tells 
me Baltimore wins the Super Bowl. I’m going with my gut—Baltimore wins.
4. Abby middle daughter has been imploring me to see Les Miz since it came out. So far, it has 
been easy to resist.
5. I watched the first season of Downton Abbey on Netflix. I think I know now why it has been
 such a big hit, although I do think they could have easily edited out ten seconds of the first 
episode. Warning: skip over those ten seconds if you watch.
*Thanks to Peter King for the inspiration for this title.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

January 22, 2013


1. I think first lady Michelle Obama was correct in affirming Walmart’s decision to offer jobs to all veterans who receive honorable discharges, “We all believe that no one who serves our country should have to fight for a job once they return home.” Kudos to Walmart, and I hope more corporations and businesses follow their cue.
2. I read in this week’s Time that humans throw away 50% of the world’s total food production—about 1.2 billion tons of food. Wow! You would think we could figure out a way not to waste so much.
3. Today marks the 40th anniversary of Roe v. Wade. I tweeted and Facebooked this morning about the irony of the national conversation concerning the ban of assault weapons, while legalizing them when it comes to the tiniest of human creatures. Having said that, I want to say something more positive. I am encouraged by the small but growing trend for the Pro-life cause. Technology has changed the national conversation. It is much more emotional to destroy a living person, whom you can see so clearly in the womb. I predict someday civilization will view abortion the same way it views slavery.
4. RIP Abigail Van Buren. I’ve collected various columns (“Dear Abby”) she has written through the years. I’ll add another thanks to SI’s Peter King. He noted, “Abby was a woman-empowerer and common-sense-maker. I remember one of her responses, when a woman bemoaned how old she would be if she went back to school in her late '30s to get a college degree, and Abby wrote: ‘Well, how old will you be in five years if you don't go back to school?’” Wise words.
5. RIP as well, Stan Musial. I did not have an affection for him as a boy like I did Willie Mays and Mickey Mantle, or that I later had for Ted Williams. However, in my adult years, I’ve grown to admire and appreciate Musial more. He had great baseball numbers—especially his batting average—and and from all accounts he was an amazing human being.

*Thanks to Peter King for the inspiration for this title.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

January 15, 2013


1. E-cigs, anyone? I read this week in Time that electronic cigarettes are projected to generate $1 billion in sales this year. Targeting smokers who desire to quit, an E-cig works by using a sensor, microprocessor, battery, LED, heater, and nicotine cartridge to "atomize the cartridge’s liquid and produce a nicotine vapor." Wow! That is a sci-fi concept that even The Jetsons missed. So effective is the product, more and more smokers are dropping cigarettes and smoking E-cigs–without any intention to stop. Some marketers are forecasting a commercial success similar to the energy drink explosion. Still, I’ll pass on investing.
2. If you like business, can I recommend a book to you? I am not a Ted Turner fan, and I never have been. However, I found an unabridged audio version of his autobiography Call My Ted
and loved it! It’s the story of his risk taking, adventurous, and visionary life. (Historian Harold 
Evans called Turner one of the most important innovators in American history.) What 
fascinated me was the fact that Turner spent the first 20 years of his adult life borrowing 
money for his new business endeavors. Every time his ideas came close to paying off, 
he would have a new vision, borrow more money, a place himself on the precipice of disaster. Finally, in the 90s when CNN and his other networks became financial and critical successes, 
he began to slow down. A few years later, he found deep disappointment in his merger with 
Time Warner and AOL. Turner reads the book himself, which lends itself to humor and 
authenticity. He also has associates, friends, and even enemies share stories along the way. 
Find yourself a copy of this book, and listen or read it.
4. I was also saddened to read that ESPN veteran Stuart Scott’s cancer has returned. My prayers have gone out for him.
5. RG3, Russell Wilson, and Colin Kaepernick are living the life Tim Tebow dreamed of. Unfortunately for Tim, they all throw better than he does. I hope he takes solace knowing he helped pave the way for their success. We are seeing what experts said would never happen—pro offenses in the NFL dominated by running quarterbacks who can throw well. A new era in pro football has arrived.
*Thanks to Peter King for the inspiration for this title.



Tuesday, January 8, 2013

January 8, 2013


1. I think this week’s TIME magazine cover is remarkable: “40 YEARS AGO, ABORTION –RIGHTS ACTIVISTS WON AN EPIC VICTORY WITH ROE V. WADE… THEY’VE BEEN LOSING EVER SINCE.”
2. I think Pink, more than any other artist today, captures the essence of what lies inside the hearts of teenage girls. Let me explain.
            My opinion is based upon reading the most intimate thoughts of high school seniors and college freshmen–as expressed in their spiritual autobiographies and reflection papers for the past 12 years. Reading how some of these of these girls saw themselves, and reading about their wounds, makes you feel for them profoundly.
            As for Pink, here is a warning: warning: she can at times be profane and crude. Still, she is speaking to these girls. Her songs express their battles with low self-esteem, eating disorders, and reveal the pain they feel in their hearts. Here are some examples of her lyrics from a song her recording company cleaned up for radio:

You're so mean when you talk
About yourself, you are wrong
Change the voices in your head
Make them like you instead

Done looking for the critics 'cause they're everywhere
They don't like my genes, they don't get my hair
Strange ourselves and we do it all the time
Why do we do that? Why do I do that? Why do I do that?

Ooh, pretty, pretty, pretty
Pretty, pretty please, don't you ever, ever feel
Like you're less than, less than perfect
Pretty, pretty please, if you ever, ever feel
Like you're nothing, you are perfect to me
You are perfect to me

            Everything is spiritual. I hope Pink can someday know the Lord.
3. Last week, I was drinking coffee in a Dallas Half Price bookstore when a funky song came on that haunted me. It must have been stuck in my subconscious mind. Fortunately, I pulled my handy iPhone out, which I stuck next to the speaker. The app identified the song as “Time to Pretend.” The group MGMT released it in 2008.
            The song is a masterpiece in that it critiques the 1960s psychedelic drug culture. The band performed the song on Letterman in 2008, ending it with a riff from Jim Morrison's “Light My Fire.” There was a reason for this. No one epitomized the decadent lifestyle of the sixties more than the Doors’ lead singer, Jim Morrison. Listen to these lyrics:

This is our decision, to live fast and die young.
We've got the vision, now let's have some fun.
Yeah, it's overwhelming, but what else can we do.
Get jobs in offices, and wake up for the morning commute.

Forget about our mothers and our friends
We're fated to pretend…

I'll miss the playgrounds and the animals and digging up worms
I'll miss the comfort of my mother and the weight of the world
I'll miss my sister, miss my father, miss my dog and my home
Yeah, I'll miss the boredom and the freedom and the time spent alone.

There's really nothing, nothing we can do
Love must be forgotten, life can always start up anew.
The models will have children, we'll get a divorce
We'll find some more models, everything must run it's course.

We'll choke on our vomit and that will be the end
We were fated to pretend
To pretend
We're fated to pretend

            You may know that Jim Morrison traveled to Paris, dated models, shot up drugs, and died in a hotel bathtub in 1971, choking on his own vomit, after injecting himself with heroin. He was 27.
            If you care about these things, Rolling Stone lists the song as number 493 of their 500 greatest songs of all time.
            The video of the song is on YouTube. The one crude word in the song is silenced. Remember these are young rockers, they are not Christians. That is what makes the song’s critique so compelling to me. Incidentally, if you watch the video, you will see psychedelic artwork that evokes memories of the sixties. What I like, though, is their reference to the classic novel “Lord of the Flies”—probably a fitting symbol of the sixties. Here is the link: http://www.youtube.com/user/MGMTVEVO

4. I'm sticking with my preseason prediction of Houston and San Francisco facing each other in the Super Bowl. However, I must admit my confidence is lagging. I'm also the guy who predicted halfway through the season that Dallas would make the playoffs and play well. Obviously, I was wrong there. Having said that, I thought the Cowboys played amazingly during the stretch drive. They had a terrible toll of injuries, and in spite of this Tony Romo was magnificent—interceptions against Washington notwithstanding. Wait until next year!
5. Alabama, you have my respect. Especially, you, Nick Saban.

*Thanks to Peter King for the inspiration for this title.