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church

Welcome to the new me… same as the old me.

December 19th, 2007 @ 3:30 am by Rich | Share This | 7 comments
Filed under: Site Updates, Work, Random Miscellany
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Hi, all.

First off, I apologize for not spending much time in this space over the past couple of months.

If you've followed my blog activities (and inactivity!), you know that on October 22, I accepted a position as marketing and media director at one of the Assemblies of God's 100 largest churches. I was thrilled not only to have a job but to be in a position that required top-notch creativity and performance from many areas of my skill site — and many areas I was eager to acquire new skills in.

As marketing and media director I designed several promotional and in-house printed pieces, I wrote press releases, I worked with vendors, I approved and gave guidance for the video and broadcast editing (though not much of that because


Church Rentals: Have Space Will Worship

September 29th, 2007 @ 12:44 am by Rich | Share This | 6 comments
Filed under: Religion
Church

This is my pre-published version of an article I wrote for Christianity Today International's Resources department. It is part of a larger downloadable study exploring Church rental issues. Here, with the help of a few friends, I consider the advantages and disadvantages of renting worship space.

The urban landscape is becoming increasingly crowded — and expensive. While churches have been moving out of the city to the suburbs, the cites have been growing. The North American Misssion Board reports that nearly 6 out of 10 Americans live in the 50 largest cities. And while establishing a new congregation in a populous city context poses many challenges, the lack of affordable space for church property is one of the most daunting. Purchasing facilities for worship in most large cities, especially for a church plant, is often impossible.


Moral Outrage: Folsom Street Sinnage … er … Signage

September 27th, 2007 @ 8:54 pm by Rich | Share This | 15 comments
Filed under: Religion, Rage and Rants, Random Miscellany

Wherein I opine on the culture war between Christianity and those of homosexual persuasion, and their supporters.

So, breaking news, San Fransisco is a gay-friendly town. Oh, more breaking news: Chrisitanity is anathema to a sinful lifestyle. And it's an easy target for sinners.

So the 24th annual hedonistic fetish event, San Fransisco's Folsom Street Fair (wiki definition), created a poster playing off da Vinci's "Last Supper." Instead of tableware, there are sex toys. Instead of Jesus and his disciples, there was "Sister Roma" and " "half-naked homosexual sadomasochists" (WND). And, of course, there were sponsor logos.

The fair is scheduled for September 30, three days from now.

Predictably, the Christian community at-large has recoiled in disgust and lashed back with angry diatribes and calls for apologies. The poster, itself, has been labeled an "unprovoked attack against Christ and His


What’s Different? Church vs. Bar

July 22nd, 2007 @ 9:35 pm by Rich | Share This | 46 comments
Filed under: Religion, Rage and Rants

Overheard recently: "I'm wondering what's the difference between church and the bar?"

In church you pray for the Spirit. In a bar you pay for the spirits? (Sorry, couldn't resist!)

Anyways...

Everybody knows your name…

When Jennifer and I lived in Springfield, MO, and worked at the Assemblies of God headquarters, our friendly pagan neighbors invited us to join them at a neighborhood bar for lunch. We were on our way back home from church where we had invited them, so we figured a little tit for tat was probably in order.


Assemblies of God Mega-Churches

July 14th, 2007 @ 7:26 am by Rich | Share This | 12 comments
Filed under: Random Miscellany

The 100 or so largest churches in the Assemblies of God

I wanted to see where the largest A/G churches were, and to find out what constituted a "large" church in the Assemblies of God. A quick search turned up the 2004 Statistical Report for the Assemblies of God. I quickly whipped together this list, not thinking to look for the latest 2005 report. :: sigh :: So, I went back and added the latest numbers from the '05 data and added about 14 churches. I didn't drop any from the '04 report, assuming that two years wouldn't have made a dramatic difference.

I now supply the list for you to browse and explore. I have added links to the church homepage, media page (if any) and weblog (almost none). Enjoy!

#1: Phoenix First Assembly of God

When church signs go awry: Stoners Welcome Here

June 18th, 2007 @ 12:12 am by Rich | Share This | 4 comments
Filed under: Things going awry!, Random Miscellany

Reverend Billy H. BurrisPraise A/G Sign: Stoners WelcomeAnd just what as the Reverend Billy H. Burris thinking on that day?

Sign spotted at Praise Assembly of God in Springfield, Missouri.

HT: DocLarry at Lost Chord

[tags]BlogRodent, church, praise-assembly, assembly-of-god, assemblies-of-god, church-sign, funny, humerous, marijuana, pot, reefer, stoner, drugs[/tags]

Involuntary Self-Denial and Relationship Breakdown

June 14th, 2007 @ 11:39 pm by Rich | Share This | 4 comments
Filed under: Religion, Bible and Theology, Random Miscellany

Why so many problems begin with frustrated desire

FrustrationEvery day, headlines assault us with troubling news. These recent titles from a local news website are just a small sampling:

  • Two Shotgunned to Death [source]
  • Joyriding Gang Member Slain; Crash Injures Family [source]
  • Local Soldier Dies in Afghanistan [source]
  • School Gets Tough on Commencement Outbursts [source]
  • Wife Gets $184 Million in Divorce Ruling [source]

From international to household warfare, roadway to classroom outrage, and mortal to financial loss, such stories reveal our fallen, human propensity to sin.

The cause of these impulsive, sinful outbursts is no secret: When we want what we cannot get, we lash out.

What causes fights and quarrels among

Sexual Conversion: Gender dysphoria, the UMC and the transgendered minister

May 29th, 2007 @ 7:14 pm by Rich | Share This | 24 comments
Filed under: Assembly of God, Pentecostal, Religion, Rage and Rants, Bible and Theology

 Gender Dysphoria I recently wrote about the relatively unremarked issue of gender dysphoria and believers opting for gender reassignment. I wrote that I had communicated with Assemblies of God leadership about this issue some years ago, and that I believed a position paper is in order — now, not at some later date when it becomes a "real" issue.

And it has begun. I'd say the issue is now real.

While it hasn't surfaced within the Assemblies of God yet, I suspect it will within the next few years. Meanwhile, The Church Report Online released a special report in its May 2007 issue, titled: "Identity Crisis: A Transgender Minister Reappointed to Lead


Ranking the Divine: The Holy Spirit and Search trends

May 28th, 2007 @ 11:05 pm by Rich | Share This | 11 comments
Filed under: Assembly of God, Pentecostal, Religion, Random Miscellany

Google Trend Search: God, Jesus, Holy Spirit I've often heard it said within Pentecostal circles that the Holy Spirit gets little recognition — even within our own Pentecostal and Charismatic circles. Of course, there's some theological justification for this: According to Jesus' promise in John 14:26, one of the Holy Spirit's primary roles in the believer's life is to direct our attention to Jesus:

"But the Counselor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you all things and will remind you of everything I have said to you."

As I was checking out a few of my unread feed subscriptions tonight, I came across a mention of the Google Trends service. This tool has been in service for quite some time, but since I was


Hollywood: The modern Areopagus

May 12th, 2007 @ 2:00 am by Rich | Share This | 19 comments
Filed under: Religion, Rage and Rants, Bible and Theology

Spider-Man 3: Bad SpideyRecently, I posted my Spider-Man Bible Study / Discussion Guide. Simultaneously, I dropped a few comments on some blogs that referenced a different Spider-Man Bible Study produced by Fuller Theological Seminary's professor Craig Detweiler.

Some GodBloggers have been critical of the whole "movie-based Bible study" enterprise. Not surprising, really: using Hollywood movies to teach Biblical truth is a little like using dance to teach worship, or wine to serve Communion. There may be a place for it, but it's going to generate controversy somewhere.

I've been asked before to justify how I could write a Bible study with a movie as its context. After all, if I'm writing a


Should Ministry Leaders Blog?

April 29th, 2007 @ 3:13 am by Rich | Share This | 12 comments
Filed under: Blogging, Rage and Rants, Random Miscellany

Hat tip to Michael Davis for alerting me to this question posed over at Total Leadership: "Should Ministry Leaders Blog?" Here are my thoughts…

A blogger with a "why" beats one with only a "how"

KeyboardBlogging can be a waste of a leader's time if he doesn't know what he's doing or why he's doing it. (Especially why.)

I would never suggest a leader start blogging (or podcasting) unless they've already been reading some choice blogs and are starting to get some idea of what value a blog can bring to a ministry or to one's life. Rushing into blogging without first experiencing it is like convincing someone to preach who's never heard a sermon in their life. Sure, it might be comical or even refreshing — once.

A


Eternal Certainties: The Hope of Heaven

April 11th, 2007 @ 9:09 pm by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: Religion, Bible and Theology, Random Miscellany

While things are confusing down here, we can always trust in the hope of heaven.

About an hour northeast of Indianapolis on April 26, 2006, a tractor-trailer drifted across the Interstate 69 median. In its path: ten students and staff in a Taylor University van. The tractor ripped through one side of the van, scattering wallets, purses, and debris across the dark roadway and sending five souls into eternity.

In the accident's aftermath, one survivor was identified as Laura VanRyn, and officials contacted her family as she was airlifted from the site in a comatose state. Over the next several weeks the VanRyn family kept constant and prayerful vigil at her bedside while she struggled out of her coma.

Then came the shattering revelation: the young woman they lovingly watched over did not answer to the name Laura VanRyn. Instead, a battered and broken stranger lay in her place: fellow Taylor student and


Del.icio.us links for September 4, 2006

September 3rd, 2006 @ 7:21 pm by Rich | Share This | 8 comments
Filed under: Links

Rich's Delicious LinksThese are a few of the things I've recently found interesting, but don't have the time to properly blog on. I don't necessarily like or agree with the links here, I just think they're interesting. And just in case you do, too, enjoy.

(You can view past Del.icio.us links here or subscribe to my Del.icio.us feed here. Subscribe to Rich's Delicious Links)


Del.icio.us links for August 30, 2006

August 30th, 2006 @ 4:19 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: Links

Rich's Delicious LinksThese are a few of the things I've recently found interesting, but don't have the time to properly blog on. I don't necessarily like or agree with the links here, I just think they're interesting. And just in case you do, too, enjoy.

(You can view past Del.icio.us links here or subscribe to my Del.icio.us feed here. Subscribe to Rich's Delicious Links)


Del.icio.us links for August 7, 2006

August 7th, 2006 @ 4:18 am by Rich | Share This | 2 comments
Filed under: Links

Rich's Delicious LinksThese are a few of the things I've recently found interesting, but don't have the time to properly blog on. I don't necessarily like or agree with the links here, I just think they're interesting. And just in case you do, too, enjoy.

(You can view past Del.icio.us links here or subscribe to my Del.icio.us feed here. Subscribe to Rich's Delicious Links)


When worship goes awry…

November 15th, 2005 @ 4:27 pm by Rich | Share This | 17 comments
Filed under: Podcast/Media, Things going awry!, Religion, Links, Random Miscellany

Okay, okay, okay. I know. This is a day of tragedy and mourning for my lost and beloved RodentMobile. But blame it on Travis Johnson. He posted a link to the “Concerned pastor” voicemail Trent Fuller released on the GraceHead blog, and I badly needed the humor. Perhaps you do, too.

I’m a white guy (well, not really, I’m Hispanic—maybe [long story]—but I think I’m white) so, naturally, I don’t move much when I sing. And when I catch myself moving, I nervously stop, shove my hands in my pockets, and look around with a sheepish grin. The Bride of Rat, though, she loves to move when she sings. She spent a year in Brazil as an exchange student and learned to enjoy dancing over there; consequently, she gets a little rhythm goin’ on during worship now and then.

Nothing wrong with


F-bombs, poets, and church. Or, “When church goes intentionally awry!”

November 12th, 2005 @ 6:44 am by Rich | Share This | 2 comments
Filed under: Podcast/Media, Things going awry!, Religion, Links, Random Miscellany

First, I blogged about Blake Bergstrom and his hilarious attempt to have Lot say “pitch his tents.” Then we had John Ortberg entreating: “Let everything that has breasts, praise the Lord,” along with William Willimon’s story of an evangelist unintentionally preaching the shorts off a church-skipper.

On the time-worn religious use of the word F---

The obscenity f--- is a very old word and has been considered shocking from the first, though it is seen in print much more often now than in the past. Its first known occurrence, in code because of its unacceptability, is in a poem composed in a mixture of Latin and English sometime before 1500. The poem, which satirizes the Carmelite friars of Cambridge, England, takes its title, “Flen flyys,” from the first words of its opening line, “Flen, flyys, and freris,” that is, “fleas, flies, and friars.” The


Megiddo, Church, & Prison. Or, “Wait’ll the warden sees this!”

November 8th, 2005 @ 4:28 pm by Rich | Share This | 4 comments
Filed under: Religion, Links
Click on images to see more detail.
Megiddo Prison Church

Megiddo Prison Church
Megiddo Prison Church
Megiddo Prison Church
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Megiddo Prison Church
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Old hymns, new tunes

November 5th, 2005 @ 1:29 am by Rich | Share This | 6 comments
Filed under: Religion, Random Miscellany

For years I've bemoaned the lack of serious, thoughtful, theologically rich lyrics in the praise songs and worship choruses I'm subjected to at church. Some of the recent praise and worship music remedies that, but I'm still occasionally struck silent by vacuous, empty lyrics using clichés to resonate with worshipers and the time-tested trick of singing a single chorus line over and over until we all fall into a trance-like worship state.

:: sigh ::

I miss scripture in my worship. I miss theology in my worship. I miss the hymns.

But what I don’t necessarily miss are the hymn’s melodies and forms. As my wife and I have discussed this, I’ve often wondered aloud why church worship directors don’t apply their musical talents to translate older hymns into contemporary sounds. Okay, maybe most church worship and music directors really aren’t that good at creating


My 15 minutes of limited fame…

October 16th, 2005 @ 4:56 am by Rich | Share This | 1 comment
Filed under: Podcast/Media, Links, Random Miscellany

I’m popular on the Web! Well, maybe I’m just popular on Garrick Van Buren’s website. Or, maybe I’m just popular on one podcast on one podcaster’s show coming out of a small home in Minnesota that is redolent of freshly roasted coffee.

I had the pleasure of spending over an hour on Skype with Garrick of the “First Crack Podcast,” talking about his show, podcasting, the Internet, and more. It was a great conversation, and I’m looking forward to listening to his half-hour condensation our our hour-plus conversation.

I just had to say that now, before listening to the show, because I really enjoyed the conversation, and didn’t want to sully my good feelings with that sense of “Aargh! He left out the best part!” <grin> Garrick’s a good guy, and he has an interesting show, in my opinion. I frequently enjoy the


Heaven and Hell: September 28, 2005, class #3

October 4th, 2005 @ 2:14 pm by Rich | Share This | 3 comments
Filed under: Podcast/Media, Talking Points

Sorry it took so long to get these notes and ideas posted from last week’s class—it’s been a very busy week at work, and I haven’t had the time at home to get as much done as I’d hoped. So, unfortunately, this is a bit raw. But, fortunately, I have the audio done, and I have a couple other articles on this topic I can add in subsequent posts as well.

Without futher ado, here’s the audio file, it’s about an hour and twenty minutes long, and it includes some after-class discussion for a few die-hards who hung around to grill the unfortunate teacher. The audio is kinda poor, but it comes with the use-what-you-got technology category. If you can’t listen via the player below, here’s a link to the file.

[audio:http://tatumweb.com/blog/wp-content/mp3/bli-hh-03-2005-09-28-2.mp3]

The main topic today was whether or not Christ spent any time in Hell. I argue against that proposition, even


Nature, God, Blame, and Shame

September 12th, 2005 @ 1:38 pm by Rich | Share This | 2 comments
Filed under: Katrina Aftermath, Religion, Rage and Rants

Pulitzer Prize-winning commentator Charles Krauthammer has written a great “big-picture” view of the blame-shifting realities of Katrina’s fallout: “Assigning Blame.” It’s not long and is worth reading. Here’s a graf Krauthammer put out there as a “throw-away” item, but it brilliantly sums up what I wish I had written:

This kind of stupidity merits no attention whatsoever, but I'll give it a paragraph. There is no relationship between global warming and the frequency and intensity of Atlantic hurricanes. Period. The problem with the evacuation of New Orleans is not that National Guardsmen in Iraq could not get to New Orleans, but that National Guardsmen in Louisiana did not get to New Orleans. As for the Bush tax cuts, administration budget requests for New Orleans flood control during the five Bush years exceed that of the five preceding


News item: The Battle For Latino Souls

August 13th, 2005 @ 3:30 am by Rich | Share This | 2 comments
Filed under: Pentecostal, Religion, Random Miscellany

From Flickr.com.
Uploaded on March 6, 2005 by D LeRoy

An item from the March 21 issue of Newsweek popped up on my radar: “The Battle For Latino Souls.” Subitled, “Pentecostal churches are using savvy marketing to attract traditionally Catholic Hispanics. A holy struggle in Chicago”.

I found this quote interesting:

Latinos remain the Catholic church's fastest-growing ethnic bloc, but they are also one of the fastest-growing segments among Mormons, Methodists and most other denominations. The result: all faiths are courting Hispanics with a marketing savvy more often associated with corporate America. These churches “have plans to grow, and they're aggressive,” says Edwin Hernandez of the University of Notre Dame. “The competition is rampant.”

The dark-side of evangelistic economics? Or language from a skewed perspective? The picture’s a little clearer as we begin the next


Bridgewood: ‘A church for life’

July 29th, 2005 @ 7:58 pm by Rich | Share This | 2 comments
Filed under: Assembly of God, Pentecostal, Religion, Random Miscellany
It's great to see little churches doing effectively what the big churches are still trying to figure out: take a hint from Starbucks and Barnes & Noble, and start building community the way our culture responds to it.
Bridgewood: 'A church for life'
Everyone is welcome to congregate before or after services in the cafe, which has a fireplace and cappuccino machine. The venue is so popular, members are already asking about expanding it and adding a yogurt machine for smoothies, Marquis said. "People just want to sit and talk with each other," she said.

On the other hand, the Borg-like "Starbuxination" of church can be a little disturbing. My mom talked about visiting a church in Albuquerque, NM, where people were wandering around during the sermon to get coffee refills. When I wandered down the hallways of my home church, Calvary



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