Archive for July, 2007
Read it here.
That isn’t really the tagline, of course. I think it should be. The paper and friends were abuzz with this thing. I swear to you, they said 450,000 people go over the two days. We even saw a friend walking down the street headed there, who urged us to get there asap. We had been […]
Has now been updated here.
See the pages for the information, if you’re a blogger. If you’re not, feel free to add your five in a comment.
Five Classic Board Games I Love:
Backgammon.
Cranium.
Sorry.
Scattergories.
Mastermind.
It’s so bad, it’s funny!
The Dumb Brother
A pregnant woman is in a car accident and falls into a deep coma. Asleep for nearly six months, she wakes up and sees that she is no longer pregnant. Frantically, she asks the doctor about her baby. The doctor replies, “Ma’am, you had twins! A boy and a […]
Imagine Your Children: New Article Release
Closed Published by jdodson July 26th, 2007 on Creation ProjectHere is Ted Slater’s intro to my new article “Imagine Your Children” from Boundless:
If you’re the typical Boundless reader, you’re single and don’t have kids. The thing is, you likely some day will have children of your own, little ones who’ll lovingly call you mommy or daddy (or “papa,” as in my case). And just […]
Animal Rights, Michael Vick & Gregory of Nyssa
Closed Published by jdodson July 26th, 2007 on Creation ProjectAn interesting article on animal rights here.
Church Planting or Re-planting …and doing both at the same time…
Closed Published by Charles Whitmire July 26th, 2007 on ConnexionI listened to a podcast from Driscoll the other day about re-planting. Re-planting is the fancy new word for transitioning a church apparently - who knew? I didn’t…but then, there’s a lot that I admit to not knowing. It was…
Trip summary, vol. I: Foto Voz
Closed Published by peoplenotprofit July 26th, 2007 on People not profitWhile some of us were working on building a house, others were busy working with El Sunza’s youth on a project we’ve named (quite unoriginally) Foto Voz (photo voice).
The idea of the project was to put cameras in the hands of village kids - to give them a medium and voice through which to capture […]