Happy New Year! Table for 2?

happy-new-year.jpg

Ok, I’ll admit it, we love a good party. Especially since New Years Day is Roger’s birthday. We have hosted our share of New Year’s bashes and usually attend the best of the best! Not this year, I have the flu. Again. So we declined all invitations and stayed home.

It rained all day yesterday. Not knowing exactly what to do to celebrate, we noticed the rain had stopped and we decided to ring in the new year outside in the hottub. What a fabulous experience that was! It was mild last night about 40 degrees. The water was 102, and I felt the warmth infusing my aching bones. We could watch the ball dropping in Times Square on the tv from the tub. Just before midnight, we prayed 2006 out and 2007 in. That was a pretty amazing thing in itself and then the second the ball dropped, the sky was lit with fireworks! People were outside with clackers, horns, kids were banging pots and pans and everyone was shouting and whooping! We could hear it in all directions and it just made us laugh. After a few minutes  things began to settle down a bit and we started dreaming of what 2007 would bring. All of a sudden, fireworks began again along with the roll of thunder and the flash of lightning in the distance…we waited, but no rain!That’s my prayer for 2007. Fireworks, thunder and lightning, a sprinkle or two but no rain! Come on 2007! Bring it, I can hardly wait!

Happy Birthday Love and a Blessed New Year everyone!

billclark

G.

This is an interesting tension that I’m not sure I’m ever going to fully understand. Practice is important (”train unto godliness”), performance is important (otherwise what’s all this talk from Paul about running races?) but transformation is what its all about (too many versus to mention) - but what’s cause? what’s effect? what’s the means? what’s the end?

Sometimes it seems like a gestalt test - the more you look at it, the more the images flip back and forth!

obahsomah

bill clark you are always thinking!

I think the performing part is to perform before one and only one…God. When we set out to proclaim and perform our deeds as something WE are doing, not something God is doing through us, then it is showing off.

Gwen…always getting me thinking way to early! Love you!

awarriorprincess

maybe its where the energy is coming from to begin with? maybe when we expect nothing in return? Maybe when we project the shekina shine away from ourselves? maybe when we walk away without having flown our banner at all and make people want to ask “why”?

parke

In some unhealthy situations there really is a sense of performance. I think that it’s worthwhile noting that sometimes we mistake things for performance that are healthy. For example, non-profits frequently tout what they are doing. There is a wrong way to do this, but they know that by touting what is being done (via the power of the supporters and with the energy of the receivers) encourages even more people to jump in. And there is a certain amount of that which you’ll see Paul doing in his letters. He praises what some people over here are doing in a letter that will go around so that others will be jealous to do good things.

There’s also an element of praising God. One of my roles in life is to praise God in my writing. Part of that is pointing out miraculous moments that are clearly all God. I think another part of that though is pointing out God at work in the community around me and in the lives of those serving.

It certainly does make for a complex situation to dive into.

Gwen

True Parke, I think when there is performance but it’s not for self, that there is a bigger picture for the good of others, that’s transformance.
When I think of Performance I think ritualistic and empty, just going through the motions because we were taught that Christians live a certain way or perform kind deeds. There doesn’t appear to be any life behind it.

Gwen

but sad…

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