Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Book Review: Deep & Wide by Andy Stanley






Deep & Wide by Andy Stanley
Review by Peter Narloch 01-05-2013

This Andy Stanley book is a very personal writing. Pastor Stanley shares many personal stories throughout the book. The book is divided into five major sections with different target readers in mind. In general I would recommend this book to those who have been around church for awhile or are interested in church leadership. If you one who is in a position of leading a ministry area or doing any teaching during the weekend services I would say this is a must read for you.  This book is a call to action for churches to become churches for the unchurched.

Section one shares a very personal account of the starting of north point community. If you have been an Andy Stanley fan you will most definitely appreciate this insight into Stanley's life. The thought that everyone has a story rings loudly from this section.

Section two discusses the definition of a church.  This section offers an excellent summary of history. Those who have been around church for awhile will appreciate the clarity of these chapters. I specifically enjoyed the discussion of truth and grace within the church world and whether all decisions in churches need to be fair.  Stanley states that churches have removed "move" from the original Christianity movement and have become very stuck in their ways.   

Section three focuses on the five faith catalysts that North Point uses to guide its ministries.  This section is a must read for all church leaders including those leading small groups.  One their five catalysts is Providential Relationships and I appreciated the insight on being deliberate to influence relationships.

Section four is the largest section of the book and its focus is making your church irresistible.  Stanley is bursting with things to share with his readers in this section.  He speaks very pointedly to church leaders and cautions them repeatedly not get used to use the messes in your church.  He encourages leaders to be very clear in defining what they want to accomplish in each area of the church.  How do you know if you delivered a good message or ran a good student ministry gathering?  All church leaders should read this section.

Section five deals with how to get your church aligned on a mission which may be contrary to the way things have always been done at your church.  Getting everyone at your church on the same mission page is critical for all areas to work well together.  Island ministry areas must be avoided.  Everyone must be working for the same goal or there will be not be success for the local church.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

The Computer Backup Rule of Three

Appreciated the clarity of this backup strategy

-Nar 


Begin forwarded message:

From: "Scott Hanselman" <scott+blog@hanselman.com>


Scott Hanselman's Blog

The Computer Backup Rule of Three


Hard drive failure. Seriously. - Used under CC. Photo by Jon RossI'm ALWAYS pounding people to backup. I will continue. BACKUP YOUR STUFF. If you care about it, back it up.

Let's talk. Yes, I'm talking to you, non-technical friend. You're a writer, a blogger, not a techie. I get that. Can't be bothered, I get that. Very busy. You will be even busier when you lose access to your dropbox, or leave your laptop on a train.

Please. Read. Tell your friends.

These are NOT backups

Here are some things that are NOT backups. Feel free to tweet or Facebook them to shame educate your family.

  • Backing up your laptop to an SD Card in the same laptop is #notabackup
  • Backing up to a hard drive that is 6 inches away from your computer is #notabackup
  • Backing up your Gmail to another Gmail account is #notabackup
  • Backing up your book by copying it to another folder is #notabackup
  • The photos that are still in your camera memory are #notabackup

Do you have any other good examples?

The Backup Rule of Three

Here's the rule of three. It's a long time computer-person rule of thumb that you can apply to your life now. It's also called the Backup 3-2-1 rule.

  • 3 copies of anything you care about - Two isn't enough if it's important.
  • 2 different formats - Example: Dropbox+DVDs or Hard Drive+Memory Stick or CD+Crash Plan, or more
  • 1 off-site backup - If the house burns down, how will you get your memories back?

Why so paranoid?

Simple. Because I care about my work, photos and data and I would be sad if I lost it.

Think about all the times you've heard about a friend who has lost everything. A decade of photos. Years of email. It hurts-  just like exercise - because it's good for you.

Try restoring from a backup to practice. Backups always succeed. It's restores that fail.

What should l do?

I think at a minimum folks should do this.

  • Have TWO physical backups (hard drive, memory card) with a copy of everything, at least weekly. You can automate this.
  • Backup everything that has data that matters. That means phones, too.
  • Have a cloud backup storage (CrashPlan, DropBox, SkyDrive, something)
  • Don't trust the cloud. I backup my gmail, too.
  • Rotate the physical backups between your house and somewhere else. I use the safety deposit box. You can use your Mama's house. Just label one "Backup A" and one "Backup B" and when you visit, swap them.

Recommended Reading

Here's some other blog posts on the topic of backup. Now, take action.



© 2012 Scott Hanselman. All rights reserved.

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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Book Review of Soul Detox

Book Review of Soul Detox 

Soul Detox is a book that we carry in our bookstores which was written by Craig Groeshel who is the pastor of LifeChurch.tv church based in Oklahoma.  This book was primary text of the recent Toxic message series at EBC.  Groeschel writes in a very personal and engaging style sharing many of his life blunders as he encourages readers to come clean and recognize that this world is trying to lead you away from your relationship with Jesus.

This book is written in such a way that each chapter can stand on its own which makes it a great candidate for being a small group study book.  There are supporting study guides also available if someone chooses to use this book as their small group material.

Groeschel starts out Soul Detox with some straight talk, challenging each of us to realize that we need to be on the watch for self deception and thinking that we are not susceptible to toxic influences of the world. Craig Groeschel writes with very color language which makes this book very easy to read. He covers topics such as envy, rage, relationship, culture and language with more detail than time allowed in the EBC Toxic message series. In the Green with Envy chapter Groeschel warns us of an important fact about the grass is greener mentality.  He says "their grass may be greener than yours, but from where you're standing, you may not be able to see all the poop in their yard".

Soul Detox is an excellent book on many levels and could be recommended to everyone at some point whether individually or as a small group resource. It would be suitable for mature senior high students and all adults.

Friday, September 28, 2012

NFL financial insights

The first 10 mins of this program pretty interesting about the NFL

I am listening to The Dave Ramsey Show with TuneIn Radio.

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Book review of Andy Stanley's Collision book


When Work and Family Collide  by Andy Stanley

When I had a chance to read another Andy Stanley book I jumped at it. But after I started reading it I discovered that I was reading a Stanley book which had been retitled.  The old title was “Choosing to Cheat”.  Considering it perhaps a divine nudge I decided to reread the book.  Turns out that the timing for me to reread this challenging book was good.  I would recommend this book to anyone with a busy life schedule.

Stanley does an excellent job of objectively looking at the facts involved in our decision process of determining what activities we participate in.  This book challenges readers to take a good look that the message that their choices send to their families.  Stanley goes after the prevailing thought that we have that to sacrifice time with our family today so that we can give them a better life tomorrow.  We are encouraged in this book that our actions speak louder than our intentions.

Definitely a book worth reading twice.  I received this book for free from WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group for this review.  Check out the first chapter at http://www.scribd.com/doc/70673372/When-Work-and-Family-Collide-by-Andy-Stanley-Chapter-1-Excerpt