It Begins…

The summer is right around the corner. The last day of classes around here is May 24- which is a week from this Thursday. Crazy!

In the coming weeks I will be traveling on mission trips and to church camps. We will be painting houses and serving people in and around our community.

Summer is the bread and butter for youth ministry because students have free time and it is really when relationships can fully develop.

Growing up I had a great youth ministry experience while in high school. We did work camp, a camp at a Christian college, mission trips, late-night movies, sleepovers, cook-outs, service projects and a VBS.

Looks like that is close to what we’ll be doing this summer. It won’t be to much longer until…

(eerie voice) …it begins!!! (dum-dum-DAAAH)

Top Eleven Moments in Yellow

As of today there are only 11 more Fridays until the Best. Episode. Ever.

The Simpsons Movie opens worldwide on July 27, 2007 and I can hardly wait. I have welcomed the yellow family from Springfield into my home for over a decade now. The show went from being banned by my parents, to slightly tolerated, to a nightly ritual by my wife and I.

Every Friday from today until the release of the movie I will be recounting my favorite moments, episodes, and things that I love about the longest running television sitcom of all time.

Today’s installment:
When I Fell In Love With The Simpsons Part 1

If I had to pick a favorite episode it would probably be I Love Lisa (9F13). Everything about this episode speaks to why I love this show. It has satire, a great story, wonderful gags, and, above all, heart.

The story begins on Valentine’s Day. Remember when you would spend the morning creating “mailboxes” for everyone to put their Valentine cards into? You would sweat and worry that you wouldn’t get one. You glanced around hoping to catch a glimpse of someone dropping a little card into your sack. You didn’t care about the cupcakes at the party. All you cared about was finding out whether or not someone cared about you.

Well, in Lisa Simpson’s class everyone but Ralph Wiggum gets a Valentine. Ralph is the weird kid. He eats glue and crayons. He’s annoying. He’s simple. He simply doesn’t fit in. When Lisa sees that he has been left out she quickly writes him a card and slips it on his desk. The card says, “I Choo-Choo-Choose You” and there’s a picture of a train on it. Her small act of mercy is taken by Ralph as a act of true love. Ralph soon becomes her shadow. While walking home he let’s her in on everything in his small, little life. I mean everything. He tells her, “The doctor said I wouldn’t get so many nose bleeds if I kept my finger out of there.” It is more than Lisa can stand. All she wanted to do was show a little kindness to poor Ralph. She doesn’t want to hurt his feelings but she can’t figure out a way to let him down easy. They even get paired up as George and Martha Washington in the upcoming president’s Day program. Her plans to distance herself from Ralph become even further complicated when Ralph invites her to the Krusty Anniversary Show, the event of the year.

During the broadcast Ralph introduces Lisa to Krusty as his girlfriend exclaiming, “This is Lisa Simpson and one day I’m going to marry her!” Lisa can’t stand anymore. In front of the cameras, Krusty, and the world Lisa revealed that the only reason she gave Ralph a card was because she felt sorry for him. Ralph’s little heart can’t take the pain. later that night Bart replays the video frame by frame so that Lisa can see the exact moment Ralph’s heart broke. It is a lesson we have all had to learn the hard way. Lisa tries to apologize but she isn’t able to before the President’s day performance.

Speaking of…

We are the Mediocre Presidents!
You won’t find our faces on dollars or on cents!
There’s Taylor, There’s Tyler, There’s Filmore and There’s Hayes
There’s William Henry Harrison: “I died in thirty days!”

Right smack in the middle of the episode is this little jewel. It’s President’s Day and the children of Springfield Elementary are performing a Broadway-style review of the history of America’s leaders. Washington, Jefferson, and Lincoln are always center stage but in the twisted world of the Simpsons everyone gets their due. Even John Wilkes Booth.

After misbehaving backstage, Miss Hoover grabs Bart by the collar and flatly delivers a classic example of Simpson humor: “Do you want to play John Wilkes Booth, or do you want to act like a maniac?”

Awesome.

As Ralph takes the stage as George Washington everyone is rightly nervous. Will Ralph remember the lines? Will he embarrass everyone? Will he eat his wig? To everyone’s surprise Ralph is mesmerizing as our nation’s first president. As Washington lies on his deathbed, Groundskeeper Willie fights back the tears saying, “I didn’ta cry when my father was hung for stealin’ a pig but I’ll cry now.”

Ralph becomes a hero to everyone at Springfield Elementary that night. Lisa asks for an apology and gives Ralph another Valentine. This time there’s a picture of a bee on it. It says, “Let’s BEE Friends.” Ralph thinks that will be just fine.

Growing up, I was always told that I shouldn’t watch the Simpsons because it was rude, crude, and had a bad attitude. However, episodes like this are the rule rather than the exception. The episode also rang incredibly true to me.

Who didn’t have the weird kid in their class?
Who didn’t feel sorry for them?
Who hasn’t experienced a time where your kindness was pushed to the limit?
And after you blew up at them when didn’t you realize that your limit was set way too short?

In a day where most animated shows seek to shock and push the limits of taste and “humor” the Simpsons has at its core the one thing that “Family Guy,” “American Dad,” and “Moral Oral” will never have:

Heart.

Ralph Wiggum: Portrait of a Legend (Includes clips from “I Love Lisa”)

Next Friday: Why I Love The Simpsons Part 2: I Don’t Want to Look Like A Weirdo. I’ll Just Go With the Muu-Muu

Pastoral Reminder

Hebrews 10:11-14 TNIV
Day after day every priest stands and performs his religious duties; again and again he offers the same sacrifices, which can never take away sins. But when this priest had offered for all time one sacrifice for sins, he sat down at the right hand of God, and since that time he waits for his enemies to be made his footstool. For by one sacrifice he has made perfect forever those who are being made holy.

What an awesome reminder that it isn’t us who save people. Yes, we can introduce people to God. We can focus people on Jesus Christ. We point beyond this world and peer into the kingdom with the help of the Holy Spirit.

But make no mistake- Salvation belongs to our God. May we never forget that.

Compare and Contrast

“A few days later, when Jesus again entered Capernaum, the people heard that he had come home. They gathered in such large numbers that there was no room left, not even outside the door, and he preached the word to them. Some men came, bringing to him a paralyzed man, carried by four of them. Since they could not get him to Jesus because of the crowd, they made an opening in the roof above Jesus by digging through it and then lowered the mat the man was lying on.” (Mark 2:1-4 TNIV)

Sometimes I feel like one of the crowd. I bet you do too. We are so intent and so focused on packing the house in order to hear a word for Jesus that we forget about people on the outside.

In Mark 2 we see a man with a real, physical problem. His body has betrayed him and left him helpless. He needs Jesus- both physically and spiritually. Only, the crowd is making it difficult to come to healing. Imagine the picture of what that paralytic saw. The non-verbal cues that the crowd was giving him.

Backs turned. Blinders on. “We’re in.” “You’re out.” Tough luck buddy. No time for you. Maybe next time.

Recently I read Dan Kimball’s newest book titled They Like Jesus but Not the Church. Ever since I have found myself looking critically at how others might see the church and, more importantly, how we in the church treat those who are outside of the house.

Earlier this week I sang We’re Marching to Zion with a group of college students in their chapel service. I’ll admit that I’m a sucker for the “ye olde hymns” but I found myself struggling with the second verse:

Let those refuse to sing
who never knew our God;
but children of the heavenly King,
but children of the heavenly King
may speak their joys abroad,
may speak their joys abroad.

Do we really mean that? Are we really a people who rejoice and act as though we are the only ones who can and should sing praises to the Father of Creation? I’d imagine that if a stranger wandered into our worship services and stood in the back of our auditoriums observing us as we sang this he would see what the paralytic saw.

Backs turned. Blinders on. “We’re in.” “You’re out.” Tough luck buddy. No time for you. Maybe next time.

As I read the old hymn on the screen immediately I was struck by the words in another song. The last few lines of U2’s City of Blinding Lights transformed this gorgeous rock song into a psalm of remembrance. From a ballad about a city to a modern-day hymn that challenges the way I think about who God truly is.

The more you know the less you feel
Some pray for, others steal
Blessings are not just for the ones who kneel
Luckily

Maybe I’m being hyper-sensitive. Maybe not. Maybe I just want to be one of the four friends. A friend to the helpless or spiritually dead and dying who is willing to tear open a hole in our clubhouses in order to bring people to Jesus.

We forget that at one time we too were on the outside. There was a time that we desperately needed to get to the Savior. There was a time that we didn’t, couldn’t, or wouldn’t kneel before God. And yet…

God blessed us anyway. His sun shines on the irreligious and the faithful alike. Luckily. Thankfully.

Do you live like you believe? If you really believe that God cares for everyone than quit turning you back on the ones who need Him the most. Don’t hinder those who need to come by making it difficult for them to see Jesus. Let everyone experience the joy of lifting their hearts in praise. Not just the ones who kneel.

I Could Watch This For an Hour

We have really enjoyed watching Planet Earth on the Discovery Channel. The series was aboslutely brilliant! I was facinated by crystal caves created by acid, snow leopards on the hunt, land monkeys marching across the highplains, and bison asserting their dominance. However, one segmant not only stole my heart but has kept me laughing ever since.

In the Seasonal Forrest episode, a female mandarin duck emerges from her nest in a tree trunk. Her one-day old hatchlings have to jump from the nest to the forrest floor in order to journey to the water. Thanks to YouTube, here is the video and some appropriate Ben Folds music. Enjoy:

Back in the Big D

I’m back home after spending Monday and Tuesday in Searcy at an Uplift meeting. I grew up going to Uplift every summer and while interning and in college I was able to be a counselor for the camp. Last year, I was excited about coming full circle by getting the opportunity to teach one of the encounter classes.

This year the Uplift team invited all of the teachers from each of the three sessions for a brainstorming meeting. Uplift got to explain to all of the ministers about the theme and their vision for what they hope to accomplish over the summer. I am teaching a leadership class during third session. Both the first and second session teachers were there and we spent a good 3 hours tweaking, dreaming, and exploring our topic and curriculum. I was really great. I left the meeting excited and challenged. I am a certian that was the case for everyone there.

I had a blast catching up with friends and swapping stories from my time at Harding. I also got to catch up with a few former students who are experiencing “dead week” in preparation for their exams. I walked around Hasting’s and drank a Mr. Blonde from Midnight Oil while I was there. It was a good trip.

It is good to be back home though.