I’ve Been Rebuked for Using My iPhone Bible!

I’ve Been Rebuked for Using My iPhone Bible!

Uber blogger Tim Challies suggests that my using my iPhone Bible while listening to a sermon is not really a good idea and may have a detrimental effect on my actually deepening my understanding of and dexterity in using my Bible. I confess, I like using the Bible on my phone (I’ve done it for many years) while listening to a sermon.  It is easier for me to take notes.  I also use Bible software while studying and preparing for sermons.  Most of my intake of Scripture is with a physical copy of the Scriptures. I do think there is something to be gained by using a physical rather than electronic Bible in regular reading, studying and teaching of Scripture.  But times and people seem to be changing in the way they take in information.  The electronic world seems to be utilized more and more.  A good friend of mine does all of his devotional reading with his computer and even sends out his devotionals electronically to a e-mail subscription group.  He has done it for many years and does not seem to be any the worse for it.  I wish I had his discipline and depth of devotion. Give Challies’ article a read and let me know what you think.  Do you do much reading online or through a PDA, smart phone, Kindle, etc.? Don’t Take Your iPod to Church! :: books, reading, technology :: A Reformed, Christian...
Five Temptations and Ten Reasons to Twitter

Five Temptations and Ten Reasons to Twitter

Should an ordinary pastor get involved in the latest social media extravaganza? Drawbacks and benefits abound. Like most things the devil isn’t in the device as much as in the one using it. To each his own, but here are five temptations to avoid and ten reasons why I use Twitter. Twitter Temptations 1. Narcissism. Twitter assumes not only that others care what you are doing, but that you should have a group of followers enamored with what you are doing. Who can know a person’s motives for Twittering, Facebooking, or involvement in any other social media. But if you lust for a following Twitter (or social media in general) may bring out the worst in you. 2. Wasting Time. This is obvious. If you have Twitter tools to interrupt you on your computer, or perhaps have it text you when someone sends you a Tweet, you can be continually interrupted, checking in and responding, that you will inevitably neglect the important issues of your life. 3. Too Much Info. Twitter is not a place for confrontation of sin or a place to air out your disgruntled feelings. Some tell us too much about what’s in their hearts. Not everything we think or feel needs to come out of our mouth or from our keyboards. 4. Not Enough Info. Some don’t say much when they Tweet. “Eating cereal” may be significant when you are an avid 140 character Twitter-bug, but if such is the sum and substance of your comments, it is hardly a benefit to anyone. 5. Avoiding the Face-to-Face. As with virtually all electronic media, it is...
Coming Out

Coming Out

It”™s time to stop living the lie that I”™ve been living.  The struggle has been a drain on my conscience, especially since I have been living one way in secret, keeping even my wife in the dark (sort of).  It”™s time to be honest ““ it”™s time to acknowledge not merely a radical change for me, but more of an acknowledgment of who I really am-who I”™ve always really been.  I really can”™t keep it a secret anymore. I am a . . . Mac User! Three weeks ago, I bought my first iMac and have been living in both the PC and Mac world since.  Two weeks of using both, I can say I”™ve been continually frustrated with my PC and continually satisfied using the Mac.  Today that all ends.  I have come out of the closet and embraced the Mac way of living. First, a little history.  In college, I was a Mac user.  My university had two computer labs:  a PC lab that most of the students on campus used and a Mac lab in the music and art building.  Since I was a music major for a year and half I regularly used a Mac.  At that time (late 80s, early 90s), PCs were a drag to use.  I wrote all my papers and even did a substantial amount of church work on Macs.  However, as I moved into seminary, the world of Mac was simply not as compatible or suggested.  So I became a Mac hater ““ why in the world would anyone own a Macintrash?  Yet, secretly, I have always been attracted to...
Cheap Technology and the Ordinary Pastor – a Wrap-Up – Part 3

Cheap Technology and the Ordinary Pastor – a Wrap-Up – Part 3

Here’s the last installment on the technology series: An area where I will be sticking with the paid versions is Groove.  What, you don”™t know what Groove is?  You need to.  Groove is a collaboration software tool that comes in the new Office 07 suite.  I can create multiple workspaces, invite who I want to them, assign permissions and begin sharing any sort of document with whomever I want (of course, they must also own and install Groove).  If they make changes to the document, it synchronizes the doc for any who are a part of the workspace.  You can even create files on your desktop to be “Grooved” and share those files with those you want so that you don”™t have to recreate or upload files to a separate workspace.  The only problem with this is that the 64 bit version of Groove does not work with Vista and Microsoft has no plans to make it work. Go figure.  This was a major bummer for me.  For pastoral ministry this has become invaluable.  Our pastoral team collaborates with one of our members who actually puts up a copy of the bulletin each week and we all add our two cents.  I do this also with our Sunday School bulletin, PowerPoint presentations, and a vast array of documents I want to share with others.  I looked into Zoho”™s Sharepoint-like site, but it simply was not as easy to use or set up.  Groove has been a pleasure to use. What about note taking?  When Office 07 came out I became hooked to One Note.  However, I think the free...
Cheap Technology and the Ordinary Pastor-Wrapping Up – part 2

Cheap Technology and the Ordinary Pastor-Wrapping Up – part 2

More on my wrap up of Cheap Technology and the Ordinary Pastor Excel is a tool I regularly use, especially since I oversee our church”™s finances.  The ability to quickly create charts and graphs in Word and extensively manipulate them to fit your desired look and express your information as you desire is easy.  Word has vastly improved the styles of their charts and graphs, adding more 3D effects and sharper colors and backgrounds.  Numbers is the Mac version, and it simply produces a better-looking product than does Excel and is very easy to use.  I”™m no Excel power user, but what I do with it was not as easy to accomplish in the OpenOffice platform. Let me say a word about PowerPoint.  I used to despise PowerPoint.  They have the WORST looking templates.  Another area Microsoft just simply does not do well in ““ really professional, modern, crisp, clean, sharp presentations.  PowerPoint 07 is a great improvement over previous versions.  I do a PPT presentation almost every week that I teach my mid-week class.  OpenOffice is a joke.  I also extensively tried out the free (and the paid versions) of Sliderocket.  Sliderocket has some real potential, but was so buggy that it created some major headaches for me.  I also called their customer support for help because once it was out of beta, I couldn”™t seem to get anyone to respond via e-mail.  The guy was awesome on the phone and assured me that someone would follow up with my problems ““ I have yet to hear from them.  While it still irks me that PowerPoint is so...
Cheap Technology and the Ordinary Pastor – Wrap-up – part 1

Cheap Technology and the Ordinary Pastor – Wrap-up – part 1

I”™m going to wrap up (belatedly) my little series on pastoral ministry and the quest for inexpensive technology.  Honestly, this is not really an issue for some pastors (or others).  Some are in the position where expense is not really an issue.  Or they are willing to forgo something else in order to have the better technology.  After evaluating the free side of life, I think it is worth spending some money in order to have the better technology and thus a more productive time accomplishing what you do and yet there are a few apps. Let me start with productivity suites. Word Processing, Number Crunching and Presentations.  Hands down, MS Office:  Word, Excel, and PowerPoint are your best bets (all of these in the world of PC).  For a basic suite, of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote (more on this one later), you”™ll pay about $150.00.  If you are a student, you can get the Ultimate Office suite for about $60.00.  That”™s really the way to go for the power and ease of use you will gain over the zero-priced material like OpenOffice.org. Why pay the money for these? Word is the universal powerhouse of word processing.  Other programs, including WordPerfect and Pages with the Mac, have to adjust to it.  It is the standard platform. Office has become much more user friendly.  Though it did take me awhile to adjust to the new ribbon format, the UI is much cleaner, easier to use, faster to navigate, and even pleasing to the eyes.  As said before, OpenOffice reminds me of Windows 98. In Word (Excel, PowerPoint) you can...