Month: June 2007

  • Today's Cartoon
     
    An old friend just called.  That was great.  We were able to catch up on old times. 
     
    It must be a season of old friends.  There was a teenager that was in our youth group several years ago.  Well he got into some trouble and fell away.  I visited him in jail yesterday for nearly 2 hours.  He’s so excited about Jesus again.
     
    I just got off the phone with Stephanie.  (She’s Kalli’s birth mom.  Kalli is our adopted daughter.)  She and her husband are moving back to Yankton.  We’re so excited.  She thinks of me as her Dad.  Below is the picture of her new born baby:

    JOSE ANTONIO

    Born:  June 25, 2007 at 9:00 am

    Weight:  7 lbs 1 oz

    Length:  19 1/2 oz

    Parents:  Jose & Stephanie

  • Springfield

    I got back from Springfield late last night.  I had a good time.  Right now it’s hard to get back into the “normal”. 

  • Springfield

    My two older girls just left for Teen Camp.  Two weeks of camp is enough for me.  I’ll be headed to Springfield Missiouri tomorrow for the rest of the week. 

  • Camp

    We got back from Middle School Camp about 8:00 last night.  It was a long bus ride across the state, but fun.  Middle School kids have a lot of energy – even on a 8 hour bus ride.  I’ll add details about camp later. 

    There were over 200 at camp.  One of the games we played was, “Amazon Torture”.  All the guys sat down in the middle of the field.  The camp speaker was in the middle, the chaperons were locked arms circling him and the rest of the boy campers were around us with arms locked.  The girls all had teams. (8 teams)  There goal was to capture the boys and get them back to their group.  I thought there was no way the girls could break through and capture us.  I was wrong.  The first game me and 2 other guys were able to hold out and not be captured.  The second game everyone was dragged across the field.  It was a lot of fun. 

    A funny incident:   A group of us were hiking through the forest on the way to a waterfall.  Some girls went way ahead of us.  We they rounded a corner they came back screaming, “cows”.  A herd of cows with 2 bulls must of gotten loose and came close to the camp.  Well the hike leader went ahead to see if he could get the cows and bulls out of the way.  We were watching.  He ran back, yelling, “Stampede”.  (Not actually)  Anyways, everyone ran back to the camp as fast as possible.  It was hilarious. 

  • Family

    Today's Cartoon

    We’re having service at the park today, baptism in the river and then a picnic.  It’s going to be great.  Tonight Kim and I will be going to Sioux City, Iowa to our favorite Chinese Restaurant.

    The service was great.  I nearly fell in when we were baptizing a couple at the same time.  I grabbed on to Pastor Andrew so I didn’t fall in.  I had a couple kids that I baptized.   Most of those baptized were adults.   

    I’ll be headed back to Camp (Middle School) on Monday.  I may not get to all the comments, but I certainly appreciate all.  Everyone have a great Father’s day and week.   

  • Camp

    Camp was great.  I had a group of boys.  Well one afternoon they decided to corner a field mouse.  The mouse jumped and bite one of the little boys.  He was taken to the ER.  (the mouse was brought in to the hospital – The doctor said the mouse was too small to carry anything )  He was OK.  We had over 200 kids at camp.  It was so fun.   I’m here for the weekend then will be going back out to the Black Hills for another week.  This time with Middle Schoolers.  We’re busing about 35-40 kids to camp.  That will be an adventure.  

    Thanks for all the comments.  I’ll try to get to them this weekend. 

  • The Peacock

    The peacock is first mentioned in the Bible in the time of Solomon. He used to send his vessels to distant countries, and they came back once in three years, “bringing gold, and silver, and ivory, and apes, and peacocks.”

           Solomon was the richest among all the kings that the Bible tells us about. When he first became king God spoke to him in a dream, and told him to ask for any thing he wished. If God should speak so to you, what would you ask for?

           Solomon did not pray that God would make him rich, or that he would give him health, or let him live a great many years on the earth; but he said, “I am a little child, I know not how to go out or come in.

           Give therefore thy servant an understanding heart.” Then God was pleased with what he asked, and besides giving him great wisdom, he gave him also riches and honor. He had forty thousand horses, and silver and gold in abundance. All the vessels used in his house were of gold, because silver was not good enough; it was “as stones” for plenty, and was “nothing accounted of in the days of Solomon.”

           In the second chapter of Ecclesiastes, Solomon himself speaks of his riches, and after telling us of some of his treasures, he says: “Whatsoever my eyes desired I kept not from them; I withheld not my heart from any joy.” Perhaps you think he must have been perfectly happy, if any man in this world ever was; but what does he say?

           “All is vanity and vexation of spirit.” This does not sound much like being contented. No, dear child, these are not the things that make us happy; nothing but the true love of God in the heart can do this.

           There are many peacocks in India, and large flocks of them are sometimes seen around the temples; they also live among the bushes near the banks of rivers. They sometimes rest on high trees, but always make their nests on the ground, under the shrubs.

           There was once a foolish and wicked emperor who cared little for any thing excepting “what he should eat, and what he should drink, and wherewithal he should be clothed.” He took great pride in telling how much his dinners cost, and how much trouble it gave people to prepare them.

           One of the dishes that pleased him, because it cost money enough, and time and trouble enough, was made up of the tongues of flamingoes, (a kind of bird,) and the brains of peacocks-do you envy such a king as that?

           The peacock is a very splendid bird; its colors are most rich and beautiful. The feathers of the tail are often more than a yard long, and when they are spread out in the sunlight, like a great fan, nothing can be more elegant.

           Yet with all its beauty I do not believe you could ever love a peacock, as you love a lamb or a dove. It seems selfish and vain, and there is nothing lovely about it-its voice is very harsh and disagreeable.

           There are some people who, like the peacock, are called handsome or beautiful, but whose hearts are not pure and lovely in the sight of God. “Beauty,” in itself, “is vain;” but “the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit is in the sight of God of great price.”
     
    We have a Family Reunion today and I’m headed to Kid’sCamp in the Black Hills of South Dakota tomorrow. (Absolutely no contact with civilization in the forest.)   I’ll be gone for a week.  I’ll be driving nearly 20 kids across the state.  That’ll be fun. 
    Talk to everyone next weekend.
     

  • Kalli’s Birthday Party
    HPIM0475
     HPIM0473 HPIM0471 HPIM0467 HPIM0466
    Kalli’s Biological Sister – Selena
    HPIM0458 HPIM0456HPIM0452
    HPIM0479
    Danielle & Alicia
    It was a great party.  Grandmothers, Friends and lots of kids were there. 

  •  NASA: Atlantis is ready for launch today.  HPIM0356We’re celebrating Kalli’s birthday tonight.  Her birthday is next week but I’ll be gone at camp.  I can’t think of a better way to celebrate my birthday but with a birthday party for Kalli. 

  • Ocean

    The tentacles of the giant Arctic jellyfish can reach 120 feet (36.6 meters) in length.
    The greatest tide change on earth occurs in the Bay of Fundy.
    The pupil of an octopus’ eye is rectangular.
    The largest eggs in the world are laid by a shark.
    Sharks are immune to cancer.

    The deepest part of the ocean is 35,813 feet (10,916 meters) deep and occurs in the Mariana Trench in the Pacific Ocean.    I was able to swim in this part of the ocean when I was aboard USS Kitty Hawk.  Marines stood guard with rifles to shoot any sharks.  It was a huge jump from the hangar bay to the ocean and a lot of work to swim out from the ship, back in again and up the net ladder.  I gained a huge appreciation for the ocean that day. 

    The whale is mentioned in the first chapter of the Bible, 21st verse. “And God created great whales.” Some suppose that large fish of every kind are here meant.

           An animal called the leviathan is described in one of the last chapters of Job, which some suppose to be the whale. It certainly means a large and strong animal, as you will see by the questions asked about him: “Canst thou draw out leviathan with a hook ? or his tongue with a cord which thou lettest down?

           Canst thou put a hook in his nose ? or bore his jaw through with a thorn? Wilt thou play with him as with a bird? When he raiseth himself up, the mighty are afraid.

           The arrow cannot make him flee; he laugheth at the shaking of a spear; he maketh the deep to boil like a pot; one would think the deep to be hoary.” This is like the whale in some things; but you will remember that it is not certain that he is meant.

           The common whale for which so many sailors are always seeking on the great ocean, is an enormous animal. It is often found seventy feet long; and it is said that they have been found of the length of a hundred feet.

                  It is covered with a coat of fat, sometimes more than a yard thick; and when this is cut up and put over fires in great kettles, a hundred barrels of oil are sometimes obtained from a single whale.

           Perhaps you already know how they take the whale. As soon as the sailors see one, they go towards him in a boat until they get as near to him as they dare. Then they throw their harpoons at him; these are sharp-pointed irons, fastened to a very long rope, one end of which they keep in the boat.

           As soon as the whale is wounded, he dives down into the water, and swims away to some distance. He is usually obliged to come up again in about half an hour to breathe, for he cannot live all the while under water; and then the men throw other harpoons at him. Sometimes he comes so near as to upset the boat with a blow of his strong tail.

    I loved the story of the two whales that were lost inland around San Francisco and eventually found their way back. 

    Today's Cartoon

    Where are you going for vacation this year?