Jan 12 2009

journaling on the daniel fast

steven hopkins sent me a twitter yesterday asking if we had a daniel fast journal anywhere to download.  we don’t.  but i actually have used macjournal for quite some time and really, really love it.  is is free (well, vs. 2.6.1 is) and allows you to organize different journals by topic.  so i can keep my daniel fast thoughts and prayers seperate from say my bible study journal, or my “what keeps me up at night” journal.  i hope to upgrade to the latest version as it’s has been a really great tool.  it’s $34.95 and well worth it, but i’m gonna have to settle for the free version a little while longer.

i haven’t actually used any pc journaling software but my journal 1 is listed on download.com as a free download.  it seems to get good reviews.  might be a good place to start looking.  there are some other ones that seem to run in the $39.95 range which i’m sure work great.  if anyone has a good one, leave us a comment below.

happy journaling!


Jan 8 2009

daniel fast recipe: perfect spaghetti with tomato sauce

rock church is getting ready to participate in awake21 a 21 day daniel fast starting on sunday.  i am starting to get really excited.  but, as i walked through the grocery store today i was a little spooked by the price of produce.  ouch.  so, when i got home i started planning out meals we can afford.

i stumbled on an old recipe i haven’t made in ages.  it’s one of my favorites and very inexpensive to make.  i thought i’d share it in case anyone needs any ideas.

perfect spaghetti with tomato sauce
2 tbsp. plus 1/4 tspn. salt
1 1/2 lbs. of baby pear tomatoes
8 oz. whole wheat spaghetti
4 tbsp. evoo
4 cloves garlic minced (or pressed)
1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
1/4 cu fresh basil leaves loosely packed and torn

(note:  this recipe really is best with the real live fresh ingredients.  you can substitute canned italian plum tomatoes and dried basil if it’s all you have, but if you can, take the time to get the real stuff.  you won’t need much of it – it’s still an inexpensive meal with all the fresh ingredients.)

the recipe i use says to blanch and peel the tomatoes, but i never have.  i just seed them and really cut them up fine.

in a skillet, heat up the evoo.  add the garlic and simmer until golden (bout 30 sec.).  add red pepper flakes and remaining 1/4 tsp. salt.  increase heat to high and add tomatoes.  heat them through while crushing them into the garlic, pepperflakes and evoo with the back of a spoon.  the texture you’re going for is super mashed up tomatoes….not sauce.   if it gets too dry you can add a little more evoo or some water from your pasta pot.

drain your whole wheat spaghetti noodles when al dente.  then just toss the tomato sauce into the pasta.

not your typical spaghetti…it’s so, so good.
what about you?  found any good recipes for the daniel fast?


Jan 3 2009

book review: mad church disease

mad-church-disease

it came in the mail almost 2 months ago.  my very own “advance reader’s copy” of mad church disease.  it was so cool… it had no page numbers.  the table of contents just had “000″ written next to each chapter where the page number would be and contained a disclaimer to the effect that this isn’t the final final which made me feel like i was getting a top secret glimpse.  when i got it and thumbed through it i was so proud of anne jackson.  for a little over a year, her bloggees have been privy to the signing of the contract with zondervan, quizzes about our experiences and her word count mile stones.  now, receiving this pre-release copy of the practically finished work, i think i can appreciate, at least on some level, the accomplishment of – - writing a whole freakin’ book!!! wow, congratulations anne.  that must be some feeling.

anyway… where was i?  oh yes,  almost 2 months ago i got this book that i have been so excited to read.  so what took so long, you ask?  was it hard?  was it deep?  was it difficult to grasp?

no…. quite the contrary.  it was one of the simplest things i’ve ever read.

no, wait!  hang on  – -  this is a good review.  keep reading.

the best way i can describe this book is that it is like sitting down with a good friend who will plant themselves in front of you and begin relentlessly asking all the right questions until you start spilling the honest to goodness truth about yourself.  and, the best part?  it’s not a “how to” book.  i was so relieved when i at some point during the read i flipped over to the cover to confirm this little fact.  the book contains no perfect prayer and no secret combination of activities that will cure you once and for all.  no, this is a book that emphasizes identifying and owning responsibility for our actions and embracing the process of overcoming the messes that, on many levels, we create all by ourselves.  i love that.  i find books that try to spoon feed me all the answers, though probably inspired, are uninspiring.  i’m a bright girl, challenge me to find my own answers.  and, that’s what anne did.

so, the number one question people have asked me about the book… “can i borrow it when you’re done?”

sorry, no way, no how.  the pages are dripping with a steady drool of my own honesty.  the book didn’t take me so long because it was difficult to read…. it took that long to make myself write down the answers to all those questions.  this is truly not a book you read.  if you just read it you are completely missing the point and wasting your time.  for people who have served in ministry for any length of time, there will be little to no new information in it.  but i almost guarantee most people have never taken the initiative to effectively act on the familiar truths written in it’s pages.  this book is tool you use to assess, and more importantly, identify what you need to do next to get healthy.  i mean it when i say… it is perfectly simple.  if she had made it difficult and deep it wouldn’t have been nearly as effective.

i believe everyone who even entertains the idea of full time ministry should pick up this book before they start.  i would love to have had this book before i was in need of it… but perhaps i wouldn’t have taken it so seriously.

for those called to serve in ministry, we have a responsibility to be accountable for staying in the race.  we are not called for the period of time that it takes for us to self distruct.  our calling is for a lifetime.  to succeed in this will take a little bit of effort on our part and a lot of loving grace and strength from a loving god.

thank you, anne.

now, quit buggin’ me
and go buy your own book
here


Dec 9 2008

to decide and to choose…

i believe to decide and to choose are humanity’s two greatest super powers.

this statement is the long and short of what has been tumbling around in my spirit lately.  every moment of every day we are faced with situations that require a decision and result in a choice.  some are big and some are small.  but the cumulative effect of all of these decisions and choices determine who we are, how we respond to life’s challenges and how great our influence will be…

no pressure.

i think my greatest decision and choice of recent is to be more responsible for my verbal and non-verbal responses to the situation of the moment.  no one chooses how i communicate but me.  and how i communicate should be determined by my choice to love god and my neighbors rather than the circumstances that may be pressing me at the moment.

ok. you go.
what decisions and choices have you been faced with lately?
what is your take on how our decisions and choices shape us?