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Smart remarks about a week of sick kids on Facebook

This week I made a bunch of smart remarks about sick kids on Facebook.


Today January 25

Andy is home from church with sick boys so we’re . . . having sword fights and . . . playing the harmonica. 10:02am

Yesterday January 24

Andy thinks there are lots of people out this Saturday morning–starting to get into the spring routine. But I could just be projecting that. 10:13am

Joel Scandrett at 10:20am January 24

uh, “spring routine?”

Andy Rowell at 10:23am January 24

It is 53 degrees right now in Durham, NC. We were just outside riding bikes and playing soccer. I see it is 3 degrees in my hometown Wheaton, Il where you are Joel. Sorry. What a difference 50 degrees makes.

Natalie Freeman Calhoun at 10:25am January 24

That is so very very wrong.

Andy Rowell at 10:30am January 24

I actually also think in terms of three seasons: “Fall Semester” “Spring Semester” and “Summer” and spring semester began a couple weeks ago.

Joel Scandrett at 11:10am January 24

apology accepted. 😉

January 23

Andy C.H.I.L.D: Carrier of Highly Infectious Longlasting Diseases. 8:32pm –

Donna M. Becker at 3:46pm January 24

Love your acronym!

January 22

Andy taught 1 year old Jacob to throw Kleenex in the garbage can. Now he keeps digging it out and throwing in back in. I’ve created a monster. 11:59am

January 20

Andy would like to buy stock in Kleenex because my boys alone will keep them profitable. 5:08pm

Andy looked through 7 bins of clothes and didn’t find the snowsuits. That is the problem when it only snows once a year. 9:25am

January 19

Andy wonders if “demon-possessed” children were brought to Jesus but all they had was a cold. Sometimes it is difficult to know the difference. 8:58am

Andy rents out sick children. Low low price. Special opportunity to wipe snotty noses! 8:01am

Natalie Freeman Calhoun at 8:10am January 19

Hehehe do you accept other sick kids in trade? You can send me your runny noses if I can send you my upset stomachs?

Joel Scandrett at 12:05pm January 19

I’ll see your cold and raise you a stomach virus!

January 17

Andy is minivan-shopping, reading Barth’s commentary on Romans, and playing with the Shake’n’Go speedway. 3:49pm

Andy notes that “Jakey likes it”–namely Life Cereal. Our 1 year old ate three bowls of Life this morning. What a discovery–he likes sugar. 8:56am

January 16

Andy thinks it is hard for those of us who love our jobs (pastor, student, etc.) to take Sabbath. But among other reasons, our kids need us to do so anyway. 9:26am

Categories
Blogging Stanley Hauerwas Twitter

Aristotle on Facebook and Twitter

"To be a friend to many people in the complete kind of friendship is not possible . . . it is necessary to get experience and to come into intimate acquaintance with each other, which is of the utmost difficulty.  But it is possible to be pleased by many people for usefulness and pleasure, since there are many people of those sorts, and their services are provided in a short time" (Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, Book Eight, 1158a, (trans. Joe Sachs). 

Aristotle: Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics

Aristotle is right.  In order to have strong friendships, we need to spend significant time with one another.  We need people who believe in us, tell us the truth, and support us.  I think of small groups, phone calls, long walks, and long drives with friends. 

But I admit that I have come to also really enjoy Facebook and Twitter.  My Facebook friends are people I know from real life (high school, college, church, seminary, colleagues, etc.)  On Twitter, I follow some Christian leaders, authors and pastors.  My Facebook Status Updates and Posted Items tend to be more amusing and personal–about my kids, witty remarks, etc.  My Twitter tweets are more thoughtful comments usually pertaining to church leadership and theology.

Interestingly I think I exchange what Aristotle calls "pleasure" through Facebook–joking around–seeing what my friends are up to.  I exchange what Aristotle calls "usefulness" through Twitter. 

I think the usefulness and pleasure of Facebook and Twitter
have to do with your particular life situation and personality.  Because I am usually
either reading or watching my 3 and 1 year old boys and my laptop is nearby, it happens to fit
my lifestyle.  My wife Amy
on the other hand neither blogs, nor has Facebook or Twitter.  Instead she chats with people on
the phone and at her workplace–our church.  Aristotle is on to something–we all need solid friendships of equality but we also all enjoy other relationships that bring us smiles (pleasure) and insight (usefulness).        

Other info:

If you are someone who knows me from real life, you can find my Facebook account here.

If you are interested in church leadership and my blog, please follow me at my Twitter page.  Or you can just go check it out anonymously without joining Twitter. 

I am reading Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics for Stanley Hauerwas's course Happiness, the Life of Virtue, and Friendship.  I have posted about that here.

There are lots of interesting comments from Aristotle about relationships in book 8 of the Nicomachean Ethics that I thought were relevant to Facebook and Twitter.  You can access an old translation online for free.  For example, Aristotle addresses the issue of power in relationships.  In Twitter, power is obvious.  If you follow someone but they don't follow you, they are in the power position.  If they decide to follow you, you are equal.  In Facebook, everyone is equal because you both have to agree to be friends.  Now, there are people who accept everyone as a Facebook friend and follow everyone who follows you on Twitter, but this has some negative effects on the functioning of the applications–they are cluttered with people you really do not know.  

Categories
Books Duke Divinity School Ecclesiology Ken Carder Leadership Missiology

Ken Carder’s course The Local Church in Mission to God’s World books

I am the preceptor (teaching assistant) for retired United Methodist Church Bishop Ken Carder’s course “The Local Church in Mission to God’s World” this semester at Duke Divinity School.  Here are the books on the reading list and his syllabus.   Update January 2010: Here is the 2010 version: Ken Carder's course The Local Church in Mission to God's World

Required Texts:

Other resources:

See the Sustaining Pastoral Excellence website for more Duke Divinity School resources on pastoring.


Posts on Ken Carder's other course Introduction to Christian Ministry (Fall 2008):

Ken Carder: Introduction to Christian Ministry books (Fall 2008)

Education in the Local Church: Taylor, Willimon, Storey, Niebuhr, and Groome

Review of Pastor: Theology and Practice by Will Willimon

Review of With God in the Crucible by Peter Storey