Anna and I are in Colorado this weekend for several events in the following order:
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| 1. Anna's brother, Andrew, graduated from DCHS yesterday.
| 2. My cousin, Rebecca, graduated from High School yesterday.
3. My cousin, Hannah, is marrying the man of her dreams, Jared, tomorrow. (Pictures to come...)
4. Colorado is the greatest place on earth.
5. Did I mention it's beautiful out here?
There is something unique about my family. On my mom's side there are 19 cousins, plus 2 that have married in (3 if your reading this 24 hours or more from the time of this posting). What is so unique about us is not the amount of cousins but the closeness between us all.
It is always so great to be with familly. I don't know if there's really a way to explain it other than to talk about how easy it is for us to come together without seeing eachother in over a year or more and immediately laughing, hugging and crying together. It is an amazing bond of friendship and family that I am so grateful to be a part of.
So with that said I'd like to give a shout-out to all the cousins; and when I say cousins I mean the literal kind, not the other kind (it's a little inside, I know).
Nate, Hanna, Angie, Steven, Jaleh, Ashcon, Bejan, Romeo, Trevor, Tessa, SaraLynn, Kyle, Dirk, Angelique, Elena, Daniel, Rebecca, Jennifer, Elise, Anna: I love you guys.

| The Onething crew is going to Tallahassee this weekend for a conference. The forecast looks good. Too bad they don't serve IN-N-OUT. I guess you can't have it all. In other news: Justin Rizzo will be going with us as the other worship leader this weekend. He's been writing songs and they are really good. You can tell he reads his Bible.
John G. Lake on the Baptism of the Holy GhostWhen we stand before the bar of God and are asked why we have not fulfilled in our life all the mind of Christ and all His desire in the salvation of the world... How terrible it will be for us to say we neglected, we put off, we failed to seek for the enduement that cometh from on high - the baptism of the Holy Ghost
Two days ago our prayer room team decided to do a little experiment with praying in tongues. For 24 hours we were going to try to pray in tongues whenever we were not talking. After 24 hours we decided to continue the experiment for a whole week. Some of the testimonies so far after only 2 days are: 1. Noticable increase of God's presence on our spirit. 2. Easier to have refined speach (you have to stop praying to say something). 3. Less prone to sinning (you have to stop praying to sin, or pray while sinning). 4. Noticable increase of joy, kindness and humility. 5. Increased tenderness and hunger for God.
I've been thinking and praying a lot over the past few days about the baptism of the Holy Spirit and how that relates to being a 'sent one' and a 'witness' ( John 1:6-7 ; Acts 1:8 ). It started a few days ago when I was just reading through my daily verses in John, and I came to 5:33 where Jesus is talking about John the Baptist and He says that "he has born witness to the truth." O.k. that's cool. All Christians bear witness to the truth right? Well why is John the Baptist the only man mentioned as a witness to Christ in chapter 5? The other witnesses are the Father (v. 32), Jesus' works (v. 36), and the Scriptures (v. 39). So this leads me back to John 1:6-8 "There was a man sent from God whose name was John. This man came for a witness to bear witness of the Light, that all through him might believe. He...was sent to bear witness of that Light." This got me thinking: "Can we be true witnesses of Christ without being sent by God?"This question led me to other scriptures in the Bible that relate to heroes of the faith having an encounter by which before that encounter they were less 'active' and 'powerful' in their walk with God but that after the encounter they had a marked increase and greater dynamic of the anointing in their life. Example #1: Moses - Before the burning bush he had run away from his homeland and was hanging out in the desert. After the burning bush he has a power ministry in front of Pharoah (who's basically the king of the world), he delivers millions of Jews out of 400 years of captivity, and continues in signs and wonders until his death.
Example #2: Elijah - His Biblical Debut is 1st Kings 17:1 where he shows up out of nowhere and tells the king "it won't rain except by my word." He went from "who's' that" to "Ahab's Most Wanted" in one sentence. James tells us that Elijah was a guy just like the rest of us but that he prayed earnestly so it didn't rain for 3 1/2 years (James 5:17).
Example #3: Isaiah - He's operating as a prophet for five chapters, and prophesying some pretty good stuff too. But then all of a sudden he has the meeting of a lifetime. He has a Divine encounter with God, and he gets sent by God to prophecy to Israel a decree and a judgment that still stands today.
Example #4: Jesus - In Luke 4 he goes into the wilderness for his 40 day fast being "filled with and led by the Spirit" and he comes out afterwards "under the power of the Spirit." Immediately He begins His ministry, and need I say more?...
Example #5: The Apostles - They're all fishermen and even after 3 1/2 years of "Jesus School of Ministry" they still run away, deny Jesus and accept defeat in the hour of testing. But after the ascention they're in the upper room for 10 days praying and Pentecost comes. They get filled with the Holy Spirit. From that point on the church goes crazy, they have shadows that heal people, they preach sermons that get 3,000 saved in a day and that's just the start!
On this subject, Art Katz says
"There is a difference between ‘went’ and ‘sent’. The root word of apostolic is ‘sent’. However well meaning most of the activity in the church today is self-initiated. We donÂ’t esteem the phenomenon of sending as well as recognizing the difference between the work in those who have been sent and those who just went...Nations that hate us will only hear us if they recognize we are sent from God." In all this my point is that I believe there are levels of our personal 'baptism in the Spirit' or that there are stages of our being filled with the indwelling Spirit. I think our progression in the Christian faith probably looks something like this. 1. Lost Sinner 2. Saved by Grace through Faith in Jesus 3. Baptism of the Spirit / Receipt of the indwelling Spirit 4. Working out our Salvation 5. Progression of holiness and freedom from sin 6. Progressive increase of anointing on our hearts and our ministry
To muse on steps 5 & 6 for a moment (really these two go hand in hand): I think that as we continue to draw closer to a holy God we can only do so by growing in holiness ourselves. We are designed to be a dwelling place for God but a holy God requires a holy dwelling place. Our progression in the Spirit is directly related to our denial of our selves and our hatred of sin. Every little ounce of sin in our life is a hindrance to the life of the Spirit within us. Every act of rebellion is an axe-blow to the tree of life growing in our soul. Real Christianity ever seeks to be made perfect in God, both in character and gifts. We all know that we need to deny ourselves as we progress in our faith. That's not a new concept. What I want to know is how do we get sent?! I think there are lots and lots of Christians in the Church that will live their life and never be sent. The point isn't to be sent into full-time ministry in Africa or whatever. The point is to be sent as witnesses and as apostles of the Living God; no matter what your vocation. Right now We have a skewed and watered down view of the Baptism of the Spirit. When it came upon a man originally, as it did upon the hundred and twenty at Jerusalem in Acts 2, no one went around saying, "Brother, have you got your baptism?" They were walking with their shoes of, with uncovered heads and uncovered hearts before the eternal God! "You shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be witnesses to Me..."(Acts 1:8) So how to we get from our initial baptism in the spirit to our own personal pentecost where we go from scared fishermen to thoseturning turrning the world upside down? I love the answer that John G. Lake gives: "You may have God. That is the wonder of the baptism of the Holy Ghost. It is not a work of grace; it is God possessing you. So beloved, you pray through. Pray through for this church, pray through for this work. Oh, God will come! God will come with more tongues than you have ever heard. God will come with more power than your eyes ever beheld. God will come with waves of heavenly love and sweetness, and blessed God, your heart will be satisfied in Him." We will never be sent ones if we casually read our Bible and pray a little bit. We have to do as the Apostles did and "give ourselves continually to prayer and to the ministry of the word." (Acts 6:4)
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The Researchers at the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio, Texas have developed a super-slimy substance. When fired at an unruly mob it causes rioters to slip and fall over.
The invention will also be sold at Toys-R-Us as the new summer sensation slip-n-slide-as-you-go.
[Read more from the actual site.]
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 I read a funny story today about this guy Alex Gordon who was going to sign to the Kansas City Royals so they (Topps) made his Rookie Card, but then he didn't sign and instead is only playing double A down in Wichita (I have no idea why, but I chalk it up to fitting in with the way things go for the Royals). So Topps pulls his cards from their 2006 collection but some kid stumbles accross 5 of them at Wal-Mart after buying some packs of cards for his own collection and (very inteligenly) decides to sell them via eBay for a grand total of $5,761.79! There's supposedly less than 100 out there that didn't make it in the recall and so now everyone's going crazy over this guy's rookie card when he's not even in the major leagues. Supposedly he might be a really good ball player down the road and then his 'non-existent' pre-rookie card rookie card will be worth even more than the $2,550 that someone's paid for one so far.
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