Month: August 2006

Everything Else

Home Depot —“ further adventures

A Home Depot associate got back to me last night. The information I received on Monday was incorrect. It would take 10 to 13 business days for my patio furniture order to arrive.

I’ve got the steaks, beer, hotdogs, and burgers ready for —“ well perhaps August 18th at the earliest. I best not get my hopes up.

There are so many Home Depot S**ks websites out there. They echo the same story and others even sillier or more horrible. The main Home Depot S**ks site is pretty informative. Just use caution —“ there’s a lot of bitter language out there.

Current Events, Perspective

Shuffle back to Buffalo

Donn Esmonde wrote an op-ed in the Buffalo News entitled: Bringing them all back home. There is an effort underway in Buffalo, New York to reclaim those whom the city has lost to greener pastures.

An excerpt follows:

She is swimming against a tidal wave. She is walking into a hurricane. She believes she will beat the odds and the elements.

Contrary to evidence, including a decades-long exodus, Marti Gorman thinks Buffalo’s renaissance has begun.

She is putting her pro-Buffalo conviction into motion. She and a dozen other True Believers are reviving, after 99 years, Buffalo Old Home Week. They are contacting folks who left – and they are legion – and inviting them to visit Aug. 24-27. If everybody comes, North Carolina will lose half of its population.

Barely 5 feet tall, fluent in three languages, Gorman is fueled by confidence, intelligence and a waterfall of energy. The talkative workaholic left Buffalo with no regrets 32 years ago. She recently returned and saw the city for what it is: An architectural museum close to water, with low-cost quality housing, minuscule commute times, 17 colleges and universities, big-city culture, great quality of life and a sense of community.

All of which, she says, overshadows the high-tax tonnage and consequent business flight that make this livable city so leave-able.

“Maybe I’m naive,” she said. “But I think the renaissance already has started.”

Planned are four days of tours, job fairs, parties and open houses, wrapped around the Elmwood arts festival.

The hope is that seeing will translate into staying, that expats will become repats – and buy a house or bring a business with them. Folks long gone bring fresh eyes and energy – they haven’t been beaten down by decades of petty politics and tail-first leadership.

The hurricane in Gorman’s face is downstate’s control of Albany. The consequence is high health care and utility costs and generous public-worker wages and benefits. It leaves job-challenged upstaters carrying the heaviest tax load in the nation.

We lost nearly a third of our 25-to-34-year-olds in the past 14 years. That is the tsunami that Gorman and friends face. They think they are up to it.

“There is a lot to build on here,” she said, “that offsets the absurd taxes and political smallness.”

The odds are long. But the cause is just, and the spirit is strong. Let the crusade begin.

Christian Witness, Media

Billy Graham interview

Newsweek magazine’s August 14th issue contains an interview with and retrospective on Billy Graham.

In Pilgrim’s Progress the Rev. Franklin Graham comments on his father and the culture wars: —…my father does not feel God has called him to speak out against any particular sin. He is against all sin…—

It is a wide ranging interview and well worth the read, especially if you believe that Christians are called to witness truth to power.

Amen.

Saints and Martyrs

August 11 – St. Susanna (Św. Zuzanna)

Niezwyciężona męczennico, święta Zuzanno! Nie brakło ci siły z nieba na oparcie się tyranowi i na wytrzymanie rozlicznych męczarni, dla ocalenia wiary Chrystusowej. Uproś nam u Boga, abyśmy naśladując cię, nadzieję naszą pokładali w Bogu, i zasłużyli sobie na Jego pomoc w nieszczęścia, w utrapieniach i rozmaitych uciskach. Amen.

Current Events

Home Depot – the horror continues

It’s almost one week past the date my patio furniture was to be delivered, almost two weeks since I ordered the stuff.

I’m on the phone with Home Depot right now. I’ve already had two calls disconnected. The man answering the phone, Ralph, seems very nice, and very frustrated. On the second call Ralph told me that there was no one at customer service. Robbie was at ‘lunch’ (by-the-way, it’s 5:35pm) and wasn’t expected back until 6:15. He tried to connect me with a manager.

On the third call I was finally connected with a manager, Dick. I left my name, order number, and cell number with him. He tells me that he will call me back in an hour. We’ll see.

Again, Dick seemed like a decent person – very frustrated – and it seemed rather overwhelmed. He told me that he’s swamped.

Saints and Martyrs

August 10 – St. Lawrence of Rome (Św. Wawrzyniec)

St. Lawrence before Ceasar.jpg

Prosimy Cię wszechmogący Boże, zgaś w nas płomienie występków, Ty cos błogosławionego Wawrzyńcowi, dręczonemu płomieniem, dal siłę wytrwać w boleściach. Przez Chrystusa Pana naszego. Amen.

Almighty God, who didst call thy deacon Laurence to serve thee With deeds of love, and didst give him the crown of martyrdom: Grant, we beseech thee, that we, following his example, may fulfil thy commandments by defending and supporting the poor, and by loving thee with all our hearts, through Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.

On St. Lawrence, Deacon and Martyr

The Roman Church commends this day to us as the blessed Laurence’s day of triumph, on which he trod down the world as it roared and raged against him; spurned it as it coaxed and wheedled him; and in each case, conquered the devil as he persecuted him. For in that Church, you see, as you have regularly been told, he performed the office of deacon; it was there that he administered the sacred chalice of Christ’s blood; there that he shed his own blood for the name of Christ. The blessed apostle John clearly explained the mystery of the Lord’s supper when he said Just as Christ laid down his life for us, so we too ought to lay down our lives for the brethren. St Laurence understood this, my brethren, and he did it; and he undoubtedly prepared things similar to what he received at that table. He loved Christ in his life, he imitated him in his death.

And we too, brethren, if we truly love him, let us imitate him. After all, we shall not be able to give a better proof of love than by imitating his example; for Christ suffered for us, leaving us an example, so that we might follow in his footsteps. In this sentence the apostle Peter appears to have seen that Christ suffered only for those who follow in his footsteps, and that Christ’s passion profits none but those who follow in his footsteps. The holy martyrs followed him, to the shedding of their blood, to the similarity of their sufferings. The martyrs followed, but they were not the only ones. It is not the case, I mean to say, that after they crossed, the bridge was cut; or that after they had drunk, the fountain dried up.

The garden of the Lord, brethren, includes – yes, it truly includes – includes not only the roses of martyrs but also the lilies of virgins, and the ivy of married people, and the violets of widows. There is absolutely no kind of human beings, my dearly beloved, who need to despair of their vocation; Christ suffered for all. It was very truly written about him: who wishes all men to be saved, and to come to the acknowledgement of the truth.

So let us understand how Christians ought to follow Christ, short of the shedding of blood, short of the danger of suffering death. The Apostle says, speaking of the Lord Christ, Who, though he was in the form of God, did not think it robbery to be equal to God. What incomparable greatness! But he emptied himself, taking the form of a servant, and being made in the likeness of men, and found in condition as a man. What unequalled humility!

Christ humbled himself: you have something, Christian, to latch on to. Christ became obedient. Why do you behave proudly? After running the course of these humiliations and laying death low, Christ ascended into heaven: let us follow him there. Let us listen to the Apostle telling us, If you have risen with Christ, savor the things that are above is, seated at God’s right hand.

From a sermon delivered by St. Augustine in about 400 AD on the occasion of the Feast of St. Lawrence (Sermo 304, 1-4, PL 38, 1395-1397)

To all my fellow deacons out there, may this commemoration renew our zeal and may the intercession of St. Lawrence stregthen us.

Everything Else,

My first anniversary – one year blogging

I’ve been blogging for one year now —“ glad I made it, and I hope to continue.

I’m sure that my postings have been many things to many people, enlightening, challenging, maddening, frustrating, and funny. If they have moved you to consider something differently then they are of value.

I appreciate all of you who visit and read, or read via RSS or Atom. I appreciate all who comment. I pray for all of you.

Even in this modern age we keep reinventing ways to achieve community. Blogs are part of that, and they connect us in ways that span time, distance, and technology. They are simply an archetype of what God intends for us —“ that we join in community. The Kingdom of God, in its fullness, will be just that, a community joined in praise and worship around the throne of God.

Come Lord Jesus.

Current Events

The grateful dead

Deadly Israeli Strike Scatters Mourners

GHAZIYEH, Lebanon (AP) – Mourners in a funeral procession for Israeli airstrike victims scattered in panic Tuesday as warplanes again unleashed missiles that hit buildings and killed 13 people, witnesses and officials said.

The first missile struck a building about five minutes after the march by about 1,500 people had passed by, killing one person and wounding five.

The blast was close enough to send mourners screaming, “Allahu akbar!” or “God is great!” Some broke away from the procession, while others continued on.

They were burying some of the 15 people killed in Ghaziyeh on Monday, when Israeli airstrikes flattened three buildings in the Shiite town southeast of the port city of Sidon.

About 30 minutes after Tuesday’s first airstrike, Israeli warplanes staged four more bombing runs, destroying two buildings, said Mayor Mohammed Ghaddar.

Twelve more people were killed and 18 wounded in those strikes, according to tally from three area hospitals…