Earth Day

April 22, 2009 by  
Filed under Blog

I bet most of you are surprised to see that I’m writing about Earth Day today.  Now, I’m no tree hugger, or granola- cruncher, but I think there’s something to be said about protecting the environment.  How does a TrueMan do that?

I recommend that we look at the Book of Genesis to get a foundation for this.  Genesis 2:15 “The Lord God then took the man and settled him in the garden of Eden, to cultivate and care for it.”  To cultivate and to care for it – in Hebrew, to SHAMAR (guard).  Everything in the garden (creation) was given to Adam to protect and defend it.  Yes, this included the woman (Eve) and the animals, but it also included the land and plants.  See, God wanted Adam to take responsibility for his surroundings.  Ask any farmer, and they’ll tell you that the land produces more bounty if you take care of it.  Adam’s job was to see to it that the land produced a large bounty.

The same goes for us now.  God expects that we shamar our gardens (our families, our land, our life, our Church).  He expects that we protect and defend all that is around us, therefore, we must protect our earth.  Personally, I’m not going to stop driving my eight cylinder Chevy truck, but what I will do is continue to use cloth diapers and homemade bio-degradable baby wipes.  I’ll continue to throw away my trash in a can instead of littering the side of the highways.  I will instill in my children how to respect the earth.  When I camp, I protect the fire from spreading.  When I see trash, I pick it up.  I’ve recently started using CFL bulbs around the house and just bought a bunch of new ones for the remaining lights.  It’s the little things that add up and really count.

Think about how you can protect the earth in your own little way.  If we all do it just a little bit, it’ll add up to some big changes.

Man up!

Being Great At What You Do

April 19, 2009 by  
Filed under Blog

My father-in-law is great at what he does.  He loves what he does.  He eats, sleeps, breaths and talks about what he does.  In his case, what he does and who he is really equal up.  (That’s not usually the case in people.)  I want to take a few words and honor his dedication to what he does and to how faithfully, fervently and excitedly he does it.

My father-in-law, Gary, is the Director of Catholic Music at the Air Force Academy.  I have the privilege of working with him on the Catholic staff at the Academy and I know, firsthand, that he is incredibly dedicated to his portion of our ministry.  See, what Gary does is he puts his passion to work for the Lord and he doesn’t hold anything back.  Sunday was a great example of that when he showed his mastery of fine choral music with a concert by the Catholic Cadet Choir, Men in Blaque (a men’s vocal group from the Univ of California, Irvine), In the Stairwell (a men’s a capella group from USAFA) and the Cadet Orchestra.  The concert was a resounding success and Gary is at the heart of that success.  Yes, the voices and instruments make it, but he put his heart and soul into the logistics, planning, timing, musicianship and professionalism of the concert.  To that, a job well done Gary!

My point with this today is that we should all be putting our passion to work for the Lord.  Find what it is that God created you to do and do it, fervently and with joy!  For Him!  If more men would live out their passions in life, we’d all be better off.

Man up!

The Don't Song

April 2, 2009 by  
Filed under Blog

Another video I stumbled across one day.  Although these guys are doing parody, it’s true. 

Man up!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T-lv8745InI]

"A Worldview that Leaves Me Cold"

April 1, 2009 by  
Filed under Blog

This tid-bit came across my inbox today.  I find it hilarious and frustrating at the same time.  The point of why I’m posting it on TrueManhood today is that I want to encourage us all to think for ourselves and not get caught up in socially-enabled “End Times Fear”.  God provides and is much bigger than global warming.  Take care of your portion of the planet and keep living.

Man up!

“The brutal winter of 2009 is finally coming to an end in the Great Plains. Or is it? Temperatures across North Dakota have been five to 10 degrees below normal all winter long. Massive snowfalls have blanketed the Peace Garden State for months. As now, North Dakota is enduring an end-of-March blizzard. The people of Fargo are paying the price. The ice-jammed Red River is cresting more than 40 feet over normal, flooding everything that isn’t protected by the heroic efforts of North Dakota citizens building up and maintaining the levies.  So, I ask you, what is the cause of all the cold, the snow, and the ice?  Global warming, of course!

According to Kate White, a civil engineer with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, “climate change caused by global warming likely is changing ice conditions and adding to the unpredictability” of ice jams along the Red River, so she said. 

Let me see if I get this. A “near-record snowpack,” along with below-normal temperatures, have led to more ice, which is acting unpredictably because of global warming?  What am I not getting here? I’ll tell you what I am getting—more proof that apocalyptic visions of global warming are driven by a particular worldview. Forget the facts.  Even President Obama, at least to some degree, has bought into it. Here’s what he had to say: “I actually think the science around climate change is real. . . . If you look at the flooding that’s going on right now in North Dakota . . . that indicates the degree to which we have to take this seriously.”  Record snow is the result of global warming?  Folks, what we have to take seriously here is the fact that our worldview determines how we see the world and how we live in the world. And we’d better have it correct, which is why I spend so much time talking about this on this broadcast every day.

Despite the fact that the globe has been cooling since at least 2002,  or that near-record cold and snow have plagued much of North America all year long, all the proponents of global warming can see is—well, global warming.  This is why its adherents in Congress and in the White House want curbs on greenhouse gases, potentially ruinous cap-and-trade policies, and curbs on oil exploration (at a time when we need to decrease our dependence on foreign oil). And if in the near future you start paying upwards of $5 a pound for ground beef, thank those in Congress who want to tax cow flatulence as a way to combat global warming.  As the New York Times relates, renowned physicist Freeman Dyson has called “climate change an ‘obsession’—the primary article of faith for ‘a worldwide secular religion’ known as environmentalism.” Dyson accuses the adherents of this religion of “relying too heavily on computer-generated climate models that foresee . . . imminent world devastation as icecaps melt, oceans rise and storms and plagues sweep the earth.”  But the models aren’t holding true. Which is why the global warming scientists need to examine their worldview.  And then they need to step out of the computer lab and take a walk. But they’d better bundle up first.”

I'm Watching You Dad

March 26, 2009 by  
Filed under Fatherhood

I thought that this video went well as a “part 2” to my last post. 

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0MMEwl9dCt8]

Man up!

Things You Don't Say to Your Wife

March 23, 2009 by  
Filed under Blog

I thought I’d take it funny today.  Make sure you heed these words.  Tim Hawkins… clean, funny comedian.  Check him out HERE.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iK2OakMoW_c]

Man up!

7 Days of Virtue; Day 2 – Justice

March 11, 2009 by  
Filed under Virtue

 Justice

 

Think of virtues like your muscles.  You work your muscles out so that they can perform for you when needed.  Virtue is the same way.  You practice, work on the virtue and then, when the time comes, the virtue is there and ready.

Day 2 of the 7 Day Journey through the Virtues: DAY 2 – JUSTICE.

Justice is the good due to others.  This removes the emphasis from self and places the emphasis on others.  Overemphasis on rights misses the concept of justice.   There are seven sub-virtues of Justice:

  1. Honor – recognizing the worth (value) of something.  In ancient times, if something was weighty, it was valued (ie: gold).  In ancient Greece, dishonor was symbolized by mist or steam.
  2. Religion – a head virtue.  Habitually honoring and praising God in all we do.
  3. Piety – Honor and Service.  Honor through obedience and respect.
  4. Observance – honoring our leaders/those in positions of authority over us.  Observing the office they hold.
  5. Gratitude – honoring our benefactors.  St. Thomas Aquinas suggested that we 1. Recognize the favor 2. Express thanks 3. Repay the favor.
  6. Kindness – intending comfort/pleasure for those around you.  Anticipating others’ needs, habitually.
  7. Truth – our words and deeds correspond to reality.  We owe reality to one another. 

Practically, I am a justice-seeker, meaning that if I see someone who is not receiving “the good due to them”, I tend to step in and make it right.  I’ve done this since I was a kid – if I saw someone bullying someone, I stepped in and forced the bully to respond to me.  (Most often, the bullying stopped.)  Knowing this, regularly for me, seeking justice can easily overlap with anger, which is dangerous.  We want to afford people with the ability to receive the good that is due to them, yet we must be careful of how we go about that.  Use the virtue of prudence to know when to purposefully seek justice and when to not step in.

Man up!

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