“And in the end it’s not the years in your life that count. It’s the life in your years.” [Abraham Lincoln]
Tuesday, December 18, 2007
In a bear-ish mood
Our varsity however, is playing without one of our best players (he went home for Christmas). We were in a slug match of a game that had very big league implications & we came out on top by finishing the game on a 23-5 run. Can't ask for much more! It was an exciting "chess match" of a game as us coaches like to say.
Tonight my JV play at Cascade High School. I'm hoping for a MUCH better outcome then last night, as I think my players will be motivated tonight.
This is yet another crazy basketball week before Christmas break. We play 4 games in 5 days! absolutely crazy & makes sleep an afterthought, but I love it. If we can win out this week, we will climb back to the top of the state rankings. I love going up against challenging teams & this week offer 4 great challenges. It fires me up as a competitor because it only makes you better when you play the best!
On another note, Sara & I have just been blessed how God has provided for us. Every time we think we are not going to make it financially one month or something like that, we find out God has totally provided & it has been taken care of. It is such a blessing to trust & be carried. Humbling, yet exciting at the same time.
Well, I'm off to get things wrapped up for work before I leave for my game. I'm hoping to actually be home in time to have dinner with my wife (a novel idea, eh?)....lol
P.S. My Blazers won AGAIN last night. 8 in a row baby! Watch out, here we come!!! (& all this without the enforcer, Greg Oden) Who would have thought? If you haven't been keeping tabs on them, you REALLY should...For more info go to HERE.
Monday, December 17, 2007
To Love or Not To Love? That Is The Question!
Love.........what an interesting word. Webster defines the word "Love" from a deep internal affection for someone to having a sexual affair against your spouse. It is quite the wide variety of definitions. Yet, I've been stuck here wondering for 2 days what love is? How would I describe it? How would my friends, family, & strangers describe it? I've talked to numerous people recently that are contemplating divorce or contemplating breaking up with their significant others or something along those lines. It has brought me to many nights of frustration in the past week where my wife simply has to tell me, "Honey, why are you so upset? Our marriage is fine."
Well our marriage is fine, in fact it's doing great! Yet, I still can't get over the fact of what commitment, love, & marriage really mean! To find the answer, I went to the only person I trust 100% & that is the Big Man upstairs. I read many articles from churches & have asked many friends/family I respect their opinions on this. Many places factored into this response. I'm not saying this is 100% a right conclusion, but this is what I gather after researching:
DON'T READ UNLESS YOU WANT TO READ BIBLE & SOME "IN YOUR FACE OPINIONS"
To start I had to determine God's purpose for marriage & what it means. The earliest Biblical reference on marriage is in the first two chapters of Genesis. God created humans male and female and instructed them to populate the earth and exercise dominion over it (Genesis 1:26-31). God said marital partners were to leave their parents, be joined together and have a sexual relationship (Genesis 2:24-25). Noting that "it is not good that man should be alone" (Genesis 2:18), God gave humans the wonderful gift of marriage.
Some 2,500 years ago ancient Israel wallowed in moral decay. Its leaders were not teaching God's values (Malachi 1:6; 2:7-8). Just as today, marriages were falling apart as people selfishly sought only their own gratification. In this setting God sent the prophet Malachi to identify the Israelites' mistakes and explain what they should do to secure God's blessings again. In doing so, God revealed another purpose of marriage. What had the Israelites done wrong?"Judah has broken faith," Malachi explained under divine inspiration. "A detestable thing has been committed in Israel and in Jerusalem: Judah has desecrated the sanctuary the Lord loves, by marrying the daughter of a foreign god" (Malachi 2:11).
Many Israelite men had married women from other nations who enticed them to worship their gods rather than the true God. When some of these men decided to worship God in addition to these foreign deities, they found that He would not accept their offerings (verses 12-13). But there was more.
"You ask, 'Why?' " proclaimed the prophet. "It is because the Lord is acting as the witness between you and the wife of your youth, because you have broken faith with her, though she is your partner, the wife of your marriage covenant. Has not the Lord made them one? In flesh and spirit they are his. And why one? Because he was seeking godly offspring. So guard yourself in your spirit, and do not break faith with the wife of your youth.
" 'I hate divorce,' says the Lord God of Israel, 'and I hate a man's covering himself with violence as well as with his garment,' says the Lord Almighty. So guard yourself in your spirit, and do not break faith" (Malachi 2:14-16).
Besides paying homage to other gods, the men of Israel also sinned by breaking their marriage covenants and divorcing their wives. These actions thwarted one of God's great purposes for marriage, the development of "godly offspring" (verse 15); that is, children who accept God's values as their own. One reason God hates divorce is that it hinders such children. Instead of witnessing a successful marriage, children of divorce experience the negative effects of a failed relationship.
Divorce brings so much crappy other problems as well, from financial hardship to the scars of emotional trauma. One of the greatest fears hat I hear in our youth group or at school coaching basketball is that their parents will separate.
Because not everyone accepts or practices God's ideals for marriage, some conclude that divorce is sometimes the only answer. Jesus Christ addressed the problem of divorce by first affirming God's values as stated in Genesis and then by saying, "So then, they are no longer two but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let not man separate" (Matthew 19:4-6). Jesus was not in favor of divorce.
When pressed however, Jesus said divorce was allowed for "sexual immorality" (verse 9). Jesus' perspective was that divorce should be legal but rare. If everyone would refrain from sexual intercourse before marriage and experience it only within marriage, many divorces could be avoided. Tragically, sexual permissiveness is rampant in our society. Few couples today enter marriage as virgins and sadly, many will not remain faithful to their marriage partner.
Most people want happy marriages, but they don't want to follow God's advice on how to achieve them. The same was true in Jesus' day. Few were willing to live according to God's instructions. This is why Jesus said, "All cannot accept this saying, but only those to whom it has been given" (verse 11).
As the head of His spiritual family, God promises never to break His relationship with His people (Revelation 3:21; 21:7). He makes a covenant with them and writes His laws in their hearts (Hebrews 8:10), and promises never to forsake them (Hebrews 13:5). Just as God honors His commitments, so shouldn't we honor our marriage vows? How has a vow become so shallow?In Ephesians 5:33 Paul summed up a passage on marriage: "Nevertheless let each one of you in particular so love his own wife as himself, and let the wife see that she respects her husband." Love and respect are two simple but important principles husbands and wives can use to build sound, stable, happy marriages.
People think that love is an uncontrolled and uncontrollable emotion. They believe it just happens and that humans fall prey to this seemingly unpredictable force. We speak of "falling in love" as though it were some fortunate accident. By popular, idealized convention, love continues joyful and fun.
The apostle Paul, though, penned a different definition. "Love suffers long," he wrote (1 Corinthians 13:4). Paul's words equated loving someone with being willing to suffer for or with that person. True love, as defined in the Bible, requires a willingness to suffer patiently for or with someone for, if necessary, a lifetime. This kind of love comes by choice, not by accident. This love demonstrates an unselfish concern for another, even when showing such love grows difficult or inconvenient.
"Love suffers long and is kind," Paul continued; "love does not envy; love does not parade itself, is not puffed up; does not behave rudely, does not seek its own, is not provoked, thinks no evil; does not rejoice in iniquity, but rejoices in the truth; bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never fails" (verses 4-8). This kind of love will sustain a relationship, not just through the good times, but through the difficult and bleak times all marriages encounter.
Like love, respect implies that a choice has to be made. We can choose to respect someone for his/her positive attributes or disrespect him/her for his/her faults. As marital partners, our choice can support our relationship or help destroy it.
Many more principles could be added to a discussion of how to have a happy marriage. Most of these, however, simply demonstrate, I have found, the two great principles: love and respect.
Yes I realize I babbled there & I didn't even get into everything I read. I simply think that we need to value what we vowed before "God & man." I'm literally saddened by how I know over 5 people contemplating divorce at the moment or going through it. My prayer would simply be this: "God please burden our hearts that we might value our 3 chord marriages with you & us in one accord."Thursday, December 13, 2007
In the midst of a crazy week---------LIFE
This is my new little niece! Juniper Octavia. What an amazing thing new life is. To think how God took nothing & made such a beautiful child is astounding! Quite remarkable actually...
I am finally done with a hellish week. It's been a week where I haven't even seen Sara that much. The week brought me 3 basketball games, 8 hour bus rides, & 2am bedtimes. it was quite the week! But in the end, we came away with 3 amazing victories, & teams that are getting better. I love the emotional roller-coaster that is basketball. I love how I get so wrapped up into each game. I'm with my team through each play, regardless of the fact I don't play. It can be draining emotionally & physically, yet it is so rewarding. I wouldn't trade it for anything in the world!
Tonight has been relaxing as I got to come home after an odd day at practice & relax & watch some TV. It was nice! Sara has a Bible study, so I didn't get to see her much, but the relaxing was needed. For any of you that watched, "Are you smarter then a 5th grader?" The guy on there was an absolute idiot. The fact he graduated college & didn't know some of those answers scared me.
I think I'm going to go watch SportsCenter & hit the hay.........
Thursday, December 6, 2007
First Post.: Another Day another _______?
Work has started to go good for me. I still have yet to see a consitent influx of money, but we are staying afloat. It has taken a while for me to wrap my mind around this job. It has been a total restructuring of what I know. What I'm good at is leading. It's how I became an effective manager at my parents store. I lead, motivate, & plan better then most people I know. However, with this job there is elements of that, but it is so different. I came to the point of knowing the grocery business inside & out. I had to totally remove my brain from everything I've known & wrap it around the IT world. This job has been more difficult & challenging then I would have thought when I started out on my own, but it has been very rewarding. I feel I'm starting to get the hang of this world they call "Marketing." & YES, it is much bigger than anyone would have ever imagined...
So my days have been filled up with phone calls, hundreds of e-mails, & scouring online for potential business. Which is good. Busy = good, but the money is the real thing I'm after. (That sounds like it could be the title of a book!)
My other job, coaching basketball, has been going great! We beat the Delphian school last night in pretty emphatic fashion. My JV team put a thumpin' on their boys by 30 + as well as the Varsity. It was good coming off of a win like that as, we both got beat at the end of the game by Westside Christian on Saturday, ruining our perfect season. It's always nice to come off a tough loss with a team like Delphian waiting for you. Next up, we travel all the way to the great town of Culver on Tuesday which will get us back home LATE! Then the next night we travel all the way down to Oakland to play North Valley (a 4A school) which will get us back LATE! It will be a crazy week with 4 game on the schedule, but there's nothing I would rather be doing. I absolutely love coaching basketball. It is my passion, my love, my drive, & I love teaching kids the game. The most amazing thing, is my wife is so supportive of my coaching & my dreams. She is truly the perfect support! If I could only figure out how to get paid enough to coach full time, I'd be the happiest guy in the world. Well that leaves one solution-----College coaching here I come! =)
On another note, I'm anxiously waiting for my sister to have her baby. She is 9+ months & is supposed to have it any day. We'll see when it actually happens, but we'll all waiting for our first neice!
Well for now, that is it. I'm off to work more....