Monday, November 29, 2010

Friday, November 26, 2010

Dave Tallman and the effects of Tryptophan.

We have pictures of Dave Tallman like this going back for many years.  Good shot Chad.

Friday, November 19, 2010

Populi staff on one computer...

Adam Sentz took a pic of a bunch of us crowded around a computer in our CTO's office.  Cool.

Winter is here.

It's supposed to be in the 20s tomorrow and teens next week here in north Idaho. Should make for an interesting drive to Oregon this Thanksgiving.

Before the snow hit.

Curious George at the library.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

First Snow...

Got our first snow of the 2010-2011 winter here in north Idaho.  Zane was pretty interested.  However, once he touched it, he seemed to lose interest.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Our great hope.

Click here to get an excellent discussion of living forever.  Read it all.  It's quite good.

Having been raised in a pre-millennial Christian tradition, we saw the world as evil, everyone around us evil, and that things were only getting worse.  Jesus was going to come down in a spiritual helicopter and 'rapture' us all away from this sinful mess.  A quite pessimistic, destructive and, in my opinion, irresponsible way of looking at the world.  It only encouraged detachment, aloofness, elitism, and a  weird gnosticism

Moving to the post-millennial side of Christianity, we see a much more optimistic view of things.  The world is indeed corrupt, sin happens, but things aren't getting worse, they are getting better.  Indoor plumbing, iPhones, central heating, A/C, Christian philosophy, morals, and worldview growing from 12 Hebrew stiffs to a worldwide movement that converted an entire empire (thanks Constantine).  The post-millennial view of the kingdom of Jesus and eternal life is both responsible and creative.  It encourages engagement with the world around us and requires that we build.

Is man still inhuman to man?  Does tragedy happen?  Yes, of course.  This is not a pollyanna-like naivety.  The coming of the kingdom of Christ is an incremental, slow working of the yeast through the entire loaf.  The kingdom doesn't happen all at once.  Our microwave, want-it-now approach fits perfectly with our length of life, but is oh-so-short-sighted. But if we have a long-term view of the coming kingdom, death does seem as if it's only a nap and we raise our kids and build our communities in anticipation of the fullness and fulfillment of time, the coming of Christ.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Jack o'lanterns

Horse and 'Bama boy.

Alabama fan?

No, I'm not really a Crimson Tide fan, but I thought borrowing Gunnar's helmet might protect my brain and hep soothe my savage side.  I don't think it helped.  (Thanks for the pic, Rob... THANKS A LOT.)

Reformation day & All Saint's Eve (aka Halloween)

For Gunnar, it's "Chocowate" and wanting to be brave at the scarier houses so he can be a daddy someday too.

For Zane, it's figuring out that walking up to people's doors at night, muttering some incantation, a bowl of candy appears, grab said candy, and stuff it into one's mouth, irregardless of wrapper or covering.

For Signe, it's dressing up as a fairy princess, refusing to wear anything but the most inappropriate plastic princess high heels, and being the first to ring the doorbell (despite being held back by aforementioned shoes).

For Abby and I, it's about enjoying our kids, watching our kids enjoy the day, and remembering the saints who have gone before and thanking God for the blessings that have come to us through them.  Thank you God for giving us saints, grandparents, great-grandparents, and more, dead and gone, who passed on the living faith.

Holloway family from the Harvest Fest 2010