Archive for July, 2009

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Today I am going to Six Flags with 54 REVOLUTION students and adults. In honor of this special day, I wanted to relive one of my favorite posts (originally posted August 19, 2008). Enjoy…

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I am writing this post from a bench at Six Flags in Arlington, TX. Today I have been hanging out here with 25 students riding rollercoasters, talking, laughing, making memories, and having a great time.

As a seasoned, veteran youth minister I have spent my fair share of time in Six Flags. During that time in the popular theme park, I have made several what I like to call “Six Flags Observations” that I would like to share with you…

1. SIX FLAGS PDA – for those of you who do not know, PDA means public displays of affection. There is not many places in the world where it is 105 degrees, people hot and sweaty everywhere, a number of unflattering smells coming from the park and people, and still you see couples all over each other. I don’t know if it is the fear of near death from the last coaster or freedom from the watchful eyes of parents, but it is ridiculous. Please don’t be one of those people. There are little kids everywhere and they do not need to see you sticking your tongue down your significant other’s throat or rubbing her mid-thigh while waiting in line.

2. GIRL THAT WEARS BIKINI TOP AS A TOP – Do I really have to say much about this one? All I can say is would you wear a bra around in public? Of course not, so please don’t at Six Flags.

3. SIX FLAGS IS A CASH-EATING MACHINE – There is not many places where you can actually sell a drink (with refills available) for $15. I am not exagerating that price. We had to park three vehicles and it seriously cost $55. A new rule Six Flags has is that you cannot put your personal belongings in the storage containers at the start of each ride. They now make you rent a personal locker for $1 each time you ride. The funny thing is that almost everything they sell you or that you win cannot fit on the rides, earning them more money. They even make the water in the drinking fountains lukewarm, so you buy more ice cold water or soda. Everything is strategically planned for you to spend more money!

4. THE GIGANTIC PRIZE – You spend $45 playing ring toss and what is your prize? A gigantic, 40 pound Tweaty bird stuffed animal. It always seems that people win that prize within the first thirty minutes of being in the park and have to lug that life-sized Scooby Doo around with them all day. What do people actually do with that prize when they get home? And for those boyfriends that thinks winning your girlfriend a life-size Taz is romantic, please stop.

5. ADULT’S WEARING CAPES – There is nothing more embarrassing than seeing an adult man or woman wearing a superman cape. Leave that one to the kids.
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What about you? Got any funny Six Flags/theme park stories or observations? I would love to laugh today.

As most of you know, I recently have joined the NORTHchurch staff in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. One of the most amazing things about working at NORTHchurch is being able to work everyday with such an amazing, Godly staff.

A few of the other guys on staff have blogs where they consistently write about life, ministry, and leadership. They are both sharp, quality communicators. I strongly encourage all the briancromer.com readers to check out their blogs. You won’t be disappointed.

Rodney Fouts, Lead Pastor, NORTHchurch – http://rodneyfouts.com/

Clint Smith, Executive Pastor, NORTHchurch – http://clintsmith10.blogspot.com/

You’re blessed when you’re at the end of your rope. With less of you there is more of God and his rule.

You’re blessed when you feel you’ve lost what is most dear to you. Only then can you be embraced by the One most dear to you.

You’re blessed when you’re content with just who you are – no more, no less. That’s the moment you find yourselves proud owners of everything that can’t be bought.

You’re blessed when you’ve worked up a good appetite for God. He’s food and drink in the best meal you’ll ever eat.

You’re blessed when you care. At the moment of being “care-full,” you find yourselves cared for.

You’re blessed when you get your inside world – your mind and heart – put right. Then you can see God in the outside world.

You’re blessed when you can show people how to cooperate instead of compete or fight. That’s when you discover who you really are, and your place in God’s family.

You’re blessed when your commitment to God provokes persecution. The persecution drives you even deeper into God’s kingdom

~ Jesus, Matthew 5:3-10 (The Message)

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How are you blessed today?

I know it has been quite a while since Sulphur Springs Workcamp 2009, but there is a story that you need to hear.

The Skit Guy were scheduled to kickoff SSWC 2009. The Skit Guys are an incredibly talented and hilarious Christian comedy duo. Simply booking the Skit Guys was a big deal because they are consistently booked (especially throughout the summer). Here’s one of my favorite videos from the Skit Guys:

Our plans changed as I got a phone call on the night before SSWC 2009 started from their manager telling me that they were having to cancel. Tragically, one of the members of the Skit Guys had a serious family issue surface that kept them from coming. Trying not to completely freak out, I started to call all my close friends in ministry trying to find some sort of quality entertainment that was available on short notice.

I decided to take a shot in the dark. Finding a contact number on myspace, I called Jared Hall at 9:30pm on the night before SSWC 2009 was to start. Jared Hall is an unbelievable Christian illusionist that I have seen multiple times at much larger venues. Unbelievably, a woman (who turned out to be Jared’s mom) picked up the phone. After I apologized for calling at such an inappropriate time, I explained the situation. It turned out that Jared (who is based out of Houston, TX) was miraculously in Dallas, TX with one free day before his next scheduled show. Having worked closely with the Skit Guys in the past, Jared accepted without hesitation. He showed up and put on an amazing show. Crisis averted.

For those of you who do not the Skit Guys or Jared Hall, you may not see how truly big of a deal this was.

A relatively small teenage event in little ole’ Sulphur Springs, TX replaced one nationally-known, consistently-booked, incredible talent with another nationally-known, consistently-booked, incredible talent within two hours the night before the event started.

That is a miracle.

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Our God is a God who saves. Our God is a God who provides. Our God is a God of the miraculous.

If God provided for Sulphur Springs Workcamp, he can and will provide for you.

Starting P90X

Posted: July 27, 2009 in Family, Life, People
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Today Heather and I started the P90X workout. For the next three months this 6-day a week workout that specializes in “muscle confusion” will be pushing our limits and kicking our tails. It is pretty hardcore. I’m pumped (and already sore)!

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Has anybody tried P90X? Thoughts?

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On Friday the New York Yankees finished their first ever HOPE (Helping Others Persevere and Excel) Week. This was an unbelievable week where the Yankees staff, players, and coaches went above and beyond by reaching out to individuals and groups. Yankees.com describes it this way…

The New York Yankees are proud to introduce the creation of HOPE Week, a unique week-long community program designed to Help Others Persevere and Excel. During HOPE Week, the Yankees will bring to light five remarkable stories of inspiration.

Each day from Monday, July 20, through Friday, July 24, Yankees players will reach out to an individual, family, or organization worthy of recognition and support. Though each day’s celebration will culminate at Yankee Stadium, outreach will often take place away from the field, to allow the Yankees to go into the community. Whenever possible, the Yankees’ goal is to personally connect with individuals in the settings of their greatest personal successes.

Some of the people the Yankees reached out to included Camp Sundown. Camp Sundown is a special retreat for those with Xeroderma Pigmentosum, or XP, a rare genetic disorder (affecting approximately 250 in the U.S. and 3,000 worldwide) that causes the body to be unable to repair cells damaged by UV light. The majority of those with XP do not live past the age of 20.

The Yankees transformed the Yankee Stadium field into an incredible carnival-like atmosphere, complete with wiffle ball games, bounce house, video games on the centerfield big screen, and magicians. Not to mention that these kids got to experience on these amazing things with some of their favorite Yankee ballplayers. The Yankees did this after a night game that was delayed three hours. The event wrapped up around 4am so that the XP kids and their families could get back before daybreak.

They also visited two special need guys at their Manhattan law firm where they sort and deliver mail, made dreams come true for a man diagnosed with ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease), practiced with a six-grader with cerebral palsy and his little league team, and visited a crowded apartment in Washington Heights where a married couple started a non-profit mentorship group to nurture leadership in children from underprivileged neighborhoods.

CHECK OUT THIS POWERFUL VIDEO OF THE YANKEES’ HOPE WEEK.

Today I am a bigger New York Yankees fan than ever before and it has nothing to do with baseball.

Whether you are a New York Yankees fan or not, you have got to admit that this is amazing. They did not just throw money at some people, problems, or organizations. They gave their time. They gave their energy. I guarantee that they changed lives.

Let’s follow their example and make a difference in someone else’s life.

This is a short video to document my first visit to the new Yankee Stadium in July 2009. Shot on my new iPhone 3GS.

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In August 2008 I brought up this topic of which social networking website is better –  facebook or myspace.

At the time, I was using both social networking websites. Trying to keep up with both websites was becoming too time-consuming and draining. To combat this problem, I first started using a passive aggressive approach – trying to stay balanced in my social networking website time or going through cycles of which website I was using more. This approach made the problems worse and morphed the two websites together – I call this the facespace stage.

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Well, I can proudly tell you that I will no longer have this debate or this social networking problem anymore. I have taken Jesus’ advice from Matthew 6 where he says, “No one can serve two masters (or social networking websites). Either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other.”

I am officially off myspace. No more friend requests from shady, barely dressed people. No more profile songs. No more trying to figure out how to write Internet code to have a cool profile. No more Tom. No more top friends.

I am proud to say that I am a 100% facebook guy now.

The words of a text I recently received from a teenager beautifully describes what I am experiencing because of this decision, “I just deleted my myspace! I’m free!

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I strongly encourage you to experience this freedom too.

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If you will, think for a few seconds on how you would answer this question: WHAT IS THE MOST OVER-USED QUESTION IN TODAY’S SOCIETY?

“Huh?” ~ no

“Paper or plastic?” ~ nah

“Do you want fries with that?” ~ nope

In my opinion the most over-used question in today’s society is “HOW ARE YOU?” That question comes in many different forms such as “How are you doing?” or “How’s life?” or “How’s it going?” Think about it, our society throws around this question so frequently. In fact, we have thrown it around so much that it has lost its meaning and its importance. 

Think about how much that question is thrown around on a daily basis.  You can walk up and down the halls of your school, your office, your local mall, and even your church and hear this question over and over again. It has become synonymous with “hello” as a common greeting but it is so much more than just a greeting. How many times have people today asked you that question? How many times have you answered it with 100% honesty? How many times has your answer been “good” or “fine” and the last words to describe your life was “good” or “fine”?

“HOW ARE YOU?” is a hugely important question. It is loaded. It requires complete honesty. It requires more time than a simple pass in a hallway.

I came to this “HOW ARE YOU?” epiphany during my college days at Lipscomb University. I loved going to school there. However, there were times in that super-friendly, Christian environment where I felt that the community of students were content with being fake. Walking around campus I would constantly get bombarded with “How are you?” from friends, classmates, acquaintances, and strangers. Often times, they would pass by before I could even give an answer. Did they truly care? Would it be an inconvenience in their lives if I answered that question honestly because they would probably have to stop right there in their tracks?

I made a decision during that time that has absolutely changed my life. I decided to never ask the question, “HOW ARE YOU?” unless I truly wanted to hear the answer. As I think about the life of Jesus, was there ever a time he asked somebody “HOW ARE YOU?” and did not really want to heave the answer? Did He ever just want to be polite and act like He was interested to just not be rude?

Is our goal as followers of Christ to simply not be rude or to be real and to really care about others?

My daily challenge to myself is this: be real, be honest, and care about people enough to give them the time of the day to answer “HOW ARE YOU?” honestly. In my experience, people are really surprised when others truly mean that question. I have to sometimes slow somebody down and say “seriously, HOW ARE YOU DOING?” just so they can let the “I always answer with a smile and a ‘fine’ or ‘good’” wall down. I have found that people are dying for somebody to simply listen to them. Often times, that question has opened the Pandora’s box of a person’s soul because they had held it in for so long.

I dare you to try it for a week and see if you life is any different. Only ask “HOW ARE YOU?” when you really mean it and when you really want to know the answer. Make sure that people you ask know that you mean it. Look them in the eyes, take an extra 5 minutes, and care. You do not have to be a pastor or have a ministerial degree to do this. 

Instead of “HOW ARE YOU?” being the most over-used question in our society, let’s make it the most life-changing question in our society.

How do people know that I love God with all my heart, soul, mind, and strength? Does my life help make the God I love and serve become more famous? How do people around me (even strangers) know that I have completely sold out, gone all in, and am following after God with a reckless abandonment?

I have been asking myself these type of questions ever since my recent trip to New York City. During this trip, I got the chance to go into a Buddhist temple and into a Muslim mosque. What I saw there floored me.

While I obviously do not see eye-to-eye in matters of faith, I greatly respect their devotion to their religion and I think Christians can learn from their day-to-day devotion and commitment.

As we were touring the Buddhist temple, I noticed one woman by herself. It was obvious that she was active in the Buddhist faith. There was no service planned. There was no organized group of people. On this normal Friday afternoon in July, this woman was bowing down in worship to her god. Many times we found her face-down in worship. Friends and family were no where to be seen and she was completely alone.

Earlier that same day, we had a chance to see a Muslim mosque. While this experience was memorable, I will remember an encounter we had later that afternoon. 

We made our way to Battery Park. This is a beautiful park in south Manhattan that is full of art, September 11 memorials, a great view of the Statue of Liberty, and a fort from the War of 1812. As we were there, we noticed a lot of people around us spontaneously bowing down. It turns out that the people bowing were of the Muslim faith and that it was time for their daily afternoon prayer. So in the middle of a busy New York City park on a normal Friday afternoon in July, these people were face-down before their god.

I was blown away.

I started to ask myself if I would be so sold out, so committed, so public with my faith.

Sure Christians have the cross necklaces, the WWJD bracelets, the trendy Christian t-shirts, the Christian fish bumper stickers, and a couple of television channels nobody watches. But that stuff is easy. You can pull off some of those things with a very low commitment to your faith. It is very easy to speak Christianese and play the part a few hours a week around the right people at the right time – that’s called playing church. It is a far different ball game to live sold out on a daily basis where anybody around you cannot help but notice how much you love God – that’s way more than t-shirts and bumper stickers.

My question to you is this…

How do people know that you are sold out and completely in love with God on a normal Friday afternoon in July?