Monday, May 21, 2007

a comment....



Here is a recent comment I left on the deep church blog:

It is interesting that i just heard a pod/net cast from Wired parish of an interview with Peter Rollins (his blog is here)(northern Ireland) author of the new book, “How (not) To Speak Of God”. And in the podcast he talks about being in Geneva last year at some square in the city. At one end of the square there is this great church…the church of St. Peter: a symbol of the institution, creeds, doctrine, and tradition of Christianity. But on the other side of the square was a statue of Jeremiah who was turning away from the church in shame and disgust……and when one stands in the center of the square, one must ask yourself, “whom do I run too?”


It is in this center that we find ourselves in as pilgrims in this current age.

This is why I find myself drawn to deep church. It is wiling to not just stand in the center, but passionate about living there, growing there, and encouraging the universal church to struggle in that place.


Any thoughts?

Sunday, May 20, 2007

I love Halo 3!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! woo hoo!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Holy cow this game is fun...not the best graphics I have seen on the Xbox 360 (better than Halo 2, but not as good as Gears of War), but I promise you that the fun factor makes up for it... here are a few shots:







Click on the images to enlarge them. (if the link does not work then just go to Bungie.net for movies and pics.)

Oh and here is a wonderful case to support:

Shane Bernier has a wish! Please help him make it true!

Saturday, May 19, 2007

great quote from a friend....

Leave it to a kid to say something funny without meaning to. I recently brought my son along with me to help a friend do some moving, afterwards we stopped for a bite to eat. As we were eating my son notices a man with dreds a little past the shoulders a and a close trimmed beard and says “Look it’s Jesus, to save our lives on DVD and VHS.”


I love it! want to read more form my friend (Matt)...he has a good blog here.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

A beautiful life remembered..... Melissa Mansfield:

KY Sunrise early

One of my best friends in Seminary (at least one of my friends that I look up to the most was and still is Aaron Mansfield. He is by far the one I turn to if I have a question about Leviticus, and he reminds me so much of my Good-Old-Boy West Texas kind-of-guy-great-friend. Well, his wife passed away yesterday...a beautiful woman inside and out. She was an inspiration to me, because he too like my brother Jay had cancer, and yet it looked like she was going to kick it's ass....but I think the chemo (just like my brother) got the best of her body. I just read the first of many posts by Aaron as he takes the long never ending journey of life living after one has crossed the thin space into "actual" reality and presence with Christ. I read it and of course I cried, because I hear the echos of jay in his grief, and passionate love of God and his wife. It is personal, and it is hard..but it is life, and life well living... And I wanted to share his heart with you in the hopes that you to will be blessed so that you in turn can take your blessing from the memories and life of Melissa and bless this world... for we are here only for but a short time. God bless you all...and God bless you Aaron.

(please pray for Aaron, and their two children little Joseph and John) God bless you and KUTPs!!!

Here is Aaron's letter:

Hey folks, I'll put this on the blog, I guess, but maybe some people don't get there, and this will be easy enough to froward. Please pass it on to anyone you think would want to know.

On Saturday, we saw the first signs of a problem. Didn’t know it was a problem. She had received an injection in the back of her arm that morning. Later that evening, it started bleeding and it took a while to get it stopped. Not a huge amount of blood, but a steady flow from a pin-prick hole. I thought, “Well, her platelets must be really low.”

Got it stopped, no more problem. She went to the clinic for her usual visit Sunday. We knew her liver numbers weren’t great. But when she got there, they were worse and with the bleeding, they admitted her.

Apparently, your liver has a huge role to play in clotting, and even if your platelets are good, if the liver is not helping, you’re in trouble. I stayed with her Sunday night. We watched The Big Lebowski on tv. We saw it for the first time Friday night, and were laughing that it was on again.

She was weak Monday morning. I went on to the church. Came back, got the boys settled, returned to the hospital about 7:30 or so. Connie (Sissy’s mom) told me she was not so good. And she wasn’t. But, I thought, she’ll get past it. She always did. I had seen her weaker.

She had liver problems right after the transplant. She did not look as bad as then. Her eyes were a little yellow, but not bad.

Through the night, she’d get up and I’d help her to the bathroom. She was still getting up, still strong enough to get up and walk. We didn’t talk much—I was tired, she was, too, and I had no clue how things were.

Her levels of different things were spiking up and they tried to get them down. Some of the clotting numbers were improving. Then at 5 a.m. or so, she started bleeding massively—her heart rate went sky high, blood pressure dropped. The crash team came in and after about 40 minutes got things under control, but Sissy was never really responsive much after that. You could call to her, and she’d look at you. I told her I loved her. Melissa’s parents came in as soon as her nurse told me she was doing bad, and they needed to be called. We had to make decisions—she might need to be on a ventilator.

We knew from long before she ever got sick she didn’t want that. And thru this all she told me that if it got to the point where she was fading, let her go. She stabilized. Dr. Geoff Herzig won’t give up, and he felt like if she could get her past this, the liver would regenerate and we’d be back where we were, a positive place where she was doing good in recovery. But by noon, it was clear that was not working. We could give her blood, blood products, clotting drugs and all it would do was work a little. The liver just didn’t have anything else in it. Her kidneys did not seem to be functioning.

So I had to say things I never thought I would. I broke my own heart and said, let’s let her go.

I left about an hour after that to go get the boys. To tell them something. To take them to be with my parents and brother who had come in. I knew that Sissy might not last until I got back. But I also knew she would want the boys taken care of. I knew her love for them is what would send me. My goodness, what love she gave to us, that even in the most desperate moment in my life, when all I wanted to do was stay with her, to watch her, to touch her, to speak to her, I knew I could leave because she loved those boys. And there has never been anything left unsaid between us. There was nothing more to say to her that she had not know long before she ever got sick.

My brother drove me to the house. Got clothes for the boys, got them from school. I told them that Mommy was really sick, that her liver was not working, and when that happens, people don’t live. John fell into me and Joseph jumped around like he head not heard and then snuggled with Nathan. As I had been told, they would hear it and then move on, trying to deny it. We sat around loving on them, then took them to Dairy Queen. Dropped them off at the hotel with my parents.

The boys were so glad to see them. It was a great distraction, a great aid for them to be with family, where the grief would not be so open and raw all the time.

My dad drove me to the hospital. When I came onto the unit, one of the nurses, Shellie, came and got me and rushed me back. I stepped into the door way and Sissy stopped breathing. Y’all, she waited for me to come back. She knew I had that darn squeaky left shoe. Could hear it coming down whatever hall I walked. I prayed over her. And then there was so much crying. My dad held me like he has never had to in probably 30 years. “I wish I didn’t love her so much.” He said, “no greater love…” a reference to his favorite verse. Jesus laid down his life that we might live.

But now let me tell you about what I am calling “Melissa’s Holy Week.”

I think she knew something was up. I am not sure she knew she would die. But I think she knew that she might have something going on she would not recover from. So it was time to hang out. Monday, she had the best day ever, as she said. We left the clinic, ate at Skyline, got the boys. She did not want to go home and sit or sleep. So we all went back to town, dropped off her handicapped parking permit, went and got some periwinkles. We came back and planted them, me and the boys, while she sat in the garage and watched. We had a picnic outside.

Maybe that day she really did feel good. She wanted to hang out with us. Periwinkles—a chemo drug Melissa took is made from African perwinkles. They are my favorite annual flower, I guess. And now, like all things, they are freighted with memory.

Tuesday, she hung out with her mom. Wednesday I think, she drove around with her dad, more energy, doing more things. I think she knew she had to soak up some time.

Friday was the last good day. I took her home from the clinic, we got the boys, planted what was left to plant while she sat in the garage.

There was nothing but patience with the boys, where I was a little impatient. Then she wanted to watch the boys ride their bikes at the school down the road, something she had not done yet. She was really quiet as she watched them, and me. I should have known.

We had another picnic. She told me, “I am glad you like to be outside.” She knows this is important to the boys. I think she was telling me, as she had in a million other ways, even literally, “You’re a good Daddy, and thank you.” Dummy me, I said, “When you get better, maybe we can adopt some kids,” because all we wanted was a lot of kids.

Connie bought her some new clothes, and we see now that Melissa looked at her with a look that said, “Why buy these now?”

What a good week it was. She spent her time with us. She didn’t say how she was feeling. A mother and a wife to the end—her love for us spent time with us. She took care of us to the end.

I married Melissa because: we were good friends; she was the most beautiful woman; she was funny; she accepted me for who I was; when we held each other, all was right in the world; I knew she would be a good mother; she loved Jesus; I knew she would stand beside me.

Melissa and I were submitted to each other before we knew of the biblical doctrine of submission, that each would seek the other’s good before his/her own.

She was never more beautiful than when she had her babies. She loved them more than anyone could. They know it, and it’s our task that they remember it. That’s what she told her mom when she came out of the hospital in June after the transplant. “If I don’t make it through this, you have to tell them how much I loved them, how hard I fought for them.” Do this in remembrance of me.

I am as heartbroken and beat down as I have ever been. But I have peace. I can’t explain this power of Jesus. It’s not only that I know her faith, her trust, and how it grew these two years. She is a model of grace under pressure, of the power of faith in Christ in times when it’s easiest to give up, to ask where is this God everyone keeps talking about. My peace also comes from knowing that if her love sustains me now, to the point I could go to the boys, not knowing if she would die before I returned, how much will Christ’s love sustain us?

Y’all, I am beat down. Crushed. There are no words for my grief. But there are no words for my peace. He lives. She lives in Him. John and Joe have kept saying that they know she is with Jesus and one day they will see her again. “Jesus has better food even than Mammaw.”

But Melissa might beg to differ.

During the day, I read her favorite Scriptures to her. Revelation 5, esp 5:8. Matthew 11:28-30. Psalm 62. Then some others. John 12, the seed that dies to produce fruit. 1 Corinthians 15 on the resurrection and the resurrection body. Philippians 1, because she says she wins either way—she got that from Ann Orr, when Ann was dying of cancer.

Remember us, especially my boys. It’s a long road. One that will need light on the path. I’ll need wisdom and discernment to discover how I live now, how I continue in my calling. There was a time in the desperate days before and right after transplant when I said, “Maybe I should quit and take a regular job where the time demands are not as great or at least not as demanding in times when you could spend it wit you or the boys?” Or when we talked about what might happen if she

died: “Do I quit for a while, find a regular job, something where I can take care of the boys in the best way?” She had a quick answer, “You wouldn’t be happy doing that.” She always supported me in everything.

Always will.

Let me tell you one of those stories you hear, a strange moment. I was coming back from my parents’ hotel, going back to Waddy to be with my in-laws, make arrangements, etc. I turned on our (the four of us) favorite tape, Jars of Clay’s Redemption Songs. I like, “God Will Lift Up Your Head.” John likes “On Jordan’s Stormy Banks I Stand.” Joe’s favorite is “It is Well With My Soul.” Sissy’s favorite is “I’ll Fly Away.” I turned it on in the car. I said, “Sissy, I am playing your song.” Then I did what I too often do: start talking too much, analyzing, thinking out loud. Do they hear what’s going on down here?

Do they care up in heaven about this miserable place? I was wondering, “What would Aquinas or Chrysostom say?” Then I heard clear as day, “Be quiet and let me listen!” How many times has she said that? I’m a ranter and raver, a think-out-louder, and so many times she would just ask me to be quiet for a spell. Or, one night when she could not sleep she said, “Tell me about Pol Pot” (because I know just about everything there is to know about Pol Pot…) and she went out.

I looked over in the passenger seat, a seat she sat in all the time, we would hold hands all the time. And it was empty. But my heart is full of love for her and her love for me. Folks, it’s like I get a clearer picture of the gospel: the disciples (loved ones) don’t quite get it, that the end is coming. Jesus spends some real time with them, even tho He always had anyway. Some last words, some powerful love. He dies. Then we go about keeping the memory alive. Keeping the love and the power of the love alive.

One day, things will recede. I won’t be constantly heartbroken. The devotion to her memory will not be as fierce. But it will be there, I pray, a constant source of strength. She loved me, the boys, her family, like no one else. I floated around constantly, did whatever, had confidence in all things because I knew simply that at the end of the day, no matter what, I could go home to love.

I suppose I will say a lot more. It’s how I process things, I guess.

And more: I want you to know her.

You can read Aaron's blog here:
www.p-over-g.blogspot.com

Here are the arrangements if you live near Lexington, KY:

Visitation will be at Shannon Funeral Home in Shelbyville, Friday from 3-9.

Funeral Service will be Saturday at First United Methodist in Lexington, Ky at 1 p.m.

Burial will follow in Bagdad, KY.




Sunday, May 13, 2007

Happy Mother's Day!!!

Well, Tiffany and I made it though this special day again.... it is usually very hard for us, because we want Babies so bad, and yet no luck in the 7 years of trying, but every now and then God just gives you a blessing and lets you know that even though life might not look like or feel like the way you desire it to be, he still loves you like a mother and lets you know everything is OK, and The Kingdom is in working order. Thank you God, and we love you too, Happy Mother's Day everyone!

Mother's Day

The front door of our church has fake flower wreaths hung on them with suction cups. And the main office door one bird decided to build her nest on the top of that wreath, no matter how many times a day people open and close the door. Well, today we noticed at least three baby birds in that nest all trying to sty warm and begging for food, I had to try to get a blind picture of it. So this was the best shot I got... Happy Mother's Day!

BTW: there are several pictures I have posted as of late...go check them out @ D.G.'s Flickr photos.

What is that you did not know that I put up new photos? Well, get on my Jaiku lifefeed and find out what is going on in my life.

Saturday, May 12, 2007

"Church" verses/and/or/both/ "Kingdom"

Well, Ken a very good friend (and fellow pastor) of mine left a comment to the last blog post just talking about the emphasis of the "emerging" church (by the way: I really desire to focus on "emerging" and not "emergent"...there is a difference and it sounds more and more to me that even the "emergent" people and using the term "emerging" because of some of the negative connotations of "emergent"...that is a whole other post...but anyway.. I wanted to put Ken's comment to the last post up and since my response was getting too long, I decided to make it another blog post here instead...so here goes:

this is Ken's comment to the last post (below):

"D.G., not having read the book, my comments are more about the whole "emergent" movement and are probably a bit out of context with your post -- BUT... With regards to point #1, I think that is my biggest issue with some of the writers/leaders of the emergent movement. Regardless of how the established Church (or denominations) have or still do miss the point -- the Church was God's idea. I don't think that just means some loose confederacy of people who make vaguely the same confession about Jesus Christ and then just stop worrying about the rest of orthodox belief. I believe that the organized Church is a vehicle of Christian community, of orthodox truth rooted in Scripture and Christian conversation, of commissioning and equipping people's calls to ministry, and of engaging the world in corporate mission and witness. I also believe that right belief is critical to right action!

I've been reading a book called "Evangelicals on the Canterbury Trail" by Robert Webber and another called "Working the Angles..." by Peterson. I think both of those books offer a healthy counterbalance to the McManus, Easum, McClaren, Sweet etc. crowd. ~Ken"
(I added some links to the books you suggested) (oh and here is another post talking about the Peterson book from a friend of mine Todd)
And here is my response:

Awesome Ken! Now I will have to add two more books to the shelf that I will never get to read, heh. But I see your point and that is kind of what this book (and you will find out in the next posts) is dealing with,and says that we need to stop thinking about emerging church, and see that the emerging church is just another expression of a larger deep church. Thanks for reading and please keep up the discussion..... but here is my thoughts to your point....

I do not think that "emerging" movement is doing away with the church....it is just putting it's focus on Kingdom...and not church...they realize that the church is a part of the Kingdom, but not vice versa. And when you realize that the kingdom should be the main focus, then you realize that the church is not the end, but it is a means with-in the Kingdom to be (all the things you listed: "a vehicle of Christian community, of orthodox truth rooted in Scripture and Christian conversation, of commissioning and equipping people's calls to ministry, and of engaging the world in corporate mission and witness"

And when Kingdom language is used it does promote a larger sense of the place of the church in the kingdom..and in my mind promotes more of an understanding of living missional in this world.

As a (loose) quote from Reggie McNeal says, "Christ did not say that he came to bring church and to bring it in abundance, he said 'life'...people do not wake up in the world and think to themselves, "man I need more church"', ha ha ha... Christ came to bring life in the world...and the church is not the end result of being in the kingdom, it is a life lived in relationship with allowing Christ to be your king. Now sure we all need support, equipping, encouraging, being help to our full potential, and that is the place and role of the church, but the church is in existence to take us to the next "place/level" in the Kingdom. The church is not the desired location for the end of the journey, it is just the airport hub (image from Reggie again) to help us get from here(our current faith/depth of relationship with Christ) to there (a deeper relationship with Christ that is missional at the very core of our being....i.e. Wesley would call it, entire sanctification)

But with all of that said, I do think that we are all saying the same thing, but putting the emphasis on a different terminology.

ALSO, Ken seriously keep reading the posts I put up from this book,because they are proposing that we should be seeing much larger in these regards (i.e. I read Kingdom mindedness) and think of the church in a much larger context, and they call it "deep church" (including all of church history, and high church, and house churches)...so anyway... anyone else want to add to the conversation?

Hey you! Jump on in! The friendship is warm and the discussion deep, welcome to growth! KUTPs!!!

Wednesday, May 09, 2007

emering church/deep church...



Yes, it is one of those rare occasions that I actually talk a little bit about my passions in my profession here on my blog. But I have been reading a book as of late, and I would love some more thoughts and insights with those of you who actually read this blog and are a colleague or one who cares about the Kingdom, church, Christianity, people, world, etc.... so here goes..

I was reading Jason Clark's blog I first ran into Jason when Markus and I went to the Off The Map conference in Seattle. He is a great man, passionate and authentic and truly echoes with my soul, when it comes to "deep church". The blog post I read was this one...and so of course I decided to order, Remembering our Future: Explorations in Deep Church (a UK only book and pay an arm and a leg in shipping but it is very worth it.

And so of course, I read the same chapter Jason was talking about that he read, "Beyond the Emerging Church?" by Luke Bretherton.

and here are some of my thoughts (and BTW, no I am no where near finishing this book, and like good books I need to really digest them and re=read them if necessary, so don't just now ask to borrow it, heh)

Bretherton uses the 9 core emphases with in the emerging church found in Gibbs and Bolger's book, Emerging Churches: Creating Christian Community in postmodern Cultures.

and they are:
1. Emphasis on Kingdom of God as apposed to "church/denomination"...(including emphasis on right practice over right belief)
2.engagement with contemporary 'secular' culture at all levels so that it is reflected in and transformed through worship.
3. Emphasising personal relationship and community over and above institutions, structure and bureaucratic forms of organization.

subsidiary emphases:

4. welcoming the stranger primarily in the form of humble openness to other faiths and the culture at large.
5. holistic service to the wider society, with an emphasis on embodied action as a gift as distinct form a consumer service or evangelistic technique.
6. participating in and taking responsibility for worship as producers rather than passive consumers
7. emphasis on art and creativity as a central part of Christian witness
8. encouraging all-member ministry and collective or team forms of leadership
9. emphasis on spiritual disciplines and liturgical practices both individually and in community.

OK wow... that was long...and maybe some of yo might like to stop there and comment...and fell free to do that because I am tired of typing...and this blog post is too long as it is right now...

OK, so do you personally see these things in your Christian community? If not do you think that it is possible to make these changes if you think they are good ones? how would it happen? do you agree or disagree with Gibbs and Bolger's 9 key emphasis of emerging churches? My critique of the rest of the article will follow...thanks for reading?

Monday, May 07, 2007

Well, I have officially joined Jaiku.com....Welcome to the life feed of D.G. Hollums....



Well, if you know me then you know that I will jump on internet application band wagons faster than you can spit...and it has happened again. lets run down the history of web apps I am a part of:

Blogger
Flickr
Myspace
Facebook
Virb
Frappr
del.icio.us
Youtube
Digg
and now.....

Jaiku!

Jaiku is basically the sum of a lot of my web stuff. It will show you every time this blog is updated, my Flickr is updated, Th3 Harbor (Th3 Waters blog) is updated, my del.icio.us tags are updated.....so....

I beg of you all to stop coming only to my blog....yeah I know sounds weird..but on Jaiku you will see when I update my blog, as well as my links, photos, videos, etc... so please change the main link for your connection to D.G. Hollums...to now be this web address:

book mark it now:

http://argon52.jaiku.com/

Thursday, May 03, 2007

Man I love this ad!!!....

This one is for you Court...and yes I agree it is one of the best ads I have ever seen:

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

The Purple People Bridge shoot....

Here are a few photos from my shoot today while Benjie (the only one that showed) and I walked across and back. Every Tuesday (around 3:30 @ The Newport Levee) I meet with a group of local pastors (yes..you are welcome to come...yes...you!) I had fun...and it was the first time since moving to the Cincy area that I got to go on it. (also, below are a few photos of Halo/Sushi, and Tiffany (woo woo!)

purple people bridge B&W

purple people P&G

washer man

More from the shoot and be seen here:
D.G.'s Flickr

And here are the two I told you about above:

reading with company

the coveted chair

=======================
Can yall tell that I am enjoying my camera? heh heh... Man I love it..and it is really fun remembering all of my college stuff.... I need to go find my college photos and scan mn to show off my mad skills when I was young and not fat, heh..... anyway... yal take care, God bless, and KUTPs!!!