Friday, June 30, 2006

Food Friday: Best Italian


Local:
1. Cunetto House of Pasta (St. Louis, MO) - Reasonable prices, unbelievable food, great service...simply the best!
2. Santioni's (Jacksonville, FL) - Best for Atmosphere.
3. Alongi's (DuQuoin, IL, and now in Carbondale also) - Most excellent!
4. Luigi's (Midland, TX) - It's been a long time, but if it is still as good as it was back in '89, it's on the list.
5. Bennie's (Marion, IL) Good, cheap Italian food and more!

Franchise/Chains:
1. Olive Garden
2. Buca Di Beppo

Overrated: Macaroni Grill
Will try real soon: Maggiano's Little Italy

What are your favorites?

Thursday, June 29, 2006

Dee Brown to Utah Jazz

Dee Brown was hoping to go as high as #20 in the first round. Instead he dropped became the 16th pick of the second round (#46 overall). Fifteen guards were taken ahead of him, although some of them were forwards in college. He goes to Utah, joining his old backcourt buddy Deron Williams, who is the starting point guard for the Jazz. Prediction: Other teams will regret passing on Dee.

Friday, June 23, 2006

If I were elected President of the SBC...

...I would...

a. Show up at the press conference with those fake buck teeth in.

b. Call Class of '88 "Mr. Most Likely to Succeed" and ask what's goin' on in his life these days.

c. Inform the newly elected 2nd Vice President that his job at the convention, during all business sessions, is to make sure that all the restrooms are fully supplied, thereby ensuring that the most widely asked question of the San Antonio Convention would not be "Who was the genius that suggested we should be in San Antonio in June?" but would be "Where's Wiley?"

d. Buy a ranch out West somewhere so I can chop wood and ride horses for the media.

e. Take Bobby's old bus and beg the producers of MTV's "Pimp My Ride" to transform it...with Al Mohler's mug on the side, right beside the text "Tonight on Larry King"

f. Donate the newly pimped SBC Bus to the Southern Baptist Historical Library and Archives for posterity.

g. Get a custom equipped Boeing 747-200B and call it SBC-1.

h. Urge Hayes Wicker to really draw the theologues to San Antonio with
"Mohler/Patterson II: the Cage Match"

i. Issue a statement titled "Patterson's Left Hook: the Truth about Mohler's Supposed Cornea Surgery Before Greensboro"

j. Use my childrens' toy mallet as a gavel when people start acting childish.

k. Conclude my Introduction of whichever politician the Bush administration sends to San Antonio with these words: "And it is my great privelege to inform you that in an unprecedented display of gratitude for our Convention's unwavering loyalty to the Republican party, our next speaker just pledged to give 10% of his/her gross income to the Cooperative Program!"

l. Grant clemency to Wade Burleson.

Thursday, June 22, 2006

Why Am I Surprised?

Just when I thought I'd heard it all regarding the pragmatism and shallowness of evangelical churches in America...

A church outside of Dallas hosted a Sunday morning worship service/pep rally for the NBA Dallas Mavericks.

HT: Denny Burk

Monday, June 19, 2006

Mountain Dew in the Bible

Theological justification for my favorite drink -or, for you Left Behind fans- a prophetic prediction of the drink known as Mountain Dew:

"Like the dew of Hermon, which descendeth upon the mountains of Zion, for there Jehovah commanded the blessing, life for evermore." - Psalm 133.3

Thursday, June 15, 2006

More Thoughts Regarding the Greensboro SBC

With the election of "outsider" Frank Page:

- Progress was made in repudiating Landmarkism.

- The Cooperative Program was loudly affirmed.

- At least for the near future, uncontested races for President are history.

Other preliminary observations:

- Megachurch pastors, while still having a major influence in Convention life, have less influence than they have ever had since the conservative resurgence.

- Bloggers have emerged (don't read too much into my use of that word) as a real force. I remember some six years ago hearing Dr. Ed Stetzer say that the Internet is THE media of the people and will revolutionize the world in ways we've never dreamed of. I'm sure few of us ever dreamed the SBC would be impacted so much by blogs.

- Calvinism is spreading so fast that nearly every speaker at the Convention mentioned it. Mark Dever was nearly elected to the office of 1st Vice President.

- Young pastors in the SBC are tenaciously committed to the inerrancy, authority and sufficiency of the Bible, to the point that they are unwilling to die for traditional Baptist positions on non-essential doctrines. Examples include congegational government and total abstinence from alcoholic beverages. This, of course, creates a tension that will continue to be present for several years in SBC life.

- Expository preaching is clearly the preferred approach to preaching in the SBC. Praise God. It's the only legitimate approach for inerrancy. However, I'm not sure everyone understands what true expository preaching is, as evidenced by some of the messages presented at the Pastor's Conference and Convention.

Finally, I believe that it's well beyond time to change the name of our beloved Convention. Greensboro seemed to me to be a convention that has us headed in the right direction. Perhaps within a few years we will have a name that more accurately portrays the national and international people of God we are.

Condi the Calvinist

Condi Rice spoke to the messengers of the Southern Baptist Convention Monday morning. By all accounts, her she was very warmly received. I wonder how many applauding Condi thought through the fact she is a Calvinist. Not only is she Presbyterian, but the vision she presented for America's presence in the world springs from a Calvinistic worldview.

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Report From Greensboro

What a day for the Southern Baptist Convention!

The big news, of course, is that the non-establishment candidate, Frank Page (50.4%), also described as the "outsider", soundly defeated Ronnie Floyd (24.95%) and Jerry Sutton (24.05%) for the Presidency.

Page joins Orlando's Jim Henry as the only men to win the office over the favored candidate of the "establishment." I consider the establishment as the major figures of the conservative resurgence, including men like Paige Patterson, Jerry Vines, etc. In this case, 3 seminary presidents (Patterson, Mohler, and Akin) publicly supported Floyd, as well as Johnny Hunt (who nominated Floyd) and Jerry Vines. Interestingly, Page would not even be considered the 2nd choice of the establishment in this 3 man race. Jerry Sutton had the support of Judge Pressler, was sitting First Vice President, and was considered by many to be a more palatable choice (than Floyd) because of a more respectable CP record.

I can think of five factors that contributed to votes for Frank Page...
...1 - $CP Giving$ - the grassroots churches that make up the heart of the SBC are generally very generous to undesignated CP giving, and the messengers from these churches are increasingly dissatisfied with megachurches giving so little proportionally. Case in point: our church plant (www.pogc.net) has grown to 150 but still gave only $12,000 less to the CP than Ronnie Floyd's megachurch.
...2 - Broad Tent - Page promised to involve more people in SBC leadership; he also described a willingness to cooperate with those he theologically or methodologically disagrees with (e.g. Calvinists). Many SBC pastors feel like their views are being marginalized. Page represents those who want to continue to have a seat at the table but feel increasingly ostracized or isolated from SBC influence/participation.
Jerry Sutton did himself no favors by suggesting that the BF&M should perhaps address the glossolia issue. I know very few Southern Baptists who are ready to start getting that narrow with our confession. It also makes people wonder, who is next? Calvinists? Postmillienialists? Contemporaries?
...3 - Outsider - Playing a card that has helped thrust many Governors ("Washington Outsiders") into the White House, Page's supporters described him as outside the "good old boy" network. The word "Kingmakers" has bounced around the blogosphere to describe the tight group of successful megachurch pastors who supposedly meet together at airports to determine the policy and officers of the SBC. Being for and identifying with the underdog is almost as American as baseball, hot dogs, and apple pie.
...4 - IMB controversy/Wade Burleson - A trustee thinks that Southern Baptists need to be aware that the parameters are narrowing for SBC candidates for missionaries and soon finds himself very unwelcome at the trustee meetings. A whole lot of Southern Baptists got very ticked about this, secured their reservations for Greensboro and asked Wade for guidance. Wade responded: "Vote for Page." They did.
...5 - BLOGs - It was hard to find support on the internet for Floyd. Sutton came in too late. Frank Page won the Presidency on the blogosphere. The question was whether that would be an accurate reflection of the Convention as a whole. I had my doubts when I saw the less than impressive turnout for the Young Leaders summit and identified five prominent bloggers in attendance. Turns out they may have had more influence than anyone expected.

The other surprise development of the day was the overwhelming rejection of the WMU becoming an agency of the SBC instead of an auxilary. Here appears to be an example of the establishment saying, "Do this..." and the people saying..."We don't think so..."

There is much more to write about, but for this post, let me say I was both pleased with and frustrated with Bobby Welch's presiding over the business. He had a good stage presence and handled many incidents very well, but he is clearly a passionate man who had a hard time remaining neutral.

Hopefully, I'll post more within a couple of days...

Wednesday, June 07, 2006

I'm a Pretty Conservative Guy

Your Political Profile:
Overall: 80% Conservative, 20% Liberal
Social Issues: 75% Conservative, 25% Liberal
Personal Responsibility: 75% Conservative, 25% Liberal
Fiscal Issues: 100% Conservative, 0% Liberal
Ethics: 50% Conservative, 50% Liberal
Defense and Crime: 100% Conservative, 0% Liberal

More than Morbid Curiosity...

...is the reason I regularly go to findagrave.com....you see, it serves as my source for keeping up with national obituaries.

For example, for you sports fans, were you aware that former longtime major-league baseball umpire Eric Gregg died yesterday? Or that Craig "Ironhead' Heyward died last week?

Another fascinating feature of this unique website that I frequent probabably once or twice a month is that it allows you to know where they are buried and eventually will post pics of their gravesites.

Saturday, June 03, 2006

The Cross Still Foolishness to Some...

Christopher Hitchens is obviuosly a brilliant, articulate man. But when it comes to the cross of Jesus, he falls into the wisdom of this world camp. In a recent World magazine interview, he said that the crucifixiion of Jesus Christ "is scapegoating that absolves one of all responsibility in return for the acceptance of the incredible and the undesirable. And then with the other shoe, the other hand, says if you don't believe it, then we have a real program of torture that will go on forever. It's disgusting. It was completely invented by very underdeveloped human beings...These are peasants; the sort of people we are up against now, with wild looks in their eyes and living in caves."