• Airbnb for Youth Workers

    Airbnb for Youth Workers

    I’m a big fan of the sharing economy. Services like Airbnb, Über, Craigslist, and Stubhub directly connect people who buy stuff with people who want to develop an interest in business without having to do it full-time.

    A couple weeks back I had this little Twitter conversation with Mark Matlock, a fellow youth worker who travels a lot.

    The Genesis of an Idea

    The Idea

    That got me thinking… “You know, I bet we really could work together to set-up something similar to Airbnb?”

    If you think about it a lot of youth workers travel for a wide variety of reasons to a lot of places…

    • We go to conferences and we either need a place to stay at the conference… or I know plenty of people who drive far enough where they overnight somewhere.
    • We take students places and often need a cost-effective place to crash.
    • We get away with our leadership teams, often times borrowing space from someone in the church or finding a place on Airbnb, VRBO, or Craigslist.
    • We’re all broke… so we need to go somewhere on vacation and sometimes we just can’t afford to do it.

    And there are a lot of youth workers who have space they could make available…

    • I’ve stayed in a lot of guest rooms.
    • I know a fair number of youth workers with guest houses, cottages, or other types of vacation property.
    • Tons of churches would be open to letting other churches utilize their space for traveling youth groups for a small fee.

    So what would happen if we created a clearinghouse where these people could find one another?

    Similar to Airbnb, we could create something (either a stand-alone website or integrate into something existing) that acted as the middle-man, hosting listings, collecting money, handling payments, setting up policies, offering a level of service.

    Obviously, we’d make it so that it self-sustains and doesn’t make anyone rich… it’s just out to connect the dots and make youth workers lives easier. (Or, if you’re a host, you could use it as a way to create a little side-money which might help make your local ministry a bit more self-sustaining.)

    Is this an idea you are interested in?

    This is as far as the idea has gone. I think it’s interesting, Mark and some other folks think it’s interesting, but before anyone proceeds we’d all have to know it’s interesting to you.

    So, before I go any further, I need to know if you’d be interested in an idea like this.

    1. Leave comments below with thoughts about the idea. How can we make it better? What do you like or not like about it?
    2. Fill out the form below to show your interested. (I promise I won’t contact you for anything else, just this idea.)

    [gravityform id=”11″ name=”Airbnb for Youth Workers” title=”false” description=”false” ajax=”true”]

  • Kayaking, a New Obsession

    Kayaking, a New Obsession

    I don’t even know how to describe this obsession. Which is, I suppose, the definition of an obsession.

    As the summer began I had a tiny spark of a thought that I needed to find something fun to do that’d get me outside more. I have a personal philosophy of recreation but I had just let it lapse.

    My first thought was golf. I absolutely love golf. I grew up playing the game. I love playing… I’m actually a decent enough golfer. (Official handicap is 7, though 11 is more like it.) And, especially while we were in Michigan, it was a constant source of solace. So I started doing research on that. In Michigan I was able to get a membership at a course for under $1000 a year. (I played 5-6 times per week!) But here in San Diego there’s just not that cost-effective option, a course membership would cost me at least $500 per month! On top of that I need new clubs, so we’re really talking about something that’d be $3000 to start and $500-$1000 per month to do well.

    Yeah, too much.

    Then we went on vacation to Yosemite, where my favorite thing is to play in the Merced River. After which we went to Cayucos, where Kristen and I spent about 40% of our time either on the beach or walking the beach.

    Somewhere in there I got bit by the idea that we needed to get into kayaking here in San Diego.

    So when I got home in late-July the hunt for kayaks began. After several days of trolling Craigslist, asking a bunch of questions, watching way too many YouTube videos, we bought 2 kayaks and all the gear. (PFDs, car carriers, paddles, and everything else.)

    And since then we’ve basically tried to find any available excuse to get the kayaks out on the water.

    Fishing with Paul at Lake Murray

    Exploring caves and getting flipped by waves at La Jolla

    And pretty much any time we’ve got some free time I’m thinking… “I wonder if I can paddle….”

  • Guest post for xxxchurch.com

    Guest post for xxxchurch.com

    I’m excited to join the contributor team for the new xxxchurch.com blog. (A ministry with duel purposes. The help people struggling with pornography and they minister to individuals within the porn industry.) Here’s my first post, My Teenager is Making Porn, Uh… Now What? 

    As a parent you probably want to wring your kid’s neck, scream, or ground them for the rest of their lives. Really, those are understandable emotions for a parent to experience.

    But this is also a time to minister to your child in their brokenness, with a goal of restoration.

    [button link=”http://www.xxxchurch.com/thehaps/my-teenager-is-making-porn-uh-now-what.html”]Read the rest[/button]

    I’d love your feedback.

    Do you want more of this kind of post from me? 

  • Guest Post at the 30 Hour Famine blog

    Guest Post at the 30 Hour Famine blog

    Check out my latest guest post on the 30 Hour Famine blog, Putting It All Together for the Kingdom.

    It’s pretty cool if you think about it. For me, it’s a great reminder that we’re not serving the little kingdoms of individual organizations, we’re serving the Kingdom of God.

    Read the rest

  • The Christmas Cows Have Arrived

    The Christmas Cows Have Arrived

    Over the past couple of years I’ve visited Good Shepherd Orphanage several times. And at each visit, usually as I helped show teams of youth workers around her compound, Sister Mona has told groups about her annual Christmas party. The party is simple… they invite every kid in the neighborhood who wants to come, to come. They get a gift and a beef dinner.

    It’s no small thing. Each year the orphanage serves something like 1,000 kids in the community as well as at the orphanages other location out in the country.

    And visit after visit I heard Mona mention the cows. Earlier this summer I asked my buddy Jim at Praying Pelican Missions to track down the cow situation and find out if she had them. She didn’t, so it was time to act.

    I asked friends who have gone to Haiti with me to think about donating some money to buy Sister Mona cows for her annual Christmas party. They did. In fact, while the goal was to buy just one cow, we were able to raise enough money to buy both cows.

    All that to say that yesterday I got confirmation, by way of these photos of these handsome cattle, that the cows had been delivered.

    And thanks, Almando for all the hard work in making it happen. Apparently he’s the kind of guy you can ask “How do I get a cow delivered?” and he knows what to do.

    Seriously, way to go friends! We did it!

     

  • The Unstoppable Power of Romeo and Juliet

    The Unstoppable Power of Romeo and Juliet

    “For never was a story of more woe than this of Juliet and her Romeo.”

    You’ve read Romeo and Juliet, right? Probably as a high school freshmen. Together, we struggled past the language of William Shakespeare to discover a story that has captured the ethos of adolescence for generations.

    Some of us needed a movie to get past the language. For me, it was the 1968 Franco Zeffirelli version, complete with the famous boob scene. (When our teacher left a student got up and rewinded to that scene, showing it to our class over and over again in a way only 9th graders can truly appreciate.) For others, grasping Bill’s story came by way of the 1996 version starring Leonard DiCaprio.

    olivia-leo-romeo-and-juliet-1968-10866585-480-332

    As a fourteen year old, the story of finding love despite every obstacle thrown in their way was eye-opening. For some reason the story felt personal– transcendent even, as if I suddenly realized that I could experience love for myself– even if it meant I might have to hide it or fight for it.

    Comprehending the storyline was a transition from sheepishly looking away when the love scene happened in a movie to identifying that as something I’d like to experience for myself one day.

    Forbidden Love?

    “Two households, both alike in dignity
    In fair Verona, where we lay our scene
    From ancient grudge break to new mutiny
    Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean. 
    From forth the fatal loins of these two foes
    A pair of star-cross’d lovers take their life 
    Whose misadventured piteous overthrows
    Do with their death bury their parents’ strife.”

    As the parent of a teenager I read Romeo and Juliet in a totally different light. I realize the impossible struggle of forbidding my teenager from doing anything. Do I really think that because I’ve said no and she knows my wishes that she won’t simply put on the mask of obedience for the freedom it buys?

    “O Romeo, Romeo! Wherefore art thou Romeo? Deny thy father and refuse thy name, or if thou wilt not, be but sworn my love, and I’ll no longer be a Capulet.”

    Parenting a teenager has to shift from managing their activity, like we do in childhood, to influencing her thought life. This isn’t merely the action of culture, this is the reality that in adolescence their brains are growing and maturing from a child-like state towards an adult one. (See A Parent’s Guide to Understanding Teenage Brains) Literally, she can’t live her life doing as I say simply because I’ve said so. She needs to think about things and make decisions about who she is for herself.

    I can’t tell you how many times I’ve lead a parent meeting or done Q&A with a group of parents and one will brag, “I just tell them this is the rule and that’s that.

    This is what Marko calls “the cage” mindset of parenting a teenager. And not only does it not work, I think it’s dangerous. As a parent you think that if you’ve got your child caged off from danger that they won’t get into any trouble. But what I think is so dangerous about this is that you’re choosing to lose the war for the sake of a battle. You’re telling your teenager that you just care about their behavior, not what’s going on inside their head and heart. As far as you are concerned, your duckling is quaking and waddling the way you want… so they are fine. When, in fact, you’ve got no idea what’s going on in their lives. (Marko’s opposite of that is equally dangerous, he calls it “free range,” and is basically too much freedom.)

    Romeo and Juliet made love in her house with her parents assuming she was safely tucked away. She went to bed at 9, right? 

    My response to the comment from “the cage” is usually the same.

    “Have you read Romeo and Juliet lately? Teenagers are unstoppable when they find something worth chasing.” 

    It might be love. It might be a sport. It might be studies. It can be anything… but once your teenager has latched onto something and is chasing it, you aren’t very likely as a parent to just tell them not to do something simply because you say so.

    You can get that duck to quack but you can’t force that duck to act like a duck when you aren’t looking.

    It just doesn’t work that way, it didn’t when we were teenagers, it won’t work for your teenager, and it never has!

    What Does Romeo and Juliet Have to Do With the Gospel?

    MV5BMTM1MzM2OTY2OF5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwNzI3MDkzNw@@._V1_SX640_SY720_

    The point of raising your kids isn’t that they’ll look the part as a Christian. (Or that they don’t look at porn or not date non-Christians or that they will evidence their faith by their activity in youth group.) The difference is intrinsic. They take it and own it for themselves. But only they can do that, truly know what’s in their heart.

    Romeo and Juliet’s parents didn’t lose them because their kids didn’t know the rules. They lost them because love was a more powerful force.

    As Christian parents our responsibility is to create an environment where faith is fostered, where questions are OK, where doubts are acceptable. Ultimately– as we each know– the Gospel is an insurrection of the heart.

    When internalized its an unstoppable force.

    External motivation and forces, things that manipulate them or an emphasis on looking the part of being a Christian just don’t work because fear is a short-term motivator.

    The story of Romeo and Juliet reminds parents that that control hasn’t ever worked in parent teenagers. It’s a flawed and stupid strategy, ever popular but never functional. 

    “I would forget it fain,
    But oh, it presses to my memory,
    Like damnèd guilty deeds to sinners’ minds.”

     

  • Paddling to La Jolla Caves

    Paddling to La Jolla Caves

    Kristen, Jackson, and I had a great time paddling out to the La Jolla Caves.

    Conveniently missing from these photos is proof that I got dumped in the waves twice and Kristen & Jackson got dumped once. We’re all OK, just a great time getting wet and exploring our town!

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  • Unsolicited Advice for New MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred

    Unsolicited Advice for New MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred

    Any reader of this blog knows I’m a sports nut. I love football, basketball, soccer, golf, and just about any other sport.

    I like the idea of Major League Baseball… I’ve been to lots of MLB games, a couple years ago we even dipped our toes into buying a package of tickets at Petco.

    But I’ve since given up completely because the product of Major League Baseball lost it’s allure. I’d rather not go as opposed to find a way to go. Nostalgia only gets so much interest when the product on the field is defined by it’s boringness, worse it’s boorish attitude that it’s sense of historic value would be bothered by making the game more interesting to watch.

    Yesterday, MLB announced that Rob Manfred has been hired to replace Buddy Selig as the new commissioner of baseball.

    I think he has a tough job ahead. The NFL, NBA, and NCAA football and basketball are surging in popularity. And the rising popularity of the World Cup, 100,000 fans in Ann Arbor for a friendly, or even Sounder’s game in Seattle proves that soccer and specifically, MLS is on the rise. While it’s true soccer is a step-child to most other popular sports… don’t forget that it’s the world’s most popular game when the United States is rapidly changing demographically.

    With the least interesting part of the regular season to come, there are more teams with less than 60% of their stadium filled on an average night than there were a year ago. Plus, fewer teams have more than 90% average attendance in 2014 than in 2012 or 2013. (Don’t forget about TV. TV is down,  too.)

    So, with that in mind, I thought I’d offer a few unsolicited bits of advice for Mr. Manfred.

    1. You’ve got to speed up the game. Have you been to a game lately? Not much excitement. 95% of the game is like a middle school track meet. Too much talking, too much stretching, not enough action. You could easily shave 30 minutes off the typical game and increase the enjoyment of the live experience. A soccer player runs miles and miles each game. A baseball player trots to position and waits for something interesting to happen.
    2. De-emphasize the historical stats. Does anyone really care who is the best left-handed 3rd basemen when facing a sidearm pitcher from Canada? Of course not. It makes no difference to the outcome of the game. It’s all just time filler for a boring product on TV.
    3. Forget instant replay, you need a pitching clock. Pitchers hold the ball too long. It’s not unusual for there to be 30 seconds between pitches. Give the pitcher 10 seconds to deliver the ball to the catcher or first base. Never allow the batter to step out of the box to reset it either. If the pitcher doesn’t release the ball in 10 seconds, it’s a balk and the batter advances.
    4. Cut down the time between innings. Run a clock, give teams 2-3 minutes max. Show your commercials but keep the action moving.
    5. Loosen the strike zone. Watch the Little League World Series. With a less strict strike zone batters have to actually bat and defend the plate, making more contact with the ball and keeping the game moving.
    6. Give up the PED hoax. Let’s keep it real… PEDs have been part of baseball forever. Speeding up the game is going to keep players honest anyways. But if a guy wants to pull a Mark McGuire and put on 50 lbs of bulk in the off-season, let him. People like to see the ball fly 780 feet. And if that player wants to shrink his testicles to make that happen… well, it’s a free country, right?

    What are your ideas for making MLB more interesting? Heck, what are some things you’d do to make other boring sports more interesting to watch? Leave a comment and share your ideas. Best idea gets to own the Indians. 

    Photo credit: Fenway Park by Werner Kunz via Flickr (Creative Commons)
  • Liberty and Justice for All

    Liberty and Justice for All

    The past few weeks have been full of horror and hope for me. There have been moments where I could do nothing but turn off the news. And there have been moments where I watched the news unfold, mesmerized to do little more than watch and pray.

    Where is justice?

    The Horrors

    • In an effort to stamp out Hamas, Israel shelled it’s own people in Gaza, killing more than 1,000 civilians. This included women and children seeking shelter in United Nations facilities. It makes no sense to me. There’s no justification acceptable for it and yet our country is so afraid of Israel that they just stand by and watch. New York can’t build a wall around Jersey and then send in troops, can they?
    • An unarmed teenager was gunned down by police in Ferguson, MO. Understandably, since Saturday racial tensions have continued to mount. Mostly peaceful protests have been punctuated by some regrettable looting and rapid militarization of the local police force. The police killed an unarmed teenager and then have the audacity to blame residents for being angry and taking to the streets? (Including the illegal arrests of two members of the media and an elected official.) The police exist to serve and protect the citizens! All of a sudden it looks the state of Missouri might just wall of the city of Ferguson. What’s next? Shelling?
    • Thousands of Central American children and adolescents are detained by border patrol for illegally entering the United States. Instead of asking the question, “Why is this happening?” the news media and some elected officials in Washington act as though we’re being invaded. Famously, members of the public took the bait. Instead of responding in a humanitarian way, people showed up in Murrieta to protest children’s arrival at a detention facility. Adults. Picketed. Children!
    • ISIS, a group so extreme that Al-queda won’t claim them, exploded into Iraq and are allegedly systematically committing genocidal acts against the population. It’s been hard to verify exactly what’s happening and there are rumors of all sorts of terror. But it’s abundantly clear that there’s an emerging humanitarian crisis going on. If the rumors are true, ISIS is committing atrocities that demand a response from neighboring countries.

    All of these things stun the senses. They aren’t just news items. You can’t just flip the channel to a baseball game and move on. They are people.

    I don’t know how people of conscience, much less ministers of the Gospel, can not stop what they are doing and pay attention.

    These things are really happening. You and I have to act, somehow.

    Prayer is not enough.

    Hope

    • Last week, I had the joyous opportunity to visit the new IJM field staff in the Dominican Republic. The government there is overwhelmed with the crisis of commercially trafficked sexual exploitation (adults & minors) and is welcoming the International Justice Mission with open arms. Even a semi-trained eye can walk around tourist areas in the DR and see rampant sexual exploitation. It brings me hope to meet with passionate people who don’t cast a blind eye to injustice in front of them, but make sacrifices to stand up, seek justice, and ensure that victims experience restoration.
    • Two weeks ago I hung out with Jon Huckins, a good friend and co-founder of The Global Immersion Project. Their work started with leading experiences in Israel, taking Americans to all sides of the dispute there, hearing from leading voices in the peace process. Jon and his partner, Jer, are now taking those same lessons and helping leaders in cities throughout the U.S.. But I’m especially excited about two specific things with their work… 1. They are beginning a work helping church leaders better understand issues on the U.S./Mexico border with an immersion experience. 2. They are beginning to work with teenagers to help them understand the peacemaking process through immersion experiences.
    • This week, Marko and I are finalizing our latest collaboration which will help youth workers equip and activate teenagers in their ministry around issues of justice. We’ll be making an official announcement about it in the coming weeks, but I’m very excited about the long-term impact of this pivot within the Cartel.

    To be honest, this dichotomy is confusing. I’m angered and frustrated about the horrors going on. While at the same time this despair is back-filled with hope in the knowledge that there is a lot I can actually do.

    And I suppose that’s what the meaning of hope is, right? When all you are left with is despair, hope rises. 

    Photo credit: Golden Lady Justice by Emmanuel Huybrechts via Flickr (Creative Commons)
  • Muzzled Leaders

    Muzzled Leaders

    In 2010 Andrew Marin got himself in trouble for calling out a room full of Christian leaders. It was the best kind of trouble… black balled for saying what needed to be said.

    Here’s what he said:

    I stand silent to give dignity to a moment many Christians take for granted.

    There are only a few sacred moments in one’s life—one of them is when you know in your heart that you’ve been set apart to dare to be remarkable by doing nothing other than believing in a just and powerful God.

    The last great Roman satirical poet, Juvenal, commented about power by saying:

    “But who is to guard the guards themselves?”

    I am standing in a room with 600 gatekeepers to our faith. 600 influencers. 600 people that stand amongst and above the rest.

    Maybe you don’t feel as such in your own mind.

    But the Christian hierarchy proves different.

    Jesus said that: “wisdom will be proven right by her actions.”

    Well, our actions have only proven that ‘wisdom’ must be an elite group of predominantly white upper class individuals who care about their “Christian brands.”

    I don’t care about your Christian brand, and neither does the Lord.

    God says to Isaiah:

    “These people come near to me with their mouth and honor me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me.

    Their worship of me is made up only of rules taught by men.

    Therefore once more I will astound these people with wonder upon wonder.

    The wisdom of the wise will perish, the intelligence of the intelligent will vanish.”

    You all are the best; you are all the brightest that our faith has. And yet where are your hearts with the gay community?

    How have your tangible actions proven the Lord’s wisdom right?

    Is the culture war it too political? Too divisive? Too scary? Too unknown to stop us from changing our medium of engagement with gays and lesbians.

    In his famous speech apologizing to America after his sex scandal, Bill Clinton said:

    “This has gone on too long, cost too much and hurt too many innocent people.”

    Friends, I plead with you today that you stop being a gatekeeper and start acting like Jesus.

    Source

    Every day I’m astounded at the silence of Christians who are in leadership positions. In the face of abuses, they are silent. In the face of corruption, they are silent. In the face of social injustices, they are silent.

    Many define themselves by what they say on the platform. But I think their public silence defines them.

    It’s easy to say “I’m minding my business” or “I don’t want to risk hurting my organization.

    But the silence gives permission for atrocities to continue.

    The silence implies approval.

    The silence proves to those you are called to lead that you aren’t a leader taking them bravely where they need to go.

    The silence says you value your position more than you value your calling to serve something bigger than a job.

    You think being silent sustains your ministry because you don’t want to make enemies with powerful people when, in fact, it kills it.

    “Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.”
    – Martin Luther King, Jr.

    You have a platform, not a brand.

    Speak up.

    Your community needs you.

    Speak up. Speak out.

    Lead.

    You don’t have a brand.

    You only have Jesus.

    Lead.

    Photo credit: Microphone by Evan Forester via Flickr (Creative Commons)