Tapestry Podcast AM Service
Date | 8-24-2008
Speaker | Matt Rudolph
Title | Sunday AM Sermon
This is the morning service when Matt Rudolph spoke on Sunday, August 24, 2008.
Is This What You Are Looking For?
Tapestry Podcast AM Service
Date | 8-24-2008
Speaker | Matt Rudolph
Title | Sunday AM Sermon
This is the morning service when Matt Rudolph spoke on Sunday, August 24, 2008.
Tapestry Podcast AM Announcements
Date | 8-24-2008
Speaker | pd
Title | Sunday AM Announcements
We don’t normally include announcements, however, this set includes a prophetic story that pd shares from his trip to Williamsburg, VA the weekend before!
Tapestry Podcast PM Service
Date | 8-3-2008
Speaker | Tony Dillon
Title | Sunday PM Sermon
This is the evening service when Tony Dillon spoke on Sunday, August 3, 2008.
Tapestry Podcast AM Service
Date | 8-3-2008
Speaker | David Dirroll
Title | Sunday AM Sermon
This is the morning service when David Dirroll spoke on Sunday, August 3, 2008.
Hey everyone!
We need your help. The Tapestry Church’s Reserve has been selected for
an amazing fundraiser. Squidoo web site will donate $2 for EVERY VOTE
you give us!!!!!
So go to this link http://www.squidoo.com/squidoo-charity-giveaway and
choose ‘”Tapestry Reserve” and we get a chunk of money. This really
works because Squidoo has been sending us sponsorship for the last year.
SO GO NOW!!!!
Blessings!
pd
Dustin Hedrick
the Tapestry Church and Reserve
Hey Charity Partner!
*wave*
Most of you know Squidoo as that place where lensmasters can make money
for their favorite charity. Right now, we’re doing something super
special where your supporters don’t even have to make a lens to support
you. That’s right. A simple click of the mouse can get you a chunk of
$80,000.
Here’s how it works: we’ve been saving 5% of our total income since we
got started. It’s part of our mission to do so, and now we’re asking for
your help in giving some of it away. All you need to do is go to
http://www.squidoo.com/squidoo-charity-giveaway and click on the charity
of your choice. For each vote a charity gets, we’ll donate $2 up to
$80,000 or through October 15th.
No joke, no gimmick. Just a few quick rules:
1. Feel free to invite as many people as you can to vote.
2. It’s entirely possible that one non-profit could get the lion’s share
of the donations. It’s all up to you.
3. Yes, it’s ok to blog about this. In fact, tell everyone. Think
website announcement, email list, press releases, etc. The more word
you get out, the more potential donations you’ll receive.
4. Of course, we hope you’ll still encourage your friends and volunteers
to sign up with Squidoo and make a few lenses. After all, 5% of what
they earn will continue to go towards helpful causes, and you’ll receive
a passive stream of donations month in and month out.
(And just for the record, everyone gets one vote only. We’ll delete
votes from duplicate accounts, and block the accounts.)
Don’t delay! Remember, this only runs through the first 40,000 votes or
October 15th. And while you’re there, be sure to get in on our debate
about the future of fundraising online.
http://www.squidoo.com/squidoo-charity-giveaway
Make it an awesome week!
~Kimberly
Your Community and Charity Organizer on Squidoo
http://www.squidoo.com
Friday night DC lights October 3 8:00 pm- You must RSVP for this event.
This Friday night event will be in DC.
We will be touring the monuments this Friday night. It’s beautiful, beautiful at night, quiet and calm. Meet around 200 Constitution Ave corner of 3rd and Constitution Ave NW at 8:00pm, you should not have a problem street parking. We need everyone to be on time to this event so we don’t freeze waiting for you. To RSVP email Su at su@tapestrychurch.org or 703-989-1931.
Butlers Orchard- October 4
We will meet at 11:30 in front of the hay rides and hang out till 2:00 but you are always welcome to stay longer.It is $10 a person and that includes the hayrides, straw maze, wildcat run slide, tube slide, rubber ducky derby, pumpkin coach, jump in the hayloft, visits to the barnyard buddies, pumpkinland, twisted pumpkin corn maze, pedal tractors and the inflatable farm train. 22200 Davis Mill Road Germantown, MD 20876 301.972.3299
for more info contact lori hedrick at lorihedrick@tapestrychurch.org or 301-529-8164
“An adventure is only an inconvenience rightly considered.”
–G.K. Chesterton
Good News of the Day:
There’s an unusual park in Berkeley, California. Looking at it, “playground” probably wouldn’t be your first thought. “Junkyard” is more like it. And well, that would be accurate. Berkeley’s Adventure Playground is one of a handful of playgrounds in the United States based on a concept that grew in popularity after World War II. During the Nazi occupation of Denmark, the landscape architect C. Th. Sorensen created a new playground with whatever junk was available. It turned out, that’s exactly what kids like.There is no equipment, as such, in the park. Instead, kids are confronted with boards, spare tires, telephone poles, and lots and lots of mud. [ more ]
Be The Change:
The next time you encounter an inconvenience try approaching it in the spirit of adventure.
My Thoughts:
I wonder if what is largely wrong with our world right now amidst market woes and bailout fears is that we have gotten so focused on the here and now that we are missing out on the future and later. It’s amazing to me that many times I miss the bigger picture trying to focus on the minute points. Have you ever looked at a comic strip in a newspaper from very close to your face? Have you seen the small pixels of ink and dots in the print? If you look at it from too close, you will not be able to see the larger picture because your eyes are focusing simply on the dots. Maybe our present circumstance is due to the same issue.
Maybe if we pull back from the issue and allow space, time and perspective, we will SEE again!
I have a handful of ways that we can make ourselves change perspective and I plan to share them here. So, with that said, see what you think…
1 – Instead of watching and listening so much to the media and reading their reviews and go outside for a moment and notice the chill in the night air as we enter the Fall.
2 – Take a walk, holding the hand of the one you love.
3 – Think of ten things that you are thankful for this year.
4 – Realize that the only ones that have your BEST interests are those that love you deeply. And at this point of insanity, TRUST THEM.
5 – Turn of the TV tonight and take a moment looking face to face with those around you.
6 – Fight the desire to act rashly and out of sorts. The next time you feel pressed, take a deep breath.
7 – Take your trip home a little slower today and be sure to LOOK UP at the trees and leaves. Take memory pictures. Make snapshots that will last in your mind for the long-haul.
8 – Do something for someone else and keep your eyes open for opportunities like opening the door and smiling.
9 – LAUGH – Find something to laugh about. IT WILL LENGTHEN YOUR LIFE! And longeveity is of the essence since we all might have to live a little longer before we comfortably retire… LOL
10 – Invest in long-lasting commodities…
I think it’s time for us to start investing in peace, kindness, trust and love. These seem to me to be the ONLY commodities that are endless and readily available to all.
With that said, enjoy the weekend and enjoy the day. And I guess, my last encouragement of the day is for all of us to have a little imagination and hope. At the very least when the day is finished, you are still alive and sharing breath with the rest of humanity and really, no matter what anyone thinks, we are IN THIS TOGETHER for better or worse, we all are sharing this present era.
“You cannot depend on your eyes when
your imagination is out of focus.”
— Mark Twain
Adjust those imaginations. Tomorrow will come. And when it does, it comes knocking at our door with inconveniences that are adventures in disguise. Adjust your focus so that you can see it!
Have a great weekend and next week!
pd
Dustin Hedrick
Bringing you the stories, videos, mp3's, podcasts, blog entries, creations, pictures, journals, thoughts and adventures the infamous pd.
Thought of the Week 9-12-2008
People who optimize their personal capital can change their world. People who optimize their social capital can change the world.
– Mike Cope
Fact of the Day:
“The one thing I’ve consistently seen entrepreneurs do that has significant measurable impact on everything they do — more than any other factor — is manage their relationships and manage their social capital. Folks that do that really well are bound to find some measure of success in some area of their life. It may not be the course they set initially, but there’s invariably some positive that comes from it. So I’ve made it point throughout my own endeavors to continue to find ways to improve my own ability to manage and maintain relationships and to learn from others.” This Fast Company interview shares more insights on social capital from tech observer and prominent entrepreneur, Eric Litman. [ more ]
Be The Change:
This site offers a list of 100 things you can do to build social capital. [ more ]
Dustin’s Thoughts:
I really like this idea. I found it in one of my emails from Charity Focus online. I like taking time to take stock of people. I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but our world has become VERY detached and unconnected. I just read an article that my wife has written on the way our world has become almost anti-social in the way we are able to disconnect from the people that are right beside us at a table, a red-light or even right next door in our neighborhood. And although I like this concept, I want to take one moment to caution us not to simply see people as Capital that can be sold, traded or invested. People are worth MUCH MORE THAN GOLD! And that’s saying a lot in our present market.
I challenge us to learn to communicate well, learn to listen well and learn to be open, transparent and relevant. I believe we can never underestimate just how much wholesome interaction and communication is worth in an organization, organism and/or team. It was Hemingway who said, “When people talk, listen completely. Most people never listen.”
It’s time to listen. It’s time to hear. It’s time to make sure that we are connecting with every person around us and if we approach this whole activity with the other’s best interests in mind, then, yes, let’s keep tally of social capital.
There’s one last point I would like to make on this topic. And that is this:
“The more elaborate our means of
communication, the less we communicate.”
— Joseph Priestley: was an 18th-century British theologian, natural philosopher, and political theorist
The more elaborate our communication, the less likely we will have actual relevant communication. Email, cell phones and Facebook are GREAT means to communicate, but for all of their ability to enhance our conversations, they can be just as much the culprits of divisiveness as gossip, slander or back-biting. It seems I am always the victim of the email system that crashes, the voicemail that is lost and the Facebook entries that mis-posted due to an upgrade in the system. Often-times people think that my not responding to their communication is due to my lack of interest or is a commentary on our friendship; however, the truth is that it is ONLY the result of technology gone wrong! We cannot trust these means of communication altogether to replace meaningful contact and face to face interaction. Seriously, I have said it before and I will say it again. Computers don’t hug after everything is said and done…
Sometimes the best ways to communicate are those face to face, simple, and authentic on purpose conversations you can only have when you take the time to do have them. (I actually spell CARE = “T.I.M.E.”). It’s time that shows me that a person really cares. TIME is the only truly limited human commodity in our world.
And don’t forget, when we converse, what we don’t say sometimes speaks louder than what we DO say. So, let’s be careful to listen, put ourselves in another’s shoes, be a friend, be a cohort, experience other’s lives with them, be open and allow others to explore our own lives, not hiding behind masks of pretense and fake courage.
If you do this, I promise that this is only the beginning of an amazing journey I call community!
I believe right now, there are more people in America than there has ever been that need friends. And inside of this idea of friendships, relationships, community, networking, communication and care is where we find TRUE social capital!
Well, it’s just a thought…
Have a great week!
dh
Dustin Hedrick
A great page with apps for Firefox that work with Facebook