Is This What You Are Looking For?

Ever had one of those days?

Ok, so I got up this morning and the church van wouldn’t start, sound system didn’t work, direct box died, battery out in a guitar, some setup people out, so I unloaded and reloaded everything and transported it all in my truck with expired tags and then after church came out, we went to leave and Lori’s car didn’t start and had to jump it. Resting now. That was tough!!!!! Did some things today that kicked it up a notch. Came home and someone took my gas can I had been using and Lori broke one of her favorite plates. Just one of those days. However, the service blew the roof off! And we had great fellowships going on in two different areas! Cannot wait to see what’s next.

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PIR & SIRI & Great Results from GOD (a brief timeline of 2005-2010)

Well, let it be known and I mean KNOWN that I am truly considering doing some serious investing now. AND that I want to give a short timeline of the last year’s investments and what GOD has done for us from 2004-2010 while we have been planting the Tapestry and working bi-vocationally.

QUICK TIMELINE:

1 – Lori and I decided NOT to buy a house in 2004 & 2005 because I sensed that the market was being inflated by speculation and that debt was creating bubbled prices. I actually began telling all my friends NOT TO BUY. (The Realtor at the time told me that we would regret not buying the house that ended up later being worth 1/2 what it was selling for that day! I told her GOD could do anything! We left that Realtor and walked away.)
2 – We totally got all of our invested money out of the market and went to cash in 2007 with all Lori and my investments. I just had a gut feeling and I had no peace to move in the market from my prayer times.
3 – We then sat on our cash until Fall 2008 after the market crashed and I began to pick up hammered down stock.
4 – We closed on a house for a 41% rebate on the price! And moved in January 9-10. (Our Realtor said we couldn’t get one that cheap, yet she was faithful through our insane bids.
5 – We went all in to the market on March 9-11 because I had a sense GOD was leading me.
6 – I picked up SIRI the night before they were to go bankrupt at ~.08 a share.
7 – I picked up PIR when it went down to ~.11 a share.
8 – I have been selling to cover my investments and making huge profits and have been reinvesting in strong, safe, companies. I set the triggers and when they hit my target prices, I sell and reinvest. I have simply prayed and moved slowly.

Due to this, Lori and I have now invested 10’s of thousands into others this year, we have helped people with debt, we have invested in ministries and non-profit work, we have given to invest in startup companies of people we mentor in order to give them a start and teach them how to become socially responsible.

And the kicker is that no matter how much we give, the LORD outgives US! We keep coming back in awe. Those thousands of shares of PIR for .11 are now worth 7.10 today!

You can check out my earlier posts here where I was sharing my steps. Just research from 2008-2009. You can see that I really did do what I am saying here. The blog time-stamped it all.

Folks, ONLY GOD does this! I am just a simple, obedient guy. And I love helping others with wise moves and tough accounting and discipleship. And this has truly given me a catch up for my retirement that I was behind on due to ministry in the church AND funds to help the world.

So, side-note, don’t contact me with your project unless you have already started it, you have it running and you are working hard on it yourself. THEN, if you have stuff to prove what you’re doing, I might be inclined to do some micro-lending (with much prayer and discipleship) and see where it takes you!

I will fill everyone in later on some of the successes we are seeing in our projects worldwide.

Just a praise today!
Blessings!
pd

PIR Stock Quote | Pier 1 Imports, Inc. Research

Pier 1 Imports, Inc. (NYSE:PIR)

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WOW! Is This Really the Truth? Tiger Woods Reveals Our Western Hubris

Say it ain’t so…

Tiger Woods: I am not perfect | the Guardian
But apology or no apology, Rubenstein believes the image of Tiger Woods the perfect husband and family man has been shattered. “I don’t think it will ever be restored.” Yet that might not prove to be as disastrous for Woods as it sounds. “It might matter to his wife,” Rubenstein said, “but most people have got used to the idea of philandering. We are not in the Victorian era.

Yet it is so. One more of our role models has fallen. And the thing that mystifies me about it all is that we have such a lack of care or remorse for the end of yet another public commitment. Have we really gotten used to the idea of “Philandering?”

Did this really happen? Have we changed so much that you wives out there really don’t care if we men act like animals? Is it really alright now to mess around on your covenant partner? And if this is the case, when did it happen? How did we get hardened? Was it when the internet made everything so accessible? Was it due to the shows we watch hardening us like “Desperate Housewives…”

I don’t know. All I know is that I do hope Tiger works it out. He really was one of my heroes. Was is the key word. Now, he is one that I pray for. I hope that family can be restored. I am so very sorry for him and I am so very sorry that this had to become such a public spectacle. It is just so tragic.

I guess the really sad thing about all of this is that this is a true signal that there has been a breaking down of the family unit. We are in an era that is a moral vacuum of sorts. I hope for the day when the “hearts of the fathers turn back to their children and the hearts of the children to the fathers.” Where a man finds his satisfaction in the bosom of the wife of his youth.

Where we can marry and grow old together. And sit outside on a porch and hold hands as we rock in rocking chairs, watching the grand-kids grow up.

I know that I am as accustomed to failure as anyone else and I am probably the chief of all sinners to tell the truth, which worries me even more with my own heart and values. I am going to covenant today again with my eyes not to look lustfully upon a woman as Job stated.

I want to grow up before I grow old.
I want to make all the important decisions right now before I am in the heat of battle.
I want to be the one my kids grow up with.
I want to be the one my family looks up to.
I want to be holy.
I want to be simple.
I want to live fully.
I want to make sure that everyone else is better able to succeed because they can see a little further due to the opportunity to stand on my shoulders.

I may have to spend some time in the public eye. If that is the case, then LORD give me the ability to stay on my knees and keep my head bowed down before you so that I won’t sin against YOU and make YOU look bad.

pd

Ever had one of those YEARS? Well, this post will encourage you…

You have to read this message if you have had the kind of month we have been having. For the last month, I have had system issues at my work which included three server failures, a RAID array crash, a virtual machine that failed and had to be rebuilt, a network scanner hard drive failure, a network switch dying, another one’s power cable dying, power failures and brown outs during all of this, my dad having surgery and not coming out of recovery well, instead going to ICU, a water pipe break the next day at my house, and other issues.

This was on the heels of 4 cell phones dying on me, two trips to Kenya, financial struggles with our International Exchange Student, Bank of America losing our loan docs, then saying that we originated the loan on 01/01/0001 and that we were overdue, then losing our escrow account all of which was after Taylor Bean & Whitaker, our original lender was overtaken by the government, a car accident that was nearly a fatal head on collision, twice being sick over exposure to toxic industrial solvents at work, then 12 family members dying.

Only to end up two weeks ago having caught possibly H1N1, recovering from that to find that Lori’s grandmother died, and we had to make a trip to Florida before my trip to NC for my brother’s wedding reception, which while we were there, we found that the Orlando shooter was not too far away shooting up an office building while we were in the middle of funeral services and then a man-hunt ensued. And if that were not enough of a tough year and month, we also had many other strange occurrences in our house and lives including the neighbors having rat infestation that caused the county to have to get involved with their house.

With that all said…

This post below was awesome and meant so much to me. Read on and you will see what I mean.

Those other things that happened, I might record and share later. but, for now, I think this is sufficient for you to get the point. It’s been a tough year hasn’t it?

Keep your heads up!
Blessings!
pd

The SILENT Christ

The SILENT Christ

by J. R. Miller

A Canaanite woman from that vicinity came to Him, crying out, “Lord, Son of David, have mercy on me! My daughter is suffering terribly from demon-possession.” Jesus did not answer her a word! So His disciples came to Him and urged Him, “Send her away, for she keeps crying out after us.” He answered, “I was sent only to the lost sheep of Israel.” The woman came and knelt before Him. “Lord, help me!” she said. He replied, “It is not right to take the children’s bread—and toss it to their dogs!” Matthew 15:22-26

Usually, Jesus was quick to answer cries for His help. No mother’s heart ever waked so easily to her child’s calls—as the heart of Christ waked to the calls of human distress! But once at least, He was silent to a very bitter cry. It was over in the edge of a heathen country. The story begins by saying that He went into a house and wanted nobody to know that He was there. He desired a little time of quiet. Even Jesus needed sometimes to rest. But He could not be hidden.

An Indian legend tells of a sorcerer who sought to hide the sun, moon, and stars in three great chests—but failed in his effort. One cannot hide light—it reveals itself by its beams. One cannot hide fragrant flowers—their perfume reveals their place of concealment.

There is a kind of wood in China, which, though buried in the earth—yet fills all the air about it with its perfumes. Nor can holy lives be hidden! No matter how modest and shy they are, wherever they go, people know of their presence. There is something in them which always reveals them.

Never was there another such rich, loving, helpful life in this world—as that of Jesus. He was everybody’s friend. His heart was full of compassion. His hand was ever stretched out to serve. No wonder He could not be hidden—even in a strange place. Burdened hearts would be drawn to Him—by the very power of His love and sympathy.

A heathen woman heard of Him that day, and came to Him with a pitiful plea. It is worth while to notice, that it was this woman’s trouble which sent her to Christ. If all had been sunshine in her house, she would not have gone to seek Him. This is one of the blessings of affliction—it often leads us into experiences of blessing we never would have had—but for our suffering. We never shall know until we have gone to heaven—how much we owe to pain and sorrow. Then we shall see that the long days when we were sick—were days of wondrous divine revealing; that what we called our misfortunes and calamities—were really pieces of shaded path, leading to nobler blessings.

It is interesting to think of the good that has come to the world through the centuries, from the mere telling of the story of this woman’s trouble. Other mothers with suffering children have been encouraged to bring their burdens to Christ, as they have read of this mother and her persistent and finally availing plea. Other pleaders at the throne of grace, discouraged for a time—as they have seen this prayer prevail at length, have taken fresh hope. No one can tell what a history of blessing this one fragment of the gospel has left among men. Yet this story never would have been written—but for the pitiful suffering of a little girl.

We do not know what blessing may go out into the world from the anguish in our home, which is so hard for us to endure. Every human pain or sorrow—is intended to make this world a little gentler, sweeter, warmer-hearted. We should never forget that the gospel, which, these nineteen centuries, has been changing the earth from coldness, harshness, cruelty, and barbarism—into love, gentleness, humane feeling, and brotherly kindness, is the story of a sorrow—the sorrow of Calvary. We ought to be willing to endure pain—to make the world more heaven-like.

We are not told anything about this woman, save that she was a woman with a great burden of sorrow. She was a broken-hearted mother, with a demoniac child. But that is enough for us to know. Her sorrow makes her kin to us all. It was not her own trouble, either. She was not sick. Yet hear her cry: “Lord, help me!” She represented a great class of burdened and crushed people, who are bowed down under the maladies or the sins of others. Especially was she the type of many human mothers, whose hearts are broken by the sufferings or by the evil ways of their children. You never enter a sick-room where a child lies in pain, and the mother keeps watch—but the mother is suffering more than the child. There are many parents prematurely stooped and aged—by reason of the burdens they are bearing for or on account of their children.

This mother’s persistence in pressing her plea, was very remarkable. When she came first, Jesus “did not answer her a word.” He stood silent before her piteous appealing. But she would not be discouraged, and as He walked on and talked with His disciples, she continued following, and beseeching Him to have mercy on her. When the silence was broken at length, it was in words which seemed strangely harsh and insulting, coming from the lips of the Christ. Yet even the offensive words did not chill the ardor of her earnestness. Indeed, she caught at the very offensiveness, seeing hope in them. She was content to be a dog—and to take a dog’s portion. Even the crumbs from that table, would abundantly satisfy her.

The woman’s prayer and its final answer tell us that we may bring to Christ in our love and faith—those who cannot come to Him themselves. Many of Christ’s healings were in answer to the prayers of friends. It is not enough for us to pray for ourselves. That love is not doing its full duty—which does not carry its dear ones to God in supplication.

Then this mother teaches us how to pray not timidly, faintly, and feebly—but with all the earnestness of passionate love, strengthened by overcoming faith. When we are at Christ’s feet with our burden, we are before One who can help us whatever our need. We should determine to stay there—until we get our plea. This mother’s supplication was as different from many of our tame, mildly-uttered requests which we call prayers—as the storm’s wild sweep is different from evening’s soft zephyr. Jesus’ silence did not discourage her. Jesus’ refusal did not check her pleadings. Jesus’ reproach had no power to drive her away. Such faith overcomes every obstacle—and wins its way to sublimest victory!

Christ’s treatment of this distressed mother, is one of the strangest things in the Bible. It seems at first scarcely consistent with our conception of Christ’s character. On nearly all other occasions He answered at once—but now, when the woman came to Him with her broken-hearted supplication, He did not answer her a word. When she continued crying, His only reply was a refusal, on the ground that His mission was not to any but His own people. Then, when she still persisted and cast herself at His feet, looking up appealingly to Him and pleading still for mercy, what was His reply? Not a kindly “no,” such as He might have spoken, to make the pain of refusal as little as possible—but words which some haughty Pharisee might have used, calling the sorrowing woman a Gentile dog.

How can this be explained? If we were to hear that some good, generous, kindly Christian man, whom we know, had treated a poor distressed woman in this way, either we would not believe it, or we would say that the man must have been mentally disturbed, that he was not himself that day, because of some secret trouble of his own. Men do such things—they do treat the poor and distressed coldly, rudely, even in these late Christian days—but not men like Jesus. When we think of the character of Jesus—so gracious, so unselfish, so compassionate, and that He was always so ready to help even outcasts—this narrative perplexes us beyond measure.

We may as well admit, too, that there are difficulties, not unlike those we meet here, in many of God’s providences in our own days. We believe in God’s fatherhood, in His love and grace, in His tender thought and care of His children. Yet the world is full of sorrows. Distressed mothers yet cry to heaven for relief in their troubles, and He who sits on the throne is silent to them. Prayers seem to go long unanswered, and suppliants appear to get no pity from Him whom we believe to be full of compassion. These are painful perplexities with many godly people.

If we can find an explanation for Christ’s treatment of this heathen mother—it will help us to understand many of the other difficulties in God’s ways with His people. It is very clear that what seemed unkindness, was not unkindness. While Jesus was silent to her pleading and apparently indifferent, He was not really indifferent. He did hear her, and His heart was greatly interested in Her sorrow. When He seemed to spurn her, there was not in His heart toward her—the slightest feeling of real contempt or spurning. He did not despise her. His thought toward her did not change at last, when He yielded to her importunity and healed her child. His compassion was moved at her first approach to Him. He intended all the while—to grant her request. His treatment of her was only seemingly unkind. Suppose she had given up and turned away, when Jesus seemed to be so indifferent to her, what would she have lost? Her faith faltered not, and at last she got the blessing.

It is evident, too, that there was wise love in Christ’s apparently harsh and severe treatment of this woman. It was the very treatment her faith needed. Of this we may be sure, as we read the story through to its close. We are safe in saying that gentle kindness from the first, would not have brought out such a noble faith in the end—as did the apparent harshness. We are apt to forget that the aim of God with us—is not to flood us all the time with tenderness, not to keep our path strewn always with flowers, not to give us everything we want, not to save us from all manner of suffering. God’s aim with us—is to make something of us, to build up in us strong and noble character, to mature in us, qualities of grace and beauty, to make us like Christ. To do this—He must ofttimes deny us what we ask for, and must seem indifferent to our cries.

There are ‘sentimental ideas of God’ prevalent, which are dishonoring to Him. There are those who imagine that God’s love, means tenderness that cannot cause pain. They think that He cannot look a moment on suffering, without relieving it; that He must instantly hear and answer every cry for the removal of trouble.

Not such a God is the God of the Bible. When suffering is the best thing for us—He is not too sympathetic to let us suffer—until the work of suffering is accomplished in us. He is not too kind to be silent to our prayers—when it is better that He should be silent for a time to allow faith to grow strong, self-confidence to be swept away, and the evil in us to be burned out in the furnace of pain!

Here, in this very story, we have an example of human compassion that seems more tender than Christ’s compassion. The disciples begged the Master to listen to the woman’s cries. They could not bear the anguish of her sorrow. It was too much for their nerves. But Jesus remained unmoved. No one will say that these rough fishermen were really more gentle-hearted than Jesus; but they were less wise in their love, than He was. They were not strong enough to wait until the right time for helping. They would have helped at once, and thus would have marred the work the Master was doing in the woman’s soul.

This is a danger with all of us. Our tenderness lacks strength. We cannot see people suffer, and so we hasten to give relief—before the ministry of suffering is accomplished. We think of our mission to men, as being only to make life easier for them. We are continually lifting away burdens, which it were better to have left resting longer on our friend’s shoulder. We are eager to make life easy for our children—when it were better if it had been left hard. We answer prayers too soon ofttimes, not asking if it were better for the suppliant to wait longer before receiving. In our dealing with human souls, we break down when we hear the first cries of penitence, hurrying to give assurance of pardon—when it were better if we left the penitent spirit longer with God for the deepening of conviction and of the sense of sin, and for the most complete humbling of the soul.

We must learn, that God does not deal with us in this ‘sentimental’ way. He is not too tender to see us suffer—if more suffering is needed to work in us the discipline that will make us like Christ. Here we have the key of many of the mysteries of Providence. Life is not easy for us—and God does not intend it to be easy! Prayers are not all answered the moment they are offered. Cries for the relief of pain do not always bring instant relief.

Suppose for a moment that God did give us everything we ask for—and did remove immediately every little pain, trouble, difficulty, and hardness that we seek to have removed; what would be the result on us? How selfish it would make us! We should become weak, unable to endure suffering, to bear trial, to carry burdens, or to struggle. We would be only children always, and would never rise into manly strength. God’s over-kindness to us would pamper in us all the worst elements of our nature, and would make us only poor driveling creatures!

On the other hand, however, God’s wise and firm treatment of us, teaches us the great lessons which make us strong with the strength of Christ Himself. He teaches us to yield our own will to Him. He develops in us patience, faith, love, hope, and peace. He trains us to endure hardness—that we may grow heroic, courageous and strong.

It is evident that at no time in the progress of this experience, did Jesus mean to refuse this woman’s plea. His cold silence—was not denial. His apparent refusal—was not rejection. He delayed for wise reasons. His treatment of the woman from beginning to end—was for the training of her faith. He did not answer her a word—that her pleading might grow stronger. At the last He commended the woman, as He commended few other people in all His ministry!

It is well for us to make careful note of this—that in all God’s delays when we pray—His aim is some good in us. Perhaps we are willful, asking only for our own way—and must learn to say, “May Your will be done.” Perhaps we are weak, unable to bear pain or to endure adversity or loss—and we must be trained and disciplined into strength. Perhaps our desires are only for earthly good, not for heavenly blessings—and we must be taught the transitory character of all worldly things, and led to desire things which are eternal. Perhaps we are impatient—and must be taught to wait for God. We are like children in our eager restlessness—and need to learn self-restraint. At least we may always know that silence is not refusal, that God hears and cares, and that when our faith has learned its lessons He will answer in blessing.

When God does not seem to answer—He is drawing us nearer to Himself. Ofttimes our unanswered prayers mean more of blessing to us—than those that are answered. The lessons set for us in them are harder—but they are greater, richer lessons. It is better for us to learn the lesson of submission and trust—than it is to get some new sweet joy which adds to our present comfort. Whether, therefore, He speaks or is silent—He has a blessing for us!

Our Home Buying Story & the $8000 Credit Use…

I just posted this on CNNMoney.com. They actually put it up and stated that they might use it in a future story from the post on the site. No matter what happens, I just wanted to put the link up from the first retelling of the story and then the comment below for what we have been doing to help others.

Here is the link to the original post:
http://holyworldwide.com/dustinhedrick/?p=918

this is the link to the story and comment below:

Blessings!
pd

Talkback: What did you buy with your $8,000 tax credit? – CNNMoney.com Talkback

My wife and I live outside Washington, DC in Silver Spring, MD and we bought our house January 5. We used our return to finance a micro-loan helping some students with their school locally AND we were able to work to start a co-ventured foundation, “the Global Access Foundation” globalaccessfoundation.com through which we were able to give funds to fight poverty, help refugees, work with medical, education and more in Kenya. The effect has already been large, but we see there is so much more to come from this story. We were so thankful to have been able to get a house for 47.1% (change from the comment. actual savings) off the value. So, we decided to do as much as possible to help others with our return. It was our way of giving back!

renaissanceofasoul.com
Posted By Dustin Hedrick, Washington, DC: August 25, 2009 12:54 pm

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US TV Tries Comedy Again. Maybe Comedy Isn’t As Dead as They Thought?!

U.S. television networks, suffering from falling ratings and advertising sales during the recession, are self-administering a stimulus package of comic relief.
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Posting an email I sent my leaders here:

Now Guys,

Some of you never heard what I said about this topic for the last four to five years, but I have been saying that we will know that the culture has changed when TV brings back REAL comedy.

I have also been saying that the TV networks have been doing something that I thought was purposeful in leading us to more and more reality series shows and dramas. I felt like we were ever becoming  more cynical and hard. It has even changed the atmosphere of the nation. For many years, I have felt like TV was really attempting to change culture, teach generations and even control thinking.

I have said quite a few times that we have not had any GREAT comedies since Friends, Cheers, Seinfeld, and even back to MASH. I am reminded of a conversation I had with a co-worker right here at my cubicle in 2005 when I said that we needed to see a return to good clean comedy. We talked about how we had gone into a dark place in entertainment. He said back that he thought the times had passed. I said that I felt like once we hit a hard time again, the networks would turn us back to things that are light-hearted to heal our pain and hurt.

Today, read this article: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=aPoYZMoKWpPw&refer=home

If you were one of the ones I had this conversation with, sound off and tell me what you think.

I am just blown away that so many things I have been feeling in the last decade are coming to pass. This is truly an interesting and exciting time. If the things such as a global economic downturn, the bursting of a housing bubble, the need for churches to re-enter community service, and the reigniting of revival in third world countries that are in need of US aid, then I believe I am right in the next thing.

WE ARE IN THE MIDST OF A KINGDOM WIDE FULL SCALE REVIVAL! We have not see it yet, but we are already in the midst of the upturn. BE AWARE that Jesus is with us and that this year is our best year YET! Keep your eyes open and RECOGNIZE GOD’s activity around you. EVERY DAY we need to see GOD at work and give HIM glory. This is NOT just positive thinking. I am meaning that we need to truly look around and be thankful for all that we ALREADY HAVE. We are NOT recognizing the day of HIS visitation.

Woe on Unrepentant Cities
20Then Jesus began to denounce the cities in which most of his miracles had been performed, because they did not repent. 21″Woe to you, Korazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida! If the miracles that were performed in you had been performed in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes. 22But I tell you, it will be more bearable for Tyre and Sidon on the day of judgment than for you. 23And you, Capernaum, will you be lifted up to the skies? No, you will go down to the depths.[d] If the miracles that were performed in you had been performed in Sodom, it would have remained to this day. 24But I tell you that it will be more bearable for Sodom on the day of judgment than for you.”

Rest for the Weary
25At that time Jesus said, “I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and learned, and revealed them to little children. 26Yes, Father, for this was your good pleasure.

27″All things have been committed to me by my Father. No one knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and those to whom the Son chooses to reveal him.

28″Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. 29Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. 30For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.”

TV and media are showing us the condition of America. We are in pain. That being the case, CHURCH, we must get active.

I am not SUPPORTIVE of TV. Many of you know that I got rid of mine after September 11. I just couldn’t take the exploitation. And I am NOT happy with the line-up. I am just pointing at an indicator that is showing that the American people are in a very different place today than they were last year this time.

Maybe a softening of hearts is at hand. At any rate, Church, it is time to get out there and encourage again.

Blessings!
pd
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U.S. television networks, suffering from falling ratings and advertising sales during the recession, are self-administering a stimulus package of comic relief.

News Corp.’s Fox will add four comedies in September, the network said at annual meetings with advertisers this week in New York. NBC is moving Jay Leno to a prime-time slot for five nights. Walt Disney Co.’s ABC gathered ad buyers at Lincoln Center to highlight two hours of laughs planned for Wednesdays.

The networks, facing a battered economy and losing audiences to the Web, cable TV and video games, are taking a cue from marketers in betting that laughter may cure advertising declines. Advance ad sales for the 2009-2010 season may drop 15 percent to $7.4 billion, estimates Barclays Capital analyst Anthony DiClemente in New York.

“Our business is selling advertising, and advertisers at the moment like comedies,” Kelly Kahl, the chief scheduler at CBS, said in an interview.

CBS, the only major broadcaster to increase its audience during the TV season ending this month, added one new comedy to its September lineup. “Accidentally on Purpose,” starring Jenna Elfman as a single journalist who gets pregnant by a younger man, gives CBS six comedies on its new schedule.

General Electric Co.’s NBC, last in ratings among the big four networks, already had comedy as a focus on Thursday nights with “The Office” and “30 Rock.” It is adding to that by moving late-night comedian Leno to 10 p.m. five nights a week.

NBC has three additional comedies that will start in September, and two that will begin mid-season, including “The Marriage Ref,” a comic reality-show for which executive producer Jerry Seinfeld will give marriage advice. His “Seinfeld” was one of the biggest shows of the 1990s.

‘Night of Comedy’

NBC highlighted its commitment to comedy by hosting — in lieu of the typical party for advertisers — “A Night of Comedy” in New York. Leno and other network stars such as Amy Poehler and Tracy Morgan performed stand-up routines for marketers.

“We’re incredibly excited about our new and returning series and have more comedy programming than anyone else,” Ben Silverman, co-chairman of NBC Entertainment, said in a statement.

First-quarter ad sales declined at all four networks. New York-based CBS Corp. climbed 6 cents to $7.28 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading and is off 69 percent in the past year.

General Electric, based in Fairfield, Connecticut, gained 7 cents to $13.77 and has lost 57 percent in 12 months. That compares with drops of 31 percent for Burbank, California-based Disney, and 53 percent at Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp.

During last year’s upfront events, comedy was an afterthought. Fox previewed one animated comedy a year ago, NBC and CBS previewed two, and ABC didn’t have any.

‘Able to Laugh’

“The comedy genre has for a few years been considered dead, but we want diversity in the schedule and we want shows that deliver the audience,” Sam Armando, a senior vice president at Chicago-based media agency Starcom Worldwide, said in an interview. “There is the belief that in these times people want to be entertained and they want to be able to laugh.”

To showcase its slate, Fox followed the May 19 broadcast of “American Idol,” the top-rated show on television, with a one- hour preview of the musical comedy “Glee.”

“It’s the biggest screening ever,” Kevin Reilly, the president of entertainment at Fox broadcasting, said at his network’s May 18 presentation.

The preview of “Glee,” about a teacher who tries to restore glory to a faded high school glee club, was watched by 10 million viewers, according to Nielsen ratings.

ABC is introducing four new comedy shows on Wednesday nights. The sitcoms showcase veterans of past hits: Kelsey Grammer of “Frasier” fame will star in “Hank”; Patricia Heaton, formerly of “Everybody Loves Raymond,” will anchor “The Middle”; and former “Friends” star Courteney Cox stars in “Cougar Town,” about a newly single divorcee.

‘Crap Shoot’

To impress advertisers, ABC showed a full half-hour episode of “Modern Family,” a new comedy starring Ed O’Neill, the grousing husband from “Married With Children,” to about 2,500 advertising representatives inside Lincoln Center’s Avery Fisher Hall. They laughed throughout.

Typically, the clips shown at upfront events are no longer than a few minutes.

“We want to make a statement that this is the kind of quality and commitment we have to comedy,” Stephen McPherson, president of ABC Entertainment Group, told reporters prior to the screening. “Comedy was a big goal” for the fall schedule.

Exiting the event, an experienced hand was complimentary, though cautious about the new schedule.

“A lot of talent and time went into it,” Thomas S. Murphy, 83, the former Capital Cities/ABC Inc. chairman who sold the company to Disney in 1996, said in an interview. “But it’s still a crap shoot.”

Some Encouragement and Food For Thought!

Friday, May 08, 2009

That You May Marvel


“The Son can do nothing of Himself, but what He sees the Father do; for whatever He does, the Son also does in like manner. For the Father loves the Son, and shows Him all things that He Himself does; and He will show Him greater works than these, that you may marvel.” (John 5:19-20)

Jesus, realizing that His role was that of a servant, never sought to initiate activity for the Father (Matt. 20:28). The servant never sets the agenda—the master does. The servant must be so alert to what the master is doing that whenever the master begins to move in a direction the servant quickly joins him. Even the Son of God did not assume He knew the best thing to do in a situation. Instead, He looked to see the Father’s activity and then joined Him. Jesus knew His Father so well that He was keenly sensitive to divine activity around Him, immediately recognizing His Father at work.

It is possible for us to be so busy trying to bring God into our activity that we don’t even notice Him at work around us. He seeks to redirect our attention so that we might join Him, but we tend to be self-centered, evaluating everything by how it affects us. We must learn to view events around us from God’s perspective. Then we will see our world very differently. When God brings someone across our path, we will look to see if God is convicting that person of his need for salvation. Perhaps God is comforting someone in her sorrow. God might be encouraging your friend as she faces a challenge. We will then adjust our lives to join God as He works in that person’s life. We ought to live each day with tremendous anticipation as we look to see where God is working around us. As our eyes are opened to His activity, we will marvel at His great works.

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I just thought that this was appropriate for the day!

Enjoy guys!

Blessings!

pd

Dustin Hedrick

Head Pastor

The Tapestry Vineyard Church

PO Box 2394

Kensington, MD 20891

Phone 301-251-4082 x13

Fax     240-206-3244

Email dustinhedrick@tapestrychurch.com

Web www.tapestrychurch.com

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