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Reflections Along The Journey

Archive for November, 2008

November 29, 2008

Wal-Mart Employee Trampled to Death by Customers

A Wal-Mart
employee in suburban New York was trampled to death by a crush of
shoppers who tore down the front doors and thronged into the store
early Friday morning, turning the annual rite of post-Thanksgiving bargain hunting into a Hobbesian frenzy.

At 4:55 a.m., just five minutes before the doors were set to open, a
crowd of 2,000 anxious shoppers started pushing, shoving and piling
against the locked sliding glass doors of the Wal-Mart in Valley
Stream, N.Y., Nassau County police said. The shoppers broke the doors
off their hinges and surged in, toppling a 34-year-old temporary
employee who had been waiting with other workers in the store’s
entryway.

People did not stop to help the employee as he lay on the ground,
and they pushed against other Wal-Mart workers who were trying to aid
the man. The crowd kept running into the store even after the police
arrived, jostling and pushing officers who were trying to perform CPR,
the police said.

“They were like a stampede,” said Nassau Det. Lt. Michael Fleming. “Hundreds of people walked past him, over him or around him.”

The employee, who was not identified, was taken from the Wal-Mart to
nearby Franklin Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 6:03 a.m.,
the police said. His exact cause of death has not been determined. The
police said that three other shoppers were injured and a 28-year-old
woman who was eight months pregnant was taken to the hospital for
observation.

One shopper, Kimberly Cribbs, said she was standing near the back of
the crowd at around 5 a.m. on Friday when people started rushing into
the store. She said several people were knocked to the ground, and
parents had to grab their children by the hand to keep them from being
caught in the crush.

“They were falling all over each other,” she said. “It was terrible.”

Crowds began building outside the Wal-Mart at 9 p.m. Thursday and
grew throughout the night, as eager shoppers queued up in a line that
filled the sidewalk and stretched toward the boundary fence of the
Green Acres Mall.

At 3:30 a.m., store employees called the Nassau police to report
that the crowd was growing quickly, the police said. Officers came by
to try to organize the line, but were called away to a Circuit City, a Best Buy and a B.J.’s Wholesale Club nearby, to deal with crowds there.

A half-dozen Wal-Mart employees lined up in the entryway trying to
hold back the crowd by pushing against the locked sliding doors, but
they were overwhelmed by the force of the crowd, Lieutenant Fleming
said.

As the doors snapped open and people streamed in, several people
fell on top of one another. The 34-year-old employee who died was at
the bottom of the pile, the police said.

On Friday, Wal-Mart released a statement saying that the man who was
killed had been working for Wal-Mart through a temp agency. The company
called the death “a tragic situation,” and said it was working with
police.

“The safety and security of our customers and associates is our top priority,” Wal-Mart said in a statement.

Lieutenant Fleming said that the store “could have done more” to prevent the melee.

“I’ve heard other people call this an accident, but it’s not,” he said. “This certainly was foreseeable.”

Team Blogging

Posted by Rob under Random Thoughts, Tech

I know I haven't been blogging consistently the past couple of weeks. I seem to go through seasons of getting out posts and not focusing on it as much. Don't worry … some changes are coming!

In the mean time, set up a Twitter account and follow me there!

Seth Godin has a great blog post today that I want to copy here … something to think about:

Death of the personal blog?

A quick look at the list
of the 'top' blogs in the world will show you that almost all of them
are written by teams of people. There isn't one in the top 10 that's
personal.

The best way to increase your ranking as
a blogger is to post
very often and to have teams of people doing the work. If that’s your
strategy, of course you can’t have it be a solo blog. The strategy for
showing up on this list is to have lots and lots of posts, so your
tactic needs to be to have a team of people doing the work.

Personal blogs aren't going anywhere, though. There’s a difference between a blog about YOU (I call this a
cat blog) and a blog about the reader. Guy Kawasaki’s blog, and my blog for that
matter, are not about us, about what we ate yesterday or how great we
are. They are about you, the reader.

I guess there's an easy analogy:
Your blog could be like a newspaper (written by a staff)
or it could be like a book (written by an author)

9 times out of 10, newspapers outsell books. No surprise. But they’re different. And we need both.

Who cares that you're not writing a mass market newspaper? The point
is not to show up on a list, the point is to start a conversation that
spreads, to share ideas and to chronicle your thinking. That's the work
of an author, and I think rather than kissing author blogs goodbye,
someone should just start a new list.

Part two of our latest series:


Connect: 02 The Member’s Role from Rob Dale on Vimeo.

Turkeys

Posted by Rob under Random Thoughts

Okay, I’m sure many of you have seen this already, but you have to admit, it is freakin’ hilarious!
As Sarah Palin speaks to reporters about pardoning a turkey (it is the U.S. Thanksgiving on Thursday), a guy in the background is slaughtering other turkeys!

Kids, close your eyes … that means you, Brittany. :-)

So, I ran my blog through typeanalyzer and this is what it told me about my blog:

ISTP – The Mechanics

The independent and problem-solving type. They are especially attuned to the demands of the moment and are masters of responding to challenges that arise spontaneously. They generally prefer to think things out for themselves and often avoid inter-personal conflicts.

The Mechanics enjoy working together with other independent and highly skilled people and often like to seek fun and action both in their work and personal life. They enjoy adventure and risk such as in driving race cars or working as policemen or firemen.


Analysis

This shows what parts of the brain that were dominant during writing:
Analysis

Jonestown

Posted by Rob under Random Thoughts

Yesterday was the 30th anniversary of the massacre at Jonestown. Art.jim.jones
It's hard to believe it's been that long. 909 people died when Rev. Jim Jones convinced them to drink poison.

Over the years, I've had discussions with people about whether something on that magnitude could happen today. Obviously we are all aware of these tragedies on smaller scales, over the years, but I do believe it could happen on a large scale again.

Why? Because people can be so sincere with their faith that they are willing to buy into anything. People can be so desperate to believe, that they will ignore inconsistencies in their leaders, simply because of how dynamic the person might be. Some are willing to put aside clear teachings of Scripture simply because the end result seems to be working.

It's a danger we must all guard against. I often tell the people I pastor that they have a responsibility to study, grow, and learn on their own. They shouldn't just accept a teaching because I tell them it's true. Rather, they should take what I teach and then spend time discovering on their own. I'd rather teach someone how to study the Bible and equip them to discover doctrine in the process, than simply tell someone what they should believe.

Bikers' Church is a unique church. Some have wondered if we are a cult. Some of our regulars will laugh about how family members have asked that type of question when they first started attending. We'll even joke sometimes about bringing out the Kool-Aide (perhaps not that funny a joke when it accompanies the picture above). But, one thing we have always strive to do is make sure that we provide an environment where we celebrate the individuals ability to discern for themselves. We truly welcome it. It's why we celebrate the "Together we'll work out what we believe" part of our DNA. Rather than church being a place where one person speaks "the word of the Lord" and the rest simply obey, we'd rather be a place where God speaks to all of us together. As we celebrate community, we discover what it means to be a follower of Christ.

That's not to dismiss the value of having a pastor who shares what he believes God's direction is for the church. I am very comfortable in doing that. However, I always ask the people to not accept what I say simply because it's me talking. Instead, take the time to examine Scripture on your own, and if you come up with a different view than I do, then let's take the time to dialogue about it. So that we can both learn more.

Unfortunately, far too many Christians aren't interested in doing the work. They'd rather just hear a sermon, be told what to believe, and follow the crowd.

Just like 909 people did thirty years ago yesterday.

Heroes

Posted by Rob under Random Thoughts

There are a couple of people out there that I consider personal heroes. These are people who inspire me in ways that words cannot express.

This is one of those people.

Posted by Rob under Random Thoughts

Article_107

Relevant Magazine sends out a weekly email called "850 Words of Relevant". The following article was in this week's edition, and I thought it was excellent, so I'm reposting it here:

We’ve been known for boycotting Disney, decrying the Teletubbies and rallying behind pet legislation. Christianity and the culture wars have been synonymous now for a long time. When it comes to media attention, Christians most often seem to get it for something we’re against. The last few decades of the Church seem to be ones in which we’ve taken an adversarial relationship to the culture around us. We’ve spearheaded protests, boycotts and letter-writing campaigns. If Christians are against it, we’ve done a decidedly good job of making the public aware of it. It seems we have made it our mission to loudly denounce those things in society that don’t match our worldview, and find ways to pressure the culture into rejecting them. As such, evangelical Christianity has developed a reputation in society for being angry, boorish and self-righteous.

Yet, should Christianity be engaged in these culture wars? Is it our lot to remake the world in God’s image? The answer is, of course, a resounding yes. It is absolutely our role to stand against the tide of culture and to be a clarion voice for God in the midst of darkness. The problem is, we often go about it all wrong.

Without a doubt, we are called to stand apart from culture. Paul admonishes us, “Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God's will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will” (Romans 12:2). The life Christ calls us to is one of being countercultural, and of spreading the Kingdom of God throughout the culture around us.

What does it mean, though, to be countercultural? Does it mean that we organize protests or pen invective letters to the FCC for some sitcom’s latest grievous offense? If we follow the standard Christ set, it is a much deeper calling than that. When Christ speaks of being countercultural, it looks so much more revolutionary and bizarre than merely fighting for legalistic ideals. The picture Christ paints is of a peculiar people who confuse the culture around them by being so utterly different. Whereas our society worships status, we are to be servants to all. When the culture tells us we have to seek fortune, we hold material goods lightly and give all we have to the poor. If prevailing public opinion says that we should lie to get ahead, we cherish honesty and keep any oath we take. Where cynicism and pessimism pervade those around us, we are agents of constant hope and tireless faith.

Ultimately, though, the absolute most countercultural role a Christian can take is that of truly loving our enemies rather than treating them to our usual show of angry saber-rattling. This is hard for a people who have spent so much time viewing those who would tear down God’s Kingdom with such vitriol. But Jesus did not suggest this—He commanded it. He told us: "You have heard that it was said, 'Eye for eye, and tooth for tooth.' But I tell you, do not resist an evil person. If anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to them the other cheek also. And if anyone wants to sue you and take your shirt, hand over your coat as well. If anyone forces you to go one mile, go with them two miles. Give to the one who asks you, and do not turn away from the one who wants to borrow from you” (Matthew 5:38-42).

This is a revolution born not of anger or discord, but of unmitigated love. It is one that confounds culture by showing resilient mercy and charity at times when it makes the least sense to do so. How would society be impacted if, instead of staging counter-protests when we disagree with a group of pro-abortion demonstrators, we showed up and served them in humility and love? What kind of reputation would we gain if we quietly showed love to our homosexual neighbors instead of putting signs in our yard touting our political views on their relationship?

Are we at war with the culture? Yes. But we’ve been fighting the wrong battle. Ours is not a war of taking shots at things we deem offensive to the public sensibility. It is one of standing against the tide of selfishness, wrath, vainglory and cynicism that surrounds us. It is a battle of refusing to be swept up in the idea of consumerism. Of fighting the concept that we should avenge every wrong done to us. Of taking up arms against our culture’s mindset that the rich, famous and powerful are to be admired and the poor despised. This is a war of loving our enemies, praying for those who persecute us and speaking God’s abiding truth with genuine compassion for those whose ears it falls upon. Now is not the time to back away from a fight. It’s time to actually engage the true enemy.

So, what do you think?

Do You Use People?

Posted by Rob under Random Thoughts

I just had a conversation with someone who called me to share how excited they were, because they had an incredible opportunity to offer me. This great opportunity would bring financial blessing to me, the churches I pastor, and many of the people who attend. This opportunity would require no work on my part, just the willingness to allow this person time to share with the congregations.

Sigh. I have to be honest, I get tired of all the marketing / pyramid schemes that think the church is a great place to do their thing. They use people in the church because most churches are great networks. Where else can you find such a diverse group of people all under one roof?

I have a policy in any church I pastor not to allow people to promote their personal business schemes. Whether it's a pyramid type scheme, or even a financial adviser, I don't allow them a church platform for promoting their stuff. I think it's unfair and unethical to do so.

But it seems that there are many who have no problem in using their church connections to entice people (read: guilt people) into signing up. Shame on them.

What do you think? Do you believe that church should be a place where these types of businesses practice their wares?

We started a new series at both churches called “Connect: Plugging Into Church”. This series focuses on the value of every person finding an area to serve within the church as a way of connecting with others.

This is the Bikers’ Church version of the message:


Connect: 01 The Pastor’s Role from Rob Dale on Vimeo.