Showing posts with label Writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writing. Show all posts

Five Reasons to Join the Mailing List


If you're like me, you see lots of requests to join e-newsletters and mailing lists. Sometimes, if the ministry or resource is particularly intriguing, I'll do it. Other times, I shy away. Then there are times that I did sign up that I soon wish I hadn't and unsubscribe. When it comes to mailing lists, you can't be too picky.

The Prayer Journal, a mailing list and newsletter I started based on the Military Prayer Week Facebook page and prayer ministry, is an attempt to expand my writing ministry into a new area. I'd love for you to consider signing up. If you join, I'll send you a free PDF copy of my ebook on John 14:6 called, "The Most Important Verse in the Bible? A Study of John 14:6."

Top five reasons to sign up for The Prayer Journal Newsletter:

1. Learn strategies for being more effective and efficient in prayer!
2. Get a head start on the 2016 Military Prayer Week!
3. Quarterly updates on the Prayer Ministry!
4.  Be introduced to resources on prayer and military ministry!
5.  Get a free ebook!

Sign up here: My Mailing List

Review of 30 Days of Prayer for the Military

Edward Fudge, noted author and theologian, recently reviewed my new book, 30 Days of Prayer for the Military.

He writes:

"Sometime in 1998 (gracEmail was approximately one year old at the time), I received an email from a young sailor serving in the U.S. Navy aboard ship somewhere near Japan. His name was Sheldon Daniel Smith, and he asked me to pray for him concerning two specific matters: that he be faithful to the Lord under what sometimes were very difficult circumstances, and that God would use him to minister to his fellow-sailers. Daniel subscribed to gracEmail and kept in touch with me through the years. Today he is a career U.S. Navy Sailor, has earned a graduate degree in religious studies, is married with three children, and has written a significant book due for release next month (November 16).

Titled 30 Days of Prayer for the Military: How to Pray Fervently and Effectively for the Military (131 pages), Smith's book is focused, useful, and practical. Chapters 1-3 introduce the subject, explain intercessory prayer, and briefly summarize the author's own story. Chapters 6-7 point the way forward, offer specifics on making prayer for military service people and their families a congregational project, and speak to church leaders. Sandwiched between these chapters are 31 very particular prayers, one for each day of the month, with a short introduction that tells why each prayer is important in a military context.

But there is more. As I read these prayers, it occurred to me that with minor editing, they are also applicable to other contexts as well--professional, corporate, educational institution, and so on. Again, this book will be available after November 16 from BN.com and Amazon.com."

How to Join Military Prayer Week


We are just three weeks away from Military Prayer Week 2015! Each year we add a few prayer points, expand our reach a little, and encourage more believers to pray for the different military services. This year is particularly exciting as we expand even more with an active Facebook page and email list.

I won’t rehash the reasons to pray for the military as I do that in detail here on this blog, but I do want to spend a few minutes telling you how to get signed up to join us in this prayer event and future efforts.

There are two ways to get involved.

The first is to like our Facebook page, Military PrayerWeek.

The second is to join the mailing list HERE.

I know what you’re thinking: You don’t want SPAM. I don’t either, and I don’t want to spend my time trying to sell you something you don’t want. This email list will meet both of our goals! I will send emails out only as they pertain to significant blog articles, updates on the ministry, prayer points, and a very few sales emails where I will bring a resource to your attention.

For example, I will be releasing the book, “30 Days of Prayer for the Military” after this year’s Military Prayer Week. I will only announce it once in a sales email. You won’t be bombarded with my desires for you to buy this book.

Still, if you don’t want to be emailed about these prayer points, ministry issues, and the upcoming book, simply “Like” the Facebook page and you won’t have to receive those emails. You’ll still be notified of prayer points and ministry updates without them coming to your email. Be sure to check back regularly for updates!

Thank you for your interest in prayer for the military. I look forward to joining you in this effort.

Your Greatest Strength (Fiction)

I wrote this and posted it because it's for fun. Sometimes I like to write as a way of just setting life aside for a few minutes and enjoying my imagination. If you enjoy this, please share it with your Facebook and Twitter friends!



Your Greatest Strength
By: S. Daniel Smith
The wind was chilly, but felt good against his legs as Paul trotted down the lane toward the starting line. He wanted to be warm enough at the start of the race to get off quickly. Of course, the bios weren’t warming up. They didn’t have to. The millions of nanobots that acted as sensors and trigger servos in their legs and lungs would make up for the deficiency.
Paul didn’t care that he was the only runner left in the elite class who ran as a whole human, or “non-bio” as they were termed. Everyone else, in order to compete against the other bios, became a bio too. Oh sure, thousands of people ran marathons, even competitive ones, as non-bios, but they didn’t really compete. Often they were charity runners. An important part of the running culture to be sure, but not where Paul operated.
“Mornin’ Paul,” said another elite runner as they crossed paths. Paul recognized the runner, a fellow American named Todd Bogart…a bio. Todd had reportedly made the switch a year ago. He hadn’t won anything yet, but it often took a year or so for the implants to reconfigure the muscular and cardiovascular systems.
Paul nodded, but didn’t speak. He was angry.
The trotting was over. Paul conducted a very short, very simple stretching routine. He didn’t want to stress his muscles too much before the race. They would be tested plenty once the gun went off. He wanted to win. When he beat the bios, he wanted them to see it. He wanted his body as fresh as possible.
“All elite runners please report to the starting line!” bellowed the loudspeaker. “Race starts in 10 minutes!”
Paul made his way forward. The bib number told others around him that he was an elite. They made way for him. Some of them didn’t know who he was, but most did. They, being non-bios, knew Paul the non-bio because all of the running magazines did articles on him. He was the fastest non-bio in competitive racing.
“Two minutes until start!” warned the loudspeaker. He was telling jokes and making fun of the newbies in between warnings.
Paul took his place in the second row of the elite group. He didn’t want to be too brash, even though he planned to beat every last one of them. Knowing what he knew, and having the advantage that he had, he didn’t mind starting just behind them. He took notice of who was around him. Many of his fellow runners had raced non-bio for years before succumbing to the pressure to compete. Money came from winning, or at least placing in the top three, and the top three was harder to come by for non-bios. A small wave of sympathy washed over him, but Paul dismissed it with a furrowed brow. He was angry.
“One minute!”
Only one other bio was in the group with him. Paul didn’t know the guy’s name, but did know he came from Ethiopia. Once upon a time, that would have mattered. It didn’t anymore, for the most part. While the biomechanical implants helped everyone improve, regardless of talent level, the body’s natural abilities still had an effect. The implants couldn’t just make a fat couch potato a star athlete (that had been tried before), but it nearly always gave an advantage.
“On your mark!”
Now the adrenaline was pumping. Paul always got nervous, even though he knew he would win this day.
“Get set!”
Why did they count down like this? It was stupid. A race like this, that lasted the better part of two hours, didn’t need a sprinter’s countdown.
“Go!”
Lots of cheering, bodies bumping against each other, and runners dodging elbows. He almost wished he weren’t an elite runner. Then he wouldn’t have to deal with it as much.
The race started normal enough. The elite runners, Paul included, tore off on a 4:10 pace down the main stretch of the road toward their first turn. The bios could maintain that pace nearly the entire marathon. Paul, while the elite of elite as far as non-bio running was concerned, could only maintain 4:25 or so per mile. Human running had adapted significantly over the years, even to the point of almost calling it evolution, but keeping his pace below five minutes per mile for the entire length of the race was still impossible…unless one was a bio runner.
That’s where your greatest strength becomes your greatest weakness,” Muluneh had said several months back He was the last elite Kenyan runner to go bio a few years before. It disgusted Paul. He liked Muluneh a lot. The guy was a fierce competitor. Too bad he was in today’s race.
Paul stayed with the pack for several of the first miles, then started drifting back a little. They were maintaining a sub-4:15 minute mile pace and he was starting to eek a little above. A few seconds here and there would add up soon.
“Just a few more miles,” he breathed to himself. He took water at the five-mile mark. Several years ago, back in the early part of the century, a 4:20 pace would have been incredible.
But that was before the big running companies started testing biomechanical running aids. Elite runners shunned the equipment for several years and major races like Boston, London, Berlin, and New York disqualified bio runners.
Things change though…people do too. Berlin was the first to allow bio runners. Once a major marathon dropped the rule, the others followed suite until the USATF was forced to do the same. It was all downhill from there.
“Almost time to make your move,” he told himself as he lost sight of the last bio elite runner ahead of him. They had rounded the turn at mile 19 without him. He was still running a blazingly fast speed, but it wouldn’t be enough. His greatest strength was his greatest weakness.
Mile 21 came and went. It was now or never. Paul was high-fived by a friend of his at the water station, where Paul took his last drink for the race. That friend then texted another friend at mile 23 (where the bios were in the race). A simple howdy-do was all he needed, and he pushed a button on the cell phone that linked to an encrypted satellite, that linked to a hacked cell phone tower, that linked to the biomechanical controller implanted in the elite runners’ bodies.
He knew the risk. The doctor he had consulted told him that it could hurt people. The biomechanical equipment hadn’t been tested in a way that bypassed its normal shutdown routine because no one had ever hacked the system before. Arrogance. It serves them right.
Except for Muluneh of course. He really didn’t deserve this, but he had gone bio too. It was another nine minutes before Paul saw the effects of his high five. He started passing them at mile 24, but a few had managed to escape the first blast and the “man” had to trigger a second one. Paul found Muluneh at mile 26, a mere 350 yards from the finish line.
Paul was alone. No other elite ran as a non-bio. He slowed as he approached Muluneh and stopped by his side. Muluneh was lying prostrate on the road, trying desperately to claw to the finish line. He dragged two inept legs behind him.
“Something is wrong, Paul,” he said, out of breath in his heavily accented Kenyan accent. “I can’t work my legs.”
Paul knelt down and touched his adversary on the shoulder. For a brief moment, the race seemed to stop. He looked at Muluneh and sighed.
“Your greatest strength is your greatest weakness, Muluneh,” said Paul. “I’m sorry. I hope they figure out what happened.”
Then he got up and won the race.




Praise for The Navy Christian Bullet on Gluttony

As a fledgling writer, it's always fun to read the reviews that my writing receives. Sometimes, I'd rather not, but I find as someone starting out that people generally say nice things when they can. I was overjoyed when I read a recent review of Gluttony: A Study of Overeating in the Bible, which is the second Navy Christian Bullet.

Here is the reviewer's remarks: "Honest and sound advice. Many good strategies to put into practice. Perfect use of scripture for application. Hard topic but well done!" The reviewer gave me five stars too!

I don't pay reviewers to look at my work, so while I don't know G. Davis, I'm grateful for the review. I'm also grateful that my writing has helped someone and that they have gleaned useful information from my work.

If you're struggling in the fight against gluttony, or otherwise unhealthy eating habits, please pick up a copy of Gluttony: A Study of Overeating in the Bible today! I think it will help you as much as it helped my reviewer.

Navy Christian Bullet #3: As Lighting from Heaven

 For the 3rd installment of The Navy Christian Bullet series, I've stepped away from practical theology (gluttony) and back toward a more academic study. I spent some time studying Satan during my graduate studies, and I've expanded that research in this volume. It is not my desire to settle the issue of Satan in this short, $0.99 book, but just to get your engines going. I aim to go deep enough to get you started, with resources noted in the end notes, but not so deep that I lose folks just getting started in theological research.

From the book: " Many people refuse to see Satan as anything but a pitch-fork-wielding, red-bodied, horned-and-hoofed animal. This is unfortunate at best, and destructively misleading at worst. " This is why I wrote the study on Satan's work and his fall.

We do know that Satan is a powerful being, though how powerful he is is up for debate. He does prowl around like a lion (I Peter 5:8) seeking who he can devour. That alone should encourage a believer to study about him as a sports team might study their opponent or a general might study his adversary. Satan is, after all, our enemy.

This short work can be picked up for any Kindle app or device whether it's a Kindle  tablet or an Android or iOS tablet with the Kindle App. The links are below to help you in that endeavor. Thank you!

Buy "As Lighting from Heaven" Here
Get the Kindle App for Android or iOS


The Most Important Verse in the Bible? A Study of John 14:6

Today I launched a Bible study called, "The Most Important Verse in the Bible? A study of John 14:6."

What is the most important verse in the Bible? Is it even possible to pick one? After all, the entirety of the Bible is God's word. It seems a little presumptuous to think that any human can decide what that might be. Yet there are certain foundational truths in our Christian faith and perhaps the most important is that Christ is the way, the truth, and the life. He is our cornerstone. As such, and with a simple yet deep study of John 14:6, I make my case in this first Navy Christian Bullet.

You can get this study for $.99 from Kindle (Amazon) or free from iBooks (search for the title). Nook and Kobo are coming soon!                         

Living in Light of the Coming Rapture

It's official! Living in Light of the Coming Rapture is going live! It will hit the book shelves (Amazon.com, that is) at the end of March or early April. I expect it to be available on Kindle at the same time. Within the next several months, it will be available at Barnes and Noble, Kobi (for Sony Readers) and iBooks.

I've sent the book out to a few folks for review. If you're interested in reading about the rapture, both from a technical perspective and for practical understanding, please let me know and I'll send you a sample (I just ask that you submit a review to Amazon if you don't mind!).

More updates to follow. I'm very excited about the opportunity!

Taking the Rapture Live

I've been struggling for awhile about publishing my work on the rapture and living by it. I grew up with the idea that the rapture could happen at any time, and I still believe it could. For some reason though, I'm afraid to release my writing into the world. The world, at least the Christian world, is more hostile to the idea of the rapture than it was when I was a kid, or maybe I just never understood the church world outside of Kansas. Anyway, I've been sitting on my research for a very long time.

My work toward writing about the rapture started on this blog back in November of 2010. Since then I've periodically experimented my ideas on this blog, in Bible studies, in seminary classes, and in general discussion. I have read plenty of books, both supporting my views and discrediting them.

I guess that I'm just afraid that the work will be rejected. It's irrational to say the least. A large proponent of American Christianity strongly believes in the rapture, and dispensationalism on top of that. I just know some will judge. It bothers me.

Still, I think my writing is sound. I've researched the topic, looked at the counterpoints, and I've rewritten my research several times. It's time to set it free and see what happens.

Stand by. Details of the release date will be forthcoming.

Posts I would Love for you to Share

As I near the end of 2013, I took a look back through my blogging. I began to think about what I'm most proud of on this blog and what was most successful. Ironically, the things I'm most proud of aren't necessarily what has been most popular. My Linux posts, by far, are the most popular posts on my blog, with Linux reviews taking 4 of the top 5 spots on my blog. However, most of that traffic is taken from DistroWatch.com, so not necessarily the organic readership that my spiritual posts enjoy.

Some of my better posts from the year are below. I would very much like for you to read them and share them with your friends. Thanks and enjoy!

On the Newness of the Rapture

The Parable of the Ten Virgins

The Reality of Arguing versus Debate

Sexual Assaults in the Military and the Christian Response

A Post Chaplain World?

What to do with that Gift Card

Hey there...I see you have a gift card to iTunes (or is it BarnesandNoble.com? Or Amazon?). Anyway, kind of hard to see from here. I was wondering if you needed some help deciding what to spend it on. I'd like to give you four ideas. No pressure, mind you, just some ideas.

Over the last several years, I have published four books available for Nook and iBooks and two books for the Kindle. I bet that one of my books would interest you, and I'd love for you to give one (or two) a try. Here is a breakdown of the four books:

Sea Stories, a Sailor's Story of Faith on the Sea
Sea Stories is the journey of a US Navy Sailor traveling the Pacific. During these cruises, he learns not only about missions, but his own faith as well.

After meeting countless missionaries in nine countries, Dan Smith has the stories and experience to share not only how to be involved in missions, but how to support missionaries and military personnel.

This book is a must for those who support missionaries and the military. Church leaders will find the information in this book to be valuable for small group leaders and the congregation as a whole.


Building a Mentoring Community
Mentoring, otherwise known in church circles as discipleship, is not easy. However, it is possibly the most important thing Christians can do to help strengthen the next generation of Christians. This ebook tells you how to do it!








Trident Defense
 "We had been left with no choice. They were coming, and time was running out.” (Chapter 1-Trident Defense)

In a classic alien invasion tale, US astronaut J. William Seymour and his crew must risk everything to prevent Earth's devastation and try to figure out the greater evil that looms behind the aliens!





Top 5 Unknown Linux Distros of 2013
What a year 2013 was for Linux! With each distribution, the greater Linux community gets closer to perfection. It's easy to take note of the big guys, like Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, and others, but what about the lesser-knowns of the Linux world? Is there a place for them?

I compiled some reviews of these lesser-known from my blog (www.navychristian.org) and other sources. It is my hope that these reviews will help you expand your understanding of the world of Linux and expose you to some distros that you might not otherwise explore.


Whatever your personal desire, be it memoirs, mentoring, sci-fi, or tech gear, I have written a book for you. Download and enjoy today!

Recent Rejection in Writing

Over at my other blog (ok, one of my other blogs), I wrote about a recent rejection I went through as a writer. I won't rehash everything here, except to say that it was an article related to military ministry, so it was something that would have furthered the Navy Christian ministry, if there be such a thing.

Rejections always bother me, especially after all of the hard work has been put into it. It's painful to see something I valued as a writer/creator get slaughtered like that and all the editor had to do was say, "No thank you," and go on about his day. Does he not realize how important that article was to me? Ha! Of course he does, but I must also see that it isn't particularly important to his readers.

Back to the drawing board. 

Further work on the Concept of the Rapture

I am the last guy who should be defending the rapture. My theological pedigree is non-existent (MAR from Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary). I have submitted a paper to a Christian theological journal, but I don't know if it's going to find a home. I'm from a simple church family in Kansas. None of my family have PhD adorning their name, though my brother is a candidate at Kansas University (education).

The point is obvious: There are more intelligent and astute men who could defend the rapture. Yet because I am fond of the doctrine, and because three challenges have come up before me, I am choosing to engage the scriptures (and the doctrine's detractors) in discussion. 

In the relative near future, I will discuss these two direct arguments against my writings on the rapture: 

1.  Matthew 13, which my friend Boilt Frog says is that this is where premillinialism goes to die. I may need some time to research this.

2.  A man blogging over at Lamp of the Body has suggested that the parable of the Ten Virgins does not refer to the rapture, but to finding Jesus in every day life. I will explore this as best I can.

A third argument comes from my research on the rapture. It comes from Gary Shogran's commentary on I and II Thessalonians. In it he suggests that I Thess 4 doesn't describe a separate coming, which comes before the 2nd Coming, but a singular event. He brings up some excellent points that I want to confront. I used his commentary on my journal submission. He is against the rapture, though. Good points are good points, and I enjoyed what he had to write.

I hope to write about at least one of these points this weekend and go from there.

Building a Mentoring Community

It's been a year or so since I wrote a simple "how-to" on mentoring, called "Building a Mentoring Community." It has been released on Barnes and Noble, Sony e-readers, Apple books, and PDF and has been downloaded over 60 times, a stat that I am grateful for. From the book's website:

Mentoring, otherwise known in church circles as discipleship, is not easy. However, it is possibly the most important thing Christians can do to help strengthen the next generation of Christians. This ebook tells you how to do it! 

You can get the book from the following links:

Barnes and Noble
Sony e-reader
PDF

And, of course, in the Apple i-Tunes store!

Thank you for your interest in mentoring!

Research Update for the Rapture: My Personal Presuppositions


Now that I have a Master of Arts degree in Religion from Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary, I have decided to further some research and writing to develop my ministry in that direction. I have always believed that one of my strengths was writing, so this year (post degree) I focused on that effort. One of my articles has already been accepted for a January 2014 publication in the Evangelical Missions Quarterly. I'm also currently under assignment to write an article about military ministry and how to start it. I'm almost finished with that one.

With those two "notches" under my belt, so to speak, I wanted to focus my efforts on theology, as both of my other articles are more of a practical ministry slant. Without a PhD in theology, I may never get anywhere with my rapture article, but I have decided to really focus on the doctrine and discover what I really believe about it after my own careful research. In order to do that, I had to take into account my own presuppositions, as failing to deal with them could lead to fouling up the research.

To presuppose is to suppose beforehand, according to Miriam Webster. When it comes to the rapture and what it has always represented for me, I definitely had some beforehand supposing in my life. From the time I was a boy growing up on a farm in Kansas, I just assumed the rapture and dispensationalism was the only way to believe. I honestly didn’t even know there was any other way. I had never heard about reformed thought, Covenant theology, or ammelinialism. I didn’t know that people existed who thought that the rapture wouldn’t happen. I just assumed that everyone “knew” the truth.

No research can be conducted without understanding the researcher’s background, even though the researcher will uphold the strictest standards of academia. It is actually for this very reason that I chose to research the rapture. Finding a defensible position is paramount and if one does not exist, then the only real conclusion is to set the doctrine aside.

I don't want to get into too many specifics of my research at this time. I am finished with the third draft of the paper and just need to go back and format my sources before one last draft and then submission. As I said before, I may get nowhere with it publication-wise, but it has been an important journey for me as I seek to understand what I believe about the doctrine and whether my presuppositions can continue to direct my life. 

My Story is not Your Story.


Periodically, though not often, I hear from a missionary I've visited that they have met other sailors as the latter pull in to town for some liberty. This was especially true of Pattaya Beach, Thailand. However, this is often not the case. If you asked ten Christian sailors if they visit missionaries overseas, I would suppose that maybe 4 of them do what I do. Then again, that could be an optimistic number as well.

Why? Most probably don't even consider it. The thought has simple never crossed their mind. It's not bad, it just is. I got the idea to meet missionaries overseas directly (I believe) from God. I didn't think of it and to my knowledge no one put the thought in my head. Therefore, it is just something that happened. Since I believe that information came from God, it would be difficult to assume other Christians would get that same message, or at least the same message the same way I got it.

Yet I did get that message, and it's something I've enjoyed doing. I get to have a finger on the pulse of missions, get to strengthen my own faith, and get to see parts of a city that most people don't get to see.

To read more about my travels and what I do in foreign ports, pick up my ebook at Barnes and Noble or, for more information, click on this link.

Continuing Strategy of TNC


I've already made a point to suggest that my ministry is centered on writing. I've written an article for Evangelical Missions Quarterly that is slated for January 2014 issue and I'm under assignment with Enrichment Magazine for an article on starting military ministries in local churches. And, thanks to a hospital stay for my daughter, I've been able to get back into blogging, mostly by chronicling her 2 weeks in the hospital.

The problem I have is that I love my three blogs a lot, at least at any given time when I'm interested in the subject they cover. I have a blog about cystic fibrosis, which I haven't written on in some time because I wrote about the hospital stay on this blog. I have a mentoring blog, which I thought would turn out to be a major ministry in and of itself, but that didn't really materialize. I think that churches already believe they support mentoring even if they don't. Anyway, I also have a fourth blog in the works for writing travel reviews on countries that Sailors visit.

What does this mean? Well, it means on one hand that I don't have any idea what I really want to write about. Or rather, I want to write about everything. I'm not just a one-passion man. I love technology, mentoring, being a Christian sailor, and beating cystic fibrosis. I also like politics, but my politics are a little different than most Christians, so I try to refrain from writing about it. Besides, what am I supposed to say about the government I've sworn to protect?

Suffice to say, I needed a new blogging plan of action. Starting now, I will publish at least one post per week in each of my passions. If I get excited enough to publish more than that, then so be it. However, the point of it all is to publish one post, build a following, expand my Twitter position and the Navy Christian Facebook page, and continue to write articles for magazines. In a few years, I really want to have a book deal. Probably a goal for 2016.

So there you have it. Things are changing a little in order to expand my writing platform in preparations for the future. Just think...someday you'll be able to say, “I knew him then.”

Post-MA Degree Plans

I'm a few months from officially being a graduate of Liberty University's Master of Arts in Religion program, but all coursework has been turned in and I'm accepted for graduation. So basically, I'm a graduate, just not officially.

And good thing too, because in December of this year I commission as a Chief Warrant Officer in the United States Navy. Immediately after the first of the year 2014, I ship off to Newport, RI for officer indoctrination and then to my ship (with a school in route). After I get to my ship, I'll probably be so busy getting my qualifications finished that I won't be able to breathe, much less think about the fun things I'd like to be doing.

Still, December is a long way off, though I suspect it will be here before I know it, and I must find something to do with my time. So, now that the degree is complete, where do I go from here? I have a few goals that I'd like to put forth in the ole' blog so that it's official:

1.  Get ready to be a Chief Warrant Officer. Moving to the Wardroom is a completely different game than what I've done so far in the Navy. Because of that, I have to figure that I'll need some preparation. I have already got a hold of the Coast Guard manual for ship-driving and plan to study that.

Along with that, and maybe most importantly at this juncture, is finally getting my weight under control. I passed my most recent Navy weigh-in, but not without some modifications, as it were, to my diet and health. It's time to fix that for good. My major goal in the next six months or so is to lose enough weight to pass my next weigh-in without being taped for body fat percentage.

2.  Focus on my writing. Now that I have some time on my hands, I want to see if I can make my MAR pay for itself. I know that the MAR isn't the most important degree in the religion community, but it did prepare me to write and to think critically. I have a few ideas already for publication and four articles in the editing process. I've already been accepted for publication in the January 2014 issue of Evangelical Missions Quarterly and I look forward to more success in this area.

In addition to official (and paid for) writing, I want to focus on blogging more as well. I love Navy Christian and I want it to be more effective in supporting my fellow Christian Sailors and helping churches around the USA support Christians in the Navy. So expanding my writing in this area is pretty important to me.

I count my writing, at this juncture, as my main ministry effort. While I will continue to mentor and preach any time I get a chance, writing is the main focus as I get ready for the big step in my life.

Making my way into Science Fiction


Sometimes I like to have fun with writing. It's just enjoyable, that's all, and provides a nice escape and a little side money. I'm not a prize-winning author, but, like many of my kind, I have a lot of fun. Yesterday I reported via Facebook that I was being published in the Evangelical Missions Quarterly in January of 2014. That is a serious credit and I'm both grateful and excited for the opportunity.

Science Fiction, on the other hand, is not very serious, but it does provide a fascinating world of possibilities. One gets to design, very literally, the universe when writing science fiction. I think it allows me to display the creative side of me that my Father gave me when he created a universe, and that is a fact I take seriously.

In the next few months, my next novel will be released. The original publisher has decided to close his doors, thus returning my contracted project back to me. I say that so that when I tell you I've decided to self-publish, you won't think ill of me. The book had been accepted for publication. Without a publisher, however, I am choosing to release the book myself.

Trident Defense, Book 1, is the story of defending the Earth from an alien invasion. It is a return to a sort of classical science fiction theme and represents my first real forray into sci-fi. I've written stories before, even some that have been published in small circulars. Trident Defense, Book 1, however is the first real attempt at commercial writing of this type.

I will keep you informed periodically about TDB1 and let you know when you can get it and where. In the meantime, take a look at my writing website and see what's going on!

Is Blogging Dead? 5 Reasons Pastors should still Blog


No way around it…blogging is not as popular as it used to be. It's a little harder now to get people to read a 500 word blog post than a 140 character Twitter update. So does that mean that pastors should avoid blogging? I don't think so. In this post I'm going to give you 5 reasons to keep blogging.

1. Your goal is to reach your flock. A blog allows you to do that in much the same way that a weekly email or bulletin insert can do, but it remains more permanent. Emails get deleted, bulletin inserts usually get trashed, but blogs don't go away.

2. Blogging is a good way for your flock to see what products/resources you'd recommend. Reading a review from you about a new book will mean a great deal. Just saying it in the bulletin or mentioning it on Sunday morning will be easily forgotten, but reading a review on it will help keep that resource fresh on your congregation's minds.

3. Your schedule: Are you speaking at a conference? Can you post the audio or video from that conference on your blog? If so, then it could be a real boon to your congregation to be able to hear what you say. Let's imagine that you're speaking at a leadership conference. Don't you think your members would like to know what you say? Post about it and keep them updated! Furthermore, with the global reach of social media and blogging, don't you want them to invite their friends to your event?

4. Your writing. Many pastors and church leaders today write books or resources on the side. Even I have a few short ebooks that talk about issues near and dear to me. Pastors can extend their sphere of influence past Sunday morning by including writing, both through blogging itself and in promoting books.

5. Building community: The most important reason to keep blogging, or to start blogging if you aren't already, is to stay engaged during the week. Any given pastor is going to be pulled away in a number of directions throughout the week. However, a blog, with at least weekly updates, can give you and your members a way to keep in touch. Just make sure you reply to comments! Otherwise it might backfire and you look even more distant.

As you can see, plenty of reasons exist to keep blogging. Our congregations need to hear from us when it is appropriate to keep connected and keep expanding spiritually.

Are there reasons you blog as a pastor that I didn't mention? Please do so in the comments!