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Trying to figure out why I left my daughter’s sippy cup on the newspaper machine.

We’re Not in Kansas Any More…

[Posted this at ParrisFam.com, too. Still trying to figure out how to decide which blog to post some of this stuff on.]

Wow. What a whirlwind.

It’s now been two months since I worked as a staff member at West Ridge. Now I’m an upstart Worship “Pastor” (still trying to get my brain around that) with barely a clue of how to get upstarted.

Since Memorial Day, we have moved into a rental house in Charleston (South Carolina), rented out our home in Paulding County (Georgia), taken two or three trips back and forth to get (most) of our flammable possessions, celebrated Caia’s second birthday, recognized Jack’s 6-month birthday, scheduled back surgery for Annette…and that’s only the first 5% of what’s taken up our time.

I say “flammable possessions” because there is no more honest time to realize just how meaningless stuff is than moving day(s). It’s all gonna burn. (a lot of it I wish would burn, quite honestly.)

The biggest percentage of my time has been consumed by freelance web-design. It’s been productive…but exhausting. And for the most part, the number of projects has dried up. The economy is hitting small businesses’ web budgets hard. This is a bad thing and a good thing for me. In bad light, funds are very tight. Tighter than ever before. But in good light Annette and I are realizing how important it is that we quickly transition into a fully support-based posture as it relates to my income.

Web-design work is very inconsistent. Feast or famine in the truest sense. A web-designer-friend and I were talking about it this morning. We go weeks with little work coming in, and then a long project list comes in all at once with very little room to breathe. It compromises our ability to deliver a quality product, and breaks down the rhythm of our families.

From Tuesday night until Thursday at 5pm this week, I literally didn’t even step outside the door of our house. Not even to check the mail. All for clicking and tapping my way to healthy web code.

Brutal.

So Annette and I have prayed and talked about how to transition the focus of my time from web-design more clearly to River Church. Not to say I won’t ever do a web project here and there. (Current or recently quoted clients, please take note! I’m still here!) But depending on it solely is wearing us thin already.

I’m thankful for God to show us this so soon and so clearly. I’m excited as heck about it to be honest. There are so many relationships I’m already forming with artists here in Charleston…and there is so much in general to be done to get this church on its legs. The remaining percentage of my time that has been given to River Church has been far to small. It won’t be tough at all to fill my time with things that fulfill the reason God moved us here to begin with.

We all need margin. Leftovers. Wasted time. Doggonit…we need to burn our leftover stuff and some of our time. Enough open time to walk or bike to our destination. Or for a ride on the slow boat. Sustainable pace, people. It’s critical.

Here’s a thought… Pacing yourself and creating margin in your life is a required ingredient for living by Faith. It’s how you tell your list, your family, your Father that you really do believe that you can do It without doing it all.

All that to say, in a nutshell, we’re hoping the storm will soon pass. We’re gonna give it a little nudge, even. It’s time to hit a stride and begin making headway. Gotta get the grease off the soles of my shoes.

Gotta Crawl Before You Can Walk…Go, Jac!

Here’s my little man beating out his big sisters in the age they learned to crawl. That’s my BOY!

Download now or watch on posterous

IMG_1101.MOV (1977 KB)

Posted via email from Stephen Parris

I can quit anytime I want

I’ve eaten 4 of these today. They’re really good. Fortunately they’re only 15 calories each. Serious citric acid goodness in three flavors. I have a leaning towards orange.

Posted via email from Stephen Parris

Oh. My. Gosh.

25 June, 2010
 
I’ll remember that I was packing my house to move when I heard that Michael Jackson died.
 
Thanks for the memories, Jack-O.
 
A tragic life, but an amazing talent.
 
. . .
 
stephenparris.com
arts + innovation pastor • riverchurch.com
678.469.9820 // @stephenparris

Posted via email from Stephen’s posterous

Is it really this simple? Help me out.

Tuesday night Annette and I were finally able to attend our first River Church Core Team gathering.

It exceeded our hopes and expectations.

We are on for the ride of our life together…God is doing something incredibly unique here.

We launch 3 January, 2010 in West Ashley, Charleston, South Carolina. There were 16 folks at the gathering who make up most of our “Core.”

They are not ordinary.

They are extraordinary.

I’m serious…each and every one of these men and women is high-calibre.

I’m amazed.

We talked through Matthew 28:18-20, and took a look at this article which explains the relationship of the Talmidim and his Rabbi. It was a good illustration of our goal at River Church to lead by fostering true community and discipleship. Intentionally, specifically, and strategically. Just as Jesus invested his greatest effort in Peter, James and John to leverage the cornerstones of the Church, we can only expand the Kingdom of God in West Ashley by focusing on roughly 3 folks over a long period of time who then focus on discipling roughly 3 folks…and so on.

Here’s the hard-hitting quote of the night:

If your disciples are not discipling, then YOU are not discipling, and you may very well not be a disciple yourself.

So, stick with me here: If the effectiveness of our church’s leadership [micro] is equal to our disciples’ effectiveness, and if the role of the Church is to make disciples of all nations, then the overall [macro] health of River Church can be easily gauged by how engaged our people are with making disciples themselves.

Simply put, if years from now we are seeing the number of intentional and effective disciples increase exponentially, then we are leading a healthy church.

That’s a tall cup of tea to swallow. A daunting task.

But Christ has told us that we are able and that we can rely on His help.

Novelty will fade and we will move from launch mode to [hopefully] gaining in maturity. Through it all, if River Church is multiplying disciples exponentially, all over the globe, then we are successful.

If our reality shows otherwise, then we have missed our calling.

Is it really that simple? Am I oversimplifying? Way off base? I’m a veteran of the Church, but am a newby in leading a church. Is this thought too idealistic!

I guess the reason I’m so uncertain is I don’t see too many church plants out there who are operating in a way that effectively cultivates this kind of community.

Are we ready to lead so intentionally and intensely that we would only have the bandwidth to disciple three men or women? Can our pride handle putting so many of our eggs in that basket?

One night on the Sea of Galilee, Peter didn’t doubt Christ’s ability to find firm footing in water…he doubted his OWN ability.

If our clothes are dusty from walking behind Jesus, we are able…because our efforts are powered by the Spirit of God.

Again, is it this simple? Disciples leading disciples who are leading disciples? Is this a thorough enough summary of the Great Commission?

Visit to The Weather Channel Studios

Had a cool experience tonight… Christian Anderson, a friend in our church, has a cousin who works at The Weather Channel here in Atlanta. He was very gracious to give us a tour of the new HD studio. I took a few photos of the new set, and some photos of the ‘ruins’ of the original set. Pretty cool stuff.

The HD set is very cool… It is constructed to rotate allowing for dozens of configurations. All of the cameras are robotic… There are no ‘camera men’ standing on the set. It’s just the anchor(s), a producer, and the maps operator (who’s sitting right behind one of the walls within earshot of the anchor). Everything else appeared to be run from one of three control rooms.

I wish I could have spent more time examining every single nook and cranny, but the “Evening Edition” was about to go live. The two anchors were very laid back and made sure they told me they look better on camera than in person.

Friday morning, I’ll be visiting the CNN Studios sets here in Atlanta while the morning show is live in New York with my friend David who works for Turner Broadcasting. That should be cool. Hopefully I’ll get to share some photos from that visit as well.

Here are some of the photos I took…

Barack Obama says “Uh” a lot. But who’s counting?

Now this is funny. Maybe not as funny as me getting hit by a car. But funny.

In Memory…

photo.jpg

Full Service Gratitude…for real this time

For some reason, my post by email didn’t work last night… Weird. So here is what it should have said instead of the nothing it said originally. Read it from the perspective of it being late Thursday night.

So I’m pretty sure God filled up my gas tank tonight.

We’re coming home from the fair, right? My gas gauge is showing “DTE 28 miles.” [DTE is 'distance til empty]

It’s about 29 to my house.

Car full of women… One 33, one 3, one 1. The youngest two are getting cranky. It’s way past their bedtime.

And I have about 120 miles worth of driving to do tomorrow for a handful of consulting visits. First one at 8am…27 miles from my house.

We drive. We drive past 8 gas stations. All out of gas.

The 1 yo started screaming.

4 more stations.

We called Annette’s mom to see if they had any gas stored up in cans. [we were then about 2 miles from their pad.] They didn’t. In fact, they’d already siphoned a spare car’s tank to avert their own disaster.

The girls finally both fell asleep.

We drove into Hiram. No gas.

No gas, no gas, no gas.

We drove on home. But at the last second [the DTE now reads "--". That's not good.] I decided to drive right past our neighborhood to the new Shell station that’s kinda in the middle of stinkin’ nowhere to see if they had anything.

I pulled in at 11:04. The lights were still on, and none of the pump handles were wrapped in grocery sacks.

Maybe?

I pulled closer. Still looked hopeful. Only the low and mid-grade buttons were covered. The super premium [which I NEVER buy] was still uncovered. I wasn’t picky at that point. Gas was gas was gas.

So I put in my card. Still good. Selected my grade. Still okay. Started pumping.

Praise Jesus. We have liftoff!

While it pumped my $87.93 gas purchase, I thanked God. Over and over I thanked Him.

So I printed my receipt, hopped back in the truck, and put it in drive.

And my truck was not even out from under the station roof before the attendant inside turned off the lights.

It was 11:08.

Thank you God.

Now to get to bed and set my alarm for 6:30am. That’s gonna come quick.

But at least I can go earn the cash to pay for the gas I just bought.

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