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Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Katie & Me

(WARNING A MOVIE SPOILER!)
OK. In this tweeting rising and blogging declining time,I decided to write a blog entry (at least try) every week.

Finally, I watched “Marley & Me.”  It was much talked about by the Kim family and one of the siblings (Becky/John/Angel/Joe) told me that my senior pastor cried watching the movie (he LOVES animals), so I figured that it would a good emotional ride.  

Overall, I was glad to finally understand the bond between man and his canine that seemed so foreign to me.

johnangel

And through out the entire movie, I just couldn’t help but to think about the pup that I had for 24 hours during my 1st year of seminary. It was a Shiba Inu and I named her “Katie.”  YG kids told me that you shouldn’t name a dog’s name that sounded like a real person’s name but I decided to give her that name anyhow – named after my favorite actress. Isn’t she a good looking pup?shiba
But after interacting with a pup for the first 24 hours, I realized that I have no capacity/time/patience to responsibly raise her, so I returned her to the owner. People say that you will treat your kids like how you treat your pets, so this may not be a good sign for my parental side.  This is something that I will need to work on later, when I get a new dog or a kid (or which one comes first).

Going back to “Marley & Me,” two things that stuck out for me:
1) “Love suffers long.” This is the KJV’s translation of 1 Cor 13:4 “Love is patient” and for this verse, I prefer it. Through out the movie, I loved the patient suffering that the entire family showed to Marley “the world’s worst dog.”   And the last scene was definitely moving, I think the kids learned an invaluable lesson on love - that every relationship comes to its inevitable/temporary end, yet love is still worth giving and receiving.

2) “We all want a good life.” For some reason, I totally identified myself with John G. The main character in the movie might possibly have everything a man would want in his life, yet his eyes were set another life/career of his friend.   This attitude of “My life will be complete with _______________” is so prevalent in my life and our time.   And the movie ends by sharing a few simple thoughts on dog’s attitude:

"A dog has no use for fancy cars, big homes, or designer clothes. A water log stick will do just fine. 

A dog doesn’t care about whether you’re rich or poor, smart or dumb, you give  him your heart and he will give you his."


Simple contentment that comes from a simple life.
Unwavering loyalty displayed by to the master’s faithfulness.

No wonder so many people prefer to relate with dogs over people.


Friday, June 27, 2008

Jester Pastor

Alright Xanga. I am back! 

I will be double timing until I generate some traffic on WordPress.

And Since it's a slow Friday, I think it's a good time for some blogging.

Yesterday, I was introduced a term "JESTER." 

jester


My co-workers and I were taking an online quiz: "Are you a metro-sexual?
Don't ask me how we got into this.  But one of the guys, who wears ripped jeans & tshirts to work and answered "I forget to wash behind my ears.", got a result of "JESTER" for his possibility of being a metro-sexual.  But for some reason, he wasn't happy with his result, so he showed up wearing a nice black shirt (with a white pair of socks) and told us that he spent 11 minutes grooming himself this morning.  So we retook the quiz and he ended up with with the same result: "JESTER."  I guess once a jester, you will  always be a jester. 

This mornig, I get a call from my dad.  He sounds pretty excited.  He tells me one of the church members is selling a 2004 Honda Pilot for a really really good price.  

pilot


This news grabs my attention, because I think Pilot's a decent car and my current car is dying slowly.  You gotta understand that I love my accord and I wouldn't mind driving it until she's dead.  But this past year, I already put in ~ $3K for a new transmission, broken ball bearings, etc and she already has 185K miles.  So I don't know what kind of future financial problems she will grieve me with. 

So I was totally willing to jump on this deal. I asked my dad about the Pilot's spec:
- 4 Wheel Drive - Check!
- Moon Roof - Not bad!
- 36,000 miles - Excellent!
- 19 mpg - So so!
- 8 seater - Yes!  Can drive more YG  kids around!

Then I asked him what color it was.  My dad says red or burgundy. 
I couldn't believe my ears, so I looked it up on the net.

redpilot


And i guess it is really red.  My superficiality kicked in and the color of the Pilot became the deal breaker.
I think the next car I get will be with me for another 10 years and I just didn't want to drive around a mini fire truck.

So I told my dad, "NO."  I give him the real reason and a made up reason that I need a car with a better gas mileage.  Then my dad reads me like a book and he tells me that since I am going to be a pastor, I shouldn't really care about the color of the car.

Yeah.  I think dad is right on this one.  But I will stick with my accord for now.
But this little incident reveals a bit of story of my past year.

Constantly thinking and struggling about how I am fitting in as a future pastor:
- Am I saying the right things?
- Am I dressing appropriately?
- Am I behaving properly?

I think I was at the both ends of the spectrum:  "heck with it!" or "become a slave to high expectations."
And either way, I ended up feeling and acting like a Jester Pastor.  A pretender.

This Sunday, I will be preaching on Philippians 2:12-16 and in these verses, I find my strength & hope.

 12 Not that I have already obtained this (KNOWING CHRIST) or am already perfect,
 but I press on to make it my own, because Christ Jesus has made me his own.

 
Paul, probably the guy, who has the most cognitive & personal knowledge of Christ, says that He's not fully there, so He will press on to know Christ. This "press on" is a hunting language - to "pursue and capture" or "chase  and overtake."  So Paul is literally hunting for Christ to make Him his own.  This was his life passion and his essence of Christianitiy.  But this pursuit is made possible only because Christ has already made Paul His own.   Paul was pursuing Christ, but at the same time, he was already caught by Christ.  Trying to know a person, who already fully knows you & loves you - I believe this is a situation you just can't fail.  So we press on.

So, if you see me driving a Red Pilot in the next month.  Praise God that I am overcoming my superficiality. 
But if you see me driving my old Accord, then Praise God that He still knows and owns me.

 


Saturday, November 24, 2007

Goodbye Xanga but One Last Time...

Dear Xanga,

I have been thinking about our relationship and it seems like things are not working out. Don't you think?
We shared some good times together but things are just not the same.

So why don't we go our separate ways?
You're the last person/thing I want to hurt but I think this is best for both of us.

But before this is all over, can I make one last entry to give a belated birthday shout out to a good friend but a not so clean roommate? I know. It's a selfish request, but it's for a good cause. So...


HAPPY 3? (maybe 40) th BIRTHDAY TO ERIC SOHN! (11/23)




Please wish him a happy belated bday and show some love to this brother!


Sunday, October 21, 2007

Two Homes

You know that feeling, how great it feels to be at home after a long trip?

It was so awesome to be back at CFC - worshiping & getting blessed with my new & old family.
Sorry I couldn't  have a long/deep/meaningful talk with everyone, but it was so good to everyone. 

The best part of this weekend was seeing our youth guys & gals literally come alive after having back to back revivals (STL Youth Rally & CFC Revival). 

Here're some pictures from past two weekends:

STL Youth Rally




[I was getting blessed by Mike Park in this picture, but he later told me he was just sitting down cause his back was hurting. ]




U of I - CFC Revival








Thoughts on youth ministry....

Kids' hearts are so pure & precious. 
Some of their hearts are like plants on steroids.  You water them a little bit, they grow like crazy. 

I learned in seminary that the average age limit for youth pastor is 35 and ESFP makes the ultimate ageless youth pastor.  Since I am ENFP,  I guess I only have a few more years left in me, but for now, I am loving it.

I do have two concerns:

1) My Junior High Boys - I am pretty sure they're knocking off a few years of my life. 
I have to discipline them like they're my own kids.  Made one cry this weekend after he repeated & chanted profanities written about Michigan on U of I  T-shirts.





2) Growing more immature - I can't believe I am screaming out "Choco Taco"at a truck stop...







Nonetheless, I am very thankful.


Friday, September 28, 2007

In Honor of Mr. Jingles

My roommates and I noticed a little mouse problem, so I put out a trap for it. 
Last Sunday night, mr jingles (we named him) went for the bate (peanut butter covered ramyun noodles & granola pieces) and he was captured.




For the past week, we were considering what to do with him.  Here's what each of said:

Sean - Keep him as a pet or set him free in the forest.
Eric - (For some reason he's deathly afraid of rodents)  Get that thing away from me!
Me - Give him proper punishment then kill it.

Using some pop psychology, I think here's an explanation of what all this  means for us as future fathers:

Sean - Will make a terrific dad.  Will give his children wings to fly so that they can enjoy their freedom.
Eric - Will neglect his kids out of personal insecurities. 
Me - Will torture his kids - possible abuse.

Anyhow, we (or I) just ended up throwing him away in the dumpster. Rest in peace Mr. Jingles.

On a serious note, STL has been bery bery good to me.
Some highlights so far:
  • Tearing up in my first preaching class with Bryan Chapell.  Covenant seminary has been amazing...
  • Getting lost and making numerous illegal u-turns for the past month - some St Louis drivers are terrible drivers.
  • Learning to live on a budget.  I miss Dorcas with all of my heart. But moms at our church have been amazing - they're weekly cooking for me, because I am single.  They kinda remind me of mamas in Kenya & Ethiopia.  I am content in my single hood.
  • And getting to know my youth group kids.  We have 20+ Korean speaking guys, so my broken Korean is utilized to the max.  Another observation. High school students are much different than college students.  Junior High kids are another species.  
My transition has not been a walk in the park, but it's worth every step of the way.  I know its cheesy.








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