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Sunday, August 1, 2010

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    A brief Introduction:

    While studying to be a pastor in college I abandoned my faith. In fact, I abandoned everything I thought I believed and rebuilt.

    To my own surprise at the time, I found that Christianity was much stronger than I had thought. As I rebuilt my belief system, I realized that there needed to be people out there responding to the questions people have. I had them myself. So, while not continuing on to be a pastor, I have focused on educating people about what Christianity is all about and responding to the various charges and accusations made against it.

    There are some obvious challenges to being successful in that capacity, but a big part of it consists not in arguing with atheists and skeptics, but rather in providing Christians with accurate information in the first place to prevent them from leaving the faith in the first place.

    Questioning is a very normal and natural part of growing up, and I am convinced that it is not wrong to ask questions of God at any age. God doesn't strike people down. On the other hand, if people are going to reject Christianity, it is my aim to at least make sure they reject the real Christianity and not a false view of it. Also, much heartache can be avoided by educating Christians properly to begin with. My experience has helped me... but it was unnecessary.

    Paul said that some plant, some water, and others reap the increase. My job is to go out into the land and move rocks- or break them if necessary- till the land, and struggle through knee deep fertilizer... all in the effort to allow those who come later to plant, water, and reap the harvest. I look forward to the prospects of either serving you as someone who needs to haul rocks out of the field, or as someone who can look at the field, detect problems, and help farmers more effectively plant, water, and reap.

    Here Begins my Blog

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Random Thoughts on Four Day Work Weeks and the Price of Oil

Posted by Anthony on July 3, 2008

Did you hear that there are businesses and state agencies moving to a four day work week?  The idea is to save on energy costs… the business’s, of course.  It has the side effect of saving normal people some costs, too.  In some cases, the extra day at home is still supposed to be dedicated to work.

I think a four day work week is a good thing.  As a teacher, Friday was almost always a waste, anyway.  Neither teachers nor students had much focus.  This doesn’t seem to be true only of teachers and students.  Two day weekends never seem to be enough to really recharge, either.  You spend all of Saturday recovering, maybe getting to a project, and then Sunday getting ready for Monday.  With three days off, you actually get your day of rest, which I’m convinced we need.  I need it, anyway.

It makes me think about our ideas about productivity in this country.  I bet we get done twice as much in a day today than we got done in 1950.  In some cases, I bet it’s three times as much.  Having increased our ability to do more in a day, did we culturally decide to diminish how many days we worked?  Nah, we just patted our backs on our increased productivity and had higher expectations placed on us.  Not only that, but by thinking in terms of the hourly investment of the employee’s time rather than what the employee is able to accomplish in that hour, businesses were able to justify paying the employee the same (or less) even though they were producing more.  CEO’s, of course, received fat bonuses for the increase in profit.

I like the idea of the four day work week but I like even more the idea of re-evaluating where we as a society our going to put our resources and time.

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