Don’t you be doing that church hop

Perry Noble points us to Steven Furtick blasting church hoppers/church shoppers like I’ve never seen it done before. I was fired up by his comments. On the other hand, I have good friends who have struggled with finding the right place where God is calling them to worship, grow, and serve. There’s a line between a genuine spiritual struggle and a crassly consumerist attitude toward church.

The best approach for churches is to reach out and welcome everyone with all of their experiences, sins, mistakes, bad hair, doubts, fears, body odor, struggles, biases, broken relationships, addictions, questions, emotions, mental illness, inappropriate behavior … and yes, even warped attitudes towards church. We start with people wherever they are. And then, pay close attention here, we must rely on the power of the Holy Spirit to work through our teaching, worship, service, and deep Christian community to transform them. No doubt some of those people have been church goers for years, yet they haven’t learned even the basics of Christian discipleship. Instead of giving up and calling them out, let’s call them up to a richer, fuller, deeper understanding of what Jesus asks of them. To be clear, I’m talking about starting with people where they are, but not being complacent about letting them stay there.

Web Software Developer position open

We’re seeking a highly-skilled web software developer for a challenging and fulfilling position at The Church of the Resurrection (Kansas City area). Work in a high-energy, innovative environment with other talented technologists. BS in computer science or related field or equivalent experience required. Minimum of 2 years professional experience with the LAMP platform and 2 years professional experience with the .NET platform. Reports to the Director of Information Technology. Don’t miss this unique opportunity to serve Christ with your software development skills. To apply, please e-mail Cork Kurlbaum (our uber-volunteer/professional IT recruiter) for immediate consideration.

Five hot technologies for 2007

Yesterday Computerworld published an interesting article predicting five technologies will be hot over the next 12 months:

1. Ruby on Rails – web application development framework

2. NAND Flash drives – solid state mass storage with big enough capacity to substitute for small hard drives and 100x the performance

3. Ultra-Wideband (UWB) – short range wireless at 200x the speed of Bluetooth

4. Grid Computing – rent a data center by the gigabyte such as Amazon’s S3 service

5. Advanced CPU architectures on higher-density chips

Kathy Sierra on user happiness

Kathy has an excellent post today on what happens when the “policies and procedures tail” wags the “user happiness dog.” I continually remind my IT team here at Resurrection that our job is to serve users, not the other way around. My team has a lot of ideas about how to increase our efficiency, which I think is great so long as it doesn’t make things more diffcult for those we serve. Do you advocate for users in your organization?

Mac vs. PC

“As a Mac user, I wish Microsoft would run an Apple-like ad about the process by which Mac users get service for broken hardware. It would be really hard for Apple to respond, because their system for dealing with broken hardware is itself horribly broken. They need serious incentives to fix this.” – Dave Winer

Just last week my team at Resurrection and I were joking about exactly this idea. (We support both PCs and Macs.) The Apple commercials are terribly funny, no doubt. But Apple would have you believe that their stuff never breaks. In our parody commercial, Mac would be broken and a poor, hapless user would be striken by the question, “How do I fix this thing?” PC would answer, “I don’t know.” Then the user would ask, “Who DOES know?” Followed by nothing but dead silence.

When PC is broken, we call our friendly Dell service person, who comes out a day or two later and fixes it. It’s painless and nearly effortless. When Mac is broken, we are faced with a small number of bad options, all of which will cost us a lot more time and brain damage than calling Dell. Surely Dave Winer and us aren’t the only ones who have faced this issue. Does Apple care?

Visual communication

I’ve posted before about the importance of visual communication in our world. Unfortunately, I’ve spent my whole life honing my ability to communicate with words. That skill will be nearly obsolete by the end of my life. Seth Godin points us to an example of how ordinary people can use video technology to communicate. Wouldn’t it be cool to use this video to teach church staff about web technology? Would it be even cooler for all of us to learn how to communicate this way?

Nerds on retreat!

We got out of the office for a day-long retreat yesterday. Most of my IT team was there:


Clockwise starting from left (goofy guy with Texas Tech t-shirt):
Chuck Russell – Internet Communications Director
Jeremy Grabrian – Desktop Support Specialist
Ian Beyer – Network Administrator
George Smiley – Desktop Support Technician (part time)
Brian Slezak – Software Developer
Leo Johns – web consultant (part time)

Oh yeah, and the end of the table with a laptop, a flat-panel monitor, and no one sitting there – that’s me. 😉

MailFrontier is nearly perfect again

Last week we finally had time to focus on our spam problem. With some assistance from our friendly SonicWall tech support person, we installed a software update and tweaked our configuration. Turns out that at some point we white-listed everything from cor.org, no doubt to address a false positive situation, but that was a bad idea – too much spam is spoofed to come from your own domain. With the new software and the tweaks, we’re back to nearly perfect, and just in time for the long Christmas-New Year’s break when many of our staff take vacation. Almost no spam is getting through to our users’ inboxes. Wee hoo!

SonicWall, I owe you an apology. When properly configured, SonicWall Mail Security is every bit as good as the spam filter built-in to Outlook 2003.