How You Know You’ve Been Part of a House Church For A While…
We’ve just crossed over the two-year mark with our house church here in Eastern Iowa. Ariel, our daughter was born just a few months before we started meeting together as a church and has grown up largely outside of what is conventianlly understood as a “church.” So how do we know we’ve been in a house church for a while?
The other day my wife was driving through a part of our neighborhood we don’t normally drive by with our kids in the backseat. She passed by a traditional church building with a tall white steeple that looks like it was built in the 30’s or 40’s. My daughter, who is obsessed with everything related to princesses, shouts out, “Look, mommy, CASTLE!”
Why You Should Always Read The Whole Article…
So I’m cruising through Foxnews.com and I come across an article about Gmail failing during the early morning hours yesterday. Being somewhat concerned as a user and staunch advocate of most Google products, I read the article:
“Google’s Gmail online e-mail service ran out of juice for several hours Tuesday morning for users in Europe and possibly worldwide.”
Now you should know that Google was predictably unclear about what the problem was and if you should be concerned. It seems they were mostly concerned about calming people down. Their response was this:
“We’re aware of a problem with Gmail affecting a small subset of users,” read a posting at 5:46 a.m. EST in a GMail help forum.
Later, at 8:48 a.m., another post read, “The problem is now resolved and users have had access restored. We know how important Gmail is to our users, so we take issues like this very seriously, and we apologize for the inconvenience.”
But the real story was found when you got to the bottom of the article. Never let a journalism proffessor tell you the most important facts are at the top of the story. The journalist writing the story goes on to describe the reaction of the “Twitosphere” but unwittingly uncovers the truth of the entire story:
“When Chuck Norris uses Gmail, the whole world waits until he’s done,” the posting read — in French.”
Dr. Seuss On The Brain
Which is worse: Being able to almost fully recite the text of Dr. Seuss’ ABC’s or having your daughter correct you when you can’t quite get the words right?
Ah well…it might have something to do with the fact that I’ve covered this story somewhere before. (And yes, I know, the song doesn’t play. Maybe that’s a good thing.)
