Thursday, August 28, 2008

God's heart at Work


It has been some time since my last post and I'm sure much has happened in your life as it has in mine. Of late, I have been focused on leadership in the workplace and expressing, or not, my Christ-following self there. More closely, though, of expressing the love of Christ and deliberately recognizing that I am an extension of Jesus everywhere all the time. Sounds simplistic, maybe even common place but placing academia into middle management is far from that.

I am weaving two themes here. Leadership and infusing a higher way of interacting with emplyees and my role as a reconciler, peace-maker. I am moved deeply buy an insight of one of my favorite speakers and one of the best Biblical expositors one will find, G. Campbell Morgan. He says, "I am to put my whole life into the great business of bringing about a reconciliation of men to God." Does that not describe the purpose of every Christian? I think that sums it up!

Working in a secular healthcare environment has delivered experiences that challenge how to reach others for Christ without using position in an inappropriate way. Business in not blind, like justice should be, but it mostly, deliberately will make decisions not in the better interest of employees. But this is becoming old school in thought but hardly in practice. Many studies and books have been written drawing attention to positive psychology in the workplace. In fact, Marcus Buckingham has suggested that a more beneficial way of looking at work is not "work is a place where work gets done but rather work is a place where people get done." Try that one on your CEO or manager. Yet evidence supports the old addage...happy emloyees are productive employees.

In my experience most employees want to be loyal, engaged, effective and productive for the business. But not so much if the business is calouse to the emotional and psychological needs of the employee.

"If you can provide a core belief that [a new idea] will work and grow and adapt, other people will come along who believe it, too...It also requires a certain amount of initiative to do things even if people think you're crazy -- they might be right, but doing it anyway is what's important" says Vinton Cerf, Ph.D.

Friday, April 25, 2008

Harmony

I was quite impressed with the Jazz Worship service at St. Paul's Collegiate Church. The musicians were wonderful and I truly marveled at the passion and precision of the band. It was a privilege. How I pray that I deliberately fulfill my part, as a follower of Christ, with the same dedication and passion.

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Snow Covered

After a snow like this, it is amazingly peaceful and quite. All nature is still, almost as if it is taking in the view and sighing over the harmouneous beauty before it.
"Whiter Than Snow"...a Christian hymn speaks of our short-comings being washed and made whiter than snow. If this picture represents life's landsccape, this is how God views it. Comforting, isn't it!
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Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Water. Spirit


I love water...I mean being near it. Lake, Ocean, Rushing River. There is something amazing about it. It is calm and soothing. It is powerful beyond reckoning. Even a small flowing river can humble you if you tip a kayak or canoe. The water just keeps on moving and as adrenalin courses through the body, one can only get out of the way. Awesome, powerful, humbling. I simply like to be in its presence. So is my experience with the Spirit of God.
I ponder that at times I/we miss adrenalin driven humility in God's presence. Perhaps that is my attraction to water.

Trees

I am praying that God will take a tree, change it and bring it to Himself. Perhaps replant it in His garden.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Night Shots


I went out with my Canon 20D, lenses and tripod and did some night, long-exposure, shots in Willimantic, CT. I hoped for good shooting around Frog Bridge.It was quite cold and many of my shots were out of focus. Some from shake (even on tripod) others from the auto-focus lens(es) not being able to focus well in darkness. It was much darker to the eye than appears in this photo.

I had exposures from fractions to 8 seconds or more. I was surprised to see the introduction of noise even though I shot with ISO 100 speed and my camera was set for "Long-exposure noise reduction" (a custom function).

The above shot is a favorite. Oh, it happened to be a full moon too! The color reproduction is as shot.

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Guitarist

A black and white with blue filter
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