New Album Release Date Set

I hold in my hands the studio CD master for my next album (9th, for those keeping track), Live at the Lyric, recorded at Lyric Coffee House back in June of ’07 with guitar-virtuoso Paul Rohling. Special guests that night also included Jason Rodgers, Christian Fahey, and Ryan Grant. Today I’m sending all the design notes, pictures, liner notes, and credits to my graphic guru, Jason Clement. Then it’s off to ESP in Buffalo for duplication! The product release date is Tuesday, February 10th, with lots of tour dates being scheduled in NY, MI and possibly TN (just got word that Phil Keaggy might sit in with us if we gig in Nashville!). I’m also stoked because we’re going to roll out a number of sepcial packages that you can order, full of “signature collectible stuff.” (At least someone might find it interesting). These goods will only be availible for a limited time right here on our new online store (coming soon), but you can always order the CD from us (hard copy, or iTunes). To date, this is the first album I’ve created that I can actually listen to from start to finish without cringing at something I did (or didn’t do). Let the countdown begin! ch:

Wind. Editing. Coffee’s On.

Whole bean Eight O’Clock Coffee is on. Been up since 3:30am after Luik woke up with a pee-pee diaper. Wicked wind outside, so I decided to edit Athera’s Dawn (working title for book III). To anyone that cares, on page 366 of 517. This book is too long…

CH

Father’s Love To Give

I must say that I am not a shopper. I don’t like shopping. I don’t like comparing prices. I don’t like browsing. I am a hunter…I’m in and out. Make the kill, drag the carcass out. But last night as I was shopping with Jennifer, picking up a few final gifts for our kids, I dare say I had an epiphany.

Luik is now two years old, the age of awareness when it comes to trucks and cars and making explosions (all loves that never really leave a guy…I was kinda’ waiting for this age with him). Likewise, I was given the responsibility of getting boy-toys for Luik, as Jennifer confessed to having no clue what to purchase. Given our incredibly busy schedules, most of this was left to last night; fortunately stores stay open late for just such reasons.

As I was…ummm…hunting…I found myself completely and thoroughly engrossed in my task. I was shopping for my son. Buying boy things, like Matchbox cars, and tracks, and Thomas the Train, and Disney’s Cars. I don’t think I’ve ever had so much fun. And I don’t think I’ve ever been so fascinated with the toy section of a store…accept for maybe when I was a boy over twenty years ago.

Suddenly I realized that this is they very reason why my father, Peter, still buys me a toy each and every Christmas; he loves giving his son gifts…toys to play with…

…in a flash, the epiphany went a step further…

…this must be what our Heavenly Father feels like. Why would such emotions be limited to humans, if they first didn’t originate from our Creator? He loves to give good gifts to His children (Matt. 7:11, James 1:5). In fact, the very nature of God is generous at His core (Romans 5:8, John 3:16). Although the preaching of certain aspects of prosperity have been taken to extremes, this does not nullify the fact that our Daddy loves to lavish us with presents…a feeling I touched in a new way last night. I experienced, if you will, a new facet of the divine nature of God.

While my daughter, Eva, slept for her nap this afternoon, I was busy in the family room assembling her new dollhouse. Thinking of her delight when she sees it tomorrow. Dreaming of all the memories she’ll have playing with her dolls in it. And it was then I had another epiphany provoked in part by something my pastor said to Jennifer and I this week. It’s not just about what our kids will get, its about what we get as parents: The experience of watching. God gives to bless us, yes. But He gives because He loves to watch. Emphasis on He. In the end, its not even necessarily about the gift, but what the gift provokes…

…in both parties.

Here’s to all the children that will walk in new, profound joy in the morning…and to the father’s like me, and the Father Himself, who delight in the profound ability to give…

…because we just can’t help ourselves.

Merry Christmas,

CH

Merry Christmas!

From our snowball fight to yours, Merry Christmas!

~The Hoppers (and Sarah Palin)

Try JibJab Sendables® eCards today!

Live on USTREAM

Bad connection at the studio today, but we are broadcasting live should you happen to chance by; sorry if you get bumped frequently. Thanks for everyone from the US and Europe that stopped by the studio yesterday! It was great to have you “there” with us.

CH

Broadcast Moved

Hey gang. Due to a problem with the Mogulus server today (of all days!), we’ve had to move the live feed to UStream. Please click here to watch us live in the studio, starting at 10:00am ET. Make sure to set up a nick name and chat with us, too!

We’re Live…

The studio cam is online at of 12:40pm ET.

Live In The Studio

After almost a year-and-a-half of delays, I’m finally in the studio this week mixing the Live @ The Lyric album I recorded in June 2007 with Paul Rohling. We’ll be broadcasting live from the studio today, tomorrow, and Wednesday; check back frequently if we have the camera off when you happen to log on. If I have a free second I may even chat with you if you’re watching. Thanks gang!

Changing the County…with gas?

Here, Kevin pumps a man’s fuel for free as Gabi and Sandie offer free
coffee and hot chocolate inside a Stewarts on Washington St. Over
thirty youth from 33 Live hit four gas stations and manned a "Free
Bread & Coffee" booth outside our church on Saturday as a part of
Operation:Blessing.

C.

A Tale of Two Atheists

I must start this post off with a disclaimer. I don’t meet or talk with atheists often, meaning, once a week would be a lot, once a day would be substantial. So having two proactively come after me in one day is, in my little world, monumental.

As I was approaching our church in Watertown, looking forward to setting up my new office, I saw a young Asian couple trying their hardest to push their car out of the snow. Seeing they were clearly not from the area, and therefore had no real idea how to unlodge a car from a ditch of snow, I felt moved to turn around and assist them. Mind you, this was a bit more than a simple conviction to help someone in need…there was clearly a God-uttered “go” in my spirit. God had something more in mind.

Within thirty seconds of helping this cool Chinese guy, Fung, shovel snow out from around his Honda, a young guy about 20-years-old showed up and started helping, too. Allow me to introduce Avery. Bearded, earrings, glasses, and strong. He was eager to push and didn’t mind his hands getting cold. After we got a third guy to help us, we finally got the car out and sent this little Asian man and his wife on their way, all of us feeling good for having done a good deed.

As Avery and I ran back to our cars, I mentioned that our church was right down the street and if he ever needed anything to let me know.

“Church?” he asked.

“Yeah, I’m actually one of the pastors there,” I replied.

He stopped. “You’re a pastor?”

“Sure am,” I said.

“I’m an atheist.”

At that I started laughing out loud (which probably freaked him out a bit). Standing by our cars he began with a short version of his life’s story. Turns out Avery was in seminary, then dropped out, started studying Buddhism, Islam, and Hinduism. Eventually he lost his faith in God and joined the Navy.

“Avery,” I said, “you may have lost your faith in God, but God still believes in you. And you are worth dying for everyday on the week. Jesus loves you, man.”

Avery didn’t say much, but thanked me and we jumped in our cars. Needless to say I drove the next two hundred yards to church praying for Avery’s heart. If that was the end of the story, I would have been stoked; Avery seemed touched by my feeble words…but touched by God, too. But there’s more…

About twenty minutes later while I was cleaning my office to Kim Walker blasting on my iMac, I heard voices in the hallway outside my office. I poke my head out and there was one of our staff, Joel, talking with…you guessed it…Avery.

“Dude!” I exclaimed. “What are you doing here?” (Probably a dumb question for a man of faith…but a better suited one for a man of little faith).

“Well, I was going to go home and do nothing like I always do, but I thought I’d come by and volunteer here today.”

Of course he would. What else should I expect?

I proceeded to press into this guy, speaking truth into his life and going after his heart. “You’ve filled your head with so much stuff, Avery, but God cares about your heart. What in the world hurt you so bad that you’d turn your heart on Jesus?” He was clearly a young man who had been deeply wounded. We talked for a while and I felt the compassion and love of the Holy Spirit just pouring over this guy. “You think that was coincidence meeting out there?”

“There’s no such thing as coincidences,” he replied.

“Exactly! God is after your heart, drawing you back!”

Avery served at the church with our staff the rest of the day, and before I left I got to pray with him…a very poignant moment as I could feel the Spirit of the Lord infiltrating his hardened and broken heart. I’m writing him an email tonight and would ask you to please pray for Avery and his imminent return to the Lord!

Then this evening as we were finishing up dinner, my phone rang. It was my Jewish friend, Kurt. Lives in Manhattan, age 65, AIDS, practicing homosexual, by far the most well traveled man I have ever met, having seen most of the known (and unknown) world, and one of the most interesting human beings alive. I met Kurt two years ago on a flight from Brussels to JFK and haven’t talked to him in almost as much time. He was calling just to catch up and get my address for a Christmas card. And as we were closing our conversion he reminded me of an unusual statement he made when I first met him: “Although I’m an antsiest, I still accept prayers.”

Obviously this was my green light from the Lord to share Avery’s story. Kurt was audibly moved as I shared my own one-liner again: “You may have lost your faith in God, but God still believes in you. And you are worth dying for everyday on the week. Jesus loves you, man.”

We said our goodbyes after that I prayed for Kurt’s heart just as I was Avery’s, realizing this atheist-centric day was far more than a coincidence. This was the Holy Ghost.

Once while I was in South Africa evangelizing in a bar, a man confronted me and said “belief in God was merely a crutch for weak minded people.” I couldn’t have agreed more. I am weak and in desperate need of something…or someone…to keep me alive. I suppose that’s why I love talking to atheists so much, and perhaps why the Lord brought me two in the same day. They are, in my observation, people of tremendous faith. It’s far easier to believe God created everything than it is to believe a billion years of evolution did. But with my atheist friends, who are most likely far more intelligent than me, I do not go after their heads. We could wrestle theology and secular humanism all day (which is often times what it takes!), but ultimately, I’m after their hearts. Just as God is.

So please say a prayer for Avery and Kurt tonight, my two beloved atheists.

From your weak-minded, crutch-needing Christian,

CH

The Goo’s Birthday!

Please leave a comment and wish Luik a happy second birthday with us!

C.

DIBOR Cluster



DIBOR Cluster, originally uploaded by christopher.hopper_pix.

The DIBOR meet on a snowy morning for their weekly Cluster meeting, a
three hour Bible study and discussion.

C.