Media Fast

I’m learning the art of not only unplugging, but making it a lifestyle. After hearing Michael Tyrrell‘s message last night on Noise Pollution in our spiritual life, I immediately felt the Holy Spirit prompt me to shut off the social media outlets of my life for ten days. It felt so right. I get tired of my reliance on this technology. ch:

Mr. & Mrs. Joe and Natalie Smith

Today, my sister Natalie is getting married. It’s my first sibling to get married, and I’m finding myself a whole lot more of a sap than I expected I’d be. Cried while redesigning her wedding programs. Cried while writing her processional score. Cried while watching the photo-montage.

The only thing that keeps me smiling? The fact that my brother-in-law-to-be has the same name as a famous cult leader. Joseph Smith.

(What were his parents thinking?)

As to today’s Red Sox header, this may be the only time you ever see it on my website. Ever. Forever. Anytime. You see, Joe (Red Sox) and Nat (almost married Derek Jeter), got me and my father tickets to see a Yankee’s game in July as our bridal party gift. And they tell me it was Joe’s idea. (I also got a custom #10 t-shirt with “Bubba” on the back; picture below). Yeah, you’re pretty cool Joe. Here’s the Red Sox in your honor.

Congratulations you two. Jennifer and I adore you both and feel so honored to be your friends, not just family. Enjoy your day. ch:

Is God Angry?

If I wasn’t a Christian already, I might think God was angry. A lot. And all the time.

Gleaning from a lot of things I’d read as an “unbeliever” scripted by “believers,” I’d say God uses catastrophic weather to judge nations, car bombs to get Christians to pray, and elected politicians to bring humanity what they deserve. And why not? I mean, Biblical passages like this clearly portray God as having anger issues:

“For all this His anger is not turned away, but His hand is stretched out still.” Isaiah 9:21b

So let me put the Christian hat back on. Scripture is clear, God gets angry. But the question worth addressing to myself as a Believer, and to those currently outside of the Christian faith, is not what causes God to get angry (everything from unrighteousness to disobedience; see Deuteronomy 11:17; 29:24-28; Ezra 8:22; Nehemiah 13:18 just for starters), but what God’s anger provokes in terms of action.

The reality is, when God got angry, he sent his son Jesus to pay the price for everything humanity ever did to “rouse his anger” in the first place. Let me simplify:

When God gets angry, he displays ultimate mercy.

Huh. Doesn’t sound quite like the God we Christians portray so very well in modern society.

And me? I get angry and do what? I get ticked off at a politician and what comes out of my mouth? An employee disobeys me and I treat them how? I watch a whole nation embrace a system of belief that enslaves people and I pray in what manner for their persecutors? I see someone willfully reject Christ, and I think what of them?

I challenge you to think less of what provokes God to anger and more of what anger provokes God to do.

It might just change the way you perceive a Heavenly Father who is actually good all the time with mercy that endures forever. (At least, that’s what the Bible claims about him). ch:

Q: Be honest. How do you respond when you get angry? And where do you need to improve? Have you been looking at God’s character improperly?


Nikon D90 Test Reel

I took @jasonjclement‘s Nikon D90 out for a video test drive yesterday. It performed very well, I must say. Certainly a huge jump for someone who is used to inferior optics when it comes to video. Even using expensive video cameras, even HD cams, I’ve thought a million times (underestimating, actually), “Man, I wish I could get the optics of my DSLRs with video capability.” And that’s just what the D90 is. Shot with a Nikon 18-200mm f1:3.5-5.6, no color correction. While I like it immensely, and believe Nikon is a superior camera for still, all reviews say that the Canon T2i is a better fit if your sole intent is shooting HD video (which is what I’m doing), so I’ll be purchasing that unit, and likewise plan on reviewing it. For a full review on both cameras, read the best one I’ve found on the web to date here. ch:

PayPal the Wagoners and Get Free Music

This winter a good friend of ours, Justin Wagoner, broke his back in a snowmobile accident. While he and his wife operate their own construction company, and have two beautiful little girls, Justin himself did not have health insurance. Not only has he been unable to work for the past several months, but his medical bills are mounting.

Miraculously, Justin has made made huge progress, even walking on his own now. What the doctors expected to take place over many months, Justin is doing in mere weeks. Clearly, Jesus still heals!

But the Wagoners do need a financial miracle. And while we believe prayer is a part of it, God has fully enabled the Church do handle such a task. I don’t need to pray about giving to a family in need. I give.

Jennifer and I will be performing a benefit concert tonight for the Wagoners; you can tune in live at 7pm EST tonight. We’ll be playing our favorite songs from artists like Norah Jones, Rascal Flatts, Eva Cassidy, and more. But I’m also asking that you consider giving toward this wonderful family. You can click on the church’s PayPal link below…

And when prompted, just open and fill out the “special instructions” dialog box…

All monies are tax-deductible, with a year-end receipt mailed to you. Any amount you feel lead to give helps lessen the burden on this wonderful family.

As a special “thank you,” I’m offering free a download for those that give. This is a reference mix of “Set Me Free” from our new album, Heaven Meets Earth, recorded Saturday night, January 2nd 2010. It will never again see the light of day as it’s the most raw look at a live recording, unmixed, unmastered, used only for letting the musicians and engineers examine their performances.The voice you hear in the beginning is my father, Peter Hopper, “slating” the take. I will keep this up for only a few days, and ask that you adhere to the honor system here. You give, you get. Please do not download the rack unless you’ve helped the Wagoners.

CHB Set Me Free Unmixed (click on drop down to “Save As Source”)

Jennifer and I thank you for caring for our friends. ch:

HME Update: In Studio May 12th

05.12.2010 UPDATE: We’re live today, Wednesday, May 12th in-studio. Weather is causing a lot of BAD interference with the wifi however. So sorry.

I’ve had a lot of inquires as to the whereabouts of the Heaven Meets Earth album, specifically those who pre-ordered. Fortunately no fans have gotten violent (proving you people are the best listeners a guy could ask for). So thanks for that. As to the album itself, yes: we’re behind schedule. But not by much. We’re shooting for a June release (just in time for Creation in Mt. Union, PA).

In the mean time, I’ll be back in the studio all day tomorrow, Wednesday, May 11th, for a full day of mixing in a closed-session. While you can’t come visit, you can join us live via webcam which we have on all day. Please say hi when you get the chance and watch how we roll. Thanks for all your encouragement and continued support of this project. ch:

What’s your favorite new song?

The tracks that made the final cut:

God Who Saves
My Last Breath
You Alone
Words Cannot Describe
You’re Everything
Take Me Deeper
Set Me Free
This is the Day
Let It Fall Away
Jesus You Are
My Heart Is Yours
Revolution Rain
Heaven Meets Earth
Honor and Glory

Relative to What?

Think of your worst day. What would it be? Horrible to think about, I know. So let’s take what your second worst day would look like. Or even what you constitute as a regular bad day. What does it consist of?

Maybe a pipe freezes in your basement then bursts, needing repair work when you don’t really have the extra funds to cover it.

Your employer suddenly gets mad at you, only to find a coworker lied about your performance behind your back.

How about you get a bad grade on a test that was essential for you to move forward in a class or a field you desperately needed to do well in.

Car accident. Turns out you didn’t have collision insurance, and you have no idea where the $2,400.00 is going to come from to get your car back on the road, the car that you need to get to and from your job everyday.

And the list goes on. Granted, any one of the scenarios would be unfortunate. And more than likely, you’ve had a variation of one or all of them happen in your life. But the question I’d like you to consider is, does this constitute a truly bad day for you, even in it’s most mild definition?

One thing I struggle with most is that God observes the entire world at one time, not just my world. Which begs me to ask Him, how do my bad days compare relative to the rest of humanity’s bad days? I won’t be so bold as to presume I know God’s actual thoughts on the issues, but a quick look at statistical research allows some fairly reasonable assumptions.

With only 570 million cars distributed among more than 6.69 billion people, about 8.5% of the world’s population owns a vehicle. Fewer still own something a middle class American would consider “nice.” (Just picture a 1980′s rust bucket Toyota from Man On Fire). That means more than 6 billion (six billion) people can’t even imagine owning [in their wildest dreams] what you scorn as a bane to your family budget.

That pipe bursting? Just be glad you haven’t died at the hands of your faucet yet. (You know, that shiny lever over the stainless steel basin in your kitchen that instantly grants you clean water within a few degrees of the temperature you want it at). The UN recently announced that contaminated water has killed more human beings than all our wars combined.

And as for your tests in academia or your vocational trials, be glad you even have the opportunity to go to school or land a decent job. 72 million children are out of school around the world, a figure equivalent to the entire primary school-aged population in Europe and North America. And almost half the world — over three billion people — live on less than $2.50 a day. And not because they want to.

Feeling grateful yet?

Oh, and just in case your worst day ever does happen (which for me would be the unthinkable: losing my wife and children), then you’d join the conservatively estimated 1 million families in Sudan, 1.5 million families in Rwanda, and countless millions of families in Burma, Vietnam, Tibet, and China (to name a few) that have endured–or are currently enduring–daily loss of their loved ones. (For the brave, read the sobering report “Death Tolls for the Major Wars and Atrocities of the Twentieth Century” and “Secondary Wars and Atrocities of the Twentieth Century“).

I recommend that you gather your loved ones around the kitchen faucet and thank Jesus later tonight. ch:

In Response to Snoring

I woke up this morning and found the following comment waiting for moderation on my snoring post. My response is below:

Dear Kiera,

Thanks for writing. I’m really honored that someone would be this excited that I’d take the time to discuss the subject of snoring. Snoring has in fact touched the lives of countless people, so your comment is very poignant in that regard. What I’m touched by even more is how strongly you felt about this subject. I mean, you even said so yourself: “I feel strongly about it.” And as if that weren’t enough, that you love learning more about it. Really? You are a rare and mystical woman, Ms. Stevenson; perhaps you should impart this gift to my wife, Jennifer. She hates learning about snoring altogether. In fact, she’s trying to get me to stop. (Can you imagine? The audacity!).

But update you with more information? That’s where I’ll have to disappoint you, Kiera. I can not possibly update my blog with more information. You’re correct in observing that my expertise in the subject will only grow (I’m flattered); I fully intend to get better and better at snoring as I grow older and lose involuntary muscle control of my relaxing oral and sinus tissues. But the inherent problem is that I don’t know when I’m snoring. I get better and better at something I’m completely unaware of. (Some might call it my spiritual gift). Thus, I can no longer be of help to you.

Where will you go for further instruction? I can not say. But it won’t be here. I have sadly taken the liberty of marking your comment as “spam,” never to return, as I can’t bear the thought of leading you on in the false hope of educating you with my increased expertise. Oh, the cruel torment. Interestingly enough, however, your comment was posted with an accompanying website; what divine intervention! It’s almost like the Greek snoring gods have looked favorably upon you! Surely you might be able to find more answers there!

May your strong feelings and desire for helpful learning only increase in the nights ahead. I bid thee a fond farewell.

ch: