This is the new Dibor promo video my film company created this week. Very proud of it and hope it inspires. Would love your thoughts. ch:
“The Truth Seat” :: Dibor from Grandath Films on Vimeo.
try not to blink.
This is the new Dibor promo video my film company created this week. Very proud of it and hope it inspires. Would love your thoughts. ch:
“The Truth Seat” :: Dibor from Grandath Films on Vimeo.

Please join me and the staff, family, and friends in congratulating the Dibor Class of 2009 in a job well done! It has been the best graduation weekend yet! So poud of you all. ch:

Being expectant is a wonderful gift. I’m anticipating the next time I get to go on the water, meeting with God corporately this Sunday morning, and seeing the Dibor graduate this weekend.
I’ve given you a bit of me; what are you anticipating? ch:
Lots to update you on–from authors to politics, church life to tour dates–so let’s dive in…
First off, I failed to mention the ever illustrious Bryan Davis on last week’s Post-FFT Blog Tour. The man is a prolific writer, amazing father, and passionate man of God. And not without his own mysteries: Like how a devote, conservative, homeschooling dad can write about dragons? (Say what?) You should ask him! Bryan’s incredible heart for young people (as displayed through his numerous hours spent online in his forum each week) and passion for the Gospel make him the most outspoken Christian Fantasy Apologist that I know! If you’re not familiar with his work, please visit his website and tell him I sent you.
Part of the delay was due to the fact that my home church, New Life Christian Church, is moving into our new building this week! This is a momentous occasion for us (to say the least!) as we’re vacating our 1836 limestone chapel for a renovated movie theater in the rapidly developing area of Watertown. The transformation has been nothing short of a miracle in itself, and the community of Believers that has pulled it off is simply astounding. I spent all last week painting the logo on a massive wall directly across from the waterfall (you heard me…waterfall), and my team is preparing to install the first phase of the audio and video systems tomorrow morning. Please keep us in prayer as we kick off this Sunday in our new home!
This week on the Post-FFT Blog Tour, we’re all featuring Mr. L.B. Graham. I had the privilege of meeting L.B. for the first time when we arrived in Abbotsford, BC at the start of the tour. Each one of the tour members is so unique, I was quite amazed at how so many different people from so many various backgrounds could survive ten days tunafished into a 15 passenger van! But L.B., apart from his brilliant mind, set us all at ease. As easy going as they come, I knew right away he was passionate about some of the same things I am. Like food (“It’s a Jack In The Box!”) and music (“Rockin’ the suburbs, baby!”). Of course he is well known as an author, too, but it’s nice to know that your writing hero’s are also people with many diverse tastes in music and food! To learn more about his Binding of The Blade series, please visit his site and, again, tell him I sent you.
Next on the agenda, I just want to give a shout out to all those who we’ll be worshiping with us this weekend at Saturate @ Elim in Lima, NY. We’ll be leading some worship alongside Isaiah 6, Adam McCain, Jude Fouquier, and Jeff Clark. As soon as that conference is done, we’ll be headed to Rochester and pick up with the November DIBOR Conference that will already be underway. So please keep us in prayer as it will be a long weekend, but hopefully very fruitful.
Lastly, I felt I should say something about tomorrow’s election given the fact that it’s an important subject and I’ve tried to make my blog something that addresses important subjects. And as I was thinking about all the things I could say, two things came to mind.
The first is that the President of the United States does not hold the country in the palm of his or her hand, although that’s the impression the media gives us (at last one thing that’s truly bipartisan!); nor is this the “most important election of our generation,” even though that’s been said during every election for the past 36 years (as reminded to us by my pastor in yesterday’s service); nor is this president going to fulfill any more “promises for change” than all the presidencies before (also as stated by all presidential candidates for the past 36 years). There is only one who holds the nations in the palm of his hand…and last I checked, he’s laughing (Psalm 2:4).
The point I would like you, my reader, to remember is that if there are any major catalysts for change in this country, it is not the politicians, although they certainly have had their day. It is not the media, even though they’ve picked up what we’ve dropped in most cases. It’s the Church. Whether she realizes it or not is irrelevant. The fact is we have been given the power and authority to be ambassadors for a different Kingdom, and it’s your birthright if you’re a Believer (2 Corinthians 5:20). We are seated with Christ in heavenly places and therefore have the distinct ability of having a different perspective on all matters of the earth, one that is uniquely divine (Ephesians 2:6). And one of the most holy things you can do as a Christian is to actually live among the world and influence them (1 Peter 2:9-12). If you think only “certain people” have power, it may be in part because you haven’t been exercising your own, realizing that you, dear brother and sister in Christ, have been called to influence the world around you just as Jesus did. In paraphrasing one of my favorite authors, Watchman Nee once wrote that we are not to be affected by our environment, but are called to affect our environment.
There is a call in the Spirit saying, “Church, rise up!” Will you respond?
Secondly, I’d like to submit something on the political level–this, my thesis for why I vote the way I do. It seems to me that there are three main cultures that comprise the human existence in our current day, at least for me up here in beautiful northern NY. Those are: Family, Church, Community. While I traverse the world as much as anyone of my contemporaries, I want to be as simple and realistic as I can, so I’m leaving “State, Country, World” out of this (sorry U.N.). But understand that I believe Communities are called to affect those last three cultures.
A Biblical study will show without question that I first have a commitment to the institution of marriage and those that are my kin, parental as well as children. Family is the building block of humanity. And remember, its God’s invention, not mine. He liked the covenant he fashioned between himself, Adam and Eve, and those after them. Next, I have a Biblical mandate to be an active part of the Body of Christ, not forsaking meeting together, nor teaching the tenants of the faith as well as the demonstration of the power of the Gospel which is life to those who are perishing. Lastly, I have a Biblical mandate to see to the well being of those in Community around me, to their needs and welfare. This Community also serves my personal command to work diligently and be fruitful. Since both Family and Church serve this end, the three are interlaced at their very core, such that interfering with one affects all the rest.
When examining those running for public office–those who represent me–the basis of my vote stems from my analysis of who is seeking to keep these three foundations of culture in the greatest health with the least amount of intrusion. Let me explain.
.: FAMILY :.
If someone is attacking the very essence of the covenant of marriage by trying to redefine it, I see them as a threat to the foundation of God’s idea, and thus undermining my first cultural commitment to Family. Likewise, if they are trying to justify taking the lives of unborn children, that too is a direct assault on the core right to life that God decided was a good idea. If the argument here is a lack of compassion, so be it; forgive me for not being compassionate enough to help all the “victims of abuse” to see their babies to life and health. That one I take on the chin. But do not endorse legislation that permits murder under the guise of compassion.
.: CHURCH :.
These same attacks on the Family also take their toll on the Church, my next cultural commitment. Here, they bring into question the very moral fiber of the belief system and seek to undermine what is being taught, as well as the teachers themselves, and the manual the teachings come from: The Bible. Of course this doesn’t even touch the fact that such “advances” placate enmity with God himself. But the assault on the Church goes further, in many cases picking up where she failed. Where she was to be caring for the needs of the Community, the government stepped in. In what I can only believe was a demonic plan, the Church abdicated her responsibility of the welfare of her Communities to politicians. That, my friends, is something I long to take back…I burn for it.
.: COMMUNITY :.
The Communities that form the furthest cultural ring around us are, among other things, meant to be sources of support and revenue, continual streams that feed the Families and the Churches to keep doing what they do. But when the businesses in those communities are taxed beyond their means, all in the name of “helping,” they begin to collapse. As a business owner myself, I could not be more intimately aware of this. And the fact that a far-off-and-distant ruling body somehow knows how my money should be spent not only belittles my stature as a human being by assuming that they know better, but removes my ability to invest myself into the lives of employees and Families alike. They, do it for me? The incentive to continue doing business is removed as well as the blessing I receive from giving.
So who do I vote for? I look for the people that stand behind God’s definition of Family, seeing such entities as the foundation of our nation; leaders that empower and inspire the Church to not only care for its Communities but reinforce the morals that she represents; and politicians that believe Communities and the businesses within them have strength to carry the burden’s of her people without their help.
For more good, thought provoking commentary on voting from a Christian world view, please read Wayne’s piece here.
Vote tomorrow!
CH
I’m learning a lot about being stretched by God in this season. Between 21 consecutive nights of house guests, writing curriculum and re-structuring leadership for re-launching a youth ministry and a discipleship school, doing my final re-write of Book III, preparing for a West Coast book tour, concerts, youth conferences, a speaking schedule, and helping to oversee a church building project as well as two new pizza business, I’m certainly feeling the affects of fatigue.
But not as much as I was six months ago.
While at a leaders meeting this past Saturday, God really moved during our time of corporate prayer. Not during our brainstorming sessions. Not during coffee and donuts. During prayer. When the dust had settled after our time of seeking God, we all rubbed our eyes and sat back, stunned at how God had met with us. Stunned at how we felt energized. Refreshed. And how many new ideas had come with so much peace accompanying them.
So often it seems we, or at least how I roll, live our lives and try make time for God, when in reality–a truer reality–we should be living our lives for God and trying to make time for everything else.
Granted, my life is pretty full and I’ve seen a lot of success, with more coming, I hope. It’s truly amazing how much we can do and be successful without even bothering to take more than ten minutes with God in a day. Even less. He’s just that gracious. But as we were in prayer, God gave me a little line that has really challenged me to determine which kind of “success” I want. Here’s what I mean…
“A life lived for God is successful, but a prayer-lead life lived with God is divinely successful.”
I’m in a season where I don’t just want to be successful, I want to be divinely successful. Anyone can be successful if they work hard enough, cling to diligence, and embrace a lifestyle of excellence. Shoot. Some people even get lucky! But to be divinely excellent, that is quite another thing. To have God breath on His own ideas for your life, for Him to dictate what and when you do, that is something heavenly. Divine. And though I’ve heard it said a thousand times, preached, taught, and recited, I am recognizing that this kind of success only comes through prayer.
Brad Ringer, one of our amazing staff members here at DIBOR, always challenges me with a question: “Are you replacing prayer with study?” Often we replace reading the Bible or a good spiritual book, or even journaling, with time that we should be in prayer. Why? Because reading my Bible is something I can do, and touch, and measure. But prayer gets no glory. I can’t measure it, save maybe in time. But true prayer is much deeper than a religious exercise or a discipline. It’s communion with the Holy Spirit. And I feel as though I’m rediscovering that.
If I ever needed refreshment in the midst of an onslaught of activities, it’s now. If I ever needed divine inspiration and direction, Holy Ghost prompted initiatives and Godly time-management skills, if I ever needed peace in the midst of the storm, I need it today.
Thanks for reading.
CH

Two days past I was at my favorite coffee shop, The Lyric, in Clayton, NY. I meet a lot of teens there for coffee, business meetings, record live concerts, you know…the usual. I had just finished hanging with two guys and walked outside when I saw this really gnarly BMW touring bike parked right in front of my truck. It was plastered with stickers from all over the world and looked like it had been driven through a desert and back. I climbed into my truck and then thought, “I have to meet whoever is riding that thing and find out what their story is.”
So I closed the door to my truck and hoped the meter lady wouldn’t notice my time was about to expire (no more quarters on me). I walked back into the Lyric and surveyed the usuals, looking for someone out of place. There, in the corner, was a couple. Riding pants, bike helmets, and a laptop was all I needed to see.
“Are you guys with that bike?” I asked.
I guess my enthusiasm said the rest.
“Have a seat,” they offered, wide smiles on their faces. Fortunately they were as eager to talk as I was.
Allow me to introduce you to two absolutely, amazingly extraordinary people: Simon & Lisa Thomas. Their many accomplishments, as well as their fantastic photographs and videos from around the world, can be seen on their awesome website www.2ridetheworld.com. But despite being the Guinness Book of World Records holder for the longest contiguous motorcycle ride, they are some of the coolest, most down to earth people you’ll ever meet. But there is a reason for that.
“We’ve realized that it’s the people that are the most memorable parts of our trip,” Lisa said.
“The media paints this awful picture of humanity, that everyone’s bad and there are horrible problems everywhere,” Simon added. “But that’s simply not reality. Reality is that most folk are wonderful, genuine, well meaning souls. The world is a wonderful place.”
Not to mention this pair have more sweet stories to tell than your average joe! But there’s a reason for that, too.
“We were tired of letting our lives slip away,” Simon replied when I asked, why are you doing this? “We wanted to actually live life, not just watch it.” So he and Lisa sold everything they had and set off on a two year trip around the world…
…that was five years ago.
Long story short, they are now staying in the DIBOR dorms here in Depauville for a few nights regrouping. I figured they’d like a dry, spacious place to stay rather than their usual tents, and they love the wireless DSL to update their website as well as the hot shower thing (always a plus).
I encourage you to go check ‘em out and drop them a note! It’s been an honor to meet them, befriend them, and even house them! Proving that cool things wait around the corner for each of us. You just have to look.
As I’m sure they’d challenge you, take life by the horns and live it. Don’t just dream about what you want to do–start doing it. Sell something. Save your money. Draw up the plans. Seek wise counsel. Invest. Learn. Whatever stage you’re at, go to the next one. The Lord gave us this life to live it for a purpose.
What’s yours?
CH
Last night I had the distinct privilege and honor to graduate the first class of DIBOR. Marty, Ephraim, Nate, Michael, Brittney and Sian (left to right, back to front) all completed their first year (DIBOR 1). And this being the first class–the pioneers of the program–I was especially proud.
But another emotion certainly had a prominent place…one of extreme awe: That the Lord would allow me to see such a day. Have you ever had a moment where complete mistakes, or things you never intended to be more than a fleeting thought, became realities? Not to get too sentimental, but my children are like that. Neither of them were “planned” (praise God!) and yet have become the greatest little blessings of my life. When they both were born, I found myself saying (at the risk of letting you all be very sarcastic), “How did this happen?”
When I first came up with the word Dibor, I hardly thought it would go beyond the Word document I was working on, let alone the name of an international school or a title of an actual human being. And when these students first arrived and we were loading mattresses into the church office building, all I could think to myself was, “Why are earth are these people here? Are they crazy? Am I crazy?”
The point being, what truly do we ever intend to be something amazing? What ideas originate in their most infant stage from our own selves? What good really comes from us?
My conclusion: nothing. It all comes from the Father.
Many thanks to my beautiful wife for not only supporting this vision, but for inspiring it to continue. And to all our staff: Brad, Robin, Chrystelle, Pastor David, Pastor Kirk; those who supported from the side lines, J, Jackie, Linda, Christian and our numerous guest speakers; and to Tim Woods who first presented the idea of making real Dibor–thank you, swordbrother. Much love to Joseph and Melinda, our two students who are halfway through their first year, as well as to those Associate Level students who made it through year 1. And finally, my congratulations to Dana and Sarah who graduated from the TYM program. Well done everyone!
CH
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It’s an overcast but warm Friday morning here in Depauville. I’m getting ready to head out to pay a visit to the Dibor Students who are serving for two weeks at an inner-city mission called The Steps in downtown Buffalo.
There time of service there is part of their continuing education at Dibor and is meant to stretch them and open their eyes to the plight of their fellow man, breeding a heart of true compassion for those in need.
As I pulled in to the church this morning I came upon a fantastic sight that I couldn’t help but snap a quick picture of. Pastor David Hayner was sitting on the tailgate of his truck reading the Word. As a retired Army soldier, he is in charge of PT for Dibor, and he had just finished the morning’s exercises. With the American flag hanging overhead, this picture was too perfect to pass up.
CH
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