Read for FREE at Spearhead Books

One of the reasons I love Spearhead Books so much is because I can do things as an author that a legacy publisher would never allow me to do.

Like let people read my entire book for free whenever they want online:

Rise of the Dibor

The Lion Vrie

Athera’s Dawn

To those of you who’ve been wanting to try my books out, go ahead. They’re all yours. (And please make sure to “like” our Facebook page here!).

And to those of you with a more critical take on this, begging for an explanation, let me break it down.

Contrary to popular belief, people don’t like to steal. In fact, as a race, we tend to have a very hard time accepting anything for free. We tend to want to reply with a gift of our own. A thank you of sorts.

The mere fact that something is offered for free does two things:

1.) It fuels the spread of content socially.

2.) It increases revenue.

The first point is easy to understand. But how does the second work? By giving readers the opportunity to give back.

In my free PDFs of The White Lion Chronicles (which can only be read online at SpeatrheadBooks.com), there are 3 ads all giving readers multiple levels of financial action that help me keep writing books.

And people tend to click on them.

Starting around Thanksgiving, I started posting a chapter a day of Athera’s Dawn (Book 3) right here on my site. A lot of people were shocked. How can you do that? The real question is how can I not? Statically, people read the first five chapters and then opt to purchase the print edition (*based on page visits and click throughs). I expect the number of sales to increase significantly once the e-book versions are made available as the price points are substantially lower (as they should be).

So read up! And don’t forget to help me keep feeding my kids. ch:

Are Status Updates Old Hat to God?

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I spent extra time on Twitter and FaceBook this morning in place of my morning run (the snow, freezing rain, and high winds kept me in bed at 6am). Granted, I have a few thousands status updates to wade through, if I were ever to read them all, so normally I’m on both clients for under 10 minutes a day, reading just a few and updating my own.

But as I was standing in the shower, I had a revelation about social networking. (Yes, most of my profound revelations come in the shower). Twitter and FaceBook are not new to God.

There is no way I could possibly keep up with the amount of people I “Follow” on Twitter and the number of “Friends” I have on FaceBook. The task would be a 60 hour per week job. If not more, should I do it justice. And yet those I “follow” are but a handful of the millions of users out there, and those users are but a fraction of a percent of the world’s population. And by virtue of the fact that they are even on a social network, that also means they own a computer, and are therefore among the world’s top 1% elite. And for all our tweeting of “concerns, situations, and problems,” when compared to an AIDS orphan in Zambia, they (I) have no real problems to update anyone about.

Yet, God gets all of my, their, and your status updates, and picture uploads, non-stop, with or without a computing device. I hate to trivialize peoples’ suffering to a social networking term, but sometimes the easiest examples are the best.

The heavenly Father not only gets countless trillions of status updates from billions of people each day, but He also feels as close to them as we do to spouses, parents, or children. Our “Friends.” He is an intimate. He formed them in their mother’s womb, and has genuine interest in their welfare. I find such pontificating staggering, a crushing weight on my chest.

Perhaps social networking is not a new technology to humanity, but rather an antiquated, marginalized glimpse of how the Maker of the Universe observes mankind. ch:


Live in Rochester & Syracuse this weekend

DATES: (click here for more new tour dates)
MARCH 06 - 7pm : Joy Community Church, 908 N. Goodman St., Rochester, NY
MARCH 07 - 8pm : BT's Cafe, Voller Hall, Roberts Wesleyan College, Rochester, NY
MARCH 08 - 6pm : Faith Chapel, 4113 W. Seneca Turnpike, Syracuse, NY 

Rochester & Syracuse 

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The Live at The Lyric CD Release Tour will be hitting Rochester and Syracuse this weekend, so if you missed our dates two weeks ago, please come on out and see us! We’ve been having an absolute blast sharing this new music and the response from everyone has been overwhelming.

SPECIAL NOTE: Saturday night’s event at Roberts will be extra special as we’ll be playing with singer/song writers/guitarists Nate Cronk and Jeremiah Garcia for a veritable guitar-fest-o-rama!

ustream_logo_191For those unable to join us, you can still catch all the live action on USTREAM. We’ll be doing our best to give you a live feed from each venue online.

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facebook_logo_91If you are a Twitter addict, you can follow me at “find_ch” and keep track (if you can!) of my crazy tweets! You can also send me a friend request on FaceBook if you like, too! Social networking on the net is so much fun. And for an added spiritual component, please see my recent post on using internet technology to advance the Gospel on my blog.

Please remember, if you don’t have the cash to purchase the new album right now, please feel free to download an MP3 version of it for free at NoiseTrade.

Blessings!

ch:

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How Do You Tweet?

SAILING ANYONE?
I recently finished watching the PlayTone special done on the second President of the United States, “John Adams.” Among the many things I learned by watching the series with the “extra content” feature rolling was just how long everything took.

If I recall correctly, it took Mr. Adams six weeks to voyage from New York Harbor to France when he was on his war-time fund raising campaign. And this was considered “fast” as the trek normally took eight weeks.

8 weeks.

I fly there in a little under 8 hours. And not only that, I do it a few times annually whereas Mr. Adams stayed there so long that he returned only to find his little girl now 21 years old.

“Hey beautiful, how was high school?”

All of it.

THE SPEED OF 2009
twitter-logoThe thing that strikes me is, truly, how much faster our lives are today. And I can honestly say I enjoy it! But our battles are certainly different. They tried to stay alive during an 8-week voyage and the resulting diseases they picked up once abroad; we try to find meaningful time spent with people, not just random forwards from family members constituting “staying in touch.” (Hardly a worthy comparison if you ask me). Q: What other interesting dissimilarities can you draw between 1785 and 2009?

I have this really fun little iPhone. I love it. My wife calls it my “second wife” as I’m always “fondling it.” (Sorry if that’s too derogatory; family joke). And I must say I’ve had to work at not allowing it to rule me. But for good reason. It acts not only as a little window into my world, but into almost anyone else’s world that I want to peer into. In the blink of an eye I can check in with friends from across the world, track my flights in real time, control my iTunes library from across a room, tune my guitar on tour, update my blog, record a new song, watch YouTube videos, even read the Bible in more translations than I knew existed (including Russian!). It’s fabulous!

And then a thought comes to mind: what would this have allowed John Adams to do?

A NEW REVOLUTION
One of the key things that has kept me from letting my heart elope with my iPhone is remembering what this really cool (really cool) technology is for, and where it came from. If nothing is knew under the sun, and that every good and perfect gift comes down from the Father of lights, it’s pretty easy to conclude that God gave man the ability and onus to come up with these cool little gadgets and the infrastructure to drive them…yes, even the iPhone. (I’m sure my “super-religious” readers will have a hard time swallowing that one). If that is true, and I believe it is, then I come to one resolution: these tools should help us drive ministry on all fronts, allowing us to shape culture from a divine perspective.

Q: How are you using what God has given you? Give everyone some good new ideas!

facebook-logoI’ve recently been on a kick, giving teens a similar challenge at all conferences I’ve been speaking at: What if our FaceBook status was not used to constantly complain or divulge secrets no one but Jesus should read (and correct!), nor to tote who we’re currently lusting over (quite frankly…just calling it like I see it), but to display what God is doing in our lives moment by moment? Since pushing this, I have received countless letters from youth pastors and parents about how their kids are changing the way they use MySpace and FaceBook.

What if we started using the video feature on our cell phones to record healings in cafeterias at school when our Christian friends offer to pray for a hurting class mate?

What if we started overrunning virtual communities with testimonies of the miraculous power of the living God until no one could not talk about Jesus without someone asking them to change the subject back to Jesus, not away from Him?

What if all this Twittering was simply a divine idea that originated from the Father’s heart to see instantaneous revival all across the globe? And He’s so sovereign that he’d even let secular business people feel like they came up with the idea (and let them walk away with a fortune).

Or maybe it’s as simple as people seeing how a real marriage is supposed to work, wort’s and all; how a teenager can get good grades; or how a person can overcome adversity in their body without being discouraged.

CHALLENGE THIS!
Disciples of Christ, wherever you are when you’re reading this, I present you with a two-fold challenge:

1.) Start using your windows into the rest of the world, whether iPhone, laptop, or desktop, as a means of affecting those “around” you for the Kingdom. If you’re not sure where to start, just ask yourself, “What has God spoken to me today?” (And if you can’t answer that, might I suggest putting this gizmo down that you’re reading on and go spend some time with your Daddy).

2.) Let the Holy Spirit spark your imagination about new inventions that could potentially affect humanity and fund the Kingdom as a result…

…of course, that’s a whole other post.

Listen, I’m not asking you to become a religious zealot, replacing a lance with an iPhone (shoot, you may not even like Apple…so use your Voyager or whatever!); I like telling people I’m on a date with my lovely wife as much as the next guy. But might I suggest being more deliberate with what you write? Affect culture for the better. I’m releasing a new CD, which means I can Twitter about concert dates in which people will hear about Jesus, buy music that I think matters, learn about other photographers and graphic artists who contributed to my projects, maybe use a great duplication company that I want to see thrive, and hopefully be inspired to create their next masterpiece portraying the way life should be…for the glory of God.

If you got to the bottom here, feel free to “be my friend” on FaceBook, or “follow my tweets” on Twitter.

ch: