Showing posts with label boosterism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label boosterism. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Off to a great start!

My son Samuel posted this photo of our grandson Noah on his Facebook page today, because he was so proud of Noah earning his Awana vest Sunday night by saying three verses with no help. I am thrilled that they are encouraging Noah to memorize God's Word because that is something I have always valued in my own life, and in the way Linda and I raised the boys. 

Thy Word is a lamp unto my feet, and a Light unto my path.   Psalm 119:105

Monday, August 29, 2011

Happy Birthday, mi esposa!

Proverbs 18:22



Whoso findeth a wife findeth a good thing, and obtaineth favour of the LORD.

I like this photo of Linda because one of the bravest things she has done in recent years was to accompany me on my "return to Hong Kong" trip in 2009. Here we are standing in front of the church I attended for the two years I was in Hong Kong.
 
I feel as though I have "dragged" dear Linda around a lot in our married life, and she has been an amazing good sport through it all. Last night, through the wonders of technology, we were able to simultaneously video chat with the two sons in Texas plus the son and grandchildren in Colorado while sitting in the room of my son here in Tucson. All three locations were on the screen at the same time! I credit Linda with the way these four young men have turned into responsible adults who love the Lord and have a great sense of humor!  
 
She is faithfully teaching five-year-olds today on her 65th birthday. We both plan to keep pursuing our calling to teach as long as we are physically able.  Happy birthday, dear Linda!  

Friday, August 26, 2011

Taking aim at Bachmann...and her God

One thing that pundits like Charles Krauthammer, politicos like Donald Rumsfeld, and academics like Judith Liu can all agree on: “Democracy is messy.” It’s also noisy, and nothing brings out the noisy mess like the anticipation of the next national election.

In the recent Iowa straw poll, the landscape of challengers to unseat incumbent President Obama was pruned somewhat as Congresswoman Michele Bachmann surged to a surprising first place finish. Both Bachmann and second place finisher Ron Paul nearly doubled the votes received by third place Tim Pawlenty, causing the latter to remove himself from the race for the nomination.

Although some of the media “noise” had begun before the Iowa vote, it has clearly escalated since then, and not very favorably for Bachmann.   Read more...



Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Just for Fun

Okay, it has nothing to do with most Dove Mountaineers, but my video-producing son has done it again!  Thought you might enjoy the videos he created so my science students at Veritas can learn taxonomy.



Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Not a TV Survivor!



Many thanks to Pastor Allen Cooney for his encouraging message from Ephesians 2:1-10 this past Sunday. We actually quoted from it several times in our Sunday school class immediately following the service. I had heard bits and pieces of the dramatic story of Louis Zamperini a few times before, but Pastor Allen's "teaser" is no doubt going to drive many of us the read  the "rest of the story."  I'd like to challenge any Dove Mountaineer to read either the book pictured here, Devil at My Heels, ot the one from which Pastor Allen quoted, Unbroken, give a complete book report in our WorldMovers Sunday School class soon! Zamperini's story is not only amazing because of what he has survived, but because of how he has turned it into a powerful testimony for Christ.  To God be the Glory!                                                

Friday, August 12, 2011

Pray for the vote!



       And I will set up shepherds over them which shall feed them: and they shall fear no more, nor be dismayed, neither shall they be lacking, saith the LORD.
Jeremiah 23:4



 
 
Note to non-Dove Mountaineers:   This Sunday our congregation will be voting on a candidate for senior pastor.   In Presbyterian polity, this is a sacred responsibility.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Coming Live to Tucson!



Ballet Magnificat, America's premiere professional Christian ballet, is coming to Tucson!  The Ballet will be held at Victory Worship Center on October 13, 2011 at 7:00 PM.   Their beautifully renovated venue is located at 2561 West Ruthrauff Road.

Book your tickets ($25 for floor seats and $15 for balcony) right away at:


I have followed and enjoeyd this company for years. I hve especially appreciated using their videos in music appreciation classes with children. Included in the unit which will be eprforming here at Victory is Tucson's own Ashley Edgerton, who formerly taught at Trinity Dance and Ballet.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Meet Samuel live!


This past Monday I posted a video of son Samuel who is Summer Program Director for Uncharted Waters Sports Ministry of Colorado Springs. I am hosting a luncheon Saturday, August 6, to connect Tucsonans with Samuel and his passion for evangelizing children. I would like any Dove Mountaineers to feel welcome to attend this event, but need to know how many to plan for. If you would like to come, please email me at tomaskew@mac.com and I will give you the details.  To get a taste of what he does, enjoy the video!

Monday, August 1, 2011

More Happy Monday Music


The guy on the left is Samuel Askew, my #3 son.  He will be in Arizona this coming week end, August 5-6, on Uncharted Waters Sports Ministry partnership business, and some of you will hear directly form me regarding a couple of events I am coordinating on his behalf. If you are interested in attending either the Tucson or Sierra Vista events, contact me via Facebook or e mail.

This video is from a Flash Mob event his ministry organized back in April...have fun!

Saturday, July 30, 2011

A Rare Cancellation


Coming from my Southern Baptist background, one of the things that has fascinated me is how often other groups (especially Presbyterians) pre-empt Sunday School. At many churches - Catalina Foothils is a good example - there is a huge summer break, and then any other unusual event during the school year causes a cancellation, as well. Of course the Sunday nearest any holiday is verboten - before Thanksgiving, practically the whole months of December and January, Rodeo Week (for crying out loud!) and so on. Meanwhile, back in my upbringing I can remember "business as usual" with both Sunday School and church at their regularly scheduled times once when Christmas fell on a Sunday!

When I started the WorldMovers class a little over  a year ago, several people asked my, "How long are you planning on?"  I toyed with so many answers, most of which were too sarcastic:  "Until we've solved all the world's problems - probably a couple of months" was my favorite. Others:  "We'll stop when all the prayers have been answered," "Until there's no more news," and "As long as the world turns," were other favorites. Sometimes at church when people ask if we are meeting today I reply, "Let's see, did the sun come up?  Then I guess we'll meet!"

Please forgive the sarcasm. Tomorrow we will not meet, for the very deserving reason that we will enjoy a potluck with our entire Dove Mountain family followed by a Town Hall "Q and A" with our current pastoral candidate. Hope to see you there!

The cover story of the issue pictured here (July 30) will be our next discussion and prayer focus, for Sunday, August 7. See you then, as well, I hope!

Monday, July 25, 2011

A little something for Monday morning




The song is from Murray Wylie's extraordinary oratorio, Jerusalem Passion, which was first performed in 1985 in Wylie's native Australia.  The song has alwys inspired me with a vision of unity in the body of Christ, so I asked my son Timothy to create a video for it.  Enjoy!

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

The amazing ladies of Peace Class

In 1988 Shiloh Christian School in Sierra Vista had its largest graduating class ever.  The 25 students had mostly been together since elementary school, and had forged strong brother-sister bonds.  Known as Peace Class, this may have been one of the most talented groups of young people I have ever taught.  In March of this year, five of the Peace Class sisters reunited for the wedding of Angela Tumpkin, who was Head Girl in her senior year.  

From left to right, they are Tamra Fowler, the sister of the groom (not a Peace Classer), Angela Tumpkin, Tiffany Taylor, Sabrina Gidley, and Pamela Hoston.  These talented ladies have served the Lord in children's ministry, music ministry, nursing, school administration, church administration, audio-visual ministry, sacred dance, short term missions, and elementary. secondary, and post-secondary teaching.  Three of them are now raising their own covenant children.

May the Lord continue to bless the adventures He has set them on!  

Thursday, July 14, 2011

And now for a little fun...and history


McLarty coat of arms
 As an addendum to the history of my Presbyterianism from the previous two days:

I recently joined Ancestry.com and have learned lots of fun things about my ancestry.  I won't go into all of it here, but one thing that was delightful to learn was that I have Scottish forebears on my maternal grandmother's side.  My great-grandmother was a McLarty!  

Ever since seeing marching bagpipes in sixth grade, I have wanted to be Scottish.  Askew, by the way, is English.  When I finally began researching my English ancestry, I learned that the Askews are from Yorkshire, in Northern England.  I took some solace in the fact the ancestral village, Aiskew, is near the Scottish border, anyway.

The emblem of the Church of Scotland:
St; Andrew's Cross
and the Burning Bush of Moses
I thought I might be in luck when, in college, I found out that my paternal grandmother was a McSwain.  But I was immediately informed that she was Irish (I had assumed that any name that started with "Mc" had to be Scottish).  I have since learned that both the McLarty line and the McSwain line are part of that great migration to the Carolinas in the early nineteenth century known as the "Scotch-Irish."  They seem to be Scots folk who had immigrated to Ireland a generation or two before making it to the new world.

Anyway, it is both an irony and a joy to me that I have "come home" to the Church of Scotland, which is the indisputable source of all American Presbyterians.  And in respect to my English forebears, I love the Book of Common Prayer.  And in light of the fact that I am now "Reformed enough" to sign the membership requirements for those Dutch Reformed schools I mentioned in yesterday's blog, I should mention that my maternal grandfather was a Kuykendall.  Although the Kuykendall's are clearly Dutch, the family line from which my mom is descended had already been Baptists for several generations when she was born.

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

It's Wednesday....

.,..and in my absence (see yesterday's blog) I am publicly charging Jeremiah Richards (from the Choir Practice tradition) and Stevie J (founder of the New Barleymen) to cohost in my absence this afternoon.  And I expect Jeremiah to post a report afterwards on the FB group page - which I will be checking from Prescott.

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Thanking you kindly for the hospitality, it's time to go home

It was great to see so many Dove Mountaineers at the Gloria Christmas Concert at Catalina Foothills Church Sunday evening. On stage were Dove Mountaineers Donita Van Stelle and John Bailey. On the row right behind me was WorldMover May Toedter. I saw old friends from Bisbee whose sister is now in the CFC Chorale. In the seat next to me was a former member of my Sunday School class when I taught at CFC. Linda and I saw many old friends from CFC, including Karen Hocker of the PrimeTimers ministry and our staff buddies Al Tellez and Scott Farris. Such reunions are always great times of renewing and catching up.

As Dove Mountaineers, we are in a unique position. Virtually all of us came originally from Catalina Foothills. That means that we have healthy connections there, and are culturally savvy enough to know when we should go back - for choir concerts, men's ministry events, educational seminars, etc. It feels good to "know our way around" there, and to not feel like a complete stranger.

But for most of us, our lot is now cast with a new family. Just speaking honestly, it has been somewhat discouraging for those of us who are "sticking it out" with Dove Mountain to see so many of our friends leaving in recent weeks. I have always been one to acknowledge the free agency of adult believers to find their own way - without guilt trips and attempts to control the lives of others through manipulation and emotional blackmail, so don't read me wrong here. I am happy when others have found what makes them happy.

But as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord with the amazing family of believers known as Dove  Mountaineers.  And I don't plan to be a nomad any more. I like the new family that is being forged at Dove Mountain, and while it may be far from perfect, I plan to stick with it and enjoy the adventure that Aslan has planned for us.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Recovering our Sense of Parish, Part 3

One very practical means of "Blooming where we are planted" is to continue the well-designed canvassing survey of the environs of Pusch Ridge.  This will take several more Saturdays to complete.  The men pictured here were the "test batch," three weeks ago, and all returned not only unscathed, but pleasantly energized.   Consider joining us for Round Two this Saturday morning at the Pusch Ridge library at 9:00 AM.  Whether we are in our final locaiton geographically or not, this is a "parish-building" activity relationally, and is helping us to build a better sense of our defined community among those of us who participate. 

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Thankful for parents who choose well....

I haven't said anything in the blog here yet about the school where I am working part time this year, but Thanksgiving prompts me to list it high on the things in my life for which I am thankul.

In 1998 I wrote my dissertation on the clearly established benefits of school choice.   That was also the year that Arizona Christian School Tuition Organization (my other employer) began enabling parents to turn tax credit money into scholarships for their children to attend Christian schools.  Since then, ASCTO has awarded scholarships to over 18,000 students attending 150 Christian schools in the state of Arizona.   While that number is impressive, I am frankly surprised that it isn't even higher. 

In the intervening years, the reports about public schools have not improved significantly, but the quality of the once-struggling Christian schools clearly improves every year.  A small example from a school we all know about is Pusch Ridge, the school that graciously allows our church to use their facility.  When Catalina Foothills Church took over a struggling and academically undistinguished Christian school and renamed it Pusch Ridge, it took five years before a graduating class had just one National Merit scholar in its ranks (these students test in the top one per cent in the U.S).  Now there are routinely two or three in each graduating class, classes of only fifty to sixty per year.  Less than half the public schools in Tucson, schools five to ten times larger than Pusch Ridge, have even one National Merit scholar per year.

Pusch Ridge didn't achieve better academic status just by charging tuition and only enrolling students from economically advantaged homes (a popular myth), or by wishful thinking, either.   The school has worked hard to improve its academic effectiveness. So do Desert Christian and all the other Christian schools in our city.

This is just one evidence that when parents make intentional and informed choices about their child's education, good things can happen.   But I said that this blog would be about Veritas Academy of Tucson, Tucson's first university model school.   Here the parents not only have to choose to pay tuition for private education, many aided by those tax credit scholarships mentioned above, but they also have to share much of the teaching load as well.  Students attend classes at the school (which meets at Sabino Road Baptist Church) two days a week, much as they would when taking university classes.  Then, following the lesson plans on the school website, students study at home with their parents the other three days per week. 

I knew this model of schooling would be good, but one semester into it, I have to say that it is even better than I imagined.   Students do not get tired of being at school - or of being at home, either.  They enjoy the benefits of having companions to play with on the playground two days a week, and lots of quiet, self-paced study time at home.  Most are able to accomplish the requirements in this rigorous classical curriculum in just four days a week, leaving more discretionary time than they would normally have.  Through the school they enjoy field trips, academic competitions, and many other benefits which are often difficult for homeschoolers to manage on their own.

Best of all, parents and teachers are clearly working as partners.  There is no adversarial relationship ("Why aren't you making my child perfect with all the tuition I'm paying you?"), because we all know the child equally well, and understand his or her weaknesses and strengths.   Our meetings are not about blame, but about problem-solving. 

I still advocate the maximum amount of parental choice possible in a child's education, and for many families that will be homeschooling, or an established private school.   But the blend of responsible parenting and educational expertise available in this model is breath-takingly effective, and one of the things for which I am truly thankful this holiday season.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

WorldMovers: Schedule for next two weeks



WorldMovers will not be meeting this coming Sunday (August 15) because of the potluck after church. The next WorldMovers class will be Sunday, August 22. We will discuss the article, "Investment Opportunity," on page 54 in the July 31 issue, which was assigned last time we met. Pictured above are some of the farmers in Pakistan who are mentioned in the article.

The next issue will be available at the potluck, so by the time we meet on August 22, you should also be prepared to discuss the next cover article, which is about a Florida candidate for Congress, Marco Rubio.

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Back from the Springs













It's good to know I have a few readers who notice when I don't post - thanks to Dove Mountaineers Gary Oglebay and J.B. Phillips for noticing I was "absent" for a week. My summer travels are now officially over.

I was in Colorado for a couple of reasons, the main one of which was to visit new my granddaughter Ellie, the first Askew girl in three generations. Her dad is our son #3, Samuel (going by Sam now, of course), who works for Uncharted Waters Sports Ministry in Colorado Springs. It was fun to see Samuel in action as a ministry leader, sports coach, husband, and father.

And it's good to be back home.