Archive > August 2007

I Caught a Virus

kylegoen » 24 August 2007 » In Influence » Comments

I hate getting sick! There is nothing worse than catching something from a person and not knowing they had “it” in the first place.

Well, over the past few days I have caught something and I had to check it out.

Viral marketing is a fairly new concept that is an effective way of getting a message out to as many people possible through other people. The concept is similar to “word of mouth” marketing. The concept is pretty simple, you have a message you want someone else to know so you pass along the info to as many people as possible in your network at one time. The recipients of the message or idea then pass the new info on to their networks and so on and so on. You get the picture (or should I say the virus).

This happened to me this week as I was reading a blog and came across a picture that I really didn’t understand. I tried to follow up but found dead ends. I ran across another blog recently that began to talk about an upcoming movie that is being “dissed” by Hollywood with a link to the movie trailer.
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WOW! Marketing folks have taken spreading so-called “good news” to a new level. Maybe we should try to start “spreading the good news” (gospel) we have in a similar way. Let’s “infect” as many people as we possibly can in our own networks.

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Happy Birthday Amy

kylegoen » 21 August 2007 » In Family » Comments

This past Sunday (8/19) my wonderful wife celebrated a 30-something birthday. I am not about to reveal the number that is for Amy to do if she chooses. (I’m not a smart man, but I do know when to be quiet) Because I’m a little more visible than she is due to my job and ministry, I wanted you to know how wonderful she is and how blessed I am to have her.
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We have been married almost seventeen years. God has blessed me with someone who is as called to ministry as I am. She is first and foremost the greatest wife in the world. She cares for me more than anyone else. She laughs at my dumb jokes and silly songs that I make up on the fly. When I get my colloquialisms jumbled and create new ones she goes right along. She is always there to encourage me when I need it and to give me a “swift kick in the rear” when I am hard headed about something. She is my best friend and I couldn’t live without her.

Amy is a wonderful and patient mom to our three kids. She laughs with them and loves to play whatever they are playing at the moment. The kids love to be around their mom. She is always there to help with homework, even when she has her own work that must be accomplished as a 4th grade teacher. Mom is always ready to give hugs, bandage wounds, throw the football with the boys, make things with our daughter, or sit and read with the kids.
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Amy loves the Lord more than she loves her family. I am so thankful for her example to our family. She is so diligent to meet with Him and talk about her day, her family, and then to listen to what He desires for her life. The relationship she has with God is what drew me to her almost seventeen years ago. I realized quickly that if I was going to even have the opportunity to date Amy I had better follow the Lord closely, because it was very evident who was first in her life. Even today I know that my walk with the Lord needs to stay fresh, clean, and close because she is counting on me.

I am going to get in trouble for this post. Don’t get me wrong, she isn’t perfect, but she is close in my book. I love my wife and I thank God for her each day. Happy birthday Amy.

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Irresistible

kylegoen » 14 August 2007 » In Influence » Comments

Irresistible is a very unique word. Webster’s dictionary defines the word as “that can not be successfully resisted or opposed; resistless… .”

We sometimes use this word in relation to food or candy.

“The steak was irresistible.”

“I couldn’t resist that Reese’s peanut butter cup.”

The word is used sometimes in reference to people.

“Charlie/Charlene has an irresistible personality.”

“I find Mark/Marlene irresistible.”

Yet, I meet people who feel that God’s matchless, supreme, unending, and sacrificial love is resistible.

Interesting isn’t it.

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Interesting Things

kylegoen » 13 August 2007 » In Influence, Mission » Comments

All of this out of one newspaper…religion is everywhere. Sometimes it is positive, but most of the time the media is looking for the negative side. We have a real responsibility to influence intentionally in a positive way so as to offset what people are seeing each day in the newspapers, magazines, Internet and on television.

Church members sue pastor

Counseling homosexuals

Arts in church

School Supply giveaway

Make a positive difference today.

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Remember our Brothers and Sisters

kylegoen » 06 August 2007 » In Influence, Mission » Comments

This tragic story is from www.bpnews.net about the Korean Christian missionary hostage situation in Afghanistan. Another good account and picture of the group can be found at http://loveeachstone.blogspot.com. I am sorry for the length, but the story is too important. I wish I would have posted something sooner.

Prayer urged for 21 Christian aid workers held hostage

Posted on Aug 3, 2007 | by Staff WASHINGTON (BP)–With two South Korean men having been executed, 21 young Koreans remained hostage by the Taliban in Afghanistan at the two-week point Aug. 2 following the Christian aid workers’ kidnapping July 19.

Two women hostages are critically ill and most of the others are sick, South Korea’s Yonhap News Agency reported Aug. 3, but it did not provide details.

In Washington, an official with the Institute on Religion and Democracy sounded a call Aug. 3 for the media and for Christians to speak up for the Korean captives.

“Why is it that the media finds the brief incarceration of Paris Hilton worthy of ’round-the-clock vigils but spares little ink and little air time to tell the world more about these two men who gave their lives while serving the people of Afghanistan?” Faith McDonnell, IRD director of religious liberty programs, asked.

“Even more disturbing than lack of media coverage, though, is the tepid response of the churches to the plight of their brothers and sisters from South Korea,” McDonnell continued in the statement.

“No matter what issues currently occupy Christians in the U.S., they should shift their focus to Afghanistan right now and join the churches in South Korea in vigilant prayer for the remaining hostages.” McDonnell said the crisis is a chance “to witness to the world that the body of Christ is one worldwide body.”

“Christians in the West should always be praying for their persecuted brothers and sisters — but particularly in this time of crisis, they should look beyond their own interests and pray for the hostages. I challenge Christians to pray daily for the South Koreans, and to include them as a prayer item on church Web sites, e-mail conferences and the blog sites of individuals.”

The two men who have been killed by the Taliban thus far are:

– Bae Hyung Kyu, 42, a minister with the Sammul Presbyterian Church near Seoul who was slain by 10 AK-47 shots July 25, his birthday. Bae worked with unmarried university graduates, helping prepare them for volunteer trips for aid work in developing countries, according to Compass, a persecution watchdog organization based in Santa Ana, Calif. Bae leaves behind a wife and 9-year-old daughter, Compass reported. (Some news reports have spelled the name of the church “Saemmul.”)

– Shim Sung Min, 29, who had left a job in information technology to seek a graduate degree in agriculture out of a concern for poor Korean farmers impacted by globalization, a church member told Compass. Shim had been teaching Sunday School classes for the handicapped, the church member also said.

While the South Korean volunteer team, 16 of whom are women, have been criticized in some quarters for venturing into Afghanistan’s volatility, an Afghan convert to Christianity told Compass he admires the commitment they evidenced and hopes that a Christian presence can continue in the country.

“During the Taliban regime, the main expatriate group in Afghanistan was Christians,” the Afghan told Compass. “They were here to help Afghanistan. … No one else had the guts to come and help this war-torn country.”

The convert said Christians are called to serve -– and sometimes at a very high cost.

“Thank you for coming to Afghanistan to serve my people,” Compass quoted the Afghan as saying to the hostages and other Korean Christians who had served in Afghanistan. “Thank you for letting the world know, ‘Don’t forget Afghanistan.’ Your Afghan brothers in faith are praying for you daily.”

The corpses of Bae and Shim have been returned to South Korea, Compass reported.

Taliban spokesmen threatened more executions by midnight Aug. 2 if the Afghan government continued to refuse demands to Taliban prisoners, Compass reported, noting that Taliban leaders later stated that no one had been hurt.

A purported Taliban spokesman, Qari Yousuf Ahmadi, told the Yonhap News Agency July 31, “If the negotiations do not go well, [the militants] will kill the male hostages, and then it will be the female hostages’ turn.”

Yonhap, in an Aug. 3 report, cited informed sources in reporting that South Korean officials are negotiating with the Taliban “for the venue for face-to-face talks” on the fate of 21 surviving hostages, “amid conflicting reports on imminent military operations to rescue the hostages.”

South Korean officials would not officially confirm efforts to establish direct talks with the kidnappers, Yonhap reported, but said they are trying to maintain “direct or indirect contact” with the captors.

Negotiations for medical treatment for the sick hostages at a Kabul hospital also have not yet been successful, Yonhap reported.

“The hospital proposed to the Taliban specific conditions for the treatment of the Korean patients, but the militants refused them,” a reporter with the Afghan Islamic Press told Yonhap on condition of anonymity.

Cheon Ho-seon, a spokesman for South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun, said a medical team from the South Korean military contingent stationed in Afghanistan is on standby near the southern Afghan province of Ghazni, where the Koreans were taken hostage. “The team has been on standby since the kidnapping took place,” he said.

The 23-member Korean aid team was traveling on a charter bus from Kandahar to the capital, Kabul, when armed men stopped them July 19 in the Ghazni province’s Qarabagh district. The volunteers had arrived in Afghanistan on July 13 and were scheduled to return home July 23.

Compass, in a July 30 news report, recounted that the team had spent three days assisting three Korean women who were engaged in long-term aid work in northern Afghanistan. The volunteers were traveling back to Kabul but went on to Kandahar by bus when no flights were available. The group had planned to spend several days volunteering at a hospital and kindergarten in Kandahar where a husband-and-wife doctor team and a single Korean woman teacher are working. The two doctors treat up to 150 patients a day, Compass quoted a member of the Korean church as saying.

An analyst for the Washington-based International Christian Concern persecution watchdog likened the incident to the 2001 kidnapping of American missionaries Heather Mercer and Dayna Curry, who were held by the Taliban for three months. “It was in the very same area of Afghanistan that these two kidnappings happened,” Jeremy Sewell said in a July 20 news release. “While Mercer and Curry’s story ended happily, it was only because anti-Taliban forces attacked the prison.

“Under the Taliban, it is absolutely illegal to preach Christianity. This courageous South Korean missions team is going to experience the ultimate test of their faith.”
–30–
Compiled by Art Toalston.

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Huge Air…Huge Hit

kylegoen » 03 August 2007 » In Sports » Comments

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4mD0VMubReo]

Unbelievable!

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