Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Justified worries?

Don't know if any of you have had the chance to see "The Golden Compass" yet. I've been reading with great curiosity all the reviews, especially the reviews from Christian telling other Christians not to see it. I even heard some prominent local pastors speak out against the movie (I wonder if they actually saw it.) I haven't seen it yet and after reading this review am considering it.

I'd love to hear your thoughts on either this review and/or the movie. Is this one of those movies that is a stretch to find a good theological message?









"The Golden Compass" prompted pandemic paranoia among Christians who see the movie as an elaborate vehicle for the atheist message of its writer, Philip Pullman. However, a careful review of the film reveals its attacks are on the abuse of power, not the love of God. The movie casts an unflattering light on the “Magisterium,” a church body that strives to control thought and manipulate free will. By trying to censor the movie because of its anti-Christian overtones, overzealous Christians feed into Pullman’s stereotype.
Pullman is not against Christianity when it's properly executed. Rather, he opposes organized religions that persecute people who do not fall in line with their belief system. He and Christians are on the same side of this fight; they just arrive there from contrasting places. "The Golden Compass" is the least religiously motivated installment in Pullman’s three-part series, "His Dark Materials." Even in the controversial final installment, "The Amber Spyglass," Pullman does not purport to kill the God of Christianity. Instead, it attacks a vindictive and judgmental deity that motivates the persecution of non-followers.Pullman’s stories will not erode the faith of young moviegoers. If anything, they will raise questions that Christian parents should use as an opportunity to solidify their children’s understanding of their faith. God granted free will so that His people would choose to follow Him; eliminating all non-Christian perspectives renders that privilege moot.Christian parents are often reluctant to expose their children to fantastical works of magic and wizardry. But what is the harm in permitting such ventures into the realm of imagination? Will children exchange a life of faith for a life of sorcery? Will they rebel against the church and start jumping off rooftops with broomsticks between their legs? The reason that billions of Christian parents raise their children to believe in Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny is that imagination is a pivotal element of childhood. If parents teach their children the real meaning of the holidays—or the real intent of the church—then neither Santa Claus nor the Golden Compass can do any harm. -Michael Lombardo

Friday, December 7, 2007

Gettin' groovy with the new camera phone


Hoping to make this a nice gift for the annual Bus club Christmas party tomorrow night. Ideally it will end up varnished on a nice piece of wood.
BTW, that's my 1960 Bus in Sepia mode, or whatever it's called.

What a great story

This story speaks for itself, very cool and quite amazing.

Big Wave Session - Maui Hawaii
Outer Spreks,Maui Hawaii3 December 2007
Laird Hamilton rescues companion in 80-foot Hawaii wave
Surfersvillage Global Surf News, 5 December, 2007 :
- - WAILUKU, Maui


Ever in search of the 100-foot wave, extreme surfing star Laird Hamilton came to the aid of a fellow surfer off Maui. Brett Lickle, who was rescued by Hamilton, said of his dramatic rescue "the most intense thing I've been through."
Lickle said Hamilton stripped naked so he could tie his surf trunks into a tourniquet after Lickle suffered a huge gash on his leg in a wipeout on what he said was an 80-foot ocean wave. Lickle, 47, was recovering Wednesday at home in Haiku.
In the incident Monday at a tow-in surf spot called Outer Spreks, Lickle says he was cut by the fin of a board on the Honda AquaTrax watercraft he and Hamilton had used to get to the spot where the waves were breaking. He says he was trying to stay ahead of the monster wave, but it crashed down on him.
Hamilton is among extreme surfers who have pioneered in the riding of superwaves that ordinary surfers don't tackle. He and fellow big-waver Dave Kalama premiered a short film, "All Aboard the Crazy Train," on tow-in surfing in 2005, warning that it wasn't a sport for the inexperienced. Hamilton also was among surfers performing in feature-length films highlighting the sport, "Step Into Liquid" and "Riding Giants."
The outer reef off Spreckelsville is a big challenge for big-wave surfers. "If ever you're going to find a 100-footer, it's there," said Lickle. He and Hamilton had surfed the area in the morning and then returned in the afternoon when the accident occurred. He said only one other tow-in team was on the waves at the time.
Lickle said he was trying to outrun the looming water wall in the watercraft when it caught him. Hamilton was in tow. "I'm in big trouble," he said he told himself. After the wave crashed down on them, he reunited with Hamilton about three quarters of a mile offshore. One fear, Lickle said, was the blood from his wound would attract tiger sharks that hover around the Maui shoreline.
He said that after tying the tourniquet, Hamilton swam "like a bat out of hell" for about a half mile to recover the watercraft. Surfers said ocean conditions on Monday created waves of historic size. "There were the biggest waves that any of us have seen," said Buzzy Kerbox, another Maui big-wave surfer who saw the Outer Spreks waves but chose to taken on another surf spot.