What Matter(ed) To You?

It's been a rough few months for the church I work with. We've had over a dozen people pass away who have been members here or connected here in some way.

I've been to a lot of visitations in the last three months, and it's amazing what you hear both at the funerals and the visitations about the deceased. 

"He was a good man."

"She was one amazing woman."

"He sure did love his sports." 

I've heard predominately what the person loved. His or her family, their cars, their sports, both local and abroad. And that got me thinking. 

Ask this question: If someone were to say something about you at your funeral if you died today, what would it be? Would it be that you were a hardcore Tennessee Vols fan? Or that you lived and breathed baseball? Or that you really liked Star Trek?

What will people remember you by? Your hobbies? Or who you really were?

What will people say that mattered to you? 

As much as some of us hate to admit it, what we spend our time doing is what matters to us the most. You spend most of your time working? It isn't because you have to work, it's because that's what matters to you the most. Spend most of your time in hobbies or collecting? That's what matters to you the most. 

Time management is a scary thing. You only have 10,800 minutes a week to fit things in. That's everything - sleep, work, play, family, hobbies, eating - everything. The truth: What you spend your time on matters the most to you. 

Ecclesiastes 3 is the famous "There is a time for everything" passage, and it rings so true today, even though it was written over 2500 years ago. There is a time for everything.

There is a time when my little boy won't be a little boy anymore, so maybe I need to prioritize my time off from work and not be distracted when I'm with my family. Maybe I need to spend less time playing retro video games and more time playing with my young son. Maybe I need to focus on my wife instead of the thousand other things that I have to do - all of which will still be there for me to do tomorrow (Matthew 6.34). 

I spend way too much time obsessing about my time. Once it's gone though, we'll never get it back. So let's use our time wisely, and live in the moment. Because when we're gone and people are talking over our casket, we want them to say that we were Godly and that we loved our families more than anything. 

Smarter iPhone Calendars with Sunrise

Sunrise [App Store, Free] is a ​relatively new app that's great for keeping track of your life. I've been using it for a month now and I'm very happy with it. 

​Sunrise interface. 

​Sunrise interface. 

What's best for me about Sunrise is that I can add calendar events quickly with natural language input. What that means in English is that I can tap and hold the '+' button on the top right and it gives me a dialog box where I can type "Lunch with Scott next Tuesday at 11:30AM at Jimmy's" and it will know exactly what I want to do with that. It will put the entry as "Lunch with Scott" next Tuesday, April 9, at 11:30 AM. It will even look up Jimmy's here in Lewisburg and give me a map if I need directions. ​

Sunrise syncs with Google Calendar, Facebook birthdays, and LinkedIn calendar. It's free and you should give it a try. ​

❯ Sunrise Website

Chad LandmanComment
Men: What Have We Become?

Men: ​

We have become a bunch of macho idiots. We have put girls in bikinis and idolized the beautiful ones and hated on the ones that don't meet society's definition of beauty. We have made sports more important than relationships - both with God and with others. We prioritize work and "getting ahead" more so than we prioritze our relationships with wives, husbands, sons, and daughters. We have set aside time for hobbies, movies, and video games - but not for family. We have degraded sex so much that it is now the equivalent of going to the mailbox. And we have done all this with a smile on our face and money in our bank accounts. 

It is time for us to be Gentlemen - gentle men.

</rant>​

Just a little excerpt from something I'm working on for our new guy's split class tomorrow. Harsh, but so true for most men. ​