No Dress Rehearsals

because you only live once


Did You Know 4.0

Posted by Travis Maclay On September - 21 - 2009

About a year ago, I posted a link to a video titled, “Did You Know 3.0.” Well, this week, XPLANE released their newest version, 4.0. There’s no doubt that social media has fully changed the world in which we live, but this is eye-opening to just how much.

I had lunch today with a couple of friends who are Media & Communications Pastors at local churches here in Austin. We were talking about this very thing just before I came across this video. Enjoy!

Bookmark and Share

Clayton’s Story

Posted by Travis Maclay On August - 3 - 2009

I have increasingly become a bigger & bigger fan of capturing & telling stories. Through a friend’s blog, I came across this video earlier today. I was blown away to say the least. It is one of the most humbling and compelling stories I’ve ever seen and I encourage you to find a few minutes to check it out.

Your thoughts?

Clayton’s Story from Jacob Lewis on Vimeo.

Bookmark and Share

Learning to Rejoice

Posted by Travis Maclay On July - 10 - 2009

Mandy and I return to “normal life” starting today. We’ve had a great time having her parents stay with us for the past week on their vacation from Florida. We took them to do, see & eat all things Austin. After a week of visiting, they took off yesterday afternoon to head home.

Mandy and I were having a conversation last night about trials & circumstances that don’t turn out as planned. Seems we’re experiencing these times in greater numbers than we’re accustomed to. Without going into detail, we’ve had experiences over the past month or so that have turned out differently than we had planned. A visit to the nursing home last week to see mom turned into an unexpected meeting about mom’s rapid decline in health and possible homegoing sooner than later. We were also given some commitments from people over the past few months that ended up not being upheld.

It’s in these times that we have the potential, if we’re not careful, to carry a “woe is me” attitude on our shoulders. I have been studying various commands of God these past few weeks. This week, I’ve been looking at the command to rejoice. I love what Bill Gothard has to say about it:

“Wisdom is basing responses on the bigger picture. This means recognizing that whatever happens to us is not the whim of fate, or the will of man, but the work of God. If a sparrow cannot fall to the ground without God’s approval, neither can anyone attack us without God’s permission.”

Though it would be much easier to skate through life with no challenges or hard times, I am thankful that in the midst of uncertainty and disappointments, we have an advocate with our Father. It is a good reminder that even in those times, we are called to rejoice.

“Blessed are ye, when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely, for my sake. Rejoice, and be exceeding glad: for great is your reward in heaven: for so persecuted they the prophets which were before you” (Matthew 5:11–12).

Bookmark and Share

Twitter and the Southern Baptist Convention

Posted by Travis Maclay On June - 24 - 2009

I ran across a blog entry today on Boring Dan (http://danielwiginton.blogspot.com) that does a great job talking about how Twitter has changed this year’s Southern Baptist Convention. I was thinking his very thoughts last night as I tweeted back and forth with those in attendance in Louisville. Rather than re-creating, I’m linking to his blog here and posting this entry in it’s entirety. Thanks, Dan, for a well-written piece on not only the power of Twitter, but also on the structure of our convention and how things work. Great insight.

Here’s the entry:

The annual meeting of the Southern Baptist Convention is wrapping up today. I was not able to attend, but thanks to the internet I hardly feel like I’ve missed it. This year’s meeting will probably be remembered most for Tuesday night’s landslide victory in favor of appointing a “Great Commission Resurgence Task Force”, which was essentially a vote to implement the GCR Statement. But the second most significant aspect of the convention seems to have been the rise of Twitter in alerting the world to every ugly detail of the proceedings.

This year everyone and their mother brought their Twitter-activated cell phones into the convention hall, and people watching the live internet feed signed up for Twitter accounts as well. As thousands of “tweets” (I hate that word) went out yesterday with the hash tag #SBC2009, the whole world was watching. Unfortunately, the founders of the SBC did not have Twitter in mind in 1845, and the meeting is no more twit-friendly today than it was then.

I should explain something about the Southern Baptist Convention to those of you who are unfamiliar. Unlike many denominations who are ruled from the top down by appointed priests or elders, the SBC is ruled from the bottom up by its churches. Each church in the denomination can send a maximum of ten messengers (essentially delegates) to the annual meeting, and these messengers are the ones who have the power to vote, introduce motions, etc. This year there were nearly 9,000 registered messengers. Because the power is in the hands of the messengers, the churches are in charge of the bureaucracy and not the other way around. This democratic structure is what allowed the SBC to reverse its drift toward liberalism 30 years ago while many other denominations could not be rescued. It is a beautiful thing in my opinion.

Part of the beauty of our Baptist democracy is freedom of speech, in that any messenger can introduce any motion that they wish. When you put out open mics for a group of 9,000 people, it’s impossible to avoid hearing some very strange and embarrassing statements coming through the loud speakers. As far as I know, someone has said something crazy every year since 1845. Usually the crazy motions contain a technical flaw related to the rules of order and are thrown out, and even if they manage to go to a vote they get dismissed by the other messengers.

But when the democratic proceedings of the SBC hit Twitter yesterday, the world did not understand. The vast majority of the tweets had to do with the off-the-wall motions that were brought up during the open mic time. Many of those watching from outside got the impression that if something was said at a microphone, then surely it must be the voice of the denomination. In addition to Twitter, videos of the open mic times have been posted to YouTube and promoted on a number of blogs. Thanks to these user generated media, rumors are spreading all over the internet that the Southern Baptist Convention is going to boycott Pepsi, ban Mark Driscoll’s books from Lifeway stores, do other terrible things to Mark Driscoll, ban all secular music, and start using only the King James Version of the Bible. All of these were made as motions by who-knows-who, but none will happen.

As the tweets went out from the convention, outsiders’ responses ranged from cries of sadness by members of other denominations to cries of “I told you so” by liberal critics. What none of them understood was that everything was proceeding as usual, that the strange motions are individual opinions, and that the denomination as a whole is as strong as ever. The truth finally came to light Tuesday night when the very forward-looking GCR Task Force (see first paragraph) was approved by a vote of 95% to 5%. Once that motion was approved the Twitterverse got quiet very quickly, as it tends to do when there is a lack of things to criticize.

This year’s convention will bring changes to the denomination. The GCR Task Force will likely recommend some significant changes, some fresh new leaders will start taking the reigns (David Platt is the most obvious), and some of the old leaders may even step down as a result of their opposition to the will of the messengers. But one needed change that I doubt anyone foresaw is a shift toward a style of meeting that does not lend itself to the huge misperceptions that were broadcast this year on Twitter. I do not have any ideas of how to accomplish this, and it might not be possible at all if we’re to preserve our democratic structure. Either way, next year the SBC will have no choice but to acknowledge that Twitter has power to change the world’s perceptions about issues much bigger than what a celebrity had for breakfast.

You can follow Dan on Twitter here.
You can follow me on Twitter here.

Bookmark and Share

Happy Birthday, Dad!

Posted by Travis Maclay On June - 20 - 2009

It’s funny how I find myself enjoying all of the little things that dad used to do that drove me crazy. The small things he loved I now have developed a love for. His personality and character is something I see in myself more and more as the years go by.

Without any opportunity to say goodbye, the Lord decided to call dad home on Christmas morning of 1993 while sitting in our living room at home. And now, looking back some 15 years later, I see so much of that man in the mirror today. Dad would have turned 68 today and I wanted to take a few minutes to say Happy Birthday and for tomorrow, Happy Father’s Day, to a man that I owe much gratitude and respect.

Dad, I wish you were still with us. I often wonder what our conversation would consist of. There are so many things I’d ask you. So many decisions I’d love to consult with you on. But, if I know anything, I know you’d be proud of what the Lord has done through your legacy.

I love you, dad, and wish you a Happy 68th today!

Bookmark and Share