Summer Movie Tour: Wolverine

The tour continues with what really kicked off the summer movie season: the X-men series prequel - Wolverine.

Wolverine is a touching, nature documentary about a cuddly woodland creature.... oh wait, not it's not.  In fact, it's quite the opposite.  Ever wonder why Logan seemed to be so ticked off all the time in the X-men movies?  Well, he does too.  He struggles with memory problems throughout the original trilogy, though some of it comes back in flashes.

This story begins with Logan, or Jimmy, as a child... in the 19th century.  Jimmy and his brother Victor go through a lot of things together - like WWI, WWII, and Vietnam.  As time passes, they don't age, and they begin heading in different directions.  Jimmy becomes more and more of a pacifist, while Victor becomes more and more of a psychotic mess.  Ultimately, they are recruited to be a part of a team of mutants who go around the world dishing out a particular brand of scariness.  However, their differences finally drive them apart, and Logan leaves the group for the quiet life in the Canadian Rockies.  But, as you would expect, he is not left alone, and eventually allows Stryker (yeah, the big, bad military guy from the original trilogy) to experiment on him, fusing his skeletal system with the indestructable adamantium that we've all come to know and love.  What follows from that point is non-stop action and unexpected plot twists.

My assessment: This is everything you're looking for in a summer movie.  Action, explosions, a few laughs here and there.  Don't expect deep storylines, and, as with a lot of prequels, don't expect to understand how all of the details translate into the previous movies.  Just sit back and enjoy the ride.  You don't have to know all about the X-men story to get into it, but it certainly helps when some characters appear without any kind of explanation as to who they are.

My recommendation: See it in the theaters.  Maybe wait for the twilight prices to save a few bucks, but this is one that is worth seeing on the big screen... unless you have a giant television, then I guess you could manage to wait for it to come out on DVD.

Summer Movie Tour: Knowing

Stop #2 on the summer movie tour is Nicolas Cage's Knowing.  The movie begins in 1959 (I think it was '59, anyway) with a ceremony at a new elementary school.  A little girl, who is clearly disturbed in some way, writes a series of numbers on a piece of paper that is destined for the time capsule that will be opened in 50 years.  This is when we flash forward and meeting John (Nicky C.) and his son, Caleb.

John is a professor, and we get a glimpse of his outlook on life during one of his lectures.  He believes that things just happen randomly, and without any purpose.  Of course, with that speech coming so early in the movie, you know that it is going to be challenged.  It is, not surprisingly, when Caleb is the recepient of the little girl's page of numbers.  One night, while Caleb is asleep, John begins to look at this sheet of paper and with the omniscience of the internet is able to discern that the numbers are a code for disasters that have occurred over the last 50 years (disasters that included the 9/11 attacks, earthquakes, plane crashes, and even the hotel fire that killed John's wife).

Meanwhile, Caleb is followed around by creepy blonde-haired guys in black jackets, who apparently cannot talk audibly.  They are referred to as the "whisper-people" by Caleb and a friend that he meets later in the movie.  These two can hear the whisper-people talking, while nobody else can.

Everything comes together in an ending that can only be described as catastrophic... and really weird.

My assessement: though there is some violence, it is not over the top.  I don't seem to remember a lot of bad language throughout the movie either.  It certainly is a movie that makes you think about how we are all connected in some way.

My recommendation: it's worth a look at the theater, especially since it should be coming to a dollar theater near you soon.  Otherwise, wait for the DVD, and maybe don't watch it in the dark when it's really hot outside.  Once you see it, you'll know what I'm talking about.

Summer Movie Tour: Watchmen

Summer is a big time for the movies, and this year isn't any different.  However, this year, I plan on seeing quite a few.   And, hey, why not let you in on what I'm seeing, and you can decide if you want to see them too.  Or you'll find out that we have totally different taste in movies... either way, it ought to be fun!

The first movie on this tour isn't really a summer movie, since it came out sometime in the spring; however, I'm starting here anyway.

Watchmen was interesting.  The plot is unique in this Hollywood age of reboots and rehashing of old storylines.  It is set in an alternative present.  Richard Nixon is president.  America crushed the opposition in Vietnam.  Superheroes are just regular people who get dressed up in funny costumes (with one exception, the freakishly blue and frequently naked Dr. Manhattan; yes, it's as disturbing as it sounds).

Watchmen gives us a glimpse of the kind of life that a hero would lead in this kind of world.  And it's a dark, morally gray lifestyle.  The action sequences are incredible.  The music really helps set the tone.  The picture itself is unique, very dark overall.  It was done by the same person who did 300, a movie that intrigues me in how it is produced.  However, I like 300 a whole lot more.

My overall assessment: the violence, language and nudity are bad in Watchmen.  For those reasons alone, I don't recommend seeing it.  It's not one that I think I'll watch again, although it did make me think and was intriguing.

Recommendation: your life won't be missing anything if you never see it.

Swish's Series Reviews - Catch Up Time

Ironic how I stopped doing the series reviews for just a little while and suddenly, the Cardinals lost their first series, and then drop a couple more.  Vacation was good, and coming back has been really busy, so this is the first real chance I've had to get caught up on things.

Philadelphia, 5/4-5/5
This series did not go so well for the Cards.  In fact, they lost both games of this two game series.  It was their first series defeat of the season, losing 1-6 and 7-10.  It was an omen of the things to come over the next several days.  Cardinals record: 0-2 (5-1-1 series).

Pittsburgh, 5/6-5/7
In a total turn-around from the Philly series, the Cardinals came out playing solid and took both games of this short set, with 4-2 and 5-2 victories.  Cardinals record: 2-0 (6-1-1)

@ Cincinnati, 5/8-5/10
First trip to Great American Ballpark of the season, and not such a good result.  They acted like they wanted to get into the first two games of the series, but never really got it going.  Then, they tried to give away the final game.  Going into the ninth, Franklin gave up his first two runs of the season.  Both on solo shots - but one to a pinch-hitting pitcher.  They came back and won it in the 10th.  Two losses: 4-6 and 3-8; victory: 8-7.  Cardinals record: 1-2 (6-2-1)

@ Pittsburgh, 5/12-5/14
There are some things that just shouldn't happen in baseball.  One of those things is the Cardinals losing a series to the Pirates.  It'd be one thing if they were close losses, but really, they weren't.  The one exception would be Game 2 of this series, in which the Cardinals did have the tying run at the plate in the 9th inning; however, they trailed by 4 going into the 9th.  The first two games: 1-7 and 2-5; final game: 5-1.  Cardinals record 1-2 (6-3-1)

This has all led from the Cardinals having a relatively firm grasp on first place in the division to them suddenly in a logjam atop the Central.  Going into Friday's postponed game against the Brewers, the Cardinals were tied with the Brew Crew at 21-14, and the Cubs and Reds were sitting 1/2 game back at 20-14.  Of the now 9 teams in baseball with 20+ wins, 4 are in the NL Central.  It's going to be interesting to see how this all plays out.

On Vacation!

In just a little while, Katie and I will be leaving for vacation!  I doubt that I will have internet access (apart from what I can get on my Blackberry), so I definitely will not be blogging until at least next Tuesday.

Swish's Series Review, Nationals 4/30-5/3

Cardinals record: 2-1 (5-0-1 series); 17-8 overall

Cardinals 9, Nationals 4
This was a tight game, believe it or not, until the 9th inning.  Tied at 4, the Cardinals "exploded" for 5 runs in the top of the ninth.  By "exploded" I mean - 3 hits (one, with bases loaded, was an infield single!), 2 walks, 1 HBP, and a balk.  Yup, that's what helped the Cardinals finish the month of April with the best record in baseball.  Lost in it all was an outstanding performance by Mitchell Boggs, who has been filling in for the injured Carpenter.  He struck out a career best 9 in 6 innings of work.

Player of the game goes to Ankiel on this one for a 2-3 night, including a pair of RBI's one of which broke a tie game in the 9th.  Pujols also deserves some mention for his 8th HR of the season in the 1st inning, which put him at 28 RBI's on the season


Cardinals 6, Nationals 2
Cards brought out the whoopin' stick in this one.  All six runs were scored via the long ball tonight.  Pujols, Duncan, Ludwick and Thurston (1st career) all homered for the Cardinals.  Pujols was on base for Duncan's and Ludwick's HRs.  Wellemeyer pitched a solid game, going 7 inning and only allowing 2 runs on a HR in the 7th.

Pujols is tonight's player of the game.  He was merely a triple short of the cycle, scored 3 runs, and knocked in another.  It's surprising he didn't get the cycle.  It seems like he has a triple every other night (not really, he has yet to record one this season).

Nationals 6, Cardinals 1
As good as the Cards played yesterday, they stunk it up today.  Pujols was getting a much deserved day off.  His replacement at first, Chris Duncan, gave Cardinal Nation another reason to love their MVP first basemen.  Duncan dropped a relatively easy foul pop-up, and the Nationals took advantage with a two-out single and a big, 3-run blast by Adam Dunn.  Pineiro pitched well, going seven strong innings and only allowing 1 earned run (the 3-run dinger by Dunn counted as 3 unearned runs), but he was outmatched by the Nationals pitcher, Martis, who pitched a complete game and only allowed 5 hits.  

It's important to note that this is the first loss by a Cardinal start whose last name doesn't rhyme with Bellemeyer.  Cardinal starters are 14-3 on the season.  In fact, Wellemeyer is the only pitcher with multiple losses on the entire team.  

An additional side note, why do I say that this was a much-deserved day off for our favorite MVP?  Currently, Pujols leads the NL in HR (tied with Adrian Gonzalez), RBI, runs, and slugging percentage, and ranks 3rd in batting average (.356), 3rd in hits, and 9th in stolen bases (don't expect that to be maintained!).  Smells like another MVP season to me!

The good thing about only scoring 1 run is that it was pretty easy to discern who the offensive player of the game was.  Rookie Colby Rasmus hit his first major league HR in the 7th inning for his second hit of the day.

Game 4 of the series was postponed due to the rain.  A makeup date has not been announced.

As much fun as a series review has been, I think with the conclusion of this series, I'll be switching to a weekly format instead.  It's an evolving process.

Loving in Truth and Action

The following was preached at Veedersburg and Hillsboro UMC on Sunday, May 3, 2009.  The text for this weeks message is 1 John 3:16-24.

Love is a word that is often thrown around, but rarely understood to the full extent.  As we get deeper into the third chapter of John’s letter, the author starts to paint a clearer picture of what it means to love another person.  The example that he gives us is Jesus.  To really know what love is, we need to look to Jesus, and not just to the versions that we see in modern culture – versions that both over-romanticize love and cheapen it.  We need to learn what it means to love another person.  We can learn that from Jesus and then apply it to how we love those around us.  Jesus’ love for us should lead us to have a similar type of love for others.

It is with much shame that I admit that I have watched the ABC Family show Secret Life of the American Teenager.  Now, originally, my excuse was that I was in youth ministry, but then I came here, and I no longer had an excuse.  So, to put it into perspective, have you ever watched a series of events that were so horrible that you couldn’t keep your eyes off of it?  I had that experience on Tuesday night last week, when Kyle McClellan, a Cardinal pitcher, walked three batters in the bottom of the eigth of a 1-0 game.  Secret Life is a lot like that.  It’s a mess.  I’m not even kidding.  The acting is terrible and the storyline is worse.  You know that it is going to be awful, but you can’t help yourself.

The main character, Amy, is 15 and pregnant.  She got pregnant during summer band camp, and the first season of the show basically traced her life during the course of her pregnancy.  In the course of this season, we meet different teenagers who struggle with what it means to be in love.  In fact, the theme song goes like this, “Falling in love is such an easy thing to do.  Birds can do it; we can do it.  Let’s stop talking. Let’s get to it.  Let’s fall in love.”  And it’s this very upbeat, pop song, which doesn’t fit with the rest of the show.

Now, during her freshman year, she meets a guy (who is not the father of the baby) and starts dating him.  For some reason, they think the answer to all the issues laid out before them is to fall in love and get married.  There is no sense of responsibility, no real grasp of the serious nature of the situation, and it’s like this for all of the characters.  Love is portrayed as some feeling that comes and goes.  It’s cheap, and not worth the time for some of the characters.  

And while I’m picking on this particular show right now, it’s not the only one on television like it.  I’m sure there is a long list of shows that we could go through right now that give a similar portrayal.  My point is not to tell you to stay away from these shows, but to watch them with a discerning eye.  Don’t just accept the “reality” that is laid out before you on television.  Every show on television gives us some kind of misguided perspective on what is important in this world, and how we should approach our relationships with others.  We have a whole generation of people who think love has a way of working itself out in neat half-an-hour segments.  But as we read through Scripture, we find that this isn’t what love is about.

Love is not about mushy feelings for one another, and it’s not an excuse to do whatever you feel like doing in your relationships.  Love for other people begins in our hearts, but it is much more than what’s portrayed on television.  Love is about earnestly caring for other people; putting their needs first, not our own.  Scripture tells us that love is patient and kind.  1 Corinthians 13 is all about the importance and description of love.  When we read Scripture, we find that love is not a feeling.  It is a verb.

It begins with our hearts.  Are our hearts in the right place?  Are we acting out of selfish desire, or out of concern for others?  John gives us the ultimate picture of love in the example set by Jesus Christ.  He says, “By this we know love, that he laid down his life for us.”  Jesus’ selfless life that was given out of the love that he has for each one of us is the ultimate picture of love.  We read in the garden before he is arrested that Jesus was praying to the Father.  He didn’t want to go through with it.  He knew what awaited him.  But his love for others, and his love for the Father caused him to say, “Not my will, but yours be done.”

And while it may seem extreme, that’s the kind of love that John encourages his readers to have as well.  That’s the kind of love that we need to have for one another.  “We ought to lay down our lives,” he says.  We need to put others ahead of us.  That’s the example that Jesus gives to us, and that’s the example that John puts forth to us as well.  John recognizes that giving one’s life is an extreme case, and so he gives us another example.

Verse 17 says, “If anyone has the world’s goods and sees his brother in need, yet closes his heart against him, how does God’s love abide in him?”  Where are our hearts?  If our hearts aren’t in the right place, we close them when we come to people in need.  I’m not suggesting that we give everything away to whoever comes around, but when we have an abundance of resources, what are we doing with them?  It’s a matter of stewardship.

I don’t talk all that much about stewardship, but it is an important part of our faith.  Usually, people complain when they hear pastors talk about money.  It’s a subject that people don’t want to hear about when they come to church.  I try not to talk too much about it, but to avoid it altogether would be irresponsible.  Perhaps we don’t like to talk about it because it is too personal.  But I’ve heard it said that if you want to see what somebody’s priorities are, then look at their checkbook.  Why is it important to talk about stewardship and money?  Because where your heart is determines where your money goes.  Do we have more than we need, but fail to give to those who need it?  I think there are times in all of our lives that we do.  But is it something that happens occasionally, or is it a pattern in our lives?  That’s where it gets a little harder.

As I’ve said before, stewardship is not about money.  Stewardship is about being faithful with what God has given us.  When it comes to money, we (and believe me, I do mean “we”, myself included here) are not always faithful.  When it comes to money, we tend to put our own wants before others’ needs.  We make out our family budgets, and we are certain to include all the bills, gas and groceries, but then we also have those other categories – entertainment, dining out, vacation.  Don’t get me wrong, all of these can be good things.  They are ways that we have fun together as a family.  But what’s missing here?

I read somewhere in the last few months, and I think I’ve shared this before, that Americans live on 110% of their annual salary.  110%.  We live in a nation where people are going deeper and deeper into debt just to keep up their lifestyle.  There are always things that we don’t think about when we make out our budgets, but how many times do we include savings and tithes in our budgets?  How often do we set aside some of our own money in order to help out those in need?  How often do we set aside some of our own time to help those in need?  If we are abiding in God, then the needs of others will be important to us.  Where are our hearts?

John challenges us to not just say that we love others, but to show it by our actions.  When Jesus is asked about the greatest commandment, he says that we are to love God will all our heart, soul, mind and strength; and then he throws another one on top of it.  Love your neighbor as yourself.  Love is a verb here.  It’s not just a gooey feeling of deep like.  It is something that is more than just talk and feeling, but action and truth.  Show it.  Live it out.  If our hearts are in the right place, then people will see it in our actions.  Katie put out a quote from the conference where she has been this week.  She said, “Mission is not a part of the church, mission is the purpose of the church.”  While all of this is true for individuals, it is also true for us as a church.  What do people see when they look at us.

Martin Luther, the German theologian, was all about the biblical idea that we are saved by faith, not our works.  The Roman Catholic Church had gotten fairly corrupt by the time Luther was on the scene.  They were selling indulgences, which was basically a way for us to pay a certain amount of money in order to be forgiven.  The money that was collected was sent to Rome, and was used to build St. Peter’s Basilica.  That was one of the Church’s first stabs at a building campaign, and it didn’t go well.  The end result was the Protestant Reformation.  The point is that Luther is a major figure in the history of the Church, but even he didn’t get everything right.

One of Luther’s most despised parts of Scripture was the book of James.  He called it the “Epistle of Straw” because it makes several references to showing your faith by your actions.  Luther took this to mean that James was laying out a salvation by works theology, which contradicted Paul’s salvation by faith theology.  James, of course, is doing no such thing; he is simply saying the same thing that John is saying here.  We show our faith by what we do.  We show where our hearts are by our actions.  When we live out our faith, we can be assured that our hearts are in the right place.  This is a point that John really wants to drive home here.

John recognizes that there are times in our lives when our hearts seem to condemn us.  We carry around a load of guilt and shame.  Sometimes people come to the faith and start doing as much as they can as a way of repenting from their past sins.  They work themselves to the bone.  When our hearts condemn us, it tends to be one of two things.  First, it could be the Holy Spirit convicting us of sin that is still residing in our lives.  And second, it could be that we just haven’t let go of the sins that God has already forgiven.

In the Church, we have a history of doing a very good job of condemning people.  We don’t always have the best track record when it comes to forgiveness.  And it is all the more magnified when we look into our own lives.  I’ve known a lot of people over the years that simply cannot forgive themselves for the things that they’ve done.  They will often use that as an excuse to avoid Christianity altogether.  They believe that God can’t forgive them, so there is no point in asking for forgiveness in the first place.  And we talked about this at Bible study a couple weeks ago, so for those that were there, this will be a bit of a rerun.  But I always want to ask them, “Why are you so special?”  Why is it that God can forgive the rest of the world for all the sins that have been committed, but He can’t forgive you?

Now, I don’t usually say that.  I try to have a little more tact with my words to other people, but I have thought it from time to time to myself.  Maybe some of us here today need to do that as well.  What sins are holding you back?  What are the areas in your life that are so bad that God can’t forgive you?  That’s not an easy conversation to have with yourself, but it is one that needs to take place.  John tells us that God is bigger than our hearts.  He knows who we are, and we are his children, remember?  If God has already forgiven us of our sins, then we need to get past them as well.  We need to stop living in shame and regret and start living in love and forgiveness.  We can live with clean hearts.
And when our hearts are clean, we can go before God with confidence.  We can pray and know that God will listen.  I can’t stand up here today and tell you that God will give you everything you ask for if you are pure of heart and ask in faith.  Because we all know that there are things in this life that just don’t happen, no matter how much we want them to.  But we can pray knowing that God loves us and He hears us and He cares about each one of us.

We will continue to abide in God if we keep his commandments.  And what are those commandments: to believe in Jesus and to love our neighbor.  There is the initial step of putting our faith in Jesus, and then there is the follow-up of living it out by loving our neighbors.  If we keep these two commandments two things will happen.  People will recognize us as disciples of Jesus Christ, and we will continue to abide in God.

So today, we go out into the world, challenged once again by God’s word.  It seems the challenge is the same just about every week, but that just tells me how important it is.  When you leave today, be prepared to follow the example of Jesus.  The love that he has for us is a model for how we need to love others.