Monthly Archives: May 2007

Lesson Sample #3

Lesson Plan 3: Advanced Class

At a Restaurant

1. Vocabulary:
• Say vocabulary and have students repeat it back to you slowly
o Listen for trouble with specific sounds
 Appetizer
 Salad
 Main Course
 Desert
 Chef
 Hostess
 Waiter
 Silver wear
 Glass
 Plate
 Customer
 Napkin
 Menu
 Drink
 Soup
2. Make sure that the students know what every word is.
 Go around and ask students what things are.

3. Have students explain to you the order that things happen in the restaurant

4. Ask every student what their favorite restaurant is and get them to use the vocabulary in the process.

5. Have each student write down two sentences using the vocabulary words.
 Have students read there sentences out loud and go over them

6. Have student repeat vocabulary and check for exact pronunciation.

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remembering Jerry Falwell

As most have heard, Jerry Falwell has gone to glory… I shook his hand twice: once when I received my B.S. from Liberty University and then when I received my M.A.R. from Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary, both times, he said “Congratulations buddy.” He had no idea who I was, but thanks to his vision, I learned how to learn.

I heard about his death as I was driving from Greenberry’s back to school just before 2, when my daughter called me to let me know, she graduates with her B.A. from Liberty tomorrow, she had heard on campus and called me. About an hour later I heard it on the radio. Then I got to school and a colleague sent an email around (this person, like many, didn’t like Jerry because of something he had done, she made some comment in the email which announced the death, I was a little put off by the crack but let it go, until now). That night I scanned the beginning of the news shows, they all led with the death of the “controversial figure.” I watched the networks (I don’t have cable) and there seemed to be a generally civil discussion of Jerry’s words and his accomplishments.

Of course, the Moral Majority was discussed, it seemed that Falwell was given the credit for the election of Reagan and both Bushes and the development of the Christian right as the most powerful single political force in America today. But as I listened to Tony Campolo on The News Hour, he really hit a kind note. Campolo, no Falwell Fundamentalist, stated that while Jerry might disagree and debate you on TV with force, he did so with kindness. He was gracious, he was a gentleman. Yesterday a friend told me that Jessie Jackson and Al Sharpton had made similar comments.

On the News Hour, Campolo said these things

“My wife, who, unlike myself, is a strong advocate for gay marriage, once had a meeting with him. And she said, “I came away feeling that this man was a gentleman, and he spoke with kindness and with civility.” And, off camera, he was as gracious a man as you could possibly imagine. And I have found him to be the same.

We differed politically, not theologically very much, but politically. And we will stand in awe of his impact in history. Of course, his greatest impact is not his politics. His greatest legacy is going to be Liberty University, where thousands of people will be raised up to support the things that he believed in.” (http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/remember/jan-june07/falwell_05-15.html)

I learned to learn at Liberty. I was glad that one of our girls went to Liberty. I have met some amazing servants of God who trained at Liberty. I think Campolo and the other guy on TV got it right, Jerry’s greatest accomplishment was founding Liberty.

But now, Jerry is so enthralled in the glory of God, that he cares no longer of these things, now he sees the Maker, the Saviour, face to face, not darkly like we do… Thanks be to God for Jerry. I’ll see you there Jerry.

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bono and the naacp

Bono got an award from the NAACP.

his speech is on YouTube.

Its very worth the 7.5 minutes it will take you to watch.

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we should slow the heck down

I have been thinking about boundaries lately…

It is my busiest time of year: school is near an end and thus going at warp 5, the reading of papers (about 750 pages worth), the giving of exams, the organizing of this and that… I enjoy the pace, but it’s stressing sometimes… so I’m extra sensitive to the pace of life… so I need to recognize boundaries

Last week the guy who was speaking at a church we attend mentioned a violinist in the Washington Metro…

I was blown away by the idea…

A leading violinist playing phenomenal music on an amazing violin for 45 or so minutes at a busy Washington D.C. Metro… who would notice? This is the question posed by the Washington Post. An article in the Washington Post Magazine, that I found long but really nicely written and fairly compelling, describes the whole deal in some detail, click here or not.

The bottom line… virtually no one noticed. Apparently one guy made time to slow down and listen. Everyone was just too busy… we should slow down…

Along those lines a friend sent me some words, that someone she knows received, that fit in this theme… think about this little tid-bit of what was said…

“To overextend yourself on any level would require a time of extended recovery” (M. Burns)

This writer then posts Psalm 32.8… I went to Psalm 32 and it really spoke to me… read the entirety of Psalm 32

As a follower of Jesus, I need to slow down… to hear the direction He has for me… I should not be like a horse or a mule… thoughtlessly and without understanding plowing ahead… I must slow down, listen to Him and follow Him… but if I refuse to stop and listen… how can I hear?

we should slow down… if you didn’t go to the article above, go now and watch the video, and be warned…

to slow the heck down…

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Robert Webber dies

One of the voices that I have been listening to since I began my journey a few years ago has been that of Robert Webber. Robert E. Webber went to worship in the presence of the Lord on 27th April.

My first reading of Webber was in 1989 when I was at L.B.T.S. and was fascinated by, what was then called by some, the liturgical renewal movement. At that time I was intrigued by the ideas in Worship is a Verb (Word, 1985). At that point I was encouraged by words like these… “…I am not suggesting that we deny either our convictions or roots.” (p. 12)

I had not heard of post-modernism in 1989 but the answers that Webber puts forth in Divine Embrace and The Younger Evangelicals were on his mind when he emphasized what today we call the emphasis on the Gospel story throughout the Bible with these words… “The parallels between what God did in the Exodus-event and what he did in the Christ-event are striking.” (p.34) The whole Bible is full of the gospel and it would seem that the church has taught this since the beginning. I grabbed Common Roots (Zondervan, 1978) from my shelf and look again at Webber’s insistence on our looking back to the early church fathers, from Webber I gained an appreciation of the roots of the church in the writings of the fathers. So, when I was reintroduced to Webber last year, I was not surprised to see the early fathers being referred to in my latest learning from the pen of Robbert Webber.

I’ve got some meaningful quotes posted elsewhere from The Divine Embrace and The Younger Evangelicals. I always found Webber’s writing compelling. I guess the reason is that he, while by all accounts a true intellectual, wrote with humility. He wrote so that I could feel his heart for the church and for worship and for the church living in and growing out from worship to the world. Because worship is so important. Indeed, isn’t it everything? Thanks be to God for the way He used the pen of Robert Webber.

Northern Seminary has posted about his work, click here (there are additional links). From there you can access much more thoughtful reading.

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a visit to Virginia Tech

Last night three fellow teachers and I went to VT to have dinner with some friends who used to be our students and are now students at Tech. Our hope was to be encouraging to them… One of these folks asked two of my fellow travellers if we had seen the memorials… So on the way home we drove through campus, stopped and pondered some of the memorials. Here are some pix from in front of Burris Hall. It was late dusk when we arrived, the darkness of the photos somehow seems appropriate.

the flowers surrounding the VT logo…


Around campus there were numerous banners from other schools… the message is that we are all Hokies now as we stand in unity with the Va Tech community, this is a sample that was in front of Burris from Anderson College.


After a few minutes looking at the remembrances, it was time for the long drive to C’ville… I took one more look at the scene…

I was moved by this scene… its like I could feel the loss… the grief… may God bring peace to these who hurt and have suffered so great a loss…

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