Archive for April, 2008

3D Models of Biblical Stuff

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

I was looking for some pictures of the Jewish temples in the Old Testament, when I though about checking Google’s Sketchup program to see if anyone had made 3D modles of them. I found a couple great ones:

Temples

  • Solomon’s Temple - This model is set on top of a map so you can see where the temple was in relation to the Dome of the Rock. If you zoom in you can see some tags that tell you a little bit about the surrounding area, but the black lettering on top of a black and white picture is difficult to see, so you have to look closely.
  • Herod’s Temple- This model is amazing.

I did some more searching and found these two models of Noah’s ark

  • Complete - This one is a complete model of the ark sitting in the water . . . but
  • Incomplete - This model has a lot more detail to it. It isn’t complete yet but it’s pretty cool. There are a couple of figures inside the ark to help give you a sense of proportion. The figures look a little big, so I’m not sure if the proportions are correct, but the modes is still being built so he might adjust that later . . . or I could just be wrong.

More software that made my job easier

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

A couple times a year I give our teens a CD (or VCD) of pictures (or videos) we took during the year. My computer came with Roxio preinstalled, and I have never liked the program. Sometimes when I try to use their “Classic Creator” it says it can’t burn the CD because their “Drag to Disk” feature is running . . . they are both part of Roxio, so why is there a conflict?

I’ve been playing around with Ubuntu lately and they recommend Window’s users download a free CD/DVD burning program called infraRecorder. This program is fantastic. It doesn’t have the shiny round buttons that most Windows programs seem to have these days, but the simple square buttons work great.

Black Light Basketball Follow-up

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

Here’s what worked and what didn’t work at our Black Light Basketball game.

Lights

My biggest concern was whether or not we would have enough lights to fill a gym. We had just enough; We could see everyone well enough that no one got hurt. I wouldn’t recommend doing this with any less light than we had.

After taking a look at the two $30 UV cannons we originally planned on renting, we decided to upgrade to two $40 UV cannons. We also had eight more 2-foot black lights loaned or given to the youth ministry.

I asked several parents how many 2-foot lights they though equaled the light produced by one UV cannon. The consensus was that between six and eight 2-foot black lights equaled one UV cannon. But, the cannons had mirrors behind the lights that helped focus the lights, while our 2-foot lights weren’t as efficient because half the light went the wrong way. I think we could duct tape four of our 2-foot lights together and slide a mirror between the light and the case to help make them more efficient. They wouldn’t be as good as the professionally made mirrors, but they wouldn’t cost as much either.

The Glow

When I found out that white t-shirts don’t glow under black lights unless they’ve been washed, I got nervous about what else would and wouldn’t glow.

We used a glow-in-the-dark basketball, and it did okay. I considered buying some neon tape to stick to the ball.

I washed the basket ball nets and that was a success. I really don’t think we could have played the game if the nets didn’t glow. I’m sure we would have come up with a workaround of some kind, but washing the nets was definitely a good decision.

We also bought glow-stick necklaces to tell which players were on which teams. They worked beautifully, but they were the other big expense for the event. I bought them at a local party shop, but if you’re better at planning ahead than I am, you can get them cheaper online.

Parents

I love the parents at my church. We had one coach show up to help, which was great because he knew how to handle large groups of energetic teenagers. Another couple parents organized all the food, drinks, and snacks without me even asking them to. And a couple more just came to hang out. This morning, one mom stopped by my office and gave me my yearly compliment :P

Money

This event ended up costing about twice what I had expected. Fortunately, this is the only expensive event we planned this year (summers trips not included).

Teens

My other big concern was that I didn’t know how many teens might show up, and only so many people can fit on a basketball court. I didn’t do a headcount but I would guess we had between 30-40 teens at the event. We had about half the teens playing at a time, which worked because they got tired and needed a breather (Thanks to the coach for organizing that). As our ministry grows, I think we could still do this event by splitting up the students by grades. So we might have Friday night just for the 9th and 10th graders and Saturday night for the 11th and 12th graders.

Side Note

I just spoke with one of the teens who was at the basketball game and found out that after the game she went to a school dance. The reason I bring this up is that we occasionally hear the excuse that a teen would come to our events if we did a better job of scheduling them on nights that didn’t already have another school function planned. But, the truth is that if our ministry is a priority in the teen’s life, they will somehow make the rest of their schedule work; if our ministry isn’t important to them, they won’t come even if they don’t have anything else to do. It’s important for us to be sensitive to the teens’ other activities, but double-scheduling is inevitable.

The Story

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

Sometime this weekend someone broke into our parish office. They didn’t take anything from my office, which surprised me because I had my old Presario 1275 on my desk, and they didn’t take much from the other offices either. Apparently, they were only after cash and we don’t keep cash around. It’s still a little creepy to imagine someone sitting at my desk—exactly where I am right now—going through my drawers. My desk is covered in black soot from the finger print search.

I wonder where a person has to be in order to break into a church office for the few dimes we have in our desk drawers. Free food is everywhere in this town, and our church gives away tons of money to people who need help with utilities.

Our receptionist thinks the break-in was for drug money. I’m not a worldly person, so I don’t know much about that lifestyle, but I can’t think of any other reason someone would go through so much trouble for so little.

The police got a pretty good handprint of the guy, so they’re optimistic that they will find him.

Break in

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

Someone broke into our church’s office this weekend. I’ll tell you more tomorrow, right now I have to edit those programs.