Category: General

Learning from the Amish

New York Times bestselling author of Amish fiction Wanda Brunstetter, and her daughter, Jean, did a book  signing last Friday, Oct. 30 at a Christian store in Shipshewana. Alas, my wife and I didn’t make it—we were four weeks too early. Still, I feel Wanda deserves a shoutout for being the primary reason we visited…
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The Danger of Remote Work

A few weeks ago, a good friend told us that after six months of remote work at home during spring’s lockdown phase of life and the nervousness that followed, she will be there forever. The reason: her employer (a nationwide company) is closing most of its offices. The one in our area will remain for…
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Tinkering with the Language

I suspect numerous readers of Facebook posts, tweets, and news stories haven’t even noticed that in recent months persons with black skin are now referred to as Black. The capitalization has been introduced because media organizations want to express solidarity with and sensitivity to those of African-American descent. So, many are treating the term like…
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The Treasure of Continuing Conversations

Because of all the pandemic’s uncertainties regarding travel, tourism, and related issues in the spring, we wound up postponing a planned long weekend with our two daughters and their husbands to mid-September. After only taking off Memorial Day and Labor Day this year (with the Fourth of July on a Saturday, that doesn’t really count),…
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Humor Amid the Apocalypse

It’s almost Election Day, and judging by the hysterical posts hurtling through cyberspace, the nation is poised for greatness or is on the verge of collapse, depending on which candidate triumphs. To offer some perspective, I predict the sun will still rise on Nov. 4, we will all still breathe, and life will continue on…
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California AB-5 is a National Headache

While AB-5 is an unfamiliar term for many, this overreaching and cumbersome California legislation has created multiple headaches for freelancers and independent contractors nationwide. Signed into law in September of 2019, Assembly Bill 5 purported to protect gig workers from employers. Namely, tight-fisted souls who classified them as independent contractors as a way of avoiding…
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Social Security: The 1% Solution

Back in the early 2000s, when I received my annual Social Security projected earnings statements, they always included a warning at the bottom: without significant adjustments to the program’s revenues, it might only be able to pay 74 percent of projected benefits by 2034. I never got overly concerned about that forecast, figuring Congress had…
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Joseph’s Ancient Story a Modern Parable

Our pastor has been preaching through Genesis for more than a year, which has been instructive and eye-opening. In a recent week, we reached the story of Joseph, which begins in chapter 37 and continues through the end of Genesis. No matter how familiar the first book of the Bible may have been, his series…
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God’s Grace Extends to Fallen Leaders

When the ruckus that led to Jerry Falwell Jr.’s leave of absence from Liberty University erupted a month ago, I dismissed it as a tempest in a teapot. I mean, imagine the outrage that would accompany a story about a Christian university president photographed with his arm around a young woman—not his wife!—at a party.…
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Walt Disney: A Dreamer Ahead of His Time

As August draws to a close and we near the end of summer, I can’t help thinking of summers past. They usually included a trip to visit family, old friends, or do some sightseeing. None of that in 2020, since COVID-19 made us reluctant to travel too far or mingle with large crowds. Given this…
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