Musings from the last best place - Thoughts on living and working in Montana

Crane at Dusk - Headwaters State Park, Montana

This evening, my friend Brant Nyberg and I trekked out to the Headwaters State Park near Three Forks, Montana for some golden hour photography. Headwaters State Park marks a special spot in Montana where three rivers - The Madison, Jefferson, and Gallatin - join to form the Missouri. We had actually packed up and were driving back to Bozeman when we saw this crane standing in reflective water by the roadside. I nearly racked out my 70-300mm Zuiko lens to capture this image (on a tripod, of course). A great end to an enjoyable evening.

Filed under  //   Crane   Montana   Photography   Reflection  

Thoughts on Passion Week 2009

As I grow older, one thing that's continually humbling is learning how much I don't know. I've been in the faith for most of my life, and yet this morning's sermon taught me something I certainly should have known, but didn't. I'm sharing this because I think it's really a pretty fundamental piece of the whole redemption puzzle.

On the cross, Christ's final prayer is this, "My God, my God - why have You forsaken me?" (Matthew 27:46) Now, the astute (in this case, the pastor's daughter) may ask, "Why did Jesus ask this question? Didn't he know what was coming?" I mean, if Christ is truly God in man, this crucifixion thing shouldn't have taken him by surprise, right?

As pastor Brett LaShelle pointed out this morning, the answer is both simple and obvious - but it's something I've missed my entire life.

While the phrase is presented as a question, it really isn't a question at all - instead, Jesus is making direct reference to Psalm 22. At the time of Christ, folks weren't walking around with the NIV tucked under an arm. No - scripture existed only on scrolls, and those scrolls were typically available only in the synagogue. In addition, there was no chapter/verse system - that's a classification mechanism that we've imposed in translation to make it easier to break things up into digestible chunks. So a reference to a Psalm was made by simply quoting its first line - in the case of Psalm 22, "My God, my God, why have You forsaken me?" So Christ wasn't asking God why, he was making reference to a Psalm that tells us why. You can read the Psalm here.

With this understanding, Christ's 'question' in Matthew 27:46 goes from strange query to intentional invocation. Right up to the end Jesus is connecting the dots, showing the Jews (and us) how he fulfilled the prophecy of the Old Testament.

If you're a believer, I hope you have a happy and blessed Easter. And if you're not, I hope you also have a great passover week and Easter weekend!

Filed under  //   Easter   Religion  

Rent Olympus Zuiko Lenses at LensRental.com

Given the price of Zuiko lenses, it would be great to rent the lenses before making a decision to buy. For instance, I've had my eye on the 11-22mm f/2.8-3.5 lens for quite some time. It runs around $700. Now, the reviews on the 11-22mm are stellar, but before I drop 700 smackers it would be nice to play with the lens a bit. If you shoot Olympus DSLR, you've probably already noticed that most camera shops won't touch Olympus with a 10 foot pole. Not sure why that is, but there you go. We Olympus shooters are left to buy online. Most of the big, reputable online photo sites carry Olympus, so this really hasn't been a problem, but rentals have been harder to come by.

Now that's all changed. I just discovered that LensRental.com now carries Olympus Zuiko lenses. The price to lay my hands on the coveted 11-22mm? $43 for seven insured days of shooting. Not bad - although shipping adds another $26. Seven days should be enough time for me to decide whether or not I'm interested in owning the lens.

Olympus shooters are often left playing second (or third, or fourth) fiddle, so I thought I'd write this quick post in the hope that it will help other Olympus fans locate a resource for lens rentals.

Filed under  //   Lens Rentals   Olympus   Photography   Zuiko  

Spring Time Snowmobiling - Cooke City, Montana

While winter has made a (hopefully brief) return to southwestern Montana this week, our snowmobiling outing this past weekend was all sunshine and spring conditions. These pics were taken in the mountains above Cooke City, home to some of the best snowmobiling to be had in the Rockies. No fresh snow this weekend, so instead of action shots I focused on sight-seeing. I think these mountains look their best in winter when snow covers most of the scars left by early 20th century mining.

This was a special weekend because we took our boys along for the ride. My son loves snowmobiling, but the Kitty Kat sled he rides around the field at the cabin just isn't cutting it anymore. So we took him up the mountain to let him get a feel for riding the 'big boy sleds'.

And no - those high-marking shots aren't of anyone in our group. Even with low-risk avalanche conditions, we're not willing to take the chance. We all wear avalanche beacons - primarily to be ready to help find guys like the ones you see in the photos. I'm not knocking them - live and let live. It's just not for me.

                         
Click here to download:
Spring_Time_Snowmobiling_-_Coo.zip (1132 KB)

Filed under  //   Cooke City   Mountains   Snow   Snowmobiling  

Sledding - Cooke City, Montana

Spring has arrived in the high country! With our friends who were in town from Minnesota, we took the kids sledding yesterday in the hills just outside Cooke City, Montana. Here are a few pics from the afternoon's fun.

                                     
Click here to download:
Sledding_-_Cooke_City_Montana.zip (917 KB)

Filed under  //   Montana   Mountains   Sledding   Winter  

Seattle Saturday 2009

We're taking a whirlwind trip to Seattle this weekend for a medical visit. Here are a few pics from the touristy stuff we're doing before our doctor's appointment on Monday.

                       
Click here to download:
Seattle_Saturday_2009.zip (6555 KB)

Filed under  //   Photography   Seattle  

"The Coming Evangelical Collapse" - Thought-Provoking Article in Christian Science Monitor

Ironically, the billions of dollars we've spent on youth ministers, Christian music, publishing, and media has produced a culture of young Christians who know next to nothing about their own faith except how they feel about it.

If you're an evangelical Christian, you should take a look at this article for some very thought-provoking insights about what the future may hold for us. I don't agree with every thought, but I'm certainly right there with the writer's indictment of the mega-church and prosperity gospel. I also find the author's suggestion that it is time for missionaries from Africa and Asia to come to minister to the US to be especially humbling.

I've often discussed with my father a perceived fade in the churches of my own faith tradition - a definite impression that things are past their zenith. Some readers of this post may rejoice in that - the continuing secularization of our culture and diminishing of the church is only perceived as a bad thing if you're a believer - which I am.

Yet the writer manages to see hope in the wreckage. And I guess that's the crux of the matter - if the church is only a human construct, we have plenty to be concerned about in the coming years. But if the core beliefs of the church are true - that God has redeemed his creation through the sacrifice of His own Son - then there's really nothing we as failed and flawed can do to screw things up beyond repair. The church as institution may fail, but the Church as bride will live on...

Read the complete article here: http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0310/p09s01-coop.html

Filed under  //   Christianity   Evangelicalism   Orthodoxy   Religion   Secularism  

Wired Reviews the Klipsch HD Theater 500

Recession Ready HD Theater Rocks the House

I can still remember the floor-standing Klipsch speakers we had at my high school. They were mounted on casters because they were too heavy to move otherwise. Those suckers could move enough air to blow a paper cup off your hand when held in front of them. Good times.

Here's a 'recession-ready' home theater system from Klipsch that lists for $600. When it comes to Klipsch, I'm used to thinking of getting one speaker for that price, so this could be a sweet deal if the quality is up to par. Wired gives it an 8/10 - anyone have personal experience?

Filed under  //   home theater   Klipsch   speakers  

Mark Hayward on 10 Tips for Blogging Your Way to Small Business Success

Promoting your small business within a forum works best when you [educate]. You need to educate the consumer and gain member trust before you can start endorsing yourself (otherwise you will be seen as a troll).

Here's a great, concise set of tips for those seeking to use blogging to build their small business. Mark speaks from experience - read the complete post at ProBlogger - http://www.problogger.net/archives/2009/02/23/10-tips-for-blogging-your-way-to-small-business-success/

Filed under  //   Blogging   small business   Social Media  

Cooke City Snowmobiling - February 2009

Here are more images shot from this past weekend's snowmobiling trip to the mountains above Cooke City, Montana.

       
Click here to download:
Cooke_City_Snowmobiling_-_Febr.zip (1348 KB)