I didn’t realize it at the time, but I was a trend setter in late 1971. I joined an elite group of men in an exercise club.
Health and fitness clubs can be found in any town of any size today. They’re easy to see with their bright signage that lures you in and smiling attendants who entice you with their catchy mottos: “Expanding wellness and extending lives through health.”
When I joined my club in 1971, it wasn’t Genesis or the YMCA, it was called boot camp. There were no smiling faces, just sneers. Words of welcome were usually limited to 4 colorful letters that would have made grandmother blush; and, the mottos were tirades about the history of my family that I’d never heard before.
You may be using some of the latest technological gadgets to enhance your time in the gym. So many people are purchasing devices to monitor their activity that PC Magazine ran an article that compares the different features of Fitbit, Mio Fuse, Vivosmart, Jawbone, and others.
The Be Trendy-Live Trimly Fitness Craze has found its way through the doors of Oral Roberts University. Freshmen students at ORU must wear a Fitbit, and they’re required to average 10,000 steps a day and 150 minutes of intense activity each week.
Exercise and sports are common analogies found in the bible, and Paul used them, in I Corinthians 9: “So I run—but not without a clear goal ahead of me. So I box—but not as if I were just shadow boxing. Rather, I toughen my body with punches and make it my slave so that I will not be disqualified after I have spread the Good News to others.”
Paul was more concerned with a person’s spiritual health than he was their physical health. Which one of the two is your greater focus? More importantly, how are you monitoring your spiritual activity?
What would a spiritual Fitbit say about you? Be Trendy, Live Trimly, and Think Theologically.
The year was 1987 and the title of the movie, RoboCop, was futuristic and ripe with sci-fi-intrigue. The plot of the movie told the story of Alex Murphy, a Detroit cop, who was was brutally murdered by a gang of thugs. Murphy becomes the experimental project of a tech company and he reappears as RoboCop, a superhuman cyborg with a conscience.
I guess it’s somewhat fitting that the date of the Iowa caucus is just a few weeks ahead of Valentine’s Day. Both are love-hate events, and the language of the participants is characterized by loving phrases of praise or acerbic accusations that are as sharp as Cupid’s arrows.
A recent survey that was conducted by the Pew Research Center involved a national sample of 2,009 adults. The results of this survey, that was take earlier this month, offer some interesting findings:
Is it important to you that the President of the United States is a person of strong faith and high moral character? Do verses like Psalm 33:12 hint that our leaders should be people of faith, and do they influence how you would vote?
If you’ve ever seen me in the fruit section of the grocery store, you may have noticed that I’m picky when I’m picking my apples. I’m not a grab-and-go any-apple-will-do kind of guy. I’m selective; I want an apple that’s red, colorful, tasty, and juicy.
After watching the gleefully satisfied look of the defensive players on the Broncos and Panthers, I’m adding a new classification to the list of impulse control disorders. This list usually includes dysfunctional behaviors such as kleptomania, pyromania, trichotillomania. 
20 to 18 was the final score, and the Broncos defeated the Patriots through the combination of a tough defense and an offense led by an aging quarterback. Peyton Manning is the comeback kid of 2016, and he has been dreaming what has seemed to be the impossible dream.
There is an old German saying that addresses the importance of self-discipline and your priorities: “Whoever does not respect the penny is not worthy of the dollar.” The essence of this quote seems to be: If you neglect or ignore the small things, you can’t be trusted with larger things.