Friday, August 13, 2010

Friberg's Friday Favorite

Mark Schultz has touched millions with his music. He has blessed the military, thousands of families, and many people in prison. Last year, I had the opportunity to meet him at a concert in St. Cloud. We spoke after he was done performing and I was amazed at his humility and care for people (especially the men and women in uniform).

Love Has Come has been on the air for a couple of months. After hearing it play again this morning, I believe that this song could be used powerfully in a worship service.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Everyone's Potential

A couple of weeks ago, I had the opportunity to learn a great lesson in leadership at Gold'n Plump Chicken. Ron (the head Elder at Westwood) is a manager at Gold'n Plump. He took me on a tour of the plant and I was amazed at what he does for a living.

Ron is in charge of raising all the chickens that produce the fryers that we purchase at our local grocery stores. Ron's chickens are raised to lay the eggs that will eventually be used for us to consume. To put it bluntly, Ron's chickens live productive, active, and long lives.

To start out the tour, we walked through the thousands of eggs that were waiting to be put into their incubation chambers. He described the different coloring of the eggs (browner is healthier), how long the eggs are in the incubator (18 days), and the process that happens once the chicks are born.

After looking at the eggs, we drove out to a farm and walked through THOUSANDS of baby chicks. He told me that each of these little chicks will produce 150 fryers (remember, they are being raised to produce the food that we eat). Ron told me that each fryer is worth $2 to his business. Each little chick is work about $300. The barn was controlled (food, water, temperature, and lighting) and set to produce the best environment for healthy growth.

As we walked up to the second level, we saw 5 dead chicks. He sighed and told me that losing these chickens cost his company $1,500. He saw the little birds for more than what I could see on the surface. He saw lost potential. He saw value.

After we were done looking at the birds, Ron told me that he looks at people the same way he looks at his chickens. He said, "Everyone has the ability to be used by God in great ways. Everyone has been given amazing gifts and the leaders around them should maximize their potential. Empower, encourage, and fan their flames into greatness!"

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Wednesday's Brian Teaser

Good luck with these riddles!

(1) If three cats catch three mice in three minutes, how many cats would be needed to catch one hundred mice in one hundred minutes?

(2) What is so fragile that when you say its name you break it?