tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8219781724285312648.post2418372767973264774..comments2024-01-25T05:05:26.688-08:00Comments on Stuff Apostolics Like: #151-MonitorsJoel Rileyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15449770157998900843noreply@blogger.comBlogger9125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8219781724285312648.post-11058145085759600502010-06-29T16:59:54.296-07:002010-06-29T16:59:54.296-07:00This comment has been removed by the author.jrevaleehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03803442608415830567noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8219781724285312648.post-5906082158630282942010-05-18T09:16:21.324-07:002010-05-18T09:16:21.324-07:00Oh, so funny :) Love this one. Maybe a little more...Oh, so funny :) Love this one. Maybe a little more than I should because just recently (ok, around Christmastime), I had someone vehemently deny that the lovely 40-something-inch TV mounted above their fireplace was, in fact, a television. OH NO, it was a MONITOR!!!!! (snap)<br /><br />More snickering over Ryan’s comment about how Pentecostal kids (of old – surely not today’s young’uns) would become Insta-Zombies in front of the TV. I was one of those… <br /><br />And even more snickering over Anonymous’ family spending a night in a hotel to watch TV! That’s just hilarious!!! :) Thank you for sharing, seriously.Stephnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8219781724285312648.post-17265405585458087762010-05-13T09:59:20.883-07:002010-05-13T09:59:20.883-07:00I too see the humor/irony/"whatever else you ...I too see the humor/irony/"whatever else you want to call it" in the transition that the UPCI has made in relation to the TV issue.<br /><br />I have noticed that most churches do not publicly preach against the ole "1-eye-devil" anymore... at least the ones that realize that if you preach against it, you will have to preach against the internet, radio, and where ever else bad content can be consumed.<br /><br />However, what I have seen is that a lot of churches (and church members) are turning a blind eye to media that is being consumed. <br /><br />I personally try be very selective and careful of what I take in through my eyes and ears, but even in the "family" shows on TV (or Hulu) there is plenty of foul language, sensuality, violence, and immorality. I am not throwing stones, because I am soooo far from perfect on this issue. <br /><br />Here is my question...<br /><br />Does the church need to dive in and actually teach the Biblical guidelines for what we allow into our hearts? Instead of just laughing it off or turning a blind eye, do we need to take a hard look at what God's word says vs. what we "think" is ok.<br /><br />Maybe it's just me, but there seems to be a void in this area. We laugh about it, but a lot of evil gets pumped into our Apostolic hearts through media...Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8219781724285312648.post-3507864552763542772010-05-10T21:50:19.460-07:002010-05-10T21:50:19.460-07:00Dear Corey,
It is with great enthusiasm that I re...Dear Corey,<br /><br />It is with great enthusiasm that I read your comment, knowing you wrote it. However, I must point out that it was not I who wrote the post to which you commented on, but rather fellow SAL blogger Chantell. That said your complements are well received. Your church is near to my heart in spite of the distance.<br /><br />Fondly,<br />JoelJoel Rileyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15449770157998900843noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8219781724285312648.post-82587593460152677552010-05-10T20:40:55.451-07:002010-05-10T20:40:55.451-07:00Joel, you are the best/worst person in the world! ...Joel, you are the best/worst person in the world! Actually the sarcasm and wit in this site is fantastic. God bless you old friend.<br />CoreyAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8219781724285312648.post-43082285566257572882010-05-09T09:14:15.707-07:002010-05-09T09:14:15.707-07:00I came into this thing as a teenager and there hav...I came into this thing as a teenager and there have occasionally been things that my friends who'd grown up in church reminisce about that I never experienced, causing me to feel a bit left out--this is not one of them. Thank goodness my family made sure we had tv wherever we moved (even Jordan, which meant a lot of bad Turkish tv).Chady Hosinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14701331138931021729noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8219781724285312648.post-77234366826445481662010-05-08T19:22:04.769-07:002010-05-08T19:22:04.769-07:00I remember the first time my parents bought a dvd....I remember the first time my parents bought a dvd. It's funny because the dvd had to be watched on a computer for we had no dvd player hooked up to our video game monitor. Some months after that my dad decided that it was in our best interest to purchase a vhs/dvd player since a lot of the films at goodwill are vhs and not dvd. Not long after we purchased bunny ears which failed us because we lived out in the country and reception was awful. We now have full blown cable god forbid and I love it. I'm able to get home from work and just zone out, it completely wastes my time and I feel horrible but I love "the soup" and CSI, how can I not watch? As for nostalgia, I remember when I was just a young'n and the Detroit Red Wings were in Stanley Cup finals. It was the early 2000's and we had not even purchase a "monitor" yet. My parents took us out and payed for a hotel room for the night so we could watch the Stanley Cup game. Soooooo sad:)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8219781724285312648.post-3023095010453763912010-05-08T16:38:59.455-07:002010-05-08T16:38:59.455-07:00HA - we had a monitor. It could also transform int...HA - we had a monitor. It could also transform into TV, but solely for sports. Unfortunately for me, I was never interested in sports so I got shafted. All other genres were out of the question except for Westerns. I think God loves Louis L'Amour and thus the Western genre. At least that's what you believe if you're raised in Pentecost.<br /><br />According to what we were allowed to watch, PG was pushing it, unless it was a higher rating due to death, violence and/or decapitation. And if ever we had visitors, the monitor was either put in the closet or hooked up to a video game. Although on vacations it was fine to turn on the TV in hotel rooms. <br /><br />I used to go to a friend's house on Sunday afternoons because he had a TV. A real TV. With cable. It used to be a marker of Pentecostal kids - put them in front of a TV and watch their eyes get glued, attention totally focused, world disappear and distractions cease to exist. You could talk to them (us) but they (we) wouldn't hear you unless the TV got turned of. The novelty! The joy! The pure bliss. <br /><br />Thank God for the internet and hulu. Now everyone has access and no one's judging.Ryanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00926712525076132009noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8219781724285312648.post-67420102237109962212010-05-08T13:37:32.622-07:002010-05-08T13:37:32.622-07:00My frustration was not necessarily with the tv/mon...My frustration was not necessarily with the tv/monitor distinction. <br /><br />But more so the wasted minutes of conversation i would get lost in, in trying to discern whether I would want to visit my friend's house and spend the night or night. I would always ask, "do you have tv?" Because tv meant the family was fun to me. And we could probably get away with watching pg-13 movies, and if I made my friend cry in a skirmish, the parents would laugh it off...<br /><br />Of course if my friend replied with "monitor" i knew I was in trouble, and i would have to find some excuse to not spend the night. It was not that we would be unable to watch movies, but rather the movies we would be able to watch would be BORING and have a positive upbeat message to it with no signs of vulgarity for the sake of humor. <br /><br />So naturally, I feel like the people with monitors caught onto my guessing game and they would say they had tv as to deceive me. And what they meant by tv was if "need be" and the sporting event on "tv" was big enough, the dad would break out the rabbit ears, but only for then would the monitor actually be a tv.Joel Rileyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15449770157998900843noreply@blogger.com