Kneeling NFL players should stand up and work with President Trump to achieve their goals

As a black woman, I am well aware that inequalities exist in America. I am well aware that the rate of poverty, imprisonment and unemployment of black Americans is higher than for white Americans. I don’t need NFL players who disrespectfully kneel when our national anthem is played to inform me of all this.

Here’s a link to the editorial at FOX News.

Walter Wendler: No Two Alike – Purpose, Population and Place

One of the challenges for students and parents trying to select a place of study is that no two postsecondary institutions are the same. If for no other reason, the laws of physics assert that two things cannot occupy the same place at the same time (my paraphrase of Newtonian physics). Unquestionably, one of the primary objectives of college and university leadership, faculty, staff, students and parents is to understand the distinctives of purpose, population, and place.

The Carnegie Classification System for post-secondary institutions makes a noble effort to clarify these distinctions to all who come calling. The problem is in the overwhelming number of institutional types. Including four-year, two-year, and special-focus institutions, there are 33 distinct types. While this periodic table of colleges may be necessary for educational leaders and faculty, it is befuddling to parents and students who would like to understand a good fit for study. In addition, even faculty and administrators fall into the trap of glossing over unique characteristics that are important in understanding purpose, population, and place for educational service.

In 1960, Clark Kerr, president of the University of California, gave birth to “A Master Plan for Higher Education in California”. The vision follows the principle that different universities serve different people in different places:

The basic issue in the development of the Master Plan for Higher Education in California is the future role of the junior colleges, state colleges, and the University of California in the state’s tripartite system and how the three segments should be governed and coordinated so that unnecessary duplication will be avoided.

This model of university structure and governance is emulated in states around the nation and nations around the world.

As universities increasingly feel the pull and push of political forces, rationality in operational distinctiveness of purpose, population and place may fade.

Erosion of mission clarity is at work in California where Kerr’s ideas came to life. California universities are wrestling. The University of California, with its ten campuses, created to be the research and scientific beacon of California, is being challenged by the 23 California State University campuses. Originally chartered to carry students through a master’s degree, some CSU campuses now compete for Ph.D. programs. In addition, California Community Colleges offer bachelor’s degrees in workforce areas that are in demand in the state.

This blurring of mission, a.k.a. purpose, will undermine quality in educational opportunity, satisfaction to students and faculty, and eventually undermine institutional effectiveness for state and citizen alike.

One of the cogs in this machine of rationality are the various state higher education coordinating boards, well-articulated by Paul E. Lingenfelter, national expert on  education and public policy. Those boards should exist beyond politics, although in almost every state they are appointed by the governor. The Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board is one such example. Reduced duplication, increased efficiencies, the division and location of various degree programs to satisfy state need and citizen aspiration are important and legitimate aspirations. A deliberate and systemic effort of thought and action that recognizes political influence and state funding guided by statewide effectiveness in utilization of tax dollars is a tall order. The question to answer is this: Does this institution and/or this program, in this place, with the people who serve and are served by it, perform a useful function in the constellation of state offerings?

A perplexing aspect in this range of considerations is that’ in spite of the 33 Carnegie Higher Education Classifications’ there appears to be one model in the minds of many citizens about what an effective postsecondary institution looks like. This is a harmful condition. The model for universities is typically the state flagship and/or land-grant institution. Additionally, elite private institutions influence ideas about what a university should be, as well as who and how it should serve.

Ultimately, effective institutions of higher education — from trade schools to elite private universities, serve best when they recognize and serve their mission.

For example, two-year colleges were called junior colleges for many years. Labeling terminology shifted to community college and then simply “college.” The oldest community college in America, Joliet Junior College in Illinois, opened in 1901 with six students. Established in partnership with the University of Chicago, it has steadfastly held on to name and purpose with pride even though their mission has changed over time to add technical skills training to the original purpose of academic preparedness for transfer to the University of Chicago. Any action, by design or default, that confuses the community college mission of preparedness and workforce education steps outside of stated purpose.

In all cases the institution must recognize and respond to its mission and the people it serves in the place it calls home.

Purpose. Population. Place.

Pastor Rick Warren: Remember: You’re Not Home Yet

“For we fix our attention, not on things that are seen, but on things that are unseen. What can be seen lasts only for a time, but what cannot be seen lasts forever” (2 Corinthians 4:18 GNT).

As you strive to reach the goals that God has given you, it’s important to remember that life on Earth is just a temporary assignment. Knowing this truth should radically alter your values and fix your attention on the things that are eternally important.As C. S. Lewis observed, “All that is not eternal is eternally useless.”

It is a fatal mistake to assume that God’s goal for your life is material prosperity or popular success as the world defines it. The abundant life has nothing to do with material abundance. Faithfulness to God does not guarantee success in a career or even in ministry. Never focus on temporary crowns.

Paul was faithful, yet he ended up in prison. John the Baptist was faithful, but he was beheaded. Millions of faithful people have been martyred, have lost everything, or have come to the end of life with nothing to show for it. But the end of life is not the end!

The Bible says in 2 Corinthians 4:18, “For we fix our attention, not on things that are seen, but on things that are unseen. What can be seen lasts only for a time, but what cannot be seen lasts forever” (GNT).

When life gets tough, when you’re overwhelmed with doubt, or when you wonder if living for Christ is worth the effort, remember that you are not home yet. At death you won’t leave home — you’ll go home.

Talk It Over

  • Think of the goals you strive toward each day. How does your effort reflect an eternal perspective?
  • How can an eternal perspective affect your relationships? Your attitude? Your witness?
  • Why do you think God blesses you financially or in your career if earthly crowns are not important?

Give hope, prayer, and encouragement below. Post a comment & talk about it.

FCN Daily Bible Verse

Defend the cause of the weak and fatherless; maintain the rights of the poor and oppressed. Rescue the weak and needy; deliver them from the hand of the wicked.

Psalm 82:3-4 (Read all of Psalm 82:3-4)
New International Version

Pastor Rick Warren: Shortcuts Will Only Get You Off Track

“Listen carefully to my words. Don’t lose sight of them. Let them penetrate deep into your heart, for they bring life to those who find them, and healing to their whole body” (Proverbs 4:20-22 NLT).

One of the pitfalls you may face as you fulfill your purpose in life is the temptation to take shortcuts.In truth, these shortcuts will only get you off track. The shortcuts may be moral, ethical, spiritual, financial, or even relational.

But they will distract you from what God wants you to do in your life, eventually eating up your time, energy, resources, and creativity.

Shortcuts are always shortsighted. God wants you to stop being “absorbed with the things right in front of you. Look up, and be alert to what is going on around Christ — that’s where the action is. See things from his perspective” (Colossians 3:2 The Message).

Let God’s Word “penetrate deep into your heart, for they bring life to those who find them, and healing to their whole body” (Proverbs 4:21-22 NLT).

Talk It Over

  • How can you recognize a shortcut in your life?
  • What shortcuts have you tried to take in the past when working toward your goals?
  • How can shortcuts cause us to be disobedient to God?

Give hope, prayer, and encouragement below. Post a comment & talk about it.

Commentary: When will Chicago’s violence evoke true citywide outrage?

The first freshly dead body I ever saw lay in the back of a police vehicle, an African-American teenager who had tried to shoot an off-duty cop. He missed, and got shot by the cop instead.

Here’s a link to the editorial at Chicago Tribune.

Editorial: Why it’s time for Trump to play his ace in the hole

You return from a great vacation and POW — reality hits like a punch in the nose. And that’s not counting the hassle of New York airports and traffic.

Here’s a link to the editorial at FOX News.

A Word for Today: Going Astray

Pastor Rick Warren: To Hear God, Get Near God

“It is the LORD who gives wisdom; from him come knowledge and understanding” (Proverbs 2:6 GNT).

You say, “I want to trust God, but I don’t hear him.”You don’t hear God when your mind is filled with a thousand other distractions. To hear God, you’ve got to get near God. You have to get alone with God and be quiet.

The Bible says, “Be still, and know that I am God” (Psalm 46:10 NIV). That means sit down and stay quiet. That’s how you hear God and get near God. You have to sit alone and just be quiet with your Bible and say, “God, is there anything you want to say to me?” You read God’s Word, and you talk to him about what’s on your heart.

God says he will give you the wisdom you need to recognize his voice and follow through on what he says: “It is the LORD who gives wisdom; from him come knowledge and understanding” (Proverbs 2:6 GNT).

Pray this today: “God, I want to listen to you, not the voices of doubt. I want to get close to you and get to know you better. I want to hear you, and I promise to then obey you. I want to be one of the people that you can use and bless.”

Talk It Over

  • What do you need to change about the way you meet with the Lord so that you can be quiet and draw closer to him?
  • How do you normally react to God’s direction in your life?
  • How can you demonstrate that you are ready to obey what God directs you to do?

Give hope, prayer, and encouragement below. Post a comment & talk about it.

Editorial — Chicago’s great shame, Chicago’s crisis: Blood on the streets

A hot summer weekend, when Chicago should be at its most livable, brings an undercurrent of dread and horror to this city. Summer is block party season, beach season, baseball season. But in some neighborhoods, summer is killing season — when armed gang members run amok firing at each other and anyone in their way.

Here’s a link to the editorial at the Chicago Tribune.

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News