Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Follow the new STadia Webpage, Facebook and Twitter pages

Hey Friends,

We have just updated all our social media accounts for Stadia.  I’d love to have you join me on Facebook and Twitter.  Just look up Stadia and become a Fan or follower.  Thanks.

Marcus Bigelow

President

Stadia: New Church Strategies

Office:  916-626-3090

Cell:  707-718-3730

Email:  mbigelow@stadia.cc

Facebook: Facebook | Marcus Bigelow

Blog: http://bruisedreedsandsmoulderingwicks.blogspot.com/

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Thursday, March 25, 2010

Promised Recipes

To all you Bootcamp planters,

Here’s the recipes from last night.

Yummy Hash Brown Casserole

1 1/2 c. sour cream

2 1/2 c. shredded cheddar cheese

1 can cream of chicken or mushroom soup

2 T. dried onions

1 (15 oz.) shredded hash browns

4 T. butter melted

Cornflakes to cover- (about 2 cups) crushed

In a large bowl mix the sour cream, cheese, soup and onions together. Use your muscles and mix the hash browns and the creamy mixture together until well blended. Press mixture into a casserole dish or 9 x 13 inch pan. Mix the melted butter and the cornflakes and spread over the top of the potatoes and bake, uncovered, at 375 degrees until heated through and bubbly (45 minutes).

Easy Chicken Marinade

Mix together equal parts of olive oil, soy sauce, and lemon juice. For 10 chicken breasts, we used 1/2 cup of each making 1 1/2 cups of marinade. Pour over partially thawed chicken 1 hour before cooking. (Using a gallon size Ziploc bag is the easiest way to marinade and clean up is a breeze.) Caution: If you marinate longer than an hour, the lemon juice will begin to cook the chicken.

Preheat grill on high. Put chicken on and close the lid. Turn down to med. low and leave for 8-10 minutes depending on the size of chicken. Flip and close lid again for 8- 10 minutes or until cooked through.

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Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Listening to Dennis Murphy

Barry Smith just hit it out of the park as he talked about how God has carried him on his journey.  Now Dennis Murphy is laying it down about prayer.  Tammy and Donna, you should be proud of your men.  They are great men of God.

Marcus Bigelow

President

Stadia: New Church Strategies

Office:  916-626-3090

Cell:  707-718-3730

Email:  mbigelow@stadia.cc

Facebook: Facebook | Marcus Bigelow

Blog: http://bruisedreedsandsmoulderingwicks.blogspot.com/

Posted via email from marcusbigelow's posterous

Listening to Barry Smith

Just listening to Barry Smith tell his awesome story of how God has worked in his life and church plant.  What a dude!

Marcus Bigelow

President

Stadia: New Church Strategies

Office:  916-626-3090

Cell:  707-718-3730

Email:  mbigelow@stadia.cc

Facebook: Facebook | Marcus Bigelow

Blog: http://bruisedreedsandsmoulderingwicks.blogspot.com/

Posted via email from marcusbigelow's posterous

Meeting with World changers

I’m in a bootcamp this morning with 10 couples who are planting churches around the US.  What a great thing!  I’m old enough to be the father of all of them.  There is hope for the next generation.

Marcus Bigelow

President

Stadia: New Church Strategies

Office:  916-626-3090

Cell:  707-718-3730

Email:  mbigelow@stadia.cc

Facebook: Facebook | Marcus Bigelow

Blog: http://bruisedreedsandsmoulderingwicks.blogspot.com/

Posted via email from marcusbigelow's posterous

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Check out Verve

Verve, our new plant in Las Vegas, opened on Sunday and Monday.  With the irrepressible Vince Antonucci at the helm you know it’s going to be great.  Check out his blog at http://www.vinceantonucci.com/.

Marcus Bigelow

President

Stadia: New Church Strategies

Office:  916-626-3090

Cell:  707-718-3730

Email:  mbigelow@stadia.cc

Facebook: Facebook | Marcus Bigelow

Blog: http://bruisedreedsandsmoulderingwicks.blogspot.com/

Posted via email from marcusbigelow's posterous

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Update from Chile

My son-in-law, Jonathan, along with a group of believers from the churches in Santiago went south to help those devastated by the earthquake.  Here is his eyewitness report of their encounters. 

Marcos smiled, he smiled and applauded. He applauded as he moved closer to me. He was in the arms of his mother and father as he talked with me. Marcos was like an infant, a twenty-something year old infant. He suffers from cerebral palsy. His house was very near the sea and the means, that which came in as a great tide, took them to a tiny hill far away from the sea. Their home is now four sticks with a blanket as a roof. There are no walls, everything in their lives can now be seen by anyone.

They had not received help for an entire week. The group I went with gave them water, but they were the last people to receive it. It was what was left of a 20 liter container that we had already given out to their new neighbors, people who, like them, were forced by fear to the height of a hill.

The only things we had left had already been given out, and I was left with nothing but a tiny water bottle I had filled in the morning to drink throughout the day. I had forgotten that I had it. I remembered it when the others in my group told me this family received only leftovers. When I gave the bottle to them, this adult child smiled. He smiled and applauded. The water was put in a cup and the child drank it. I spoke with the family and Marcos smiled while I talked to him.

The day before, another group of people, in another place, applauded when they found out we had arrived from Santiago. When they received their food, they laughed with relief, for it was another day they would be able to nourish themselves in those places which, because being dangerous areas, no help was arriving without the accompaniment of the armed forces.

We arrived to their area without any accompaniment to other places where no help had yet arrived, places where, one of the welcomes was given by a man who was sharpening his machete on the pavement. I explained to him that we had brought help to one of the local churches so that they could distribute it. I said goodbye to the man with the machete with a hug and smiles.

People applauding and smiling when we gave water and food. Isn't this what people do when they receive good news--applaud and smile?

These are the images I have in my mind. I don't want them to get erased. I hope they never disappear. I hope not to remember them as a type of monument to goodness, but I hope to recreate these actions again and again in my life. I hope that we can all do this. I hope that together we have the privilege of being received with smiles and applause when the good news--love--arrives in the form of water and food. This is the least we can do.

With love,

Jonathan

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