Friday, February 26, 2016

Computer Stickers

I had read on a blog that if you send a self addressed stamp envelope to the computer company "System76", they would send you free Linux Computer stickers.  I was doubtful of this, so I tried it.  I was surprised that two weeks later I did receive the stickers.
Below is the link and I have a few pictures.
https://system76.com/swag/stickers

Monday, August 3, 2015

The Cap Spider

I have been tying for about a solid year now and out of all of the jigs / flies that I have tied, I believe that this is my favorite.  I have caught many a fish on this fly, at times I've caught fish with it when I honestly didn't think I would catch anything.  It is called the "Cap Spider" and it is really small.  The original pattern calls for a 124 oz jig hook.  The photo below shows this particular one tied with olive chenille with brown/yellow round rubber legs. 




#flytying #crappiejigs #crazyangler #bluegill #capspider #belahbugs #flyfishing #GrayWolfFlyShop #louisiana #peakvise



I actually heard about this fly pattern from a guy at the local fly fishing club, I joined the Kisatchie Fly Fishers earlier in the year and have only attended 2 events due to my work schedule.  The only thing that I remember this guy telling me was that there was an old video on the Internet and called the Cap Spider.  When I saw the video, I thought, wow, this is easy.    


Recently, I've been tying the Cap Spider on a Matzuo Red Sickle Hook 1/100 oz instead of the 1/124 oz. These are the sharpest hooks I have used and although they are just a little lighter, I am still catching fish, so far, I have caught Blue Gill Bream, Crappie, and few catfish.


Fly Tying

Another hobby that I believe I like more than any other hobby I've had thus far....Fly Tying.  Who would have thought that I would do this for a hobby but it goes with fishing.  Here are some of flies/jigs that I have tied over the past year.  I tend to tie more crappie jigs than anything else.

#flytying #crappiejigs #fishing

Monday, July 6, 2015

Our Opinions by Bro Eddie Thompson; from his Daily Bread 07/16/2013


Another post from one of Bro Eddie's many Daily Bread's, the Daily Bread's were emails that he sent out each day.

Our Opinions by Eddie Thompson
7/16/2013 7:31:02 AM


Opinions are important, at least, if to nobody else, the purveyor of said opinion. When many of us are of the same opinion, said opinion seems as solid as a truism. When most of us have the same opinion, said opinion is the "gospel truth!" Of course, nothing has really changed at all. Simply more of us agree about something is all. Opinions are still just opinions. Some people like southern country gospel music; some people like contemporary rock gospel music; others prefer only the old classics from the church hymnal. Is there a right or wrong when it comes to our opinions, our preferences, and our tastes? Holiness doesn't come with a particular style, taste, or opinion. Turning the lights down low for a song service doesn't create holiness. For that matter, neither does leaving them brightly lit. Holiness comes from the heart of those gathered in the sanctuary. Holiness isn't produced by a certain tastes for music. Those tastes are associated with the flesh and the flesh has nothing holy in it. Holiness comes from a heart of praise. I recently listened to a Christian music concert where some of the songs presented may not have been accepted by some people. One young man presented a "rap" he had written to God. It wasn't the angry man, growling, in your face type of rap. Just a talk between a child of God and His Heavenly Father. Still, I have heard some opinions about the whole "rap" thing from Bible studies and services I have been involved with. Some people go as far as to say that there is no way it could be of God. True, the rap genre isn't pleasing to my tastes so much, but what that young man did was anointed and touched me spiritually. Perhaps I was able to receive because it just so happened I had noticed this young man and others from the band praying earlier. I had observed them and had seen with my own eyes their passion for serving God and taking the gospel to communities around this world. I had a chance to interact enough to see the young man had a heart for God. He was my brother in Christ. It was his heart for God, his passion for his Heavenly Father, his desire to share his testimony, that made that moment holy and acceptable unto the Lord. My opinion about rap music truly meant very little in that moment. I believe we need to remember to maintain our capacity for separating our opinions from God's reality. I certainly don't want to miss a holy move of God because I am convinced that God's opinion is always mine. 

Dissension by Bro Eddie Thompson; from his daily bread 02/15/2007

As long as there is dissension in a church, the enemy can disrupt any progress that is made. In fact, I've watched the enemy sit back and allow some perceived progress take place, bide his time until it seems there is about to be a breakthrough, then let some root of bitterness or some unresolved issue explode suddenly to shut down any move of God that a congregation was experiencing. The tragedy is that many will keep shoving the problem aside in the hopes that it will all just go away: And it never does. It's an arrow in the quiver of the enemy. It's an army of potential opposition, hidden within a Trojan horse right inside the camp, waiting for an inconvenient moment. We need to forgive. We need to repent of sin. We need to set things right with our brother/sister. We need to remember to pray. We need to be obedient in all things. Then we need to boldly go forth in the Name of our Champion: Jesus Christ!

The Argument Against Gay Marriage

"The Argument Against Gay Marriage" was written by my dearly departed friend and pastor, Bro Eddie Thompson, I could not believe that I found this and some of his other works.  I understand that it is a "hot" topic right now and odd that I found it when I did.

Last edited: Wednesday, May 23, 2012
Posted: Wednesday, February 18, 2004

We are bombarded by questions pouring from television commentators, gay activists, politicians, and liberal-minded publications: Don’t gay and lesbians deserve equal rights under the law? Why should we care what happens between consenting adults? If it doesn’t take anything away from others, why not allow for gay marriages? For some reason we never hear answers from those who conclude that homosexual unions should not be given the sacred stamp of marriage. Many are ambivalent or fashionably tolerant for fear of being labeled “ultra-conservative.” Let me attempt to answer those questions.

First, gay and lesbians already possess rights equally protected under the law. They have the exact rights that I have today. They can marry a member of the opposite sex if they so choose, just like I have done. I can't marry a member of my own sex, even if I wanted to. So, we have the exact same rights. What is being suggested by the gay agenda is not "equal rights" but "extra rights." They want to be allowed to reap the benefits of marriage without actually marrying in its traditional sense. There are many wonderful people who choose to remain single for myriad reasons, and these people are not clamoring for the rights granted to couples who marry. Why should those who refuse traditional marriage be granted such rights simply because they prefer sex with someone whose anatomy resembles their own? In fact, most of the so-called “rights” married couples have can be obtained through a lawyer’s legal maneuvers. What if they achieve this marital status? Does anyone really believe that it will stop there? Any heterosexual buddies could take the opportunity to garner for themselves incentives and privileges intended to support the traditional family structure by which our society survives.  Make no mistake; there is a deeper agenda at work here, even if all gay and lesbians are not aware of it.

Secondly, consenting adults can do many things, but there are some actions restricted even to consenting adults. Concerning marriage, we conclude as a society that incest is harmful and thus refuse to allow family members to intermarry. Also, we conclude that polygamy is harmful and restrict Mormons and Muslims from marrying more than one consenting adult at a time. We have age requirements on marriages as well. There are reasons we place restrictions on marriage. Homosexuals have never received marital status in the history of mankind until recently. There is a reason for that. It is not productive to continue to shred the fabric of our society. The burden of proof for changing history’s traditional marriage should fall upon the supporters of the homosexual agenda. I have heard of no compelling reasons that suggest homosexual marriages are necessary to the well-being of our society.

Finally, the agenda pushed by the gay lobby encourages behavior deemed unacceptable by every major religion, by the vast majority of our society, and by nature’s evolutionary track itself. They already have the right to participate in aberrant behavior, but that isn’t enough. They want us to validate something we consider wicked. Where are the defenders of the law who claimed Alabama’s Chief Justice Roy Moore must be fired for defying the law through civil disobedience when he placed a monument to the Ten Commandments in the courthouse? Where is the uproar for the firing of San Francisco’s Mayor Gavin Newsom for defying the law by granting marriage certificates to homosexual couples? There won’t be one. The double standard against Christianity in the public square will be ignored by most, but we should not succumb to those who mock our faith. If homosexuals win this issue politically, the victory will be hollow for them and harmful to our society. The truth of the matter is marriage is a sacred union ordained by God, and nothing man does can ever really change that.


(The current debate, spawned by President Obama's support of gay marriagse, continues to miss the point: We all have equal rights already. The gay lobby desires "extra" rights that will open the door for many unintended consequences within our society at large. To equate gay marriage with "civil rights" is an insult to a people who were discriminated against on every single level of their lives for centuries in this country. Gay couples need to seek validation outside the realm of religion, which has historically spoken on this issue. Civil unions are already available, affording gay couples rights of which honest heterosexuals don't avail themselves. The burden of proof concerning why we should change our society to accomodate gay marriages falls upon the homosexual community. Until now, there is no compelling proof our society would benefit.)

Morality and Spirituality

When challenged on my morality and spirituality, I lean on the Word of God, even if there all those who scoff at it.

Hebrews 10:26-31
If we deliberately keep on sinning after we have received the knowledge of the truth, no sacrifice for sins is left, but only a fearful expectation of judgment and of raging fire that will consume the enemies of God. Anyone who rejected the law of Moses died without mercy on the testimony of two or three witnesses. How much more severely do you think someone deserves to be punished who has trampled the Son of God underfoot, who has treated as an unholy thing the blood of the covenant that sanctified them, and who has insulted the Spirit of grace? For we know him who said, “It is mine to avenge; I will repay," and again, “The Lord will judge his people.” It is a dreadful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.



My friend overseas posted this on his Facebook wall and I thought it was fitting. How we over here in the US think of ourselves and our faith (primary Christian), we rarely think of how others deal with their faith and the trials that they must endure. This is something that I have spoken of several times during our Men's Ministry Meetings, I have spent a small amount of time overseas and have several people that I consider to be a friend but of another faith. As with all religions, there are good and there are bad "representatives" of the faith. Don't let the "bad" sway your view of what you believe in.