Here's this week's collection, with the hope that you'll be my Valinktine.
- The Christian Song Competition at Praise Tracks is narrowed down to the top twelve finalists.
- It's like a flash mob, only everybody ends up at church, so I guess it's actually a flash mass. (Or a mass mob. Take your pick.)
- Know someone who is questioning their faith? Here are eight important questions to help them qualify what they mean.
- Canadian Christian TV host Lorna Dueck travels with a group of journalists to bring a Christian perspective on the Burning Man Festival.
- Church Appreciation 101: A writer for the National Catholic Review sees some things her church can learn from Willow Creek. Days later at the same site, a Willow Creek-er turned Catholic responds.
- Last week we linked to a confession by Donald Miller that he skips church more than occasionally. This week, a lengthy reply to the many comments received. (And a long-form sample of those comments.)
- You may choose a church because you like its music, but blogger Tim Challies is somewhat drawn to a church that sings poorly.
- Maybe there are atheists in foxholes, but not in plane crashes, as in the plural crashes, as in one near miss and two crashes.
- As my kids would say, "I didn't know that was a thing." But this week we went to a U2charist. The music of U2 and… I'll let Wikipedia explain.
- Missional Moment: An interview with Michael Frost on the release of his newest, Incarnate.
- Singer/songwriter Darlene Zschech provides a health update on her blog after her first round of chemotherapy.
- Increasingly, church leadership and participation is a young man's game (or women's) but there are advantages to getting old and ugly at church.
- Speaking of which, you didn't seriously think I was going to link to that NBC story about the nudist church in Ivor, Virginia did you?
- Prognostication of the Week: Could organ music at church be ripe for a comeback? Actually, the article is about more than music.
- This is a recurring theme lately, but this UK article has some hard stats: Children no longer know the most basic Bible stories.
- Was some grassroots campaigning effective? This year's Superbowl ads were a lot less sexist.
- You won't find it on the Zondervan website yet, but the company is releasing Faith Commander, a 6-week curriculum based on Duck Dynasty with editions for children, teens, or the whole church.
- Church Growth Department: The atheist church in Tennessee has added a second service. (There's also a documentary airing in May on CNN.)
- The MovieGuide Awards, sometimes called "The Christian Oscars" were handed out last Friday.
- Nadia Bolz-Weber gets into the topic of jargon, and while I always like what she writes, you gotta read the comments on this one.
- Allegory of the Week: Author Tyler Blanski teaching a friend how to drive with a manual transmission on his Honda Civic is likened to moving beyond his Baptist roots.
- How to create a marketing strategy like Steven Furtick's, so that your book ends up on the New York Times bestseller list. (For at least one week.) …
- … And now NBC News in Furtick's hometown is tracking sales of the book at the church.
- Carlos Whittaker on how the nature of (and demand for) worship leadership is changing.
- Perry Noble definitely has his detractors, especially when he teaches on tithing. This one spares no punches.
- More links: I meant last week to include Brad Lomenick's latest list of young influencers.
- Kidmin Korner: I didn't get paid for this, but Phil Vischer's What's In the Bible is now available as a church curriculum. (But they know where to mail the check.)
- Pastors burnout and bloggers quit often because they're living a top-heavy life.
- When President Obama's State of the Union address had ended, one pastor presented God's State of the Union address.
- Been invited to a same-sex wedding yet? Check your mailbox. And then check these three articles to consider your response.
- Okay, one last response to Donald Miller, but only because you insisted. Unless, of course, this isn't how you learn.
- Finally, a Christian fiction title for serious readers who normally don't touch fiction.
After winning the silver medal in linking at the 2008 Bloglympics, Paul Wilkinson settled into a quiet life of writing at Thinking Out Loud.