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Evan AgeeI'm Evan, a web designer and developer from Richmond Indiana. Learn more about me by visiting the "Who Am I?" section.

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Archive for February, 2004

Some website stuff

Thursday, February 26, 2004

I’ve been working some on my website lately. Yesterday I worked for some time getting a feature setup on the entire site that allows people that visit evanagee.com to see what music I’m listening to at the time… and it’s updated everytime the song changes. So, for you voyer types you can see what songs I’m listening to. Check out http://www.evanagee.com/ to see what I’m talking about. The software that runs it is called Kung-Tunes. It exports a text file and uploads it to my web server and then I do all of the formatting of the data using CSS. Very cool stuff and it’s free!

Some stuff that’s going on:

  • On another note I finally got Living-Dead.com moved over to my host so I can try and sell the domain name. Hopefully that will go well.
  • Kristen and I got our taxes finished up this week and we got a really good return. Much more than we were expecting.
  • The youth group is going together on March 7th to see The Passion of the Christ
  • I re-strung my guitar yesterday and it sounds amazing :)
  • I still have Adams & Agee cds for sale here. You can choose either a CD or you can download the album in MP3 format for cheaper (for all of you tech savvy people)

That’s about it for now.

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Back to the routine

Tuesday, February 24, 2004

Well, my grandmother’s funeral is over and things are finally returning back to normal. Kristen and I spent the afternoon in Cambridge City with my family and it was a good time. I don’t get to spend a lot of time with any of them, but I do love them all and I know that they all love me as well.

We got home in the evening and I went to purchase tickets for the youth group to go see The Passion of the Christ. The closer it gets to time to see the movie the more excited I get. There was an interview with Mel Gibson on Diane Sawyer in which he did a wonderful job. I was very impressed with his answers and I think he answered some questions about Christian faith better than I’ve ever heard anyone answer them.

Well, I thought I would have more going on, but once I started writing I didn’t feel like there was much to say. I’ll write again soon.

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Another loss

Friday, February 20, 2004

I was watching The Apprentice last night when we received a call from my step-dad letting us know that my grandmother had passed away. As you might remember my grandfather passed away not long ago, and this was his wife. I’m not terribly upset about it because her quality of life has been pretty bad for the past few years.

I have many wonderful memories with all of my grandparents and many of those memories involve the two that I’ve lost. Back when I was in elementary school we lived with them for a while (my mom, brother and I) and I can recall those being some of the best years of my life. Adventures in the stream behind their house, wonderful breakfast in the morning, playing cards and grandma listening to Vince Gill on the radio. Grandpa was always a very hard worker and he had more love for all of his family that must could hope for. I had some wonderful times with them both.

But death isn’t the end. Sorrow is for those without hope. Do I miss them? Of course.

On another note Kristen and I are going with about 13 other people to see The Passion of the Christ as soon as we can. I’m going to try to arrange to get tickets today and see if we can’t see it the night it comes out. I am so excited for this movie. I’ve been reading news bits that say that they’ve increased the number of theaters that it will be playing in to around 2,500. This may not seem like a lot, but it’s actually a little more than most movies get. For example, The Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring was in around 3,000 theaters. So, this one is getting some massive exposure. Thank God.

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Mel Gibson’s The Passion of Christ

Tuesday, February 17, 2004

I cannot recall when I’ve been more excited to see a movie. Seriously.

passion.jpgMel Gibson’s career threatening movie, “The Passion of Christ”, is being called the best biblical movie ever made. One needs only to read some reviews of the film to see the impact that it will have. A great awakening is what most true Christians are waiting for. The fact is that most people that claim to be Christians are really just luke-warm and really aren’t followers of Christ. They have received salvation, but they haven’t given up their worldy lifestyles nor have they tried to give up any of their known sins. It is my hope that this movie will push those people into a greater understanding of what Christ did on the cross and make them want to follow him completely.

I’ve attached below an article written by a Jewish rabbi about the film. A VERY interesting read.

Why Mel Owes One To The Jews
© Rabbi Daniel Lapin

Two weeks before Mel Gibson¹s Passion flashes onto two thousand screens, online ticket merchants are reporting that up to half their total sales are for advance purchases for Passion. One Dallas multiplex has reserved all twenty of its screens for The Passion. I am neither a prophet nor a movie critic. I am merely an Orthodox rabbi using ancient Jewish wisdom to make three predictions about The Passion.

One, Mel Gibson and Icon Productions will make a great deal of money. Those distributors who surrendered to pressure from Jewish organizations and passed on Passion will be kicking themselves, while Newmarket Films will laugh all the way to the bank. Theater owners are going to love this film.
Two, Passion will become famous as the most serious and substantive Biblical movie ever made. It will be one of the most talked-about entertainment events in history‹it is currently on the cover of Newsweek and Vanity Fair.

My third prediction is that the faith of millions of Christians will become more fervent as Passion uplifts and inspires them. Passion will propel vast numbers of unreligious Americans to embrace Christianity. The movie will one day be seen as a harbinger of America¹s third great religious reawakening.

Those Jewish organizations that have squandered both time and money futilely protesting Passion, ostensibly in order to prevent pogroms in Pittsburgh, can hardly be proud of their performance. They failed at everything they attempted. They were hoping to ruin Gibson rather than enrich him. They were hoping to suppress Passion rather than promote it. Finally, they were hoping to help Jews rather than harm them.

Here I digress slightly to exercise the Jewish value of giving the benefit of the doubt by discounting cynical suggestions growing in popularity, that the very public nature of their attack on Gibson exposed their real purpose‹fundraising. Apparently, frightening wealthy widows in Florida about anti-Semitic thugs prowling the streets of America causes them to open their pocketbooks and refill the coffers of groups with little other raison d¹être. But let¹s assume they were hoping to help Jews.

However, instead of helping the Jewish community they have inflicted lasting harm. By selectively unleashing their fury only on wholesome entertainment that depicts Christianity, in a positive light, they have triggered anger, hurt, and resentment. Hosting the Toward Tradition Radio Show and speaking before many audiences nationwide, I enjoy extensive communication with Christian America and what I hear is troubling. Fearful of attracting the ire of Jewish groups that are so quick to hurl the ³anti-Semite epithet, some Christians are reluctant to speak out. Although one can bludgeon resentful people into silence, behind closed doors emotions continue to simmer.

I consider it crucially important for Christians to know that not all Jews are in agreement with their self-appointed spokesmen. Most American Jews, experiencing warm and gracious interactions each day with their Christian fellow-citizens, would feel awkward trying to explain why so many Jewish organizations seem focused on an agenda hostile to Judeo-Christian values. Many individual Jews have shared with me their embarrassment that groups, ostensibly representing them, attack Passion but are silent about depraved entertainment that encourages killing cops and brutalizing women. Citing artistic freedom, Jewish groups helped protect sacrilegious exhibits such as the anti-Christian feces extravaganza presented by the Brooklyn museum four years ago. One can hardly blame Christians for assuming that Jews feel artistic freedom is important only when exercised by those hostile toward Christianity. However, this is not how all Jews feel.

From audiences around America, I am encountering bitterness at Jewish organizations insisting that belief in the New Testament is de facto evidence of anti-Semitism. Christians heard Jewish leaders denouncing Gibson for making a movie that follows Gospel accounts of the Crucifixion long before any of them had even seen the movie. Furthermore, Christians are hurt that Jewish groups are presuming to teach them what Christian Scripture really means. Listen to a rabbi whom I debated on the Fox television show hosted by Bill O¹Reilly last September. This is what he said, ³We have a responsibility as Jews, as thinking Jews, as people of theology, to respond to our Christian brothers and to engage them, be it Protestants, be it Catholics, and say, look, this is not your history, this is not your theology, this does not represent what you believe in.

He happens to be a respected rabbi and a good one, but he too has bought into the preposterous proposition that Jews will reeducate Christians about Christian theology and history. Is it any wonder that this breathtaking arrogance spurs bitterness?

Many Christians who, with good reason, have considered themselves to be Jews¹ best (and perhaps, only) friends also feel bitter at Jews believing that Passion is revealing startling new information about the Crucifixion. They are incredulous at Jews thinking that exposure to the Gospels in visual form will instantly transform the most philo-Semitic gentiles of history into snarling, Jew-hating predators.

Christians are baffled by Jews who don¹t understand that President George Washington, who knew and revered every word of the Gospels, was still able to write that oft-quoted beautiful letter to the Touro Synagogue in Newport, offering friendship and full participation in America to the Jewish community.

One of the directors of the AJC recently warned that Passion ³could undermine the sense of community between Christians and Jews that’s going on in this country. We’re not allowing the film to do that.² No sir, it isn¹t the film that threatens the sense of community; it is the arrogant and intemperate response of Jewish organizations that does so.

Jewish organizations, hoping to help but failing so spectacularly, refutes all myths of Jewish intelligence. How could their plans have been so misguided and the execution so inept?

Ancient Jewish wisdom teaches that nothing confuses one¹s thinking more than being in the grip of the two powerful emotions, love and hate. The actions of these Jewish organizations sadly suggest that they are in the grip of a hatred for Christianity that is only harming Jews.

Today, peril threatens all Americans, both Jews and Christians. Many of the men and women in the front lines find great support in their Christian faith. It is strange that Jewish organizations, purporting to protect Jews, think that insulting allies is the preferred way to carry out that mandate.

A ferocious Rottweiler dog in your suburban home will quickly estrange your family from the neighborhood. For those of us in the Jewish community who cherish friendship with our neighbors, some Jewish organizations have become our Rottweilers. God help us.

Radio talk show host, Rabbi Daniel Lapin, is president of Toward Tradition, a bridge-building organization providing a voice for all Americans who defend the Judeo-Christian values vital for our nation¹s survival.

So, from the sound of it this movie will make a huge impact on the world. I can’t help but believe that this is all God’s plan. We’re planning on going with a big group of people from church as well as the youth group to see the film. I hope you’ll consider doing the same.

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Living-Dead.com shutting down

Wednesday, February 11, 2004

new_ldead_logo.gifAs most of you know I created a website based around horror movies a few years ago. You might also know that for personal reasons I resigned my ownership of the site over to my two partners about 5 months ago. Well, after lots o internal struggles and the inability to find someone to manage the technical aspsects of the website, they have decided to shut the site down.

Living-Dead.com was created to be an online community for horror movie fans. It would give them the ability to write about, talk about and get information about just about any horror movie you can think of. I grew my skills in every area by working on the site and I can say that I’ve learned more from that project than anything else I’ve done.

I’m not really sad to see it go, but I do wish I had another website of that size that I could maintain and foster. There’s something about hosting thousands of people a day and providing them with something they enjoy that I really like.

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