Differences

The priest was instructing a class of third-graders at All Saints grammar school.

“There were two brothers, and one of them chose the wicked path of Satan. The brother was evil and corrupt and did great damage to many people, and wound up a convicted criminal in a tiny, dark cell.

“But the other brother studied hard and became a great, rich, knowledgeable lawyer.

“Now, children, what is the difference between these two brothers, who started out in the same place, who together embarked upon life’s stormy seas?”

Herman raised his hand and said, “Easy. One of them got caught.”

Dear Pastor

  • Dear Pastor, I know God loves everybody but He never met my sister.
    Yours sincerely, Arnold. Age 8, Nashville.
  • Dear Pastor, Please say in your sermon that Peter Peterson has been a good boy all week. I am Peter Peterson.
    Sincerely, Pete. Age 9, Phoenix
  • Dear Pastor, My father should be a minister. Every day he gives us a sermon about something.
    Robert Anderson, age 11
  • Dear Pastor, I’m sorry I can’t leave more money in the plate, but my father didn’t give me a raise in my allowance. Could you have a sermon about a raise in my allowance?
    Love, Patty. Age 10, New Haven
  • Dear Pastor, My mother is very religious. She goes to play bingo at church every week even if she has a cold.
    Yours truly, Annette. Age 9, Albany
  • Dear Pastor, I would like to go to heaven someday because I know my brother won’t be there.
    Stephen. Age 8, Chicago
  • Dear Pastor, I think a lot more people would come to your church if you moved it to Disneyland.
    Loreen. Age 9, Tacoma
  • Dear Pastor, I liked your sermon where you said that good health is more important than money but I still want a raise in my allowance.
    Sincerely, Eleanor. Age 12, Sarasota
  • Dear Pastor, Please pray for all the airline pilots. I am flying to California tomorrow.
    Laurie. Age 10, New York City
  • Dear Pastor, I hope to go to heaven some day but later than sooner.
    Love, Ellen, age 9, Athens
  • Dear Pastor, Please say a prayer for our Little League team. We need God’s help or a new pitcher. Thank you.
    Alexander. Age 10, Raleigh
  • Dear Pastor, My father says I should learn the Ten Commandments. But I don’t think I want to because we have enough rules already in my house.
    Joshua. Age 10, South Pasadena
  • Dear Pastor, Who does God pray to? Is there a God for God?
    Sincerely, Christopher. Age 9, Titusville
  • Dear Pastor, Are there any devils on earth? I think there may be one in my class.
    Carla. Age 10, Salina
  • Dear Pastor, I liked your sermon on Sunday. Especially when it was finished.
    Ralph, Age 11, Akron
  • Dear Pastor, How does God know the good people from the bad people? Do you tell Him or does He read about it in the newspapers?
    Sincerely, Marie. Age 9, Lewiston

You Know Your Coven’s Getting Older When…

  • The ritual feast is puréed.
  • Last Beltaine the coven decided it would be nice to go out to dinner to celebrate.
  • The last time you tried to do a spiral dance your oxygen feeds got tangled.
  • Viagra is kept in the coven supplies.
  • The maiden of the coven is a grandmother.
  • The ritual room is outfitted with defibrillators.
  • The coveners drive their RV’s to Scottsdale for Mabon.
  • When you are at a festival you go to bed at sunset.
  • It takes the whole coven to move the cauldron.
  • The high priest still has a vendetta going against Richard Nixon.
  • You find yourself using your pendulum over the stock pages in the newspaper.
  • You tell an initiate that in your day you had to slog through 5′ of snow uphill both ways when you did a Yule ritual.
  • You drop your teeth in the ritual cup.
  • At Samhain you see more of your coveners in the Wild Hunt than you do in circle.
  • You put your athame in the chalice during ritual but you can’t remember why.
  • You hold an all night blow-out drum frenzy and none of your neighbors noticed.
  • You use Glenn Miller records for trance music.
  • All of your ritual robes are tie-dyed.
  • Your coven has a 401(k) retirement plan.
  • A nitro pill vial replaces the crystal on your pendant.
  • No one’s successfully jumped the Beltaine fire since 1983.
  • You set comfy chairs around the circle.
  • When you sit on the floor and can’t get up again.
  • You do anointings with Aspercreme.
  • The oak tree your coven planted died of old age.
  • You use Bran Muffins and Prune Juice for Cakes & Ale because you need the fiber.
  • You don’t use salt to consecrate you altar because you need to stay away from extra sodium.
  • You use a walker during the Wild Hunt.
  • You prefer to rent a Hall for rituals because the bathrooms are closer.
  • You need a flashlight to find the candles.

If College Students Wrote the Holy Bible

The Holy Scripture may have had a different bent if written by college students:

  • The Last Supper would have been eaten the next morning – cold, with stale Coke.
  • The Ten Commandments would actually be only five – double-spaced, with wide margins, and written in a large font.
  • A new edition would be published every two years in order to limit reselling.
  • Forbidden fruit would have been eaten because it wasn’t cafeteria food.
  • Paul’s letter to the Romans would become Paul’s e-mail to abuse@romans.gov.
  • Reason Cain killed Abel: They were roommates.
  • Reason why Moses and followers walked in the desert for 40 years: They didn’t want to ask for directions and look like freshmen.
  • Instead of God creating the world in six days and resting on the seventh, he would have put it off until the night before it was due and then pulled an all-nighter.

Signs on Church Property

  • “No God — No Peace. Know God — Know Peace.”
  • “Free Trip to heaven. Details Inside!”
  • “Try our Sundays. They are better than Baskin-Robbins.”
  • “Searching for a new look? Have your faith lifted here!”
  • “Have trouble sleeping? We have sermons — come hear one!”
  • “People are like tea bags — you have to put them in hot water before you know how strong they are.”
  • “God so loved the world that He did not send a committee.”
  • “Come in and pray today. Beat the Christmas rush!”
  • “When down in the mouth, remember Jonah. He came out all right.”
  • “Sign broken. Message inside this Sunday.”
  • “Fight truth decay — study the Bible daily.”
  • “How will you spend eternity — Smoking or Non-smoking?”
  • “Dusty Bibles lead to Dirty Lives”
  • “It is unlikely there’ll be a reduction in the wages of sin.”
  • “Do not wait for the hearse to take you to church.”
  • “If you’re headed in the wrong direction, God allows U-turns.”
  • “If you don’t like the way you were born, try being born again.”
  • “This is a ch_ _ ch. What is missing?” ———> (U R)
  • “Forbidden fruit creates many jams.”
  • “In the dark? Follow the Son.”
  • “Running low on faith? Stop in for a fill-up.”
  • “If you can’t sleep, don’t count sheep. Talk to the Shepherd.”
  • “God does not believe in atheists, therefore atheists do not exist”
  • “Don’t make me come down there – God”
  • “Keep using my name in vain. I’ll make rush hour longer – God”
  • “Honk if you love Jesus. Text while driving if you want to meet him.”
  • “God wants spiritual fruits not religious nuts.”

Church Observations

  • Some people are kind, polite, and sweet-spirited until you try to get into their pews or their favorite church parking spot.
  • Many folks want to serve God, but only as advisers.
  • It is easier to preach ten sermons than it is to live one.
  • We were called to be witnesses, not lawyers.
  • When you get to your wit’s end, you’ll find God lives there.
  • People are funny. They want the front of the bus, middle of the road, and the back of the church.
  • Opportunity may knock once, but temptation bangs on your door for years.
  • Quit griping about your church; if it was perfect, you couldn’t belong.
  • The phrase that is guaranteed to wake up an audience: “And in conclusion.”
  • If the church wants a better pastor, it only needs to pray for the one it has.
  • Not only are the sins of the fathers visited upon the children, but nowadays the sins of the children are visited upon the fathers.
  • God Himself does not propose to judge a man till he’s dead. So why should you?
  • To make a long story short, don’t tell it.
  • If your left hand doesn’t know what your right one is doing, you should consider running for a job in Washington.
  • Some minds are like concrete, thoroughly mixed up and permanently set.
  • I don’t know why some people change churches. What difference does it make which one you stay home from?
  • A lot of church members are singing “Standing on the Promises” while they are just sitting on the premises.

Ten Reasons Men Should Join The Church Choir

  1. Rehearsals are every Wednesday night. Which means that for those few hours, you will significantly reduce your risk of contracting tendinitis from nonstop operation of a television remote control or computer mouse.
  2. Because you wear a choir robe every Sunday, you are liberated from a task many men find quite challenging: finding clothes that match properly.
  3. From your special vantage point every Sunday, in which you look out at the entire congregation from the choir seats, you will develop interesting new hobbies. Among these is a little guessing game called “Who’s Praying, Who’s Sleeping?”
  4. On the other hand, sitting in full view of 400-500 people on a weekly basis makes it much less likely that you yourself will give in to a chronic lack of sleep. Although it has been known to happen.
  5. If you think your singing in the shower sounds good now, just wait till you’ve been singing with us for a few weeks.
  6. Singing in a choir is one of the few activities for men that does not require electronics equipment or expensive power tools. This could be good for the family budget.
  7. For the fitness buffs, singing in the Choir is not only heart healthy, it’s soul healthy. But there are no monthly membership fees, and it’s a lot easier on the knees than jogging.
  8. If you think you’ve done everything there is to do, and there are no great challenges left in life, try singing with us guys and staying on pitch.
  9. Choir rehearsal lasts half as long as a professional football game, but is at least twice as satisfying. This is especially true if you are a long-suffering fan of the Miami Dolphins. (Don’t worry, though, the rehearsals are on Wednesday, not Monday Nights.)
  10. When people ask you whether you’ve been behaving yourself, you can say with the utmost sincerity, “Hey, I’m a Choir Boy.”

Fundamentally Christian Dog

This fundamentalist Christian couple felt it important to own an equally fundamentally Christian pet. So, they went shopping.

At a kennel specializing in this particular breed, they found a dog they liked quite a lot. When they asked the dog to fetch the Bible, he did it in a flash. When they instructed him to look up Psalm 23, he complied equally fast, using his paws with dexterity. They were impressed, purchased the animal, and went home (piously, of course).

That night they had friends over. They were so proud of their new fundamentalist dog and his major skills, they called the dog and showed off a little.

The friends were impressed, and asked whether the dog was able to do any of the usual dog tricks, as well. This stopped the couple cold, as they hadn’t thought about “normal” tricks.

Well, they said, “let’s try this out.”

Once more they called the dog, and they clearly pronounced the command, “Heel!”

Quick as a wink, the dog jumped up, put his paw on the man’s forehead, closed his eyes in concentration, and bowed his head.

Choir Proficiency Test

In order to measure your level of proficiency as a choir member, the following test has been carefully developed by experts. Read and reflect on each situation and then select the option that will enhance the quality of the performance.

  1. You are entering the choir loft on Sunday morning and suddenly trip and fall down. You should:
    a. Assume a kneeling position and break into fervent prayer.
    b. Pretend that you’ve had a heart attack.
    c. Crawl into the nearest chair.
    d. Begin speaking in tongues.
  2. You are a soprano and count incorrectly. As a result you boom out a high “C” one measure too soon. You should:
    a. Slide into an inspired “O For a Thousand Tongues to Sing.”
    a. Look triumphant and hold on to the note.
    c. Stop abruptly in mid squawk but keep your lips moving.
    d. Sink to the floor in shame.
  3. After all those long hard choir rehearsals, you show up twenty minutes late for the Christmas musical. You should:
    a. Climb into the back row of the choir from the baptistry.
    b. Enter pretending to be a soundman checking cables and then suddenly slip yourself into the choir.
    c. Turn the lights out in the church and slip into the choir during the blackout.
    d. Read M. Stephen’s pamphlet “Techniques for Tardy Appearances.”
  4. While singing, you discover you have only one page of a two page hymn. You should:
    a. Hum for your life.
    b. Sing “watermelon, watermelon, watermelon.”
    c. Try to get another hymnal out of the choir rack with your feet.
    d. Sing the first page over again.
  5. Inevitably that dreaded big sneeze occurs toward the end of the choir special. You should:
    a. As you sneeze, come down hard on your neighbor’s foot to create a diversion.
    b. Try to make it harmonize.
    c. Sneeze into the hair of the choir member in front of you to muffle the noise.
    d. Sink to the floor in shame.

  6. Count the number of A’s, B’s, C’s, and D’s you checked and find your proficiency rating below:

    • 4 or more A’s…there is nothing more you need to know to be a first rate choir member.
    • 4 or more B’s…your church choir reflexes are fully developed and you should do well in choir.
    • 4 or more C’s…your church choral experience is spotty but your team spirit is on target. You will be an asset to most any choir.
    • 4 or more D’s…it is recommended you take soccer or group therapy counseling.

A Choir Director’s Beatitudes

…. And, seeing the long Church Year before them, and knowing the awesome role that music must play in the worship services that lay ahead, the Choir Director called together the singers and spake to them, saying:

Blessed are the poor in spirit, those who are willing to blend their voices into a harmonious ensemble, for theirs is the music of heaven.

Blessed are they that mourn when forced to miss rehearsal, but call to inform the Director of their anticipated absence, for in these faithful few shall the Director find comfort.

Blessed are the meek, who submit themselves to following the Director, for they shall merit great worth.

Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after rehearsals are concluded, bringing with them neither gum nor goodies, for they shall be filled with music.

Blessed are the merciful, who take pity on the music’s composer, careful to read the original notes, follow the original time, proclaim resoundingly the original message, for they shall obtain mercy from discriminating critics.

Blessed are the pure in pitch, in tone, in enunciation, for their voices shall blend in moving harmonies, enabling others to envision God.

Blessed are the music-makers, for they shall be called the heralders of God.

Blessed are ye singers when the Director shall seem to persecute you for the sake of the final rendition; be patient and rejoice, for of such perfection is the music of heaven.

Blessed are ye when other choirs shall revile you, and turn their ears from you, and say all manner of evil against you jealously.

Rejoice, and be exceedingly glad, for great is your reward in heavenly satisfaction that you have sung faithfully and well – for so disparaged they the great singers who were before you … perhaps even that Bethlehem choir of Angel voices!