Wednesday, August 29, 2007

August Update
















I (Kim) just wanted to post some recent pics of the kids. I am going to try to post things as often as I can. We are doing well here in Orlando. Millie is 4 months old. We took her to the pool for the first time today. She has found her toes which is really cute, and she giggles a lot. Hunter and she have both adjusted really well to our move, and I feel really blessed as a mom to have them in my life. Hunter is all into superheroes and Disney characters. His third birthday is in just two weeks, and I think we will be having a Superman party...I guess I need to plan that. Come see us in Orlando!!!

Thursday, August 23, 2007

850 miles and 26 feet of yellow steel


We have made it to Orlando!
I am pretty sure that we picked the hottest week of the year to move. Luckily, my body learned to adapt to a constant state of dehydration.

We are mostly settled into our new apartment. We're actively searching for a new church and learning the lay of the land. We have many friends with kids who live in our apartment complex. We have also had a chance to visit Disneyworld.
Next week I will begin working in the office at Lake Hart, the world headquarters for Campus Crusade.

Thanks for everything that everyone has done to help us get here. We appreciate you!







Saturday, July 07, 2007

Millie at Two Months

Yep, we're trying to get caught up on our blogging. Millie is growing well...13 lbs., 1 oz. at her two month check-up on June 21st. I (Kim) had a very emotional few days when she moved into size 2 diapers and began wearing 3-6 months clothes right when she turned two months old. Millie's second month was marked by two trips to Chattanooga including two nights at the Whitestone Inn with Mommy and Daddy.
I put Millie in this 0-3 month outfit the day before she moved into 3-6 month clothes. I was so sad that I didn't put her in it earlier. I found out that I LOVE pink gingham.


Hunter loves holding and checking on Millie. He is so sweet and gentle with her.

Why does Mommy take so many pictures of me???!!!


Millie and Hunter love visting their Mimi and Ddad (Kim's parents).



Sleeping Beauty





Just rocking on the porch of the Farmhouse at the Whitestone.

Millie joined Mommy and Daddy in a few games of croquet, shuffleboard, ping pong, and pool during our stay at the Whitestone.

Millie at One Month

Sorry we haven't been good about posting pics. We are having so much fun with Millie and Hunter that we just haven't gotten around to it. Millie is such a sweetheart. We love having a little girl.
Mommy loved celebrating Mother's Day with her two little ones.


Four generations of Levis/Friederichsens. Grandma, Nana, and Aunt Becky (Donny's Mom, Grandmother, and sister) came for Mother's Day...such a special day.


Lots of fun playing with Daddy.

Monday, April 30, 2007

Updated Pics of Amelia


Coming Home from the Hospital...Welcome Home Millie!

Millie's sweet new crib...complete with cool hanging bears.
Hunter likes to help Millie with her Bouncie Seat.
Hunter - Sept '04
Millie - Apr '07
Hunter enjoyed helping give Millie a bath. He really enjoys being a big brother.

Sunday, April 22, 2007

More Pics of Millie

The Family's all here!So that's what the sun looks like...
I love my Mommy and my Mommy loves me!
Mommy, my Aunt Jennifer, and me
My big brother, Hunter, helped change my diaper
Daniel, Nathan and Drew love meeting their new cousin...but not as much as the Purell soap dispenser.

My D-Dad with his new hat. It's instant tobacco cred in this state.


My Big Brother, Hunter, gave me a little kiss. I love him.

Saturday, April 21, 2007

Some pics of Amelia Louise




Millie's Birthday

Happy Birthday Millie!

Kim woke me up Friday (4/20) morning and said, "Donny, I don't want to sound alarmist, but I think today is the day." We went to the doctor's office to see if Kim was in fact in labor. The doctor kept saying things like, "Kim, was your first child a fast delivery?" (He wasn't). Soon after seeing the doctor in her office we were across the parking lot in the hospital prep room. An ultrasound on Thursday indicated that Millie was going to be around 10lbs 4oz. The doctor assured us that these measurements are sometimes wrong. Nevertheless, we opted for another C-Section. At 11:41am, weighing in at a cool 10lbs 3oz (see, the measurements can be off) and 21 inches, Amelia Louise, "Millie," entered the world!

Mother and baby are doing well. It was funny to look through the nursery windows and listen to other people comment. "Awww, look at all the little babi...whoa, look at that one! She must be 9lbs." To which I would reply, "Actually she's 10lbs...and she'll beat up your baby when the nurses aren't looking."
We are all really excited about this blessing from the Lord. It has been a little bit of a shock. I wasn't really prepared for her this week...but we wouldn't want it any other way! We can't wait for each of you to meet her.

Hunter is doing well. He doesn't seem to mind Millie, but he isn't exactly thrilled. He sang Happy Birthday for her, but the end of the video kinda sums up his feelings.



Thursday, April 19, 2007

Recent Campus Activities

I have had a busy couple of weeks on campus. Most of it has been really great. Some of it I could have done without.

April 4th - my 30th birthday

In adding insult to injury, not only did I turn 30, but I got the flu. I told my sister that if 30 feels this bad I can't imagine what 40 is going be like.

April 5th

Campus Crusade co-hosted a campus wide Easter service with CSF (one of the local campus ministries here at UK). It was a great event. The room was packed with college students. The Director of CSF and I spoke at the meeting. I shared about the Offense of the Cross and he shared about the Re-creation of the Resurrection.

April 8th
I led Easter Chapel for the University of Tennessee Baseball team. They were in town for a weekend series with UK (UT took the series 2-1, go Vols!). I regaled them with my Little League stories. My coaches in Little League took one look at me and knew I had the "right" stuff...the deep right field stuff. "Friederichsen, get out there and hug that foul line!" I think all my coaches just hoped and prayed that no one would hit the ball my way.

I also shared with the UT guys about the truth of the cross and the hope of the resurrection. I explained that on the cross Christ experienced physical pain beyond belief. But the most excrutiating thing he felt was the full wrath of God for my sins. He took my death on himself, but death is not the end because Easter morning is here! Because of Easter I can know that Jesus is victorious over death.

The team gave me a game ball they had all autographed. It's one of the coolest things I've gotten since I have been on staff.


April 10

I was the keynote speaker for a Greek Prayer Breakfast. I shared with around 175 Greek students about the importance of worldviews. A worldview is the lense through which you view the world. It is the grid that everything in life is filtered through before you make a decision about it. We all have a worldview...and often Christians have a worldview that is incompatible with Christianity. I explained the difference between the two dominant worldviews on the college campus: Secular Humanism and Christian Theism. When it comes to worldviews, everyone must answer three basic questions. Why am I here? What is wrong with the world? How do we fix it? Secular Humanism says, "I am the product of random chance with no purpose. I should consume and enjoy. The problems of the world are that I do not have the power to consume and enjoy all that I want. The solution is education and government." The Christian Theist's answer to those questions is summed up in Colossians 1:15-23. The Christian Theist responds by saying, "I am created in the image of God. I am the crowning glory of His creation. There is inherent worth and value in every person, regardless of age, race, gender, or ability. We are here to glorify God. The problem of the world is sin and hostility to God. The answer is the cross of Christ and His resurrection."

April 17

Our ministry hosted a Prayer Vigil on Tuesday night to pray for the victims of the Virginia Tech shooting. I spoke briefly to the 250 students gathered about the hope of the Gospel. My main text was from Habbakuk 1:2-5 and 3:17-19. In the midst of tragedy there is hope that the Lord is at work. He is doing things that are beyond our comprehension. But even though His plans are beyond our comprehension doesn't mean that God cannot understand our suffering. He understands suffering and injustice because experienced suffering and injustice on the Cross. Through the Cross, Jesus Christ brings hope to all who will call on Him. This is a good message to come out of an incomprehensible situation.

You can find more info about the Virginia Tech Campus Crusade and UK Campus Crusade response to this situation at www.ukcru.blogspot.com.

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Acts 9:1-30


Our ministry has been working through the book of Acts this semester. We are looking at how God has been at work in the life of the church. My hope is that this will serve as an encouragement for the students as they look to be "salt and light" on the college campus.
One of the things I have noticed with our ministry is that we have become content. We had a large group of students involved. We did fun things. We had a big weekly meeting. Our bible studies were fun. We, however, we not hitting our vision. We were not about turning lost students into Christ centered laborers. We were more about helping Christians at UK find a place to "plug in." Now, that's not a bad mission. There is certainly a need for that. The problem lies in the our complacency toward the lost of our campus. Fat and happy Christians who don't engage the lost people of the world forget that grace is amazing. We begin to worry about our comfort and affluence more than seeking to make God's glory known. Our problem is that we don't see lost people as really lost. And, I believe, the root of this issue is that I don't see my sin as all the bad.
The Lord has been challenging this notion in my life with the story of the Valley of Dry Bones from Ezekiel 37:
1The hand of the LORD was upon me, and he brought me out in the Spirit of the LORD and set me down in the middle of the valley;it was full of bones. 2And he led me around among them, and behold, there were very many on the surface of the valley, and behold, they were very dry. 3And he said to me, "Son of man, can these bones live?" And I answered, "O Lord GOD, you know." 4Then he said to me, "Prophesy over these bones, and say to them, O dry bones, hear the word of the LORD. 5Thus says the Lord GOD to these bones: Behold, I will cause breath to enter you, and you shall live. 6And I will lay sinews upon you, and will cause flesh to come upon you, and cover you with skin, and put breath in you, and you shall live, and you shall know that I am the LORD."

7So I prophesied as I was commanded. And as I prophesied, there was a sound, and behold, a rattling,
and the bones came together, bone to its bone. 8And I looked, and behold, there were sinews on them, and flesh had come upon them, and skin had covered them. But there was no breath in them. 9Then he said to me, "Prophesy to the breath; prophesy, son of man, and say to the breath, Thus says the Lord GOD: Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe on these slain, that they may live." 10So I prophesied as he commanded me, and the breath came into them, and they lived and stood on their feet, an exceedingly great army.

11Then he said to me, "Son of man, these bones are the whole house of Israel. Behold, they say, 'Our bones are dried up, and our hope is lost; we are clean cut off.' 12Therefore prophesy, and say to them, Thus says the Lord GOD: Behold, I will open your graves and raise you from your graves, O my people. And I will bring you into the land of Israel. 13And you shall know that I am the LORD, when I open your graves, and raise you from your graves, O my people. 14And I will put my Spirit within you, and you shall live, and I will place you in your own land. Then you shall know that I am the LORD; I have spoken, and I will do it, declares the LORD


I have begun to see our campus as a Valley of Dry Bones. I need to see lost people as dead. Without the Spirit of God blowing over them and giving them life...they will be dead forever. Then it struck me, I was dead. I was part of this valley. This story was about me!
Then I read Acts 9:1-30, the story of Paul's conversion. As I prepared to teach this to our students I thought of the parallels between Osama bin Ladin and Paul before he came to Christ. Both were trained by the leading religious scholars. Both have an enormous zeal for their cause. They were both murderers. What if Osama bin Ladin became a Christian? Is he beyond the reach of the Gospel? My immediate pre-programmed Christian response was, "No, of course not!" But, do I really believe that God can change a man like that? He did it to Paul.
As I was pondering the spiritual fate of Osama bin Ladin, the Ezekiel passage popped into my head. Osama is spiritually dead. He is lost in his sins. So was Paul before he encountered Christ. So, was I before I encountered Christ. There are not varying degrees of deadness. Osama is not more dead than I was before Christ. The lost students at UK are not less dead than this Islamic terrorist who is bent on the destruction of Western Civilization. The bones in the valley are not looking around saying, "You're deader than me. I don't think there is any hope for you. My bones aren't quite as dry as yours, I'll probably pull through this okay." They are in the same state before a Holy God. The good news is that the same Gospel that saved Paul and me can save a lost student at UK or Osama bin Ladin.
Paul knows this message well. Read Ephesian 2:1-9:
1And you were dead in the trespasses and sins 2in which you once walked, following the course of this world, following the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that is now at work in the sons of disobedience-- 3among whom we all once lived in the passions of our flesh, carrying out the desires of the body and the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, like the rest of mankind. 4But God, being rich in mercy, because of the great love with which he loved us, 5even when we were dead in our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ--by grace you have been saved-- 6and raised us up with him and seated us with him in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, 7so that in the coming ages he might show the immeasurable riches of his grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus. 8For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, 9not a result of works, so that no one may boast.

Friday, February 09, 2007

The Atonement

I was recently asked what is so important about the atonement. I found the answer to be encouraging. Here is what I wrote:

The Bible has one story from Genesis to Revelation. It is the story of a God redeeming his creation for his glory. That is the metanarrative for the entire Bible. The atonement is the key to unlocking God’s redemption. The offense of sin against a holy God is incalculable. Therefore, the punishment to be dealt is equal to the crime. No person can pay this price and be redeemed back to God. In order for there to be redemption, someone had to intervene. God’s Son came to pay that price. He who was blameless took on the blame of the world. He suffered the penalty for God’s people so that they could then receive the Son’s reward. The transaction took place on the cross. This is atonement. Without this doctrine, Christianity is simply another list of things to do and not do. A watered down or weakened version of this and you either get men who don’t really need redemption (they can do it on their own) or a God who doesn’t care (let them suffer). Today, the former thought tends to dominate. We have a high view of man and a low view of God. We often think (but never verbalize, it would be unbecoming of us) that God is lucky to have us. He would do well to just forgive anything or ignore sin. Therefore, we don’t really need redemption. We just need to try a little harder and God will honor that. No one really goes to hell because of sin, except Hitler, serial killers, and people who club baby seals. Who really needs their sins to be atoned? This doctrine is crucial to the faith because without it we are lost with a way.

Sunday, December 10, 2006

Baby on the Way

Here it is...the big news you've all been waiting for.
Is the baby a he or a she?
Check out the video to find out!

Monday, December 04, 2006

Sorry for the Delay


Okay, I know...it has been months since my last post. I know...I said that we'd keep this up to date with information about our ministry. I haven't upheld my end of the bargain. I'm the prodigal blogger. I apologize.
So, on with the ministry update.
Kim and I have accepted the position of interim Campus Director here at UK. I has been a challenge and a privilege to serve in this capacity. I have really enjoyed helping provide leadership to our movement. One of the greatest joys is seeing fledgling ministries start in new areas of the campus. This semester we have seen the Lord start a ministry among international students (Bridges International) and in the African-American community (Impact). I have loved seeing the Lord make Himself known in the hearts of the students, especially the ones that don't look like me.

I have also been taking a seminary class on Church History. It has been an incredible challenge and joy. I have learned so much about our roots. I have been encouraged by the strength of our early Church Fathers. Kim and I watched the Da Vinci Code the other night on DVD. Before, when I read the book, I could only think, "That doesn't really sound right." Now, I can accurately defend the faith. Christians, be encouraged...your faith is build upon the shoulders of men and women who have gone before us. They were strong and faithful to the end. Their perseverance in the face of death gives validity to our faith. Those who knew Jesus most intimately, were willing to die for the truth they knew; the truth that Jesus Christ was fully God and fully Man, that in Him alone can our sins be atoned, and that there is no other name by which we can be saved.

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Our July Newsletter

Click here to download our July 2006 newsletter.
You can either click on it and Adobe Reader will automatically pop up with the newsletter, or you can right click and select "Save Target As..." and save the newsletter to our computer.

Enjoy and let us know if this is helpful to you.

(note: it is in pdf format. You will need Adobe Reader. You don't have that, you can download it here.)

Wednesday, July 05, 2006

The Tower of Babel and Mephibosheth

Kim and I have been up to our eyeballs in studying. We are each working on an exegetical paper. Kim is working on Genesis 11:1-9, the Tower of Babel. I have selected II Samuel 9, the story of David's kindness to Mephibosheth.
We have really been enjoying learning how to interpret God's Word. I feel that I have learned so much about seeing a passage in light of God's plan of redemption. It is amazing to me that every book, every verse, every part of the Bible points to Jesus Christ. From the beginning, God has been working all of history toward the redemption of all of his people. How exciting that we get to be a part of this!
I have also been working through an Old Testament Survey class taugh by Dr. Mark Futato of RTS-Orlando. It has been fascinating to see God's heart through the Old Testament. God's heart from the beginning has been the redemption of his people through his Son's death and resurrection. How good is our God?
We've also learned how to use fancy words like, chiastic. Email me if you're curious as to the meaning of chiastic.