CitySalt Church

Celebrate Goodness
  • Upcoming
  • About
    • Services
    • Directions
    • CS Staff
    • What is Co-Pastoring
    • Contact
    • History
    • Affiliation
  • Media
    • Sunday Sermon Library
    • Salt Blog
    • Facebook
  • Ministries
    • Kids
    • Prayer
    • Kindness Fund
    • Serving
  • Give
  • Facility Rental
  • Upcoming
    • Services
    • Directions
    • CS Staff
    • What is Co-Pastoring
    • Contact
    • History
    • Affiliation
    • Sunday Sermon Library
    • Salt Blog
    • Facebook
    • Kids
    • Prayer
    • Kindness Fund
    • Serving
  • Give
  • Facility Rental

Salt Blog

  • Sunday Sermon Library
  • Salt Blog
  • Facebook
  • All
  • Aaron Friesen
  • Allie Hymas
  • Betty Fletcher
  • BibleProject
  • Britni D'Eliso
  • Chris Carter
  • Darla Beardsley
  • Denise Jubber
  • Dusty Johnson
  • Isaac Komolafe
  • Jessie Carter
  • Jessie Johnson
  • John Rice
  • Joseph Scheyer
  • Kayla Erickson
  • Kaylee Luna
  • Kim Phelps
  • Laura Rice
  • Lauren Watson
  • Lee Schnabel
  • Leona Abrahao
  • Mark Beardsley
  • Mike D'Eliso
  • Mike Wilday
  • Mollie Havens
  • Music
  • Pam Sand
  • Randi Nelson
  • Resources
  • Ruth Vettrus
  • Sara Gore
  • Sara-Etha Schnieder
  • Sarah Moorhead
  • Sarah Withrow King
  • Shelby Tucker
  • Special Announcement
  • Steve Mickel
  • Sunday Service
  • Tenisha Tinsley
  • Terry Sheldon
  • Ursula Crawford
  • Zeke Wilday

Self-Confidence! It’s Not Just for Pushy Jerks Anymore!

Professor Popinjay (Chris Carter) January 17, 2025

Today's Salt Blog takes a detour from our current writing theme for a guest post from our very own Chris Carter. Chris writes under the pen name Professor Popinjay for other writing outlets. Here the professor's whimsical writing style re-writes one of his published pieces about self-confidence unpacking his reason for, and invitation to self-confidence through his Christian faith.


It’s been said when we’re alone, we’re in bad company. It’s said artists are often their worst critics. Look at the lengths Van Gogh went just to avoid painting ears! We can be pretty hard on ourselves. But that harsh inner monologue doesn’t have to be so critical or mean or dismembering. You are part of God’s creation, carefully and wonderfully made!! You are grander than the Grand Canyon! You are greater than the Great Lakes! You matter more than the Matterhorn! You can like yourself, your choices, and your earless artwork! I won’t judge!

We all know at least one person who is super confident all the time even though they never drink coffee. Some of these types are arrogant jerks who boss people around. Others are more like Keanu Reeves.

But I’m not here to help you be like Keanu. That would take centuries and an indomitable will. Nevertheless, rest assured, by the time we’re done here you WILL think of yourself as a perfectly sculpted paragon of natural beauty and charisma… but also humble.

Many people are at extreme ends of the self-confidence spectrum. Some people believe a follower of Christ should be a pushover, accepting the four piece McNuggets (even though they paid for the ten piece) just to avoid an awkward situation. Others might become a tyrant, grabbing the cashier by the lapels, shaking them vehemently, and demanding satisfaction because they received a McNugget slightly smaller than the other McNuggets. Yes, the self-confidence spectrum is strangely McNugget oriented. Psychology is a bizarre and unfathomable science.

The Bible might say the meek shall inherit the Earth but it also says blessed are the peacemakers. We appoint delegates to negotiate compromise and accommodation between two countries to foster and maintain peace. Peace is never one group ruling over another. It is a mutually beneficial arrangement. In the same way, we can negotiate a mutually beneficial arrangement in a patient and compassionate way between ourselves and others. In other words, you can get your food order right and all parties involved can come out edified from the exchange. But this process requires a bit of confidence to achieve. One might call it strong meekness.

If you don’t “confide” in yourself then you’re obviously keeping secrets from yourself. But I’m a big blabbermouth. I’m going to tell you a secret. You are valuable, highly valuable, priceless even. And yet Life has been afforded to you (priceless as you are) for one reason. 1 Peter 1:18 says God has ransomed you! Despite all your imperfections and beautiful humanity: you are deemed worthy and Loved by God. You’re worth more to Him than a Faberge Egg with a side of Faberge Bacon.

Now you may ask: “What have I done to be so valuable?” Nothing! As cool as your 1st Place Trophy from the Belching Contest may be, self-confidence is not about your accomplishments. It’s about what you are. You are a beloved creation of God divinely imbued with the ability to reciprocate Love to Him, yourself and others!

Self-confidence is about your irrefutable CAPABILITIES! Here they are in a nifty little list:

  1. You are capable of enabling others to see your value by affording to them that which was afforded to you (priceless life) and recognizing they are also more valuable than the aforementioned jewel-encrusted breakfast foods.

  2. You are capable of maintaining your self-respect even in situations where others are repurposing your lunch for their own impromptu art installations. 

  3. You are capable of valuing those who do not yet value themselves (people like Pat Sajack and Tommy Lasorda).

  4. You are capable of saying “no” when you want to say “no” and refusing to let others live vicariously through you by inflicting on you obligations that are not your responsibility. Shaving your boss’s back was not in the initial job description!

  5. You are capable of walking right up to a cashier, smiling at them, and politely requesting a cheeseburger because you haven’t been given a spirit of fear but a sound mind and hungry belly!! And even though they laugh at your request because you didn’t realize you were at a law firm office, you can laugh with them because you know everyone makes mistakes and that’s okay. Sorry about all the fast food references. I haven’t had lunch yet.

Blows to our confidence do not only come from within. If someone is willfully and maliciously running you down verbally, pushing you down the stairs, bonking you on the head, stealing your Microsoft dinosaur cd-rom, kicking you in the buttocks, giving you a super-wedgie, and sticking your head in a toilet and flushing it so your hair looks like soft-serve ice cream, it can affect your confidence. Call these behaviors out! Talk to them or their mom or Henry Kissinger. If Kissinger is on your side, whom shall you fear?

In choosing to trust God to keep and defend us, instead of escalating the cycle of reciprocating pains inflicted on us, we not only soothe others but create an impenetrable shield against their misguided emotion-missiles, just like Captain America …and to a lesser extent, Captain Wisconsin, whose shield is made of cheese but is just as impenetrable.

Making the choice to be patient but assertive exercises and maintains your self-confidence muscle, located somewhere around your glutes. Working that muscle out, especially when first starting, can be a slow and tiring process. Try being assertive and polite in just one small aspect of life. Perhaps ask for more complimentary breadsticks. Gradually work your way up to telling the waiter he has gorgeous eyes. Just remember: baby steps!

Here are a few other ways to exercise your self-confidence muscle:

  1. All your friends are wearing polyester leisure suits. You, however, are more of a unitard and ankle warmer kind of person. Choosing to don less funky vestments, despite the fact that everyone else has boogie fever, could be a great way of exercising that self-confidence muscle.

    Contrariwise, perhaps staying in your comfort zone all the time might not be a benefit to your confidence. Maybe polyester leisure suits are the way to go… maybe add a huge gold medallion necklace and get a Jheri Curl? Own it you gorgeous disco queen! Just be sure your inward adornment is gentle and quiet even if you are wearing loud pants.

  2. One who never takes responsibility for their mistakes makes others want to bap you with their claws. The cat already disrespects you enough as it is. Be brave, own up to your smells and the consequences. Your confidence will thank you. Your cat will hork a hairball next to your bed by way of gratitude.

  3. Don’t toot your own horn. People love having their horn tooted by someone else but usually hold others in contempt for frequently tooting their own. Just leave your horn alone, please! And when someone does toot your horn for you just say thank you and maybe curtsy a bit.

  4. Projecting a friendly and gentle countenance while interacting with people will speak volumes over mere eye contact. Too often, motivated go-getters hear the importance of eye contact and adopt a soul-piercing gaze that not only makes others intensely uncomfortable but compels them to protect their jugular. Just be friendly and human! Don’t exsanguinate people!

  5. Ask questions! There are no stupid questions and if someone is making you feel stupid for asking stupid questions tell them they’re stupid for making people feel stupid. Okay maybe don’t call them stupid per sé, but definitely imply as much indirectly. Okay, don’t do that either. When you can confidently answer other people’s stupid questions without making them feel stupid, congratulations, you’re confident and you have people’s confidence and you’re strengthening your self-confidence… confidently.

Self-confidence, when done right can be infectious, but don’t worry about covering your mouth when you have this affliction. Give it to everyone you know just like chicken pox! 

Remember: You are Loved. So Love yourself. And then Love others as you Love yourself. You have nothing to fear and shall walk confidently through a dark world spreading His light by making peace with all you encounter. Meekness is not submission. It’s powerful.

Proverbs 3:26
For the Lord will be your confidence, and will keep your foot from being caught.


About the Author

Christopher has worked as a children’s pastor and youth leader for several years and has published countless humor articles under the pseudonym Professor Popinjay. He studied biblical history and child psychology through Burean University and various other educational institutions. He enjoys writing, art, and the history of invention. He lives with his amazing wife Jessie and their six bizarre children, one of whom is a cat..

In Chris Carter Tags Self-Confidence
Comment

Joyous Lament | The Beauty of Loss

Professor Popinjay/Chris Carter September 15, 2023

There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens: A time to be born and a time to die, a time to plant and a time to uproot, a time to kill and a time to heal, a time to tear down and a time to build, a time to weep and a time to laugh, a time to mourn and a time to dance…

When the topic of lament came up as a possible theme for these blogs, my mind immediately went to this Ecclesiastes verse. There is a time for everything… even sadness. Then in 1 Corinthians 6:12, it says "All things are permissible for me" but not all things are helpful. "All things are permissible for me," but I will not be enslaved by anything.

Mark Twain said, "As an example to others, and not that I care for moderation myself, it has always been my rule never to smoke when asleep, and never to refrain while awake. I never smoke more than one cigar at a time"

Obviously moderation can be subjective, although Twain might be proof we're not always the best judge of what moderation means for ourselves. If there is a time for everything, some questions arise: When is it the right time for what? How long shall we go on in any of these activities? When is it time to change from one thing to another? How many cigars SHOULD we smoke at once?

I first consider guilt. Guilt is evidence of our conscience or the Spirit speaking to us but it can also be used by the enemy to prevent us from personal growth and positive influence. Hopefully guilt brings us to make good decisions for ourselves and be rid of what brought us guilt before we are in real trouble. But if guilt persists long after we are redeemed it becomes shame and shame can become debilitating to us. The fear of God is the BEGINNING of wisdom but God's Love cast out all fear. We should not remain in guilt indefinitely.

Likewise, we mourn the passing of loved ones but to remain in mourning forever is something even our passed loved ones would not wish on us. There was a time for mourning. That time passes. The time to move on arrives.

We can lament different kinds of things. We can lament our actions. We can lament certain happenings in the world. We can lament the loss of something dear to us. We can lament the loss of a relationship. This lament I know all too well.

I had spent twenty years lamenting the loss of a relationship. In my grief and anger I sought to change myself into something more befitting to what that relationship required despite the impossibility of mending it. I began to read more. I began to think about things differently. The changes I made were beneficial to me. But my motivation for making these changes was unhealthy and it was eating away at me.

More accurately I learned it was not the lament of loss that was continuing to affect me but rather a hatred of myself, or who I used to be. How could I have been so foolish to have lost something so dear to me? But hate benefits no one.

A counselor advised I need to have compassion for that twenty year old version of myself whom I came to despise so much. I knew this was a way of saying I need to forgive myself. But I should have known better back then, right? I held myself to such a high standard! And the disgust I had for that twenty year old me was what turned me into something I rather liked now… or had it? Perhaps in all ways but one. I needed to let go of that grief and hatred of myself to truly be free. I knew in the present I was still tormenting myself. The time to move on was long overdue.

It took much retrospection to realize that what I endured, the changes I had put myself through, and who I am now had been directed by God from the start. The relationship I had lost was not good for me then, and it would have only become worse if allowed to continue. The lifestyle changes, despite being improperly motivated at the time, prepared me not for fixing the past but for facing the future. And now I find myself aptly placed and prepared to love the people around me in the ways they need. I find myself blessed beyond anything that past life would have been able to yield had I stayed that course. This all starts with moving on and being able to love myself.

Yes, the twenty year old me was ignorant and foolish. But we all were at some point. The process of every activity under heaven, for which there is a time, are the processes of learning and growth. We cannot remain stagnant or "be enslaved" at any point in the process or we begin to die or neglect those in our charge, be they family or acquaintance. Growth moves forward and blossoms and multiplies.

As the Master sculpts you, do not lament for long the loss of the bits and pieces that are gradually chipped away. What remains becomes more and more beautiful with every bit removed.


About the Author

Christopher has worked as a children’s pastor and youth leader for several years and has published countless humor articles under the pseudonym Professor Popinjay. He studied biblical history and child psychology through Burean University and various other educational institutions. He enjoys writing, art, and the history of invention. He lives with his amazing wife Jessie and their six bizarre children, one of whom is a cat..

In Chris Carter Tags Lament, Loss, Growth, joyous Lament
Comment

The Joy of Being Human | Have You Ever Had to Make Up Your Mind?

Professor Popinjay/Chris Carter July 14, 2023

To help me verbally process some thoughts, a counselor suggested I utilize an app that simulated conversation known as a chat bot.

The program was effective and amazingly it really seemed like I was talking to an actual person! It didn’t take long for the illusion to unravel though. It wasn’t genuinely reciprocating, it was just programmed to be agreeable. It was a useful tool but it hardly sufficed for a stimulating conversation.

I used to ask my Dad why God didn't just make people love Him. “Because God doesn’t want to be loved by a bunch of robots” was my dad’s pithy response.

Another question I asked was “where did God come from?” Again my dad’s reply was simple but true. “He’s just always been.” I pondered these notions well into adulthood and it led me to great thinkers such as Descartes and Einstein. One considered the attributes of God and man in a very logical way and the other looked at the attributes of eternity in a mathematical way. I hope you will permit me to delve into the metaphysical for just a moment so that I may explain where my Joy in my own humanity originates.

The opposite of Eternity is nothing. As we are able to perceive the order of matter around us, our limitations, and our existence as we pass through time, it naturally follows that something has to exist unbound by limitations, timeless, and omniscient. Perfect wisdom implies perfect love. And love is not self-seeking. Love must manifest and be expressed. In this we find our existence and with it we are given the most wonderful and terrible tool; the reason I find my deepest sorrow intertwined with my greatest joy in my humanity.

With the gift of our free will, through one arrogant act, we brought sin and death into this world! How can it even be called a gift? We abused the privilege afforded by this gift and have used it to separate ourselves from God’s perfect holiness. How could an omniscient perfectly wise God trust us with such a destructive tool?

In Noah’s time our evil choices had grieved God. It’s written in Jeremiah’s time that we created forms of evil that had not even entered God’s mind. We truly are free to make terrible choices and to inflict the results of those choices on ourselves and each other, in full spite of the consequences both eternal and temporal.

But as with all tools, our free will can be used to create as well as destroy.

It's said if you can think three moves ahead in the game of chess you are a very good chess player. Chess champions have claimed to think as far as five moves ahead. Suppose you could think an infinite number of moves ahead and had an infinite amount of time to deliberate. Would you ever make a mistake again?

In the film Groundhog’s Day, Bill Murray is forced to relive the same day over and over again. For a while, he manipulates the various events of that day to his own selfish ends. He begins to realize however that these selfish endeavors are unfulfilling and would always end in complete disaster. Eventually he begins to manipulate the events of the day to work out to the betterment of everyone around him.

What action by Timeless Omniscient God could be more selfless and perfect than creating life and granting it the ability to ultimately reject him?

He knew all too well we would! He knew all too well the pain He would have to endure to reconcile us to Him and yet He created us anyway! Our very existence has come out of sacrificial Love, our ability to choose was given to us out of sacrificial Love, and it’s God’s sacrificial Love that finally enables reconnection with Him.

And beautifully still left in our hands is choice.

We’re not preprogrammed chatbots designed to be agreeable. When we choose to love, when we choose to turn to God, it is real. Free will is the ability to love with real love. We may not be able to bring things into existence and breathe life into them but we have been given the ability to manifest real love!

But what of the results of our terrible choices? What of the sin and death we have filled this world with?

In order for our free will to work, it is dependent on our limitations including our brief trek through time. We do not think an infinite number of moves ahead. Of course the choice to accept God’s gift of His sacrifice is before us from day one and those who can “believe without seeing” are blessed but most of us must learn the hard way. Thankfully God is not a helicopter parent protecting us from everything as we galavant blissfully unaware of the perils around us. We are allowed to see and feel the effects of sin and death. We are invited not simply to believe but to gradually know and understand God’s gift. Would this knowledge be as meaningful if it was preprogrammed into us? So our choice to accept God’s sacrificial Love is not only real, but understood better and better by us over time.

And when His Love is accepted, the dark colors of our selfish choices will each be used as a brush stroke to bring out His Light in the Masterpiece that is each and everyone of us. No longer do they tarnish as a stain or mark against us. Rather every tragedy, every sin, every harsh word, every sorrow is the beginning of another story of His victory in us. While we must each in our own time endure the sin and death of this world until all time ends, rejoice, for Eternal God who exists beyond time has already conquered sin and death and said with finality “It is finished!”

By my choice I have permeated myself with sin. I have willfully brought death upon myself. I have involuntarily suffered crippling tragedy by time and chance. I have been blessed beyond my imagination.

The ultimate Joy I derive from my humanity?

My God-given ability, in spite of all my failures and tragedies and fortunes, to choose His Love… and to understand very well why I make that choice.


About the Author

Christopher has worked as a children’s pastor and youth leader for several years and has published countless humor articles under the pseudonym Professor Popinjay. He studied biblical history and child psychology through Burean University and various other educational institutions. He enjoys writing, art, and the history of invention. He lives with his amazing wife Jessie and their six bizarre children, one of whom is a cat..

In Chris Carter Tags The Joy of Being Human, Make Up Your Mind, Free Will, Choices, HIs Love
Comment

In His Image | Who Do You Say That I Am?

Professor Popinjay/Chris Carter May 26, 2023

If a person in Pittsburg proclaims themself a pirate, it’s generally understood that they are a baseball fan. However, should they announce this association while traveling outside Pennsylvania, there’s bound to be someone in the group who wonders why this person pilfers cruise ships on the weekend.

Normally, labeling can be a very helpful way of keeping things organized. Everything in its place and easy to find. It seems a natural habit to want to put people (ourselves included) into organized, easy to define slots. We adopt labels for ourselves. We apply labels to others. But a person is not so easily defined. And definitions are often multitudinous in their variety. 

With two middle schoolers in my house, the subject of self-identification has been prevalent both directly and subconsciously. The matter of who they are is at once consuming and confusing. Throughout my life I’ve witnessed people drastically change their style of dress, their musical tastes, and who they hang out with all in an attempt to mark themselves as unique individuals and at the same time associate themselves with something recognizable. For many businesses, a distinguished and eye-catching brand is important to stay relevant in the consumers’ minds. Just as important is whether or not the company’s standards are congruent with the public’s view of that brand. Who we wish to be and how we are viewed by others can be two very different things.

The title of “Christian” has meant many things to different cultures throughout several generations since its inception. Many have donned the title “Christian” with the belief that with it would come an immediate understanding of who they were, what their beliefs were, or perhaps why they might be abstaining from some kind of indulgence. Instead of understanding, however, confusion often prevails as the term “Christian” is incorrectly interpreted and in some cases even incorrectly applied.

Due to the misconduct of some who have called themselves Christian, or even due to propaganda put forth by organizations wishing to hurt the name of Christ for their own ends, onlookers may have a very negative view of what a Christian is and they may assume a person happily calling themselves Christian may also happily embody those negative aspects.

A missionary I was once listening to explained that influential powers in the country to which he was ministering had manipulated the people to associate the term “Christian” with the most vile and unmentionable acts. The missionary went on to explain they do not call themselves Christians in that country because the people are completely opposed to interacting with them. Knowing this, the missionaries instead refer to themselves as “followers of Christ” and with that small change the people are often open to learning that a Christian is not at all what they've been led to believe.

Our differing definitions of labels can also be a two-edged sword. Even as Christians, we can apply labels that sadly may inspire us to write certain people off as “Unsavable” or “Unloveable.” Assigning people into these “convenient” slots can be very damaging to all parties involved.

In the Bible, Saul might have been considered “Unsavable” or “Unlovable” by the early Christians, as he persecuted them in violent and deadly ways. It’s an understatement to say Saul’s view of Christians in his time did not coincide with how they would’ve liked to be regarded. Miraculously, Saul’s perspective changed through direct divine intervention and with that change in perspective came a completely new identity (even a change in name) that would be undeniably evident to all who had once known him as Saul. Here God's intervention drastically redefined everyone's definition of the labels adopted and applied.

Does God regard our titles we have applied to ourselves or others?

Some people with great titles once brought a woman before Jesus. These people had a very accusatory label for her indeed. We don't know what Jesus began to write in the sand but we know all too well what Jesus said to these greatly titled men. 

“Let he who is without sin cast the first stone.”

One by one these “prestigious” men walked away from Jesus.

“Where are your accusers?” Jesus asked the woman. “Does no one condemn you?”

“No, my Lord, they have gone.” The woman replied.

“Neither do I condemn you. Go and sin no more.”

Ironically the only person there without sin was not there to throw stones. It might be strange to point this out but even though Jesus rebuked these accusers, he didn't throw stones at them either!

Acts 10:34-35 says “…God shows no partiality.” In the story we see Jesus unaffected by the pharisees’ prestige. He is unaffected by the label they are applying to the woman. He loves all parties involved in this situation regardless of their earthly labels. Instead Jesus was looking at their hearts as it says in 1Samuel 16:7

“…People judge by outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart.”

1 Peter 3:3-4 says “Let [your adornment] be the hidden person of the heart, with the incorruptible beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which is very precious in the sight of God.”

In Matthew 7:16 Jesus warns the disciples about false prophets saying “...So then, you will know them by their fruits.” Obviously not everyone you meet has titled themselves a prophet but I beg the question: What was the fruit these religious leaders were producing in the accusation of the woman they brought before Jesus? It was certainly not a loving fruit. But when the only person there with the right and authority to not only accuse but judge and condemn, does none of these things but instead forgives and wipes the slate clean, that is a most amazing product of love! He didn't regard the woman as a harlot, as she had been labeled. He saw her heart and gave her a label far greater than the one her accusers had applied.

When God looks at our hearts what is He seeing? Matthew 6:21 says “For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” What is it you treasure? What fruit do you produce that is seen by those around you? Does that fruit concur with or contradict the misconceptions the world may have about the label you’ve adopted? Likewise, do the labels we apply to others help or inhibit the extension of God’s love through us to people He so values?

Perhaps, when it comes to people, the only truly useful label by which we should define ourselves and others is God’s only label for us. It’s the same label for Saul who persecuted Christians. It’s the same label for the woman thrown at Jesus in disgrace. It’s the same label for the Pharisees who brought her there. It’s the same label for you and everyone you meet:

So Loved.


About the Author

Christopher has worked as a children’s pastor and youth leader for several years and has published countless humor articles under the pseudonym Professor Popinjay. He studied biblical history and child psychology through Burean University and various other educational institutions. He enjoys writing, art, and the history of invention. He lives with his amazing wife Jessie and their six bizarre children, one of whom is a cat..

In Chris Carter Tags In His Image, Identity, Labels, Loved, Christian
Comment

Sidebar Title (H3)

Morbi leo risus, porta ac consectetur ac, vestibulum at eros. Curabitur blandit tempus porttitor. Curabitur blandit tempus porttitor. Vestibulum id ligula porta felis euismod semper. Vivamus sagittis lacus vel augue laoreet rutrum faucibus dolor auctor. Fusce dapibus, tellus ac cursus commodo, tortor mauris condimentum nibh, ut fermentum massa justo sit amet risus.

*This sidebar is displayed on all blog pages. It will render on both the list and item views of each blog you create.

email facebook-unauth
  • Home
  • Directions
  • Sermon Library
  • Give
  • Volunteer Interest Form

CitySalt  | PO Box 40757 Eugene OR 97404 | (541) 632-4182 | info@citysalt.org

Copyright 2023, all rights reserved.

CitySalt Church

Celebrate Goodness

CitySalt Church | 661 East 19th Avenue, Eugene, OR, 97402, United States

email facebook-unauth