david henderson

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Imaginary Shirt Design Company

Way, way too often, high school t-shirts are boring. They’re nice enough, but too often they are just products of the school name and colors being slapped on the same old boilerplate templates. Sometimes they are school specific, but they have been updated to death, filtered through brand guidelines and modernized to iron out any weirdness or link to the school’s unique history.

But in the not-too-distant past, there’s a whole world of line drawings, banners, bass drum heads, and uniform script. Things that are a little strange. A little imperfect. Things that set schools off from each other and allow them to be true to their own stories.

This is a project that imagines a world where the time and care can be taken to make things look more interesting. I scour old yearbooks, newspapers, and whatever else I can get my hands on to find historical design elements that I can reincorporate...

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I Lift My Lamp beside the Golden Door!

I was feeling a bit overwhelmed by the new immigration plan backed by the White House today, so I decided to make something. I’m not sure what, if any, good it will do, but sometimes it feels good to do something when you feel powerless.

I went through some of the pictures that I have taken of various places that I’ve been over the past few years, and picked some of my favorites. I then combined them with lines from the Emma Lazarus poem, “The New Colossus,” featured at the Statue of Liberty. There are nine square images and a poster that you can use however you want–post on social media, look at them and enjoy, completely ignore, whatever.

The images are from Acadia National Park, Canaveral National Seashore, the Gateway Arch, Key Biscayne, Fourth of July fireworks in Minneapolis, Niagara Falls, Olympic National Park, Rocky Mountain National Park, and the Statue of Liberty.

Here’s...

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Refugee Facts

Hi, everybody. I would like to let you know some facts about something that I am passionate about. The issue of the refugee crisis has been highlighted by the recent executive orders, but I think that if people had the time to investigate the actual facts, they may come away with a different way of thinking. I know that minds are so rarely changed by these sorts of posts, but I beg you to take a few minutes to read this and consider its implications.

I had the pleasure yesterday to sit with some members of a Sudanese congregation that meets at my church. These men were members of what have been come to be known as the “Lost Boys,” and most of them have been in Jacksonville for at least fifteen years and have established themselves as important members of the community, most working several jobs and going to school. All of the men that I spoke with are now American citizens, and are from...

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1510 Lent

Lent 2008

Ash Wednesday/Lent, David Henderson

Maundy Thursday/Good Friday, Eric Williams

Palm Sunday, Bryan Amerling

The Long Defeat (2010)

The Long Defeat, Bryan Amerling

Moses, David Henderson

Joseph, Bryan Amerling

Job, Mike Edwards

Jesus, David Henderson

Frontiers Everywhere! (2011)

Frontiers Everywhere, Bryan Amerling

Health & Medicine, Jeff Jacqmein

Water, David Henderson

People, David Henderson

Respond, Bryan Amerling

Stories of Resurrection, 1510 Community

Peace, David Henderson

Creation, Lauren Harris

So That We Can Bless Others, Bryan Amerling

Messy Lent (2012)

Beautiful, Messy Lent, Brandy Henderson

Beautiful, Messy Genesis, Melanie Evans

Transient Global Amnesia, David Henderson

He Meets Us in the Mess…Even When It’s Our Fault, Bryan Amerling

Joseph, Who Understood, David Henderson

Life, Death, Tomatoes, and Satan, Bryan Amerling

Please listen and...

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travel gear list

I feel very blessed to be able to do a little bit of traveling every year. Most of my traveling comes as a part of our church’s two-week youth choir tour, which is one of my very favorite things to do. I thought it would be fun to compile (and hopefully update) a list of my favorite travel gear. I’m going to base these recommendations on what I take on the two-week trip, but of course I tweak what I take depending on the trip.

I do realize that it is a luxury to travel at all, and the same can be said for this gear. Most of it is not super expensive, but what is expensive is relative, and there is definitely cheaper stuff. I’m thankful for the chances I have to hit the road, and for the fact that I’ve been able to get this stuff, but you don’t have to have a certain level of gear to travel!

Backpack: North Face Router Daypack (zinc grey heather/asphalt)
North Face Router Backpack, $149

...

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gilead

This morning I have been trying to think about heaven, but without much success. I don’t know why I should expect to have any idea of heaven. I could never have imagined this world if I hadn’t spent almost eight decades walking around in it. People talk about how wonderful the world seems to children, and that’s true enough. But children think they will grow into it and understand it, and I know very well that I will not, and would not if I had a dozen lives. That’s clearer to me every day. Each morning I’m like Adam waking up in Eden, amazed at the cleverness of my hands and at the brilliance pouring into my mind through my eyes–old hands, old eyes, old mind, a very diminished Adam altogether, and still it is just remarkable.

Gilead, Marilynne Robinson

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the year of wonder and amazement

I’ve been trying something out (working on something?) for this year, 2014. If you’ve been around me, you might have heard me talk about it, because I’m sure I’ve been a bit unbearable. I’ve decided that, for me anyone who chooses to join me, 2014 will be The Year of Wonder and Amazement. I recently had the privilege of talking a bit about these ideas to the wonderful and amazing youth group at my church, and I thought I would take a few minutes to use that as a framework to try to explain a bit further what this special year-long observance means to me.

Last year I read several books by a thinker and theologian named Walter Brueggemann. I’ll write a little more about him a bit later, but for now it will suffice to say that one of his ideas is that the way that most of us live is a way that discourages even belief in the possibility of the truly wonderful and amazing. That idea was...

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