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  • Michael Duduit
    July 2007
    There’s a new television program designed to make you feel dumber than you already felt. And as if that wasn’t bad...
  • Michael Duduit
    May 2007
    Wouldn’t it be helpful if airlines were more like churches, each with its own distinctive characteristics?
  • Michael Duduit
    March 2007
    It’s been almost seven years now since my wife and I faced the big decision: what to name our new baby. Our first son —...
  • Michael Duduit
    January 2007
    A federal judge recently ruled that the
  • Michael Duduit
    November 2006
    There are some folks who always have to have the last word in a conversation. Then again, when someone is on his or her deathbed,...
  • Michael Duduit
    September 2006
    I received a couple of emails about Mars coming amazingly close to earth on August 27. Maybe you got the same email, which begins...
  • Michael Duduit
    July 2006
    Now that American Idol has picked its silver-haired hero and started a national tour, the Fox network has to fill those lonely broadcast...
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Now if only a computer could write my sermon on Saturday...
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Now if only a computer could write my sermon on Saturday night ...
By Michael Duduit
Isn't technology something?

The other day I flew into Baltimore-Washington International Airport, where a friend picked me up. As we walked through the parking garage toward his car, I noticed a terrific use of technology. Above all the parking spaces are sensors which determine if the space is occupied by a vehicle. At the end of each row is a sign which displays the number, if any, of empty parking places in that row. So instead of having to drive up and down row after row of parked cars looking for a space (as at the Memphis Less-Than-International Airport), you can know immediately if there's a space available down that row.

Now that's the kind of technological innovation that makes life easier. If only there were more such applications.
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For example, couldn't that BWI parking garage technology be applied in a local congregation? We could install pressure-sensitive sensors in every pew to determine if a space is filled. Even from the back of the sanctuary, ushers could check an electronic monitor to see where there was space available for late arrivers.

Better yet, install similar technology in offering plates. When an offering envelope is placed in the plate as it goes by, a lovely melody begins to play (perhaps "Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing"). Likewise, if the plate passes a seat and doesn't detect a gift being placed, a less pleasant tune could be offered (maybe "Repent Thou Sinner Poor and Needy!").

Speaking of sensors: I'd pay big bucks for a technology that would monitor the body language of people in the congregation while I'm preaching. It would tell me if they're sitting up at attention (OK to throw in a few Greek participles) or if they are starting to slump in their seats (time for a sermon illustration from Rocky).

Actually, what I'm really thinking about investing in is one of those Palm Pilot devices -- also known as the $200 substitute for the 99 cent notebook. It's just that a bunch of my friends are using them these days -- carefully using that little stylus to make notes in a unique and challenging shorthand apparently descended from an obscure dialect of the ancient Aztec language -- and I hate to be the last kid in the neighborhood with the latest and coolest toy.

They are called PDA's (personal digital assistant, or particularly destructive approach, whichever you prefer). I've yet to see the preacher daring enough to use one of these PDA's to keep his sermon notes in them, but I suppose it's just a matter of time before some eager young cleric steps into the pulpit, PDA in hand, and begins his sermon:

"Turn in your Bible to Lark ... no, that's Luke IT. No, wait, that was supposed to be a 15. Well, anyway, we are looking this morning at the Proverbial ... no, that's supposed to be Prodigal Son. Oh, never mind. Just pray amongst yourselves while I decipher this ..."

A brave new world may be on the horizon, but I'd be willing to settle for a desktop PC that doesn't crash at the most inconvenient ti-------------------------------------------------------------
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