Four 2009 Sermons Available for Listening
One of my New Year’s resolutions was to preach more extemporaneously, so I haven’t had sermon manuscripts to post here on the site. Nevertheless, sermons are being prepared and preached! St. John’s has been recording many of its services, and I’ve begun to extract the sermon audio from these recordings. Here are the “back issues” of sermon audio from the past several months.
New Website Template Launched
I’m happy to report that I just launched a redesign of my personal blog and namesite, TedCarnahan.com. It’s still got some rough edges, and I’ve got some cleaning up to do, but I’m really happy with the overall look and feel of it. It took about 12 hours of work (mostly nights when the family was asleep) to put it together over the past week or ten days.
Yahoo called
Apparently while I was out on an errand during our move today, Yahoo called about my blog. This is either a sign that I’ve caught someone’s attention, or much more likely, that Yahoo’s automated phone number scraping has gotten better.
End of the Semester
Whew! Another semester ends, and I am now halfway through my seminary education at Wartburg. No breather for me, though, as I’ve got a number of big projects and travel plans that are going to happen in the next several weeks.
- Websites – I’m currently working with a task force of members of our congregation here in Dubuque to relaunch LordOfLifeDBQ.org, the congregational website. The prototype is built on WordPress and is up and available here, but doesn’t have all the content loaded in it yet. The theme is just temporary too – a talented designer at our congregation is working up a custom template for us to use. We’re also working to get content written for MovingToDubuque.org, a site designed to help IBM employees and others moving to the Dubuque area get settled in. (I’ve also got a super-secret project in the works, but if I told you what it is, I’d have to kill you.)
- Websites, ugly and less-ugly – Work continues on my study of congregational websites in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and their connection to demographic trends in those congregations. Hopefully results will be available in a few weeks.
- Hardware hackery – I just bought a Asus WL-500G Premium wireless router and a nice 640G Hitachi USB hard drive enclosure to build a cheap combination-embedded-BackupPC-FileServer-Wireless-router for church.
- Musicality – This semester I wrote a setting for Morning Prayer for Loehe Chapel at Wartburg Seminary called “Morning Light.” Now I’m working on scoring it and will soon be releasing it under a Creative Commons license. I’ve been especially thankful for the positive reception the Benediction and Sending piece from that liturgy has received – several classmates want to use it in ordination services this summer, and it may also be used at a wedding! Of course I’m geeking out as I do this, so I’m doing the typesetting in LilyPond and constructing a full-fledged musical build system in Apache Ant.
- Computers for Africa – Via one of our international students, I’ve been put in contact with a university in Africa that could use some second-hand computers loaded up with Linux and shipped out there. I am not sure whether this will come through or not, but it’s on the radar.
- Family Roots – My great-grandfather (via my paternal grandmother) Otto E. Matuschka was a Lutheran pastor in Missouri, Nebraska, and Kansas from about the year 1900 on. I’ve embarked on a project to find out more about him, and via his alma mater, Concordia Seminary in St. Louis and its Concordia Historical Institute, I’ve located some records. I’m looking forward to going down to St. Louis in June and doing some more research in their archives. According to one of their archivist, other family members were pastors too – who knew? Fun fact: my classmate’s husband served the same congregation in Nebraska that Great-Grandfather Matuschka served almost 85 years prior. It’s a small Lutheran world…
- The Great Missouri Trip – Our occasion for visiting St. Louis is a trip to St. Louis, Kansas City, and Columbia that will have me preaching at Good Shepherd, Manchester, MO on June 7th, visiting in St. Louis through the 10th, then traveling to Kansas City to visit family until the 13th, when we return to Columbia so I can preach at St. Andrew’s, Columbia, MO on June 13th and 14th. I guess I better get started on writing some sermons…
- Paint Chips – My classmates just discovered that their little girl has elevated levels of lead. We live in the same kind of housing they do, so we’re obviously also concerned. I’ll be looking into what kind of lead exposure testing might be necessary for Anneliese, Jennifer and I in the next few days.
- Leavin’ on a… Budget Truck? – Soon we’ll be
wingingdriving our way to St. John’s Lutheran Church in Sterling, IL, where I’ll be doing my year-long pastoral internship / vicarage under the supervision of Pr. Mark Oehlert. It’s going to be a busy summer, but an exciting one as we accomplish a lot of interesting tasks and get ready for a year of Something Completely Different. Pray for us! - And much much more! – Somewhere in here I might also send out some (painfully late) birth announcements, help edit the second edition of a book, and work half-time on some cool performance-related projects for IdeaWorks. Busy? Who, me?
Does your website sell Viagra too?
I decided to upgrade my WordPress installation on this website tonight. I wanted to take advantage of tags, faster code, and the new administrative backend available in WordPress 2.6. Everything went fairly smoothly (except that my category names weren’t migrated, but I didn’t care because I was changing to tags) and I was pretty satisfied, but something was still amiss. My search engine rankings had been dropping for several months, but I had shrugged it off.
If your search engine rankings start dropping, something is wrong. Don’t stop looking until you find out what.
I wish I had taken that simple advice months ago. When I went to “View Source” in Firefox, I discovered that someone had hacked my WordPress installation and changed my template to include thousands of hidden spammy links. Not only did that inflate the page size, but it destroyed my credibility in the eyes of Google, etc.
Here’s hoping that the search engines will once again recognize my brilliance (cough, cough) so that my ranks rise again soon.


