Five Months Later

I began this blog five months ago. I wanted to get myself in the habit of writing daily, so I posted every day for the first two months. That got me in the habit. Then I went to posting six days a week, taking Sundays off. Now I am going to take Saturday off as well. I am a horrible editor, and I think maybe I am trying to crank out too much too quickly. So, I will slow it down and push for better quality.

The problem is that there is much to write! I still have more to post about the clergy/laity stuff. I want to do a long series of posts on Kenneth Bailey’s work. I expect to do a lengthy series examining biblically the role of women in the home and the church. I have a whole bunch more to write on faith and economics. Starting Monday, I will begin some posts about social trends. I am loosely looking back to William J. “foot-in-my-mouth” Bennett’s The Index of Leading Cultural Indicators, published in 1994. I am not updating every item he uses, and I am adding a couple of my own. I think you will find some of the statistics very interesting.

Anyway, thanks to those of you who keep coming back. I wasn’t sure if I would like this blogging thing, but I think I’m hooked. I look forward to more conversations ahead.


Comments

4 responses to “Five Months Later”

  1. Keep them coming! I’m reading!

  2. Forget editing, you’ve got a better track on this than I do. Instead of deciding to discipline myself to write every day (or every other day) I dedided to “work up” from something like once a week or so — and haven’t even done that! If the habit’s there, go with it — and we wont wory abot edeting as we read!
    RPS

  3. Thanks Sherman and Rodger for your encouragement. And to any others out there who suffer my affliction, all I can say is…
    Misspellers of the World …Untie!

  4. Glad to see that your blog experiment has been successful. You are one of my daily reads.
    I started my blog in August and have been amazed how easy it is to keep it going on a daily (almost) basis.

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Kruse Kronicle

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading