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Overboard Blog

Living the extraordinary life of faith!

Filtering by Tag: blog

300

joeacast

Thank you. 300 times, thank you! Thank you for your amazing support.

Thank you for friendships.

Thank you for your encouragement and willingness to walk this Overboard journey with me and my family.

Thank you for reading this blog.

In fact, 300 times you’ve come to this blog and dialed up the words and challenges put on my heart by God and His Word. Thank you for following, reading, commenting, correcting my lousy grammar and encouraging me along the way. Most of all, thank you for growing with me as Overboard Ministries is becoming a movement of people eager to live their God-designed lives of faith, out of the comfort of the boat and out on the water where Jesus is building His Kingdom.

Over 50,000 times this blog has been read by people from 75 different countries. (I know, small potatoes for some of you bloggers, but for this boy, I’m blown away by what God has done!) 12 books have been released, with several more scheduled before year’s end. We have dozens of financial partners supporting our work each month, and nearly 100 people who pray for us regularly. The list goes on and on, and all I can say is “Thank you!”

I am humbled and grateful and can’t wait to see what God does in the next 300 blog posts.

As a way of remember the path we've traveled, here is one of my favorite blog posts (definitely t0p-5 out of 300!), dating pack to April of 2013. This was blog #102 (198 posts ago!). Enjoy.

Joe Castaneda

-----

Every time I watch a movie, read a story or see something about Dick and Rick Hoyt, I usually end up wiping tears from eyes. Over 950 times Dick has pushed his son Ricky in a wheel chair or pedaled him on a bike or pulled him in a canoe across race finish lines all over the U.S. Every time I think of this duo, I am reminded of what the power of a father’s love can do.

Rick Hoyt is severely disabled. And when doctors told the family to just “put him away” because he would never be more than a vegetable, the Hoyt family decided to take him home and prove doctors wrong. Take ten minutes to watch this special piece on Team Hoyt as they tell their amazing story:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=36fjVFHNU48

My favorite part of the video is when Dick says, “He’s competing. I just give him my arms and legs, but he’s competing.” I am so moved by that father’s love and I am so reminded of the love of my own Heavenly Father in the same way.

I’ve often heard people use the phrase, “we are the hands and feet of Jesus” -- and in one sense it is very true. We represent Jesus in this world, and the way we walk and serve will be the best (or sometimes worst) representation of Jesus some people will ever see.

But in another very real sense, we are all like Ricky Hoyt. “Powerless” on our own, but with God as our hands and feet, we are able to compete in this life. We are able to put aside our own selfish ambition and vain conceit, we are able to serve others as we have been served, we are able to love as God loved and we are able to run our race because of God’s power in us. We aren’t gods; we are God’s.

At the end of his life, the Apostle Paul told Timothy, “I have the run the race” and he was ready to receive his reward. How did Paul run? He ran as man pushed by God. He didn’t run on his own strength, He ran with God’s! In 2 Corinthians 11:23-29, Paul lists out the trials he worked through in his life while serving God. Then, in chapter 12, he discusses a “thorn in flesh” -- some sort of extreme suffering that kept him dependent on God. And at the end of this recounting of all of his hardships Paul says this, “Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me” (2 Corinthians 12:9).

Paul was just admitting that he was like Ricky Hoyt. No mistaking it -- Paul was competing. But he was competing with the power of God’s arms and God’s legs, so that using God’s strength, God would be glorified in Paul’s life.

You can’t live Overboard in your own strength for very long. Let God give you the power you need to press on so, like Paul, you too can finish your race!

Go ahead and take the plunge, life is always better on the water!

365 days of grateful

joeacast

This is day 3 of the Thanksgiving Blog-hop, with 7 of my blogging friends writing Thanksgiving posts, over 7 days. Today's blog comes from my friend Bev. I have a long history with Bev, including cutting my youth pastor teeth with her son, Jason, when he was in Junior High and I was barely old enough to drive. I loved those days of working with him, taking him out for Road Runner burgers (anyone in Salem remember that place?!?!) and learning how to engage youth while building genuine friendships. I'll never forget the morning that he passed away, as I was on my morning run and saw the ambulance outside the house he was living at (with some other buddies of his). I stopped in to see what was going on and I learned that Jason had died. I was sick to the core at the loss of such a great young man, but even more, I ached for Bev and her family.

Bev's journey through that loss has been incredible, and I encourage you to read her blog today, and then sign up to follow her in the future. Her grace, artistry and cleverness will keep you coming back for more content! Happy Thanksgiving, and stay tuned as we have four more days of Thanksgiving blogs! (I'm up for tomorrow).

My friend and former college roommate, Terry Porter, wrote yesterday's post. If you missed that click here: http://notthefakeptp.com/2014/11/thanksgiving-gratitude/

And my favorite blogger, Traci, posted one on Friday that got everything started. Click here if you want to read hers: http://tracicast.wordpress.com/2014/11/21/gratitude-production-101/

101 times you're read this blog...

joeacast

Monday passed by a little unceremoniously, but that blog was number 100 for Overboard Ministries. THANK YOU for reading and supporting this blog, and this ministry. Your encouragement, thoughtful comments and humorous little insights have kept me writing and have helped others try to live the Overboard Life. Looking back over the past 100 posts, here are the top 10, based on the number of readers and the number of comments. Click on your favorite ones, or read one you may have missed. Thanks for helping keep this blog going!

Big Changes: After we made the painful decision to leave our friends and family at Bethany, I wrote this blog explaining why we were moving.

Political prediction: This was our #2 post for views and #1 for comments. Probably because I nailed it perfectly!

How many body parts can you donate: Thoughts from my wife’s incredibly selfless act of donating a kidney.

A little perspective please: Lessons learned from a 3-week stint without internet (gasp!)

I believed Lance: Thoughts after Lance Armstrong revealed his drug use. 2nd most commented blog on our site.

Lessons from the road: Reflections on our road trip from Oregon to Michigan.

Newtown on my heart: Makes me sad reading this again, thinking of the tragedy that rocked our nation in Newton Conn.

Overboard Blogtionary: Yes…the Overboard Blogtionary makes the top 10 most viewed. Not sure if that’s a poor reflection on you or me =)

An open letter: This is the blog we posted after we left Salem and arrived here in Michigan.

100 days without fast-food: Apparently y’all like to read about my sufferings!

Thank you for being so gracious with your support, and so faithful with your reading. I pray that as we grow (by the way…we’re working on some fun stuff for the near future!), we will continue to walk together in living life Overboard! Trusting God to help make the next 100 better than the last.

Go ahead and take the plunge, life is always better on the water.

p.s. Ok, here's a freebie. This has always been one of my favorite posts, despite the fact it didn't get read much. I'm good with that =)

2012 was awesome. THANK YOU for reading!

joeacast

The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2012 annual report for this blog.

Here's an excerpt:

600 people reached the top of Mt. Everest in 2012. This blog got about 2,800 views in 2012. If every person who reached the top of Mt. Everest viewed this blog, it would have taken 5 years to get that many views.

Click here to see the complete report.