Our friend Geoff Chang who has spoken here at CTPC numerous times, is part of a ministry dedicated to building healthy Asian American churches called Project Antioch. Recently, they held a preconference at Together for the Gospel featuring Dr. Jeff Jue, professor at Westminster Theological Seminary. He spoke on the topic, “The Unadjusted Gospel and the Asian American Church”. Enjoy.
Archive for April, 2010
Ten big ideas from TED – CNN.com
Thursday, April 22nd, 2010
$60K a year can make you happy
Psychologist and Nobel Laureate Daniel Kahneman says millions of dollars won’t buy you happiness, but a job that pays $60,000 a year might help.
Happiness levels increase up to the $60K mark, but “above that it’s a flat line,” he said.
“Money does not buy you experiential happiness but lack of money certainly buys you misery,” he said. But the real trick, Kahneman said, is to spend time with people you like.
DC Metro Area – happiest city on the East Coast?
Thursday, April 22nd, 2010
“Most of our highest-scoring cities are found out West and most of our lowest-scoring cities are in the South,” says research director Dan Witters. Wealthier communities typically score higher.
Residents of large cities — those with a population of 1 million or more — generally report higher levels of well-being and more optimism about the future than those in small or medium-sized cities. In small cities, at 250,000 or less, people are more likely to feel safe walking alone at night and have enough money for housing.
The study provides a city-by-city portrait of the nation’s mood and a potential tool for policymakers.
Nine of the 10 cities that fare best on “life evaluation,” assessments of life now and expectations in five years, boast a major university, a big military installation or a state Capitol — institutions that presumably provide some insulation from recession.
Overall, the top 10 cities include four in California, two in Utah and one each in Colorado and Hawaii. Of them, only the Holland, Mich., and Washington, D.C., metro areas are located in the Eastern or Central time zones.
imagine what our ranking would be if traffic wasn’t so bad…
Austin Washington Raleigh And Boston = Best Cities For Young Americans
Thursday, April 22nd, 2010
Here’s a quick look at the very best places—the top-10 metros for young adults.
1. Austin: Its attractiveness to young adults is broadly based, and it ranks among the 10 leading markets in five of the categories that were analyzed. This isn’t the first time Austin takes top honors in a Portfolio.com/bizjournals analysis. Earlier this year, the city was named the best city in which to launch a small business.
2. Washington: Educated young adults flock to the nation’s capital, where 35.8 percent of all 18-to-34-year-olds hold bachelor’s degrees. The study group’s median is 23.2 percent. Per capita income ($56,510) is well above average.
3. Raleigh: This is the fastest-growing major metro in the nation. The population of the Raleigh area is increasing by 3.9 percent per year. That’s more than triple the pace for the typical market, 1.2 percent. Another North Carolina metro, Charlotte, placed at 28 in the rankings.
4. Boston: Elite universities such as Harvard and MIT give Boston its intellectual cachet. The local share of young adults with college degrees (37.6 percent) is the highest in the country.


