Views

Home page

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67,699

Motherhood and Apple Pie

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31,594

Florence Nightingale: Mother of Nursing

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26,395

Queen Victoria and Sir James Simpson

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17,492

Alexander Graham Bell: Inventing the future

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5,324

Thomas Edison: Let There Be Light….

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4,131

Samuel de Champlain and Sieur de Monts: Canadian heroes

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3,820

Laura Secord: more than just chocolates

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3,753

Dr. James Naismith: Father of Basketball

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3,738

My Fair Lady

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2,768

Sir Alexander Fleming: Countless Millions Saved

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2,554

Simon Fraser: Canada’s most successful failure

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2,236

Carl Jung and the Gnostic Reconciliation of Gender Opposites

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2,204

Taekwondo and the Martial Arts: Mere Exercise or Trojan Horse??

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2,044

Louis Riel: Canadian Patriot?

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1,856

Carl Jung, Neo-gnosticism, and the MBTI

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1,573

The Birth of the Book

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1,432

Sir Alexander Mackenzie the Scottish Bulldog

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1,378

Captain James Cook: World Explorer

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1,264

David Thompson: “Star-Gazer”

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1,216

Jesus Loves me, This I know…

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1,179

Dear friends in Christ,

 

Thank you for your regular viewing of this blog over the past two+ years. Just click on the links to view any of the following top 10 articles.  I would welcome your feedback as to why these ten articles have been the most viewed of my 380+ online articles.

Wondering, Ed+

Home page

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78,570

Florence Nightingale: Mother of Nursing

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30,412

Motherhood and Apple Pie

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29,067

Queen Victoria and Sir James Simpson

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18,462

The Unforgettable Benjamin Franklin

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15,838

Winston Churchill the British Bulldog

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9,500

Alexander Graham Bell: Inventing the future

More stats

9,245

Laura Secord: more than just chocolates

More stats

4,785

Jesus Loves me, This I know…

More stats

4,378

Dr. James Naismith: Father of Basketball

More stats

4,289

 

Over 1,100 visitors yesterday

November 16, 2011

 

 

Views

Motherhood and Apple Pie

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351

Home page

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345

Florence Nightingale: Mother of Nursing

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145

Alexander Graham Bell: Inventing the future

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36

Sir Alexander Fleming: Countless Millions Saved

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28

Dr. James Naismith: Father of Basketball

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25

My Fair Lady

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16

Thomas Edison: Let There Be Light….

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15

Simon Fraser: Canada’s most successful failure

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13

The Passion of Louis Riel

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9

Other posts

 

134

Total views of posts on your blog

 

1,117

 

Yesterday was the most traffic on my blog since I started in just over two years. For the first time, over 1,100 people dialed in to read the 383 postings.  Most of these postings are newspaper articles that I have written over the past twenty-five years for the Deep Cove Crier and the North Shore News. During this past month of October, my blog had for the first time over 25,000 visitors. The first month of the blog in August 2009, I had just over 1,000 visitors. So there has been a 25-fold increase in internet traffic to the site.  Thank you so much for your continued interest and support.

 

Also, as of yesterday, the blog has now had 275,000+ visitors.  Here are the favorite articles viewed for the past 30 days.  You can read any of them right now by just clicking on the name of a particular article. Your feedback is most welcome.  Without readers, writing is not quite the same:

Home page

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8,073

Motherhood and Apple Pie

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5,974

Florence Nightingale: Mother of Nursing

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3,602

Alexander Graham Bell: Inventing the future

More stats

773

Thomas Edison: Let There Be Light….

More stats

597

My Fair Lady

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503

Sir Alexander Fleming: Countless Millions Saved

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430

Simon Fraser: Canada’s most successful failure

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393

Queen Victoria and Sir James Simpson

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370

Dr. James Naismith: Father of Basketball

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359

250,000 visitors later

October 16, 2011

As of today, the http://edhird.wordpress.com  blog has had 250,000 visitors in just over two years.  These are the more widely read of the blog articles:

Home page

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63,585

Florence Nightingale: Mother of Nursing

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24,444

Motherhood and Apple Pie

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18,289

Queen Victoria and Sir James Simpson

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17,724

The Unforgettable Benjamin Franklin

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15,781

Winston Churchill the British Bulldog

More stats

9,406

Alexander Graham Bell: Inventing the future

More stats

7,990

Laura Secord: more than just chocolates

More stats

4,460

Jesus Loves me, This I know…

More stats

4,216

Samuel de Champlain and Sieur de Monts: Canadian heroes

More stats

3,682

Dr. James Naismith: Father of Basketball

More stats

3,649

Pain: Useless intrusion or gift of God?

More stats

3,611

Thomas Edison: Let There Be Light….

More stats

3,124

Carl Jung, Neo-gnosticism, and the MBTI

More stats

2,918

Alfred Nobel: Lord of Dynamite, Servant of Peace

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2,863

Sir Alexander Mackenzie the Scottish Bulldog

More stats

2,627

Taekwondo and the Martial Arts: Mere Exercise or Trojan Horse??

More stats

2,045

Simon Fraser: Canada’s most successful failure

More stats

1,978

Louis Riel: Canadian Patriot?

More stats

1,964

Carl Jung and the Gnostic Reconciliation of Gender Opposites

More stats

1,919

Don Quixote: Chasing After Marriage’s Windmills

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1,859

James Watt: Creative Genius

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1,679

Good King Wenceslas last looked out…

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1,660

My Fair Lady

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1,530

The Gift of Courage Can Be Imparted

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1,510

Sir Alexander Fleming: Countless Millions Saved

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1,435

When the Saints Come Marching In

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1,433

The Birth of the Book

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1,395

Captain James Cook: World Explorer

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1,392

Lord and Lady Baden-Powell: Character Builders

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1,200

David Thompson: “Star-Gazer”

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1,088

The Reverend Ed Hird, Rector

St. Simon’s Church North Vancouver

Anglican Mission in the Americas (Canada)

http://stsimonschurch.ca 

-previously published in the North Shore News & the Deep Cove Crier

-award-winning author of the book ‘Battle for the Soul of Canada’

http://www.battleforthesoulofcanada.blogspot.com

p.s. In order to obtain a copy of the book ‘Battle for the Soul of Canada’, please send a $18.50 cheque to ‘Ed Hird’, #1008-555 West 28th Street, North Vancouver, BC V7N 2J7. For mailing the book to the USA, please send $20.00 USD.  This can also be done by PAYPAL using the e-mail ed_hird@telus.net . Be sure to list your mailing address. The Battle for the Soul of Canada e-book can be obtained for $9.99 CDN/USD.

-Click to download a complimentary PDF copy of the Battle for the Soul study guide :  Seeking God’s Solution for a Spirit-Filled Canada 

You can also download the complimentary Leader’s Guide PDF: Battle for the Soul Leaders Guide

200,000 visitors…

July 13, 2011

Within the next 24 or so hours, we will have had 200,000 visitors to this blog (100,000 new visitors since Jan 2011 http://edhird.wordpress.com

 

Through your dialing in today, you will help us reach that number of people .

 

This blog started on August 2009, less than two years ago.  The next goal will be to have a total of 500,000 visitors which we will hopefully see within the next two years.

 

There are now 353 articles on the blog that you can check out. Thanks for your support and interest. The most popular articles are as follows:

Home page

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48,091

Florence Nightingale: Mother of Nursing

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18,844

Queen Victoria and Sir James Simpson

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16,619

The Unforgettable Benjamin Franklin

More stats

15,684

Winston Churchill the British Bulldog

More stats

9,288

Alexander Graham Bell: Inventing the future

More stats

7,216

Motherhood and Apple Pie

More stats

4,939

Laura Secord: more than just chocolates

More stats

4,081

Jesus Loves me, This I know…

More stats

3,851

Pain: Useless intrusion or gift of God?

More stats

3,592

Samuel de Champlain and Sieur de Monts: Canadian heroes

More stats

3,320

Dr. James Naismith: Father of Basketball

More stats

3,058

Alfred Nobel: Lord of Dynamite, Servant of Peace

More stats

2,719

Carl Jung, Neo-gnosticism, and the MBTI

More stats

2,668

Sir Alexander Mackenzie the Scottish Bulldog

More stats

2,545

Louis Riel: Canadian Patriot?

More stats

1,927

Don Quixote: Chasing After Marriage’s Windmills

More stats

1,831

Good King Wenceslas last looked out…

More stats

1,609

Taekwondo and the Martial Arts: Mere Exercise or Trojan Horse??

More stats

1,582

James Watt: Creative Genius

More stats

1,542

The Gift of Courage Can Be Imparted

More stats

1,502

Thomas Edison: Let There Be Light….

More stats

1,463

When the Saints Come Marching In

More stats

1,358

Carl Jung and the Gnostic Reconciliation of Gender Opposites

More stats

1,335

Captain James Cook: World Explorer

More stats

1,257

Sir Alexander Fleming: Countless Millions Saved

More stats

1,216

Lord and Lady Baden-Powell: Character Builders

More stats

1,138

Simon Fraser: Canada’s most successful failure

More stats

1,052

David Thompson: “Star-Gazer”

More stats

1,038

By the Rev. Dr. Ed Hird

Almost every North American has played basketball, even if only shooting a few baskets at the local park.  At my high school ‘Winston Churchill’, we had a passion for basketball. In Grade Eight, my dream was to become a basketball star.  My only limitations were getting the ball in the hoop and the fact that I was only five foot two.  Back then, I had no idea that basketball was invented by James Naismith, a Canadian on loan to the United States.  I was also unaware that basketball had deeply spiritual roots.

Dr. Naismith had a rough life growing up. When he was only eight, his parents died from typhoid fever.  Earlier the family sawmill in Almonte, Ontario, had burned down. After leaving school at age fifteen, James worked for five years as a lumberjack.  During his lumberjack phase, he had a powerful encounter with Jesus Christ which led him to attend McGill University in order to become an ordained minister.   Naismith commented: “Finally I decided that the only real satisfaction that I would ever derive from life was to help my fellow beings….”

Naismith studied so hard at McGill that he neglected regular physical exercise. His friends convinced him that involvement in sports would make him a better student.  He grew to love football, rugby baseball, field hockey, and lacrosse.  Naismith discovered that his passion for sports helped him connect with young people when he shared the gospel with them.  His sister however was deeply disappointed that James chose sports ministry instead of looking after a local congregation. Sadly she never attended any of his later basketball games.

To pursue his sports ministry, James Naismith moved to the International YMCA Training School in Springfield, Massachusetts. The YMCA was a pioneer in the ‘muscular Christianity’ movement, being among the first to integrate prayer and bible study with athletics.  By 1905, almost 50,000 men took part in YMCA college Bible studies, including 1,000 at Yale University.  Naismith greatly admired Coach Stagg who made a point in the dressing room of saying “Let’s ask God’s blessing on our game.”  Naismith noted that Coach Stagg “did not pray for victory but he prayed that each man should do his best and show the true Christian spirit.”

James was asked by another coach Dr Guilick to create an indoor winter game for bored students. Calesthenics, involving sit-ups and marching, was not exciting enough for them.  Alluding to Ecclesiastes, Dr. Guilick had made the statement: “There is nothing new under the sun. All so-called new things are simply recombinations of the factors of things that are now in existence.”  James responded by saying: “All that we have to do is to take the factors of our known games and then recombine them, and we will have the new game we are looking for.” Two weeks later on December 21st 1891, basketball was invented.  The thirteen rules of basketball which James drew up have remained as the foundation of the game.  Drawing on another game called ‘duck on the rock’, Naismith had the students throw soccer balls into baskets.  Initially they used real peach baskets and there were no backboards to bounce off.  James intentionally invented a game that would encourage less violence and more sportsmanship.  By placing the goal way up in a basket, the participants were less likely to harm each other near the goal as in hockey. By not allowing players to run with the ball, he also eliminated the violent tackling found in rugby and football.  Even today basketball has far less group violence than other active sports.

William Baker said that basketball was first spread around the world by believers using the YMCA gospel of godliness and good games.  Canada was the first country outside of the United States to start playing basketball. Ironically because British women were the first to start playing basketball, British men saw it as a women’s game and initially refused to play it.  Basketball did not enjoy instant success at first. But now over 300 million play basketball around the world.

Both Canada and the United States claim James Naismith, with both nations dedicating special postage stamps to his memory. Though Naismith is honoured in eight Canadian and American Halls of Fame, he never profited from his invention of basketball, even losing two houses to foreclosure. Unlike basketball players today, Naismith did not endorse sports equipment, or sell products in ads. In contrast to the twenty-three million dollar top-NBA salaries today, Naismith saw basketball as being for fun, not for profit. James’ stated vision was “to win men for the Master through the gym.”

Naismith was not just the inventor of basketball.  After his brother Robbie died unexpectedly from infection, James decided to also become a medical doctor. As a minister, coach and medical doctor, he was able to minister to the body, mind and spirit.  The Journal of Health and Physical Education eulogized Naismith as “a physician who encouraged healthful living through participation through vigorous activities” and a builder of “character in the hearts of young men.” As one of his students mentioned, “With him, questions of physical development inevitably led to questions of moral development, and vice versa.” Naismith challenged the National Collegiate Athletic Association to “use every means to put basketball (as) a factor in the moulding of character…”

 With good coaching, said Naismith, basketball could produce the following results: “initiative, agility, accuracy, alertness, co-operation, skill, reflex judgement, speed, self-confidence, self-sacrifice, self-control, and sportsmanship.”  James saw self-sacrifice as “a willingness to place the good of the team above one’s personal ambitions”, saying ‘There is no place in basketball for the egotist.’  Sportmanship was described by Naismith as ‘playing the game vigorously, observing the rules definitely, accepting defeat gracefully, and winning courteously.’  In short, James wanted athletes to play by the Golden Rule and to love their neighbour.  May Naismith’s vision continue to inspire our young athletes to greatness and godliness.

 

The Rev. Dr. Ed Hird, Rector, BSW, MDiv, DMin

St. Simon’s Church North Vancouver

Anglican Mission in the Americas (Canada)

http://www.stsimonschurch.ca

-published in the June 2010 Deep Cove Crier

-award-winning author of Battle for the Soul of Canada

http://battleforthesoulofcanada.blogspot.com

p.s. In order to obtain a copy of the book ‘Battle for the Soul of Canada’, please send a $18.50 cheque to ‘Ed Hird’, #1008-555 West 28th Street, North Vancouver, BC V7N 2J7. For mailing the book to the USA, please send $20.00 USD.  This can also be done by PAYPAL using the e-mail ed_hird@telus.net . Be sure to list your mailing address. The Battle for the Soul of Canada e-book can be obtained for $9.99CDN/USD.

-Click to download a complimentary PDF copy of the Battle for the Soul study guide :  Seeking God’s Solution for a Spirit-Filled Canada

You can also download the complimentary Leader’s Guide PDF: Battle for the Soul Leaders Guide

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