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Posts Tagged ‘charity’

Wakeup Call, 2010

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

clockIt’s the last day of what has been, for many of us, a very trying year. It’s been a year of economic hardship and global terror, a year in which talk over climate change and health care shared headlines with scandal upon tawdry scandal. Good news? Hard to find much in 2009. Perhaps its fitting that the year’s last big news story would feature a man trying to blow up a plane with explosives stitched in his underwear.

But, in the midst of this not-so-fond adieu to 2009, here comes a reminder of who’s really in control.

On Christmas Eve, in my hometown of Colorado Springs, a child was born.

His name was Coltyn, and he was, for all intents and purposes, dead. His mother, Tracy Hermanstorfer, had also inexplicably died just minutes before in the throes of childbirth—a cardiac arrest, doctors said. According to The Gazette, husband Mike Hermanstorfer held her hand when her heart stopped beating. He felt his wife’s skin grow cold, watched it turn blue.

“I lost all feeling,” Mike said. “Once her heartbeat stopped, it felt like mine did, too.”

Doctors still hoped to save the baby, though, and they quickly wheeled the mother into surgery to perform an emergency Cesarean section. Yet when they pulled the baby from his mother’s body, he wasn’t breathing, either. He was, in the words of Dr. Stephanie Martin, “limp.”

But, as Mike held Coltyn in his hands, doctors continued to work until the baby sucked in his first breath. And then, in that bittersweet moment, Mike learned something else: His wife had, miraculously, come back to life.

“My legs went out from underneath me,” Mike told the Associated Press. “I had everything in the world taken from me, and in an hour and a half, I had everything given to me.”

Doctors can’t explain it. Dr. Stephanie Martin says that Tracy had “no heartbeat, no blood pressure, she wasn’t breathing.” Her skin was a deathly gray. But the Hermanstorfers know what happened.

“We are both believers … but this right here, even a nonbeliever—you explain to me how this happened,” Mike told AP. “There is no other explanation.”

Imagine being pulled from death’s maw to life again. Imagine the sense of glorious responsibility such a miracle leaves in its wake—the responsibility to live with joy and purpose, the duty to make your life mean something.

All of us, of course, are imbued with that same purpose. I believe our lives are part of a glorious tapestry, made knot-by-knot by a Divine hand. We can’t see this tapestry in its entirety—not yet—so our lives can feel pretty random, pretty confusing and pretty painful at times. But I have faith in the big picture: Faith that my talents (however meager they are), my experiences (however vexing they might be) and my life (however small it might seem) adds something meaningful to the whole.

But, in the midst of life’s messiness, God’s big picture is hard to imagine, much less see.

Tracy and Coltyn were given, in a way, a very special Christmas gift—a heart-stopping reminder that our lives are not our own, that we’re meant for something more. That we’re part of a bigger picture.

My New Year’s resolution (or, maybe, my New Year’s prayer) is this: To treat 2010 as the gift as it is, and to remember that my being—who I am, what I do, what I write—should be a gift, too. We are all gifts to the people around us—reminders of the One who sent us.

It’s almost 2010. The sun’s about to rise on a beautiful new year. Time to wake up.

O Holey Night

Thursday, December 24th, 2009

Old, glorious church buildings around the country are falling on hard times as their congregations age and dwindle. Some are crumbling around the pews, and without enough congregants to help pay for the upkeep, there’s very little that can be done to save these old structures.

The Detroit Pilgrim Church was such a structure. Once the largest Presbyterian church in the Midwest, the building had begun to degenerate as its congregation shrunk, and the Presbyterians handed it over to Pilgrim Church I Am My Brother’s Keeper Ministry in 1992. But they didn’t have money to fix the building, either — particularly the gaping hole in the roof. Says ABC News:

Despite the hole in the roof, the church filled a hole in the community. It was a home to those without homes — offering its gym to those in need of a place to sleep, its kitchen to those in need of a meal and its prayers to those in need of hope.

“If you had come here the same day that I had come here and seen this whole sanctuary empty because nobody could sit in it… over to the left was a plastic tent and people huddled with their coats on, trying to pray and stay warm,” said local columnist and author of “Have a Little Faith” Mitch Albom.

The church made a big impression on Albom, and he founded the Hole in the Roof Foundation. Donations poured in from both the community and around the world (some from as far away as New Zealand), and in two weeks’ time the roof was patched. Now, this Christmas, Detroit Pilgrim will meet in a warm, dry sanctuary for the first time in years.

“We want the people to learn brotherhood and love and the importance of caring for one another,” Pilgrim pastor Henry Covington told ABC. “Because [it's] the only way we’re going to survive. We didn’t do this by ourselves.” 

It’s a good lesson to learn at any time of year, I think, but maybe particularly during the Christmas season. We often hear that it’s better to give than to receive. But, in the case of Pilgrim, it’s a blessing to receive — and receive with gratefulness — too.

That Annoying Altruism

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

Christians, if we’re honest with ourselves, realize that our theology presents some painful problems at times — the biggest, perhaps, is why there’s so much pain and unfairness in the world. Most of us have come to grips with this issue in one way or another, but it can still be hard for some of us to grasp, particularly when it smacks us in the face.

But sometimes we forget that secularists and atheists have issues equally as thorny and provocative. Chuck Colson reminds us of one of them in Christianity Today — the problem of goodness. Consider:

Recent advances in neurobiology show that the impulse toward altruism may even be hardwired. For instance, practically from birth a baby who hears the cry of another baby will cry also. However, when scientists play a recording of the sound of that child’s own cry, rarely will the baby respond. By about 14 months, not only will that infant cry when he hears another infant crying, he will also try to soothe the other child in some way.

Yeah, a purely Darwinian explanation here just doesn’t quite seem to fit the bill, does it? Interesting, I think, that without faith, pain is easier to understand, but generosity, altruism and sacrifice are almost incomprehensible.

Donate For a Good Cause, Clothe a Metrosexual Worship Leader!

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

51dNVj7AlBL._SS500_When I grow into awesome Christian blogger, I want to be  something like Jon Acuff.

Acuff is the creator of the stellar blog Stuff Christians Like, an always hilarious and often dead-on take of stuff that — well, Christians like (”Rooting for Tim Tebow” is No. 649 on the list). But recently, Acuff decided to wield his wit and wisdom for good, calling on the blog’s readers to build a kindergarten in Vietnam. Price: $30,000.

The requisite cash was raised in 18 hours.

Perhaps figuring that his readers had more money than they knew what to do with, or perhaps counting on the fund-raising effort to fill blog space for several days, Jon decided to raise money for a second kindergarten for another $30,000. And he has a special incentive: For each $3,000 donated to the cause, Zakk — a hand-drawn “metrosexual worship leader” — gets a hip new article of clothing to wear. I’d love to print a picture of Zakk in his rockin’ jeans, scarf and skinny tie. But I don’t have permission, so you’ll just have to make due with a cover from Acuff’s book and follow this link.

If you’re so inclined, feel free to trot on over to the site and donate some money. I think Zakk needs some hair mousse.

Americans Giving Less

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

While economic experts say we’re either out or coming out of the recession, charitable organizations — including, naturally, religious ones — haven’t seen any relief when it comes to their own bottom lines.

Many ministries and nonprofits have had to cut staff or services lately, according to the Associated Press. World Vision, one of the world’s largest aid ministries, says its individual cash donations dropped by $33 million in the last year. And, of course, many nonprofits feel a sort of double pinch, since its services are often needed the most in troubled times.

According to a new study by Harris Interactive, only 38 percent of Americans plan  to give a charitable gift as a Christmas present this year, compared to 49 percent in 2008. Let’s hope some of us rethink those plans.

Of Heads and Hearts

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

 

photo by Sami Keinanen

photo by Sami Keinanen

I’m not much of a beer drinker — I haven’t been since a still infamous 21st birthday celebration in college that we shall not mention any more. But if I decided to hoist a pint again, I think my mug might be filled with Guinness. Mind you, they’re not paying me to say this. And Guinness might taste like Kentucky Blue Grass, for all I know. But still, I like their style.

 

I had the pleasure of hearing Os Guinness, a member of the famed brewing family and now a popular Christian author and speaker, and I found him to be quite intelligent and witty — enough so that I walked out of the lecture thinking, “you know, Christianity needs more ambassadors like this guy.” 

Turns out, Os is just the latest of a long line of Christian ambassadors from the family Guinness — at least according to this column in USA Today written by Stephen Mansfield. Guinness, an Irish brewery founded 250 years ago by Arthur Guinness, was a brewery built — perhaps paradoxically for some — on Christian values.

“The values Arthur Guinness envisioned for his company were first honed in a life of devotion to God,” Mansfield writes. “He was beloved throughout Ireland for his defense of Roman Catholic rights, for example, an astonishing stand for a Protestant in his day. He criticized the material excesses of the upper class and sat on the board of a hospital for the poor. He was also the founder of the first Sunday schools in Ireland. When he died in 1803, the Dublin Evening Post declared that Arthur Guinness’s life was ‘useful and benevolent and virtuous.’ It was true.” And Mansfield goes on:

There are many tales that could be told: Of the Guinness heir who received millions of dollars as a wedding gift but then moved his new bride into the slums to draw attention to the plight of the poor. Or of how the Guinness company promised all of its employees who fought in World War I that their jobs would be waiting for them when they returned, and then paid their families half wages until they did.

The lesson is clear: Guinness strove to improve the lives of its employees with the same intensity as it strove to sell its beer.

I don’t know if Guinness is still such a great place to work or still serves as such a strong example of corporate charity. But it seems to me that, if more corporations held firm to the same spirit Guinness has, the world would be  much improved.