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Posts Tagged ‘charity’

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.

Hope: Our Precious Gift

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

preciousI had a chance to see “Precious” yesterday — a riveting, heartbreaking, inspiring film you’ll probably hear something about come Oscar season. 

I won’t say much about it now. But I’ve been chewing on some of the themes for several hours now, and I did want to just touch on one of them.

“Precious” is about a 16-year-old girl (called Precious) saddled with a world most of us would find unimaginable. At an age when most girls’ lives stretch before them in a ribbon of promise, Precious’ life seems stillborn. She’s given birth to one baby — a child fathered by her own father — and is pregnant with another. She’s overweight, illiterate and (she thinks) wholely unlovable. Her mother abuses her in every possible way. 

Hers is a life, it appears, without hope.

“Hope” is a deceptively glib word for most of us, I think. Hope is central to us as Americans, to us as Christians. It’s practically part of our DNA to hope — to imagine that, with hard work and faith and love, we can be anything, do anything, achieve anything. We are an optimistic people, at our core, firm in our belief that we’ve been set aside for great things. And, as such, we’ve gone great things.

But for many people around the world — for many people in the United States — the word “hope” represents an outlandish ideal. For people like Precious, poverty and abuse isn’t a horror as much as it’s a way of life. For some, reading a restaurant menu is as unreachable as the moon, and moving out of poverty is as laughable as setting up shop on Neptune. 

Hope. 

It’s not hard to give someone hope: Food. Education. Opportunity. Yet for a staggering number of people, those small gifts are hard to come by. Yesterday, the United Nations World Food Program announced that another 200 million people joined the ranks of the hungry over the last two years. That means that about 1 billion people are undernourished.

“One out of six people in humanity will wake up not sure that they can even fill a cup of food,” said Josette Sheeran, executive director for the program. “We have to make no mistake that hunger is on the march.”

Imagine, 1 billion people, living on a cup of food or less. 

My daughter — about the same age as Precious — is working on a paper dealing with John F. Kennedy’s Inaugural Address. In her paper, she quoted Kennedy: 

To those people in the huts and villages of half the globe struggling to break the bonds of mass misery, we pledge our best efforts to help them help themselves, for whatever period is required — not because the Communists may be doing it, not because we seek their votes, but because it is right. If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich.

But Precious didn’t convict me as an American — that we should be sending more aid to nations untold. Rather, it convicted me as a Christian. The Christian Church, as fragmented as it is, could still be the most powerful force on earth, if it wished to be. To paraphrase Kennedy again, it is in our power to abolish human poverty. It is in our power to bestow hope.

Thousands of Christians give hope to people every day, every minute. But we could be doing still more. We’re called to live our lives in radical love. We’re called to give hope to people around the world and across the street. And yet so often, we — I — ignore the need and go about our lives.

Living our lives as Jesus would have us live them is hard. Yet that is what we’re called to do. Our lives are not our own, we’ve been told. We’ve been bought with a ransom, and that ransom gave us hope. It’s fair and fitting we should do our upmost to give hope to others, giving freely of our time, our talents, our money, our passion. It’s time to show the world what it truly means to be Christian. It’s time to show the world what hope’s all about.

O.J. Award: Rob Smith and EarthWise Ventures

Friday, September 11th, 2009

Orange_juice_1_edit1We’ve talked some this week — maybe too much — about the Christian Church’s flaws and foibles: How church sometimes makes folks uncomfortable, how Christians sometimes rub others the wrong way and how, sometimes, Christians miss the message of their very own faith.

But it’s important to remember, always, that Christians are doing amazing work in every corner of the world, making lives easier, better and safer. The Church feeds, clothes and educates literally millions of people, and often works miracles in the bleakest of places. It serves as a much-needed lifeboat in stormy waters.

And we’re not just speaking metaphorically, here.

EarthWise Ventures, founded by Rob Smith, is working on building a ferry system serving the countries around Lake Victoria, particularly Uganda. Once upon a time, 30 percent of the Ugandan economy depending on business brought through Lake Victorian ferries. But, with the ferry system all but gone, shipping has dried up and upwards of 1,600 people who travel between Uganda and Tanzania daily do so on a dangerous, two-day bus ride.

Smith, who already founded a non-profit to feed and house AIDS orphans and widows now wants to revive the ferry system, one boat at a time. He’s raised more than $800,000 for the first ferry (which will cost an estimated $1.2 million), and he hopes eventually to operate 10 on the lake — all of which will run on biofeuls. And, while the ferry system will be a for-profit business, according to The Washington Times, Smith says it’ll serve a real, tangible need.

“We’re doing this because of our sense of calling to Africa,” he told the Times, “which is primarily to reach out to the poor and needy.”

For more information about the project, go to EarthWise’s Web site here. And, while you’re at it, raise a glass of O.J. in salute.

A Healthy Debate

Monday, August 24th, 2009

Vaccine-in-legA week or so ago, I typed up a quick little missive regarding the hubbub over health care and posited a ticklish question: If Christians are called to care for the sick, does that mean we, as Christians, are morally obligated to support government sponsored health care reform? More to the point, are we being “called” to support some form of Obamacare?

The reaction from y’all has been strong, steady and incredibly diverse. At first, I tried to respond to individual comments, but the ensuing volume pretty much ended those ambitions. But I was really impressed with the thoughtfulness and level of discourse I read from both those who support health care reform and those who object to government interference in this area. I’ve been learning — and continue to learn — a great deal from you. There are some very salient points and some touching personal stories in these posts. And even the disagreements are refreshingly civil.

Clearly, there’s no clear uniformity on the issue of health care reform for Christians — at least not when it comes to this blog’s readership. Christians are addressing this issue with both their minds and their hearts fully engaged — and that’s critical, as the debate will surely trundle on. 

One bit of house-cleaning: In the thread, “Auntie Suzie” asked if I (or someone) could find out just where abortion fits into the public option:

That is the most important question to me right now … my own health issues can be dealt with, but what about the unborn … I would like to hear what President Obama said to the clergy regarding abortion … and if he did not bring it up, why did you not … I am sure God would not approve of that, no matter the circumstances … and it causes me concern that President Obama would approach the clergy about healthcare reform when he supports abortion in the same plan …

Auntie S., my understanding is that these health care reform packages are in a state of flux, and I don’t think anyone can say definitively what the final package(s) will have to say about abortion. But President Barack Obama, during his conference call to religious leaders Aug. 19 (check out the full transcript here), had this to say:

We’ve heard that this is all designed to provide health insurance to illegal aliens. That’s not true. There’s a specific provision in the bill that does notprovide health insurance for those individuals. You’ve heard that there’s a government takeover of health care. That’s not true. You’ve heard that this is all going to mean government funding of abortion. Not true.

These are all fabrications that have been put out there in order to discourage people from meeting what I consider to be a core ethical and moral obligation. And that is that we look out for one another. That I am my brother’s keeper and my sister’s keeper. And in the wealthiest nation on earth right now, we are neglecting to live up to that call.

Now, this doesn’t strike me as an airtight assurance that abortions won’t be funded by the government, and some conservative religious leaders — such as Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council — have expressed a measure of skepticism:

This evening, President Obama stated that abortion funding in health care reform is a ‘distraction.’ If that is the case – then why not end this so-called ‘distraction’ and amend the bill to explicitly prohibit abortion funding and coverage with his health care plan? 

So Auntie S., not sure how much that helps. But I thought I’d pass it along, for what it’s worth.