» BACK TO BODY PARTS MAIN

Posts Tagged ‘global’

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.

Imprisoned for Faith

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Ran across a story from the Baptist Press of two Iranian women imprisoned for their faith:

Maryam Rostampour, 27, and Marzieh Amirizadeh, 30, were detained by Iranian security officers in March after being arrested on grounds of being “anti-government” and “a threat to national security,” according to freethemm.com, a website dedicated to winning their release. At an Aug. 9 hearing in Tehran’s Revolutionary Court, the two learned the sole charge against them is apostasy — leaving Islam. When the judge told them they would be executed if they did not recant their faith, the two reportedly told him to expedite the sentence.

The Iranian government did not “expedite” the sentence, thankfully. But the women are in prison now, and their health is reportedly deteriorating. The women are, according to Mervyn Thomas of Christian Solidarity Worldwide, just two of “scores” of Christians arrested in Iran this year because they were of the wrong sort of faith. “Neither woman has committed a crime under Iranian or international law,” Thomas told the Baptist Press. “We wholeheartedly stand in solidarity with Maryam and Marzieh, who are being held solely on the basis of exercising their most basic right: freedom of thought, conscience and belief.”

There’s a Web site up where you can learn more about Maryam and Marzieh’s story. Check it out here.

O.J. Award: Emmanuel Kadege

Friday, August 28th, 2009

Orange_juice_1_edit1Rwandan Emmanuel Kadege would’ve had every reason to turn his back on faith.

Just weeks after  he was baptized, according to Charisma Magazine’s J. Lee Grady, Kadege’s village –made up of folks from the country’s minority Tutsi tribe — was attacked by Hutus during the country’s horrific 1994 genocide. His assailants shot him, cut his legs to ribbons and forced him to watch as they raped his sister. The attackers let Kadege and his family live — but they destroyed everything they owned, almost everything they were.

Now, 15 years later, the scars on his legs are still visible. But Kadege, now a pastor, is preaching a message of forgiveness to Hutus and Tutsis alike. He and his sister have even forgiven the men –now imprisoned — who raped her: In fact, Kadege tells Grady, his sister has even visited them.

“I am preaching reconciliation, and that is really touching the hearts of people,” Kadege said.

Forgiveness is hard enough when we have nothing too serious to forgive. It takes a special man indeed to forgive such atrocities. But the fact Kadege is helping his country forgive as well — well, an O.J. Award doesn’t seem to quite cover it. 

When the Church Gets in the Way

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

 

photo by Fanny Schertzer

photo by Fanny Schertzer

Jesus called his followers to be the salt of the earth. But there are moments in history when so-called Christians rub into the world’s wounds.

 

 I just finished reading “Christ Walks Where Evil Reigned: Responding to the Rwandan Genocide,” by Emmanuel M. Kolini (the Anglican Archbishop of Rwanda) and Peter R. Holmes. The book provides a harrowing recap of one of the worst genocides in history: In 1994, a faction from Rwanda’s majority Hutu people launched an all-out drive to exterminate the minority Tutsis and their defenders. An estimated 1 million people were killed in a 100-day period. Hundreds of thousands of women and girls were raped, many purposely infected with HIV.

 Kolini (best known stateside, perhaps, for creating the Anglican Mission in the Americas) and Holmes believe the genocide stemmed from myriad roots, and argue that its 1994 incarnation was really simply an extension of what began in 1959—a serpent of destruction that lay buried for 35 years, and one that could rise again, if we’re all not careful.

 One of the things that struck me most about this gut-wrenching narrative was how, in 1994, Rwandan churches and clergy did little to stop or even slow the genocide—and some even encouraged it. The authors allege that one former archbishop blessed the killing when the violence began. Another bishop prayed “that the fire from heaven would go to Akagera Park, burning all the Tutsi ‘cockroaches.’” Some priests called refugees into their churches for the express purpose of having them killed: One such church was the site of 10,000 murders.

“It is not surprising, therefore, that trust in mainstream Christianity is waning in Rwanda,” writes the authors.

 But Kolini and Holmes also believe the Christian Church can help foster healing in the still struggling nation of Rwanda. It’ll take some work, they say, to restore many people’s trust in the church. But in a crisis in which earthly justice seems hard to come by (many of those who took part in the genocide remain unpunished and, in some cases, practically unrepentant), Christianity offers a real (though difficult) alternative to the hatred and bitterness that many survivors feel. Through faith — and lots and lots of counseling — Kolini believes that Christian belief can be instrumental in dismantling Rwanda’s serpent and return the country to a sense of normalcy.

Foreman Fasts for Life

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

By the time you read this, Switchfoot frontman Jon Foreman may be in the middle of a hearty breakfast, munching a bagel or chewing some Raisin Bran or whatever rock stars typically eat this time of morning.

If that’s true, it’d be the first time he’s eaten for three days.

Foreman just wrapped up a three-day, water-only hunger strike as part of Darfur Fast for Life, joining folks like actress Mia Farrow, Virgin CEO Sir Richard Branson and U.S. Representative Donald Payne (D–N.J.).

Foreman kept a blog during his fast at the Darfur Fast for Life Web site, and his posts are really worth reading, should you get a moment. Some highlights:

Day 1: “An estimated 300,000 folks have already died in Darfur and we do nothing… $0.00. And three people die of the [H1N1] flu and we spend $1.5 billion to figure things out. $1,500,000,000.00. I understand the need for precautionary measures but this feels like reactionary spending when I am reminded of the 2,500,000 people whose lives hang in the balance in displacement camps? What can be done for them? don’t tell me nothing.”

Day 2: [In response to a fan who questioned whether Foreman should be publicizing his fast, in light of Matthew 6:16-18]: “I thought about Matthew 6 before I began this fast and feel comfortable with my decision to make this fast public. Fasting is one of the only ways I could think of to enter into the suffering of Darfur. Like I’ve said earlier–I honestly don’t have a better idea! If you or anyone else has any better ideas as to how to end the cycle of violence and despair I’m all ears. Or let me know how to support what you’re doing over there and I will try my best to lend my songs to the cause.”

Day 3: “Even in this fast, I’m sure my motives are impure most the time. I might be drinking only water but it’s my mind and my heart that are corrupted and impure. I would like to think that I have it all together but I don’t–from the little things (I screw up the time and end up running late way too often)–to the big things (I get overwhelmed at suffering and sorrow in the world and sometimes would rather turn the other way). And in my hopes to get things right I can be extremely judgmental of everyone [and] everything around me. Dang it. I’m sorry all. God is so patient with me. My friends and family are so patient with me. I need to learn how to pass this grace along.”

I’ve read that Foreman’s favorite–or, perhaps, most formative–biblical passage is Psalm 103, part of which reads “The Lord works righteousness and justice for all the oppressed.”

“It’s a very inclusive psalm,” Foreman told JesusFreakHideout.com. “It talks about many different states of mind that we go through as humanity. And for me, it encourages me to keep my head on and focus on what matters.”

Good job, Jon. Enjoy that bagel.