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Posts Tagged ‘hunger’

Season’s Beatings

Friday, December 4th, 2009

 

photo by Malene Thyssen

photo by Malene Thyssen

Sometimes, I think our blessings can be almost too overwhelming.

 

I’m reminded of that every Christmas, it seems, when my normally dowdy social calendar takes on all the characteristics of a month-long obstacle course: Crawl through the Christmas shopping, climb past the daughter’s social orchestra concert, leap over another Christmas party and finally cross the finish line, Christmas morning, looking not so much for comfort and joy but a nice, quiet nap.

I think I get a little Scroogish this time of year, and maybe I have company. It’s the only way I can explain the amount of anger generated by the whole War on Christmas thing. 

I know lots of Christians find the fight over whether corporate America wishes us a “Merry Christmas” or “Happy Holidays” to be a very big deal. I know Sean Hannity, Bill O’Reilly and others have dedicated scads of airtime to the issue. One prominent association has made the War on Christmas a centerpiece of its ministry, and it recently declared victory over the Gap when the company aired an unambiguous “Christmas” ad. (It had previously boycotted Gap for its rather squishy holiday marketing.) But the organization still keeps a “naughty” list loaded with businesses that are “against Christmas,” which include Best Buy, Office Depot and Victoria’s Secret. I guess the lingerie-clad “angels” don’t count.

I sympathize with the Christmas warriors on some level, I guess. I mean, I think it’s a shame when people are scared to wish others a Merry Christmas, for whatever reason. I don’t think most folks get offended. But by the same token, I don’t get offended if someone wants to play it safe and wishes me a happy holiday, either  – and considering how commercial the season has become, the fight over Christmas feels a little akin to activists in Jesus’ time saying, “what?! Take the marketplace out of the temple?! What are you trying to do, marginalize religion?”

Again, I’m sure folks who worry about this sort of thing mean well. But this time of year, it’d be great to see Christians concentrating on being the hands and feet of God: Taking turns ringing a bell for the Salvation Army, perhaps. Or serving food in the local food kitchen. Or volunteering at a homeless shelter. I think that’s where hearts and minds are truly won.

Which is why I get kind of excited to see stories like this: Stories about Christians who are serving others and, perhaps, surprising some of Christianity’s shrillest critics. This particular story, from The New York Times, profiles Jenna Liao, a young evangelical who coordinates activities of volunteers for World Relief. Far from abandoning traditional evangelical causes like abortion, Liao has, like many evangelicals, simply broadened her scope.

While still a student at Wheaton [College], Ms. Liao took part in a national conference about AIDS for young evangelicals. She volunteered on a weekly basis at a homeless shelter for gay men in Chicago. She met her future husband, Richard Liao, literally over the ladle at a soup kitchen. Every experience served to confirm what Ms. Liao thought of as her scriptural mission statement, the passage in the Beatitudes that blesses the poor, the meek, the mournful, the oppressed.

We are truly blessed, and our blessings are never so apparent as they are during the Christmas season. I know it’s a time when, perhaps, we as Christians are sadly reminded that religion doesn’t command the attention it once did in this country. But maybe the best way to honor the season is not to mourn what we’ve lost and fight to get it back, but rejoice over what we’ve been given — and consider what more we can give.

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.

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.

Ramadan for Christians?

Monday, September 21st, 2009

 

Egyptians wait for sunset during Ramadan so they can eat. Photo by Otto J. Simon

Egyptians wait for sunset during Ramadan so they can eat. Photo by Otto J. Simon

The Associated Press’ Eric Gorski has a fascinating look at Christians who commemorate Ramadan (Islam’s month-long fasting ritual that ended, officially, yesterday). Among those participating: Brian McLaren, one of the leaders of the Emergent Church movement:

 

In announcing his Ramadan fast plans on his blog last month, McLaren wrote, “We are not doing so in order to become Muslims: we are deeply committed Christians. But as Christians, we want to come close to our Muslim neighbors and to share this important part of life with them.” The goal is to join Muslims in the observance as “a God-honoring expression of peace, fellowship and neighborliness,” he wrote.

Really interesting stuff. Gorski notes that lots of Christians think McLaren’s misguided at best. “The logic of Islam is obedience and submission,” Gorski quoted Albert Mohler, president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. “It’s by following these practices that a Muslim demonstrates his obedience to the rule of the law through the Quran. For a Christian to do the same automatically implies a submission to the same rule. And beyond that, it’s an explicit affirmation that this is a good and holy thing. From a New Testament perspective, it is not a good and holy thing.”

My take: I don’t feel the need to express my solidarity with those of the Islamic faith, and I would certainly not wish to submit myself to the authority of the Quran. But I do believe that we Christians can learn something from Ramadan.

I’m not a big faster. I’ve never been known for my self-discipline, and to not eat for an entire day is — well, very hard. Moreover, when I have fasted, I’ve had to curb my urge to whine about it every 10 minutes or so. But while I may be a terrible faster, one thing it effectively did for me was remind me, every time my stomach growl, of for what, and for whom, I was fasting for. It kept God at the forefront of my thoughts for the entire day.

During Ramadan, Muslims fast from dawn ’til dusk for nearly a full month. For weeks, their faith takes a position of authority in their lives they simply, physically, can’t ignore. It’s a real sacrifice, what they do — more than dropping an extra $10 in the offering plate, in my opinion — and I can’t help but respect their commitment.

As I said, I don’t feel the need to engage in a Ramadan-specific fast to show my brotherhood with my Islamic friends and neighbors. But I do think they’re onto something, and perhaps one day I’ll follow their example, and honor my own God in humility and hunger. We’ll see. 

I’d be interested to hear what you think of it all. Do you fast? When? Why? And would you ever participate in a Ramadan-style fast?

Hungry Stomachs, Hungry Souls

Monday, September 21st, 2009

 

photo by Mattia Luigi Nappi

photo by Mattia Luigi Nappi

This post from the Baptist Press reminds me, once again, of the great work Christians can do, and the overwhelming need for our help. The article, by Jami Becher, highlights work being done by the Southern Baptist’s North American Mission Board in New Mexico — a state that has a higher “food insecurity” rate than many Central and South American countries.

 

“Our office provides financial support to nine food service ministries in the association,” said Russell, ministry evangelism coordinator for the Central Baptist Association in Albuquerque. “The ministries we assisted last year fed approximately 150,000 people. That may sound like a lot, but it was just a drop in the bucket.”

Pretty staggering: 150,000 people helped, and so much more is needed.

O.J. Award: The Tour de Revs Guys

Friday, July 31st, 2009

On May 13, three Lutheran pastors climbed on board a custom-made bamboo bike and began a countrywide odyssey to raise money for the hungry.

They’re still at it.


The pastors — the Rev. Fred A. Soltow, Jr., the Rev. David A. Twedt and the Rev. Ron Schlak — are all old enough to qualify for senior citizens’ discounts (the youngest is 59). Their 30-gear, triple-seat bike  isn’t exactly the easiest thing for these oldsters to handle. “It turns like an 18-wheel truck,” Schlak told The Dallas Morning News. Despite all the obstacles, though, the pastors are nearing the end of their 13,000-mile journey, hopping from Lutheran synod to Lutheran synod, in the hopes of raising $5 million for the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America’s World Hunger activities. They call their ride “The Tour de Revs,” and they’reraising money through a comprehensive Web site complete with bios, a blog and a constantly updating map

Their journey is scheduled to end Aug. 20 in Minneapolis, Minn. — just in time to participate in The Churchwide Assembly there.

Orange_juice_1_edit1They’re in Denver now — about 60 miles up the road from where I sit typing this. Which means that I could probably cruise on up and give them some of this scrumptious O.J. myself. Great job, guys. And have a safe journey.