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  • Stirring Stirring

    • From: HemmedIn
    • Description:

      There was a period of time prior to the full force of the Iranian Revolution in 1979 when things began to stir up. I would often beg my parents to let me go for a sleep over to my Grandmother’s house. Because of the unrest, a curfew was put in place all over Tehran. My parents would oblige, but then I grew so homesick that I would be driven home quickly before it was too late. And as reports of tanks and military patrolling the streets flood twitter today, these vivid memories come to mind again. My mom would sweetly tell me to smile and wave at the army men, in the same light and un-alarming tone I encourage my children to greet Firemen.

      That stirring began as protests, turned into riots and eventually a full force revolution that changed the face of a nation and its course in history.

      Today in Iran a new stirring has begun. Yet since the military, police and revolutionary guards are lurking the streets, it appears that fear may be creeping in as weariness and fatigue take their place.

      Disappointment, death and grief each on their own is enough to bring a person to despair. However our friends in Iran are experiencing all of this at once. Think about how breathless you are when you see footage of Neda dying on the street. The despair you would feel had you known you too were there, just a few steps away. Imagine the rage that would rise up if you couldn’t properly mourn for loved ones.

      Yet they still sit on roof tops each night chanting, “God is great” over and over again. God is great. God is great. God is great.

      It makes me wonder, what would cause me to sit on top of my house, calling out the greatness of God all night long?

      If you stop and ponder that for a few moments… the reality of the longing that is stirring up inside the soul of every person breathing those words just may set in.

      The strategies of revolutionary wars and international relations have changed since 1979. The message we send to the people of Iran when they hear us speaking up for them, when they realize our eyes are on them, and when they hear we are praying for them…this is fuel for the fire.

      The world is watching and when we hear words of despair, fear, increase in tension and increase in force, we should pray for the hope of the LORD to fill Iran. Pray for strength for the weary. Pray they would walk and not grow faint. Pray for courage to fight the good fight. Pray the destruction would cease, the oppressor be cast out and those who trample on undeserving people would be taken from the land.

      Then continue to pray and make way for the LORD.




      "Even youths grow tired and weary, and young men stumble and fall; but those who hope in the LORD will renew their strength. They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint.”

      “Let the outcasts of Moab sojourn among you; be a shelter to them from the destroyer. When the oppressor is no more, and destruction has ceased, and he who tramples underfoot has vanished from the land, then a throne will be established in steadfast love, and on it will sit in faithfulness in the tent of David one who judges and seeks justice and is swift to do righteousness."

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    • 1 year ago
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  • Blessed are the Peacemakers Blessed are the Peacemakers

    • From: HemmedIn
    • Description:

      1Now when he saw the crowds, he went up on a mountainside and sat down. His disciples came to him, 2and he began to teach them saying:
      3"Blessed are the poor in spirit,
      for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
      4Blessed are those who mourn,
      for they will be comforted.
      5Blessed are the meek,
      for they will inherit the earth.
      6Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness,
      for they will be filled.
      7Blessed are the merciful,
      for they will be shown mercy.
      8Blessed are the pure in heart,
      for they will see God.
      9Blessed are the peacemakers,
      for they will be called sons of God.
      10Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness,
      for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
      11"Blessed are you when people insult you, persecute you and falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of me. 12Rejoice and be glad, because great is your reward in heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you.


      As a child of the 1979 revolution, all the scenes and images of what has been reported from Iran are eerily familiar. I am now a Iranian-American and completely immersed in my new culture here. But one never forgets where they came from.

      My perspective over the last 30 years is that most of the people born after the revolution have been raised or have become products of their environment and have generally been politically apathetic. Forgive me if I'm wrong here. But it seems that the general lack of morale, discouragement from their leadership, fear of getting in trouble have left people wanting to keep a generally low profile, living their lives to the best of their ability and staying out of the ways of trouble.

      President Obama is receiving a fair share of criticism for his hesitation to get involved in the situation. While the U.S. is known for coming to the rescue or meddling as some people put it, there may come a time for overt action. However, I think there is something to be said about waiting and allowing the Iranian people continue to rise up and find their voices that have been supressed for so many years. Two-thirds of the nation are under the age of 35. I am 35 and just begining to feel like I'm getting some gumption to do what God is calling me to do... I wonder for them, how long these feelings of oppression and captivity have been festering in the Iranian people and finally reaching a point of explosion.

      It's good to let them find their voice, THEY need to experience their own courage and recognize that what they want is GOOD.

      I also love how the U.S. is getting involved in less overt ways. That computer techs are helping Iranians get access to internet to let us know the cries of their hearts. I love even up until this year, when you heard the name Iran, it was associated with "axis of evil," "nuclear threat," etc. But today, the world is rallying around the people of Iran which is truly Iran. There is solidarity, compassion, support and love for people. We are seeing that the very things that we often take for granted like liberty, freedom, justice, our voices, our dreams and the realization of our visions are things worthy of fighting for.

      Pray for Iranians to continue to find their voices and let their voices be heard, pray for courage, boldness, protection for the innocent, justice for the oppressors. Pray for salt and light to show themselves in that part of earth so Light will shine. Pray for our President Obama, for him to have wisdom, courage, boldness, mercy when its required and heart that breaks for the things that break the heart of God.

      Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God.

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    • 1 year ago
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  • Bless the Hands that Prepare O Bless the Hands that Prepare Our Food!

    • From: agapejustice
    • Description:

      This blog was first posted on Sojourners God's Politics Blog. For more information please visit Justice at Smithfield-http://www.smithfieldjustice.com/

      During the BBQ Season of summer I attended the DC campaign kick-off for the Justice at Smithfield Campaign. "Smithfield Foods is the largest pork processor and producer in the world, the fourth largest turkey processor and fifth largest beef processor in the U.S." In the early 1990's Smithfield opened its Tar Heel, North Carolina plant, with 5,500 workers who slaughter and process 32,000 hogs per day. The Tar Heel plant is not unionized and overall only about 56% of Smithfield pork processing plant employees are unionized.

      Though raised in Brooklyn, NY, my family hails from North Carolina which makes this campaign of personal importance to me. At the campaign kick-off two young women testified about mistreatment at the Tar Heel plant. A 22 year-old woman spoke of developing such a serious case of carpal tunnel syndrome that she can no longer lift more than 15 pounds. The testimony of this woman had a profound effect on me because I saw myself in her face. At 22 years-old I was a recent college graduate excitedly planning my future. I did not have to worry about an injury that could leave me disabled for life. If my grandparents remained in North Carolina instead of migrating to Brooklyn, NY, I could have easily been one of the Smithfield workers. What separates me from the workers at Smithfield?

      Some of the tasks at the Tar Heel plant include cutting the skin off of frozen meat as it comes down the line, a task that is especially difficult when having to work at breakneck speeds. As stated in the Human Rights Watch report: Blood Sweat and Fear: Workers' Rights in U.S. Meat and Poultry Plants:

      Many workers have painful reactions to conditions, but they do not act for fear of losing their jobs. In this report one employee is quoted as saying 'I am sick at work with a cold and breathing problems and my arms are always sore. But I am afraid to say anything about this because I am afraid they will fire me.'

      Workers have also spoken of sexual harassment and racism. How can working conditions like this exist in our modern society? What is the role of race, class and economics in the Smithfield worker struggle?

      As I reflect on the Justice at Smithfield campaign I am reminded of a common request made during the blessing of a meal--"may God bless the hands of those who have prepared our food." As we continue this season of BBQ's let us remember the workers of Smithfield when we bless our meals by asking God to bless their hands and their struggle.

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    • 1 year ago
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  • Christian and Democrat: Can Yo Christian and Democrat: Can You Be Both?

    • From: agapejustice
    • Description:

        For many Christians the 2008 Presidential Election was the first time they voted for a Democrat. Recently I heard a NYC pastor discuss the belief he held that to be Christian meant you were Republican, but while attending The Sojourners Mobilization to End Poverty  in Washington, D.C. (a non-partisan gathering of 1,000+ Christians from around the country who came together because their faith inspired them to fight against poverty) he realized that a Christian did not have to be Republican and he resigned from the party. With a focus on abortion and marriage (two very important issues) many Christians are bound to the Republican Party and do not question this allegiance. This summer Christian author, inner-city minister and activist Shane Claiborne admonished Christians to “pledge allegiance to the Lamb” instead of either political party on his Jesus for President nationwide tour. As Christians I think we should align ourselves with politicians and policies that most reflect the message of Jesus Christ who proclaimed in Luke 4:18: "The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me, to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind and to release the oppressed…”

      Worship at The Mobilization to End Poverty

        I am currently a fellow for Faithful Democrats  an online community of Christians who are members of the Democratic Party. I know some might find this sacrilegious but there have always been dedicated followers of Christ who we also Democrats. As an African-American Christian my community of faith has overwhelmingly been members of the Democratic Party because Republican policies do not speak to the needs of our community, yet African-Americans are also overwhelmingly pro-life. You may ask yourself how this paring can exist, well for me to be pro-life means I support life from the cradle to the grave. I work towards ending poverty because I know many poor women are pushed into abortions for economic reasons. I do not support the death penalty or war. I think it is interesting that Christians can advocate for children while they are in the womb but once children are born we do not advocate for them to have equal educational opportunities, or a life free from hunger, sickness and disease. Mother Theresa once said “I am so pro-life that if a woman does not want her child she can leave the child with me”; hence so many Children were given to her that she received the name “Mother Theresa”. She is an example of not just holding onto arbitrary pro-life or pro-family values but actually living them out in practical ways.

      Christians Lobbying in D.C.-Holding their elected officials accountable.

       I am critical of both major parties and personally want to see our country move past the two party system that dominates because more choices will ensure that we have a true democracy. At the end of the day if a candidate is dedicated to those who Jesus calls “the least of these”, than that person will get my vote whether they are a member of the: Democratic, Republican, Green or Independence Party. As Christians we cannot let our dedication to a political party, or even the American flag surpass our dedication to the Gospel of Christ. Our true citizenship is in the Kingdom which includes: Black, White, slave, free, male, female, rich, poor, American, Mexican, undocumented, citizen and anyone else who is born-again.  I think Lisa Sharon Harper author and co-founder of NY Faith & Justice put it best when she stated: "Evangelical Doesn't Equal Republican or Democrat”. 

      A Book to read:
      I would encourage all of you to read Matthew 25, review the platforms of the different political parties, and then prayerfully ask God who you should align yourself with, the answer may surprise you.

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    • 1 year ago
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  • Madoff, Anti-Semitism and Gala Madoff, Anti-Semitism and Galatians

    • From: agapejustice
    • Description:

      Since December 2008 when Bernie Madoff turned himself over to authorities for pulling a massive $65 billion ponzi scheme I like most of you have read the countless stories of victims and reporters trying to make sense of it all. In my reading of the Madoff story I have noticed a very disturbing trend of playing into anti-Semitic and class stereotypes implying that Madoff’s ethnic group and humble beginnings in Queens were the cause of his scheming.

      As much as things change, they stay the same....As much as things change, they stay the same....

      In New York Magazine’s Bernie Madoff, Monster Mensch cover story the question is posed: What made Bernie Madoff, a man who helped revolution Wall Street and built a completely legal billion-dollar business, perpetrate the greatest fraud in history?(Steve Fishman, pg. 18 New York Magazine March 2nd 2009). Some of the reasons given were: “His grandparents had made their lives on the Lower East Side. He lived with them for a while, and that evening, he recalled how poor and rundown their neighborhood had looked”. He still had, as one observer put it, a whiff of Queens about him. He didn’t look like a leader of Wall Street…. Bernie Madoff’s story begins as that of the classic Jewish outsider, storming Wall Street gates in pursuit of fortune. He entered the financial business through a dirty disgusting outback” (Steve Fishman, pg. 18 New York Magazine March 2nd 2009). Entitling the article Monster Mensch is a play on the Yiddish (A Jewish Dialectic) term. One Vanity Fair author reported that: “Bernie was poor and from Queens…She said Bernie and Ruth (his wife) still had a Queens’s accent, adding playfully you could tell they weren’t from Switzerland” (Mark Seal Vanity Fair April 2009, pg. 129). When Palm Beach Post reporter Jose Lambiet started writing Madoff stories “the anti-Semitic messages started immediately” (Seal Vanity Fair, April 2009, pg 134).

       

      Each racial or ethnic minority group has stereotypes that they have been striving to overcome. Jewish people have had to struggle against stereotypes related to money. Sadly, Madoff has hurt his own people the most; he stole from mostly Jewish charities and institutions. A Palm Beach resident who lost millions due to Madoff stated “what Hitler didn’t finish, he did! (Seal, Vanity Fair April 2009, pg. 134)”. An area hardest hit by Madoff was the Jewish Palm Beach Country Club, some in the area were resentful of Jewish people moving in. Palm Beach Post writer Lambiet stated: “It took decades for the Jewish community to get past this thing, and now…The anti-Semites are ecstatic, said one resident. Supposedly, there was a crack made at a local club: This is terrific now maybe we’ll get our land back. These people were not pleased at the way Jewish wealth has come into this community…” (Seal Vanity Fair pg. 134 April 2009). Sadly the Madoff case hasn’t just brought to light anti-Semitic sentiment but has shed light on Hispanic prejudice and classism as well-in the same April 2009 issue of Vanity Fair there was an article about a Swiss Brazilian family that worked closely with Madoff and the stereotypes abounded: “loud Brazilian Women in the family, brash, new money, inconsiderate, hugging and kissing everyone…” and it appears that there is a “logical” conclusion being made that of course this Latino, new-money family would work with a thief like Madoff. What can we expect when we let “those people” in our neighborhoods and financial firms?

      I do not think a certain ethnic group or class is to blame for the Madoff scandal I think that out of control free market capitalism is to blame. As Christians we cannot play into anti-Semitic stereotypes realizing we worship a Jewish savior. We should pray for the Jewish community and everyone who has been hit by this crisis. I am a student at Columbia University and the law school lost 7 million to Madoff. Elie Wiesel famous Holocaust activist and author of Night was robbed by Madoff as well. Let us pray that prejudice does not lead to the scapegoating of minorities and the poor for this crisis. As minorities our greatest desire is “to be judged not by the color of our skin (or our religion or class) but by the content of our character” Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

       

      As a Christians we know that Galatians 3: 28 states: There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.” Let us remember this as we speak out and pray against stereotyping and scapegoating.

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    • 1 year ago
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  • agapejustice

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  • "God Said I Have to Wash my Ha "God Said I Have to Wash my Hair That Night": The Theology of Rejection

    • From: DustandPearls
    • Description:

      "We regret that we are unable to offer you admission at this time.” 

      “I really see our relationship as more of a friendly one. Pal.”

      “There are better candidates for this job. Thank you for your interest.”

      Rejection stinks. As in, it almost literally has a smell: the aroma of dashed dreams and curtailed crushes. It’s not pleasant, and it lingers. And whether you’re rich or poor, handsome or homely, fortunate or persistently unlucky, we have one thing in common: we’ve all caught a whiff.

      No matter who you are, from Moses to Barack Obama, you've been rejected for something in your life. Turned down. Denied. Do not cross Go, and definitely don’t collect $200. Getting shot down is arguably the largest blow that happens to your ego; it's a big “return to sender” from the entire world -- unsigned, unsealed, undelivered. Sometimes you don't even get an explanation: you're simply stood up, or told to pack your things and be escorted out. Maybe you never hear a peep about the entries you expectantly send to the New Yorker cartoon caption contest each week (which chronically happens to, uh, my friend).

      The toughest part about rejection is that it makes you feel unseen. The editor doesn’t want to read your manuscript. Your bank doesn’t care how badly you need that loan. It's the aching knowledge that that cute guy or girl has looked you up and down, taken full stock of your brains and talents and personality, and said, “Hmmm. I think I’ll pass.”

      If rejection is God’s protection, as countless Christians have told me, then I must be the safest person in the universe. In the past year, I’ve gone from graduating with an Ivy League degree and dating a cluster of cute guys to being stuck in my ho-hum job and eating frozen pizza on Friday nights. And not for lack of trying. But at some point after receiving that first layoff, the seventh rejection letter, and that 250th unreturned email, the “no’s” start to get to you.

      So one night, as I was wallowing in my sorrows with a pint of Haagen-Daz, I felt God’s presence: “Hey there, bitter, party of one. Why don’t you stop whining about your rejection and start making other people feel accepted?”

      “No, God,” I thought, swirling another heaping spoonful of chocolate chunk, “I’m not doing anything for you until you start doing something for me. You refuse to give me a boyfriend, and you refuse to let me into the Ph.D. program I want. Thank you, but no.”

      “So to make yourself feel better about your own rejection, you’re going to reject the world? Crawl into your ice cream carton and wait for all the wonders of life to be delivered into your lap? Passive-aggressive much?”

      “Wow, God, that was pretty snarky. You should start a blog.”

      “I did. 2000 years ago. Read the post ‘2 Corinthians.’ That’ll teach you to feel sorry for yourself. Paul was crippled and imprisoned, but you didn’t see him sending out pity party Twitter updates.”

      “Seriously, have you seen the show ‘Best Week Ever’? They’d totally hire you.”

      “No, I gave up on Vh-1 a long time ago. What happened to music videos? Anyway, my child, you might feel rejected now, but years in the future, you’ll see that all those jobs and dates and programs were rejecting you for a reason. Not because you weren’t good enough or smart enough, but because it wasn’t my plan, and it wasn’t my timing.”

      “I’ve heard that a million times, God. ‘You’ll find love when you’re not looking for it.’ ‘God has better plans for you.’ ‘When Jesus shuts a door, he opens a window.’ But how does that help me now? I’ve been ‘not looking’ for love since college, and Mr. Right still hasn’t fallen magically from the ether. Everyone else seems to have what they want, so why not me?”

      “Nobody starts out on top. The CEO started as the intern. The homeowner began adulthood in a studio apartment on the rough side of town. The soul mates often fought through a string of sour relationships before they met. While my will for some is clear, others hit speed bumps and detours and trying times along the way. But each foggy patch is building your character, your confidence, your faith. There’s no right job or right decision that will land you at the end of the rainbow, because there is no end of the rainbow. Just the knowledge that I’ll never forsake you in the journey.”

      And with that, I'm deciding to stop taking rejection personally; to not over-idealize some career or some marriage in the future, but to enjoy what I have and where I am in the present. Fear of rejection keeps me and millions of people from acting, paralyzing us with the irrational belief that others' reactions and approval are the driving force in life. We are over-dependent on human affirmation, and so we don't take risks. We wallow in our comfort zones, decline invitations and ignore those opportunities that float our way, because we're too lazy. Or too afraid.

      Life is too short to waste time daydreaming about what your life could look like some day. So what if you don’t have a date? Go out with your girlfriends for the millionth time. Be glad that you have a job, even if it’s not your dream career, and if you’re unemployed, keep searching and get creative about it. Send your article to the next publisher on your list. Try out that Bible study or that singles group.

      I've felt the sting--well, multiple stings--of rejection, and I've experienced the depression that comes with it. But what I need to do is not let getting rejected lead to rejecting future opportunities. If you want to reject something, reject apathy. Reject the idea that life is all about you. Reject being too absorbed in your own travails to see that others are hurting. You may not have the power to control who rejects you, but what you do have is the ability to make others feel loved and accepted for who they are.

      The only thing worse than getting rejected is never having tried in the first place. Now turn off Vh-1.

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  • Waiting on Tomorrow Waiting on Tomorrow

    • From: jlaramsey
    • Description:

      Tomorrow, the course of my life could change forever. In one moment, life could start moving on a totally new trajectory. In one moment, I could face painful disappointment, which would affect my journey as well.

       

      While any moment could do this, I think there are some that are truly life altering. This moment could mean moving half way across a country into a new life and new world. Or, it could mean facing the reality that I’m not accepted where I am and that more choices will need to be made.

       

      There’s no way to know, in this moment, which it will be. But I know in this moment, right now, all I can do is wait patiently, pray faithfully, and see what God will do.

       

      I think this is how the disciples felt after Good Friday. There lives were on the brink. Their best friend had been killed and they had no idea what was about to happen.  In fact, they may not have really known what to be looking for. 

       

      He could rise again.

       

      Or, He could remain dead – an ordinary man after all, full of delusion, and now dead. Forever. 

       

      The disciples were full of fear. They didn’t know what to think. This moment of change was proceeded by great failure and great pain; by their own weakness and unwillingness to live out who they said they were. And now, all they could do was wait.

       

      The good news for them was that He arose! He lives!  He was and is the Messiah and their lives were forever changed. The journey of their new life, as a new people, was beginning. They could never go back and never return to the life before death, but had to live in the light they were given; the light of resurrection.

       

      And the good news for me – and for you – is the same. Even though I don’t know what tomorrow brings, I stand in the confidence and assurance that He lives and reigns. That whatever happens in my earthly journey, the power of the resurrection to remake and recreate my life will continue no matter the outcome of this decision.

       

      To find peace in uncertainty is never easy. But I know that my God can handle it. He did conquer the grave after all. And he holds my future in His hands.

       

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    • 1 year ago
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  • dvinedscontent

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  • Ah, to be an elephant! Ah, to be an elephant!

    • From: rachael.reedake
    • Description:

      What a strange thing the memory is - a strange fabric, interwoven with both fibres of fragility and strength.  The very things we want to remember fray and wear away gently, without us even noticing.  These are the small intentions of the things we ought to do, the name of the brilliant movie we saw last week, or even the important lessons we learn in life.   All of these things join into a slow and constant fade as our minds continue this business of forgetting: letting go of strands, while even more new strands are woven in.  Our memory clothes us with an ever-changing garment.  And yet, some parts of memory are strong.  Woven in with threads of steel, they form the backbone of this delicate structure.  These fragments of beautiful or painful times are embedded deep in the centre, beyond the reach of the forces which can steal memories.  These moments are the ones that we will never forget, and it is they that form the shape of our lives.

      I admit that I am a poor student in the school of life.  It seems that I forget the lessons God teaches me almost as soon as I learn them.  Like many students, I learn what I need to for the exam, and then forget it straight away.  Ah, to be an elephant!  (They say he never forgets.)  How God must despair over his children's forgetfulness!  We are so quick to forget and so slow to learn.  The Israelites were a forgetful people.  The people building the temple under Nehemiah repented of their ancestors' forgetfulness: "Our forefathers became arrogant and stiff-necked, and did not obey your commands. They refused to listen and failed to remember the miracles you performed among them" (Nehemiah 9:16-17).  Jesus also chided his disciples for their forgetfulness: "Be careful," Jesus warned them. "Watch out for the yeast of the Pharisees and that of Herod."  They discussed this with one another and said, "It is because we have no bread."  Aware of their discussion, Jesus asked them: "Why are you talking about having no bread? Do you still not see or understand? Are your hearts hardened? Do you have eyes but fail to see, and ears but fail to hear? And don't you remember? When I broke the five loaves for the five thousand, how many basketfuls of pieces did you pick up?" "Twelve," they replied. "And when I broke the seven loaves for the four thousand, how many basketfuls of pieces did you pick up?" They answered, "Seven." He said to them, "Do you still not understand?" (Mark 8:15-21)

      And Jesus says to us too, "Don't you remember?"  He may say - "Why are you so fearful? Don't you remember that you can trust me?"  He may say - "Why are you so disobedient?  Don't you remember how this grieves my heart?" He may say - "Why are you so selfish?  Don't you remember that everything you have comes from me?  He may say - "Why are you so apathetic about serving me?  Don't you remember what I have done for you?" 

      Jesus' call of "Don't you remember?" encourages us to weave the stories of God's activity in our life into our memories in threads of steel which will not fray, and in bold colours which will never fail to capture our attention.  Deuteronomy 4:9 tells us, "Be careful, and watch yourselves closely so that you do not forget the things your eyes have seen or let them slip from your heart as long as you live."  We need to learn how to remember what God has taught us.  Deuteronomy 6:6 says, "These commandments that I give you today are to be upon your hearts. Impress them on your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up. Tie them as symbols on your hands and bind them on your foreheads. Write them on the doorframes of your houses and on your gates. "  In other words, place the things that God has put in your heart into someone else's heart.  Talk about what you have seen as you meet over coffee or as you speak in the quiet hours of the remains of the day.  Write down what God has done in a journal or a blog or on a post-it note  on the back of the sun visor in your car.  Do whatever you can to embed these memories of the stories of God's work deep in the centre, to make them a part of the shape of your life.

      It is a comfort in our forgetfulness that we have a God who remembers our fragile minds.  Psalm 103:14 tells us, "He knows how we are formed, he remembers that we are dust."  And so he is patient with us, and will teach us the lesson again (if we need it).  And it is a comfort that we have a God who never forgets us, although we may forget him or what he has done.  Isaiah 49:15-16 says, "Can a mother forget the baby at her breast and have no compassion on the child she has borne? Though she may forget, I will not forget you!  See, I have engraved you on the palms of my hands." 

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    • 1 year ago
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  • Who Am I? Who Am I?

    • From: NorCalGal
    • Description:

      So many of our struggles come from not seeing ourselves as God sees us. Because we don't really view ourselves with God's "eyes" we seek to define who we are in other ways. Some ways that I have sought to define myself have sadly included: doing good works in the eyes of other people, following the "rules", my attractiveness to the opposite sex, what size and brand of jeans I wear, how important my job is, pleasing my friends, my outward successes or failures and on and on...

      If we are defining who we are by anything other than Christ, it leads to discouragement and despair and often to sin as we are looking to be filled up by temporal satisfactions. If we could just have God's "eyes" for a moment, I think we would be shocked at the all-encompassing unconditional love that He has for us. If we could see have His view for just a moment I don't think we would be trying to fill-up our souls with these false sources of worth.

      Since I have been in this place of misguided self-definition (repeatedly I admit), I wanted to look at what the Bible says about how God sees me. Each line below is based directly on Scripture and tells us how the God of the entire universe sees His creation (you and me).

      I am........
      A new creation
      Chosen by God
      Unable to be separated from God’s love by anything external or internal
      Holy
      His friend
      Clean, blessed and accepted
      God's child that will receive an inheritance of glory
      Forgiven
      Approved
      Freed from sin
      Strong (through Christ)
      Without fault
      His stunning success
      Daily equipped to serve Him
      Accepted as I am
      Able to live a godly life
      A temple of the Holy Spirit


      When we are tempted to look in the mirror, to other people or to our actions (good or bad) to define us - remember that God has a different view of us.

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    • 1 year ago
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  • stitched. stitched.

    • From: hopelikefeathers
    • Description:

      My mom is an incredible seamstress. She's made some beautiful pieces over the years (my favorites included my second grade Rainbow Brite costume and my senior prom dress :). Maybe because I'm not into sewing, it all seems like a magic show to me. For years, I watched her cut around fabric pieces and lay them out until they look like lonely little islands floating on the table. Eventually the pieces come together, pinned. And then little by little they're sewn. And then eventually I had the most rocking Halloween costume in my school. But sometimes, very rarely, she would mess something up. or rethink an idea, and then she has to pull the pieces apart. It's bad enough to rethink a project before you begin it, but pulling the durn thing apart had to be a massive let down. It is for me. The only way I can relate is to think of what I write, projects I have to outline and rework and reimagine. Projects that seem to be going great and then turn cantankerous. Projects I almost complete before realizing there is a plot hole a golf cart could drive through. I think all artists are perfectionists. Some (like my mom) are just more mature than others (like me). 

      Until recently, I hadn't realized how this whole pulling apart, and re-imagining, applied to my faith. The "aw shucks" dreamy eyed love I had for God as a teen has been replaced with a still reverent, but more bruised, kind of love as a twentysomething. Both loves are genuine. Somedays it's just hard for me to figure out how to live out my faith from this angle. Recently, I feel like I've been pulling apart little pieces of my heart  - reevaluating what I believe. Remembering what matters most. Maybe it's because sometimes 'faith" seems so political. Maybe its because looking for a new church. Maybe it's because I'm just getting more apathetic as I meander through my twenties. I don't think that's it though. I'm one of those deliriously hopeful dreamer types most of the time. Reworking this thing is frustrating, that's all. 

      I've been away from Relevant and Radiant for awhile, but I'm really excited about reading these blogs. It's good to know I'm not alone in all the questions I'm asking, or even in the way I'm trying to make some peace with all the unknowns. I keep telling myself putting all these pieces together will be worth it in the end; that my life and faith will be something more genuine, and more beautiful too. 

      The best story is in the stitches right?  :)

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    • 1 year ago
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  • The Curiosity of Being Loved The Curiosity of Being Loved

    • From: Mairisimo
    • Description:

      For twenty-five years I was the girl who had never had a date.  Never been kissed, never held hands.  Two boys in my life had asked me out, but both weren't Christians (and I got the feeling they were asking because I was female).  I'll be honest and say that there were definite times when I wondered what was wrong with me.  I would walk through the park or go to a coffee shop and see smiling couples.  I yearned for that.  Why wouldn't someone like me?  Sometimes I convinced myself that it was the way I looked and maybe my personality.  If I could act more bubbly or get rid of this acne then someone will notice.  Although companionship was something I longed and prayed for, I always felt God's voice telling me to wait.  So I waited.

      To my amazement, about two months ago He granted me my heart's desire.  In typical God-fashion, it was through odd circumstances.  Rewinding to my tween years, there was a boy who was friends with my best friend's brother.  I remember seeing Josh briefly when visiting, but then we (along with a church group) all went to this ship down in Dana Point, CA which did reinactments of eighteenth century maritime life.  The group was divided into crews and since I had been on the ship before, I was chosen to be a leader of the crew.  Of course my best friend and her brother were apart of my crew, however Josh refused.  He told me that "girls were too bossy", thus wouldn't be apart of my crew.  From then on, I labeled him as a smarmy little twit and every time I saw him afterwards, I recalled that incident and detested him.

      Forward to a couple months ago at that same best friend's mother's birthday party.  My brother and I arrived at their house with a purple orchid for her gift and glanced around the livingroom to see all who was there.  A strapping young man did catch my eye and he started a conversation with me.  Turns out it was Josh.  Long story short, the feelings of disgust were replaced with much softer, friendlier ones.  We became best friends and I found myself smitten.  I was drawn to his love of God, his boldness (I possess a meek and mild personality), his genuine care for others and his enthusiasm for everything.  However, he is leaving in September to pursue pastoral training in New York, so always maintained that he could not pursue a relationship.  I'll admit that I was dissapointed, but once again God told me to have patience.  Two days after Easter while watching The Passion of the Christ that night, he told me he had opened his heart to having feelings for me and that he didn't know how it was going to work out, but he would make it work.

      I could never have imagined being blessed so much.  Josh is teaching me, encouraging me in Christ, and exuding  God's love towards me.  He tells me each day how pretty I am, both inside and out.  It still is a curious thing to be loved by a strapping young man, yet I hope I never get used to it.  I thank God every day for bringing him into my life and giving me the patience to wait.  :-)

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    • 1 year ago
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  • south island, new zealand south island, new zealand

    • From: kate cremisino
    • Description:
    • 1 year ago
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  • 2am, Pacific Standard Time 2am, Pacific Standard Time

    • From: kate cremisino
    • Description:

      we were long into the flight from auckland to los angeles. dinner had been served + we watched our personal movie screens attached to the seat backs in front of us. i sat at the window. around 2am, i saw a streak of light brighten the sky outside. for the next ten minutes i cupped my hands beside my face and window to cut the dim glare inside the plane and watched the most fascinating and spiritually provocative dance i ever experienced. 

      it was a "best thing you ever saw" moment.

      i stifled tears. i felt the power of god + the majesty of creation.

      there, over the pacific ocean was a storm, all by itself, a few miles to the east of us. we were completely out of clouds so i watched this storm from the perfect view, at eye level. i watched entire bolts of lightening streak from the top of a cloud to the ocean. i watched horizontal flashes of electricity ripple at record speed through wisps of clouds. each flash illuminating a new scene of shadow while revealing the curves of another cloud. 

      the thought that i could quite possibly be the only person in the world watching the storm, this storm that was in the middle of the ocean, miles above the sea, was breathtaking. i only pulled myself away from the window when it finally out of sight.

      it was a moment of pure creation working + doing what it does. it was energy put into motion, acting by its on volition. being in the middle of no where, away from civilization it had a raw power to it. it happening where no one to see, gave me a new sense of the bigness of this world, and the smallness of me, and the greatness of the creator. -- the creator, who set this into motion, who also gives me words of encouragement and dreams for guidance. the god who nurtures my wounds and kisses my pain away. the god who gives us vision + passion. that same person sets things into motion in his creation. every single cell. yet he is a personal being, such a good father to us--when humanity around us fails us, he picks up the pieces, saying "i can heal you. forgive them. i do. know let me show you how to love them anyway + move forward in your life i gave you." 

      few things shock + awe me anymore. i rather hate it. i feel bored with many sights + scenes. maybe in a fast-paced, image-driven world, i (+we) get bombarded with so much in a week, our sensitivity to things is weakened.... maybe i have seen too many things. maybe i am desensitized to beauty... so i am glad for that moment of beauty and strength in the plane, flying over the pacific ocean, as i felt connected to my god, the creator and healer of the world. 

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    • 1 year ago
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  • God Put a Smile Upon My Face God Put a Smile Upon My Face

    • From: lmwilliams2009
    • Description:

      I heard the news yesterday. I had received the position at Americorps. I was excited. Almost too stunned to actually believe it had happened. All of my prayers and patience had worked. Or more importantly, God's hand had been upon it.

      This morning at 8am, I had my final interview and I filled out paper work for two hours. It was long, it was tedious, but it is now done. There is so much to to do to work for the Government.

      I'm estatic about the position. But I realize that haze for next year has been pushed forward and I now have a whole year somewhat planned out for me. Now I will only need to worry about getting my grant-writing class done, and studying for the GRE. I'm rather excited that I now have a plan for the Fall, but I realize that it will be like nothing I have ever experienced.

      To God be the glory!

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    • 1 year ago
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  • The Art of Busyness The Art of Busyness

    • From: lmwilliams2009
    • Description:

       

      I love to stay busy. Texting a friend the other day, I told her that my life, after my college graduation, has been boring, because I haven't been busy. I love being busy! Every minute of the day, I feel I need to be doing something constructive, or my idea of constructive. I have been trying to stay busy, I just finished my Americorps application. I have have a list of 25 books to read this summer and I've already finished 2 of these books. I am also studying for the GRE. I've even started working out again to fill my day.

      But, there are things that I could be doing that I haven't. Looking for another job, as both of my current jobs are looking gloomier and gloomier. I also need to write thank-you notes for my graduation. I had been really good at receiving something, and right away writing my heartfelt thanks for whatever I had received. I could be cleaning my room which needs re-organizing and maybe even some pitching of things I horde. 

      Maybe my idea of busy is making sure I'm doing the things I want to do. That doesn't sound right. That sounds more like selfishness. I'm selfish. Admitting it is the first step. But, I need to not just admit, but commit to the fact that I have priorities that I have decided are unimportant because I just don't want to do them. I think if I were to get these things accomplished, I wouldn't have this dreading feeling in the pit of my stomach that I should be doing something.

      That's it! That's the feeling. The feeling that I should be doing something because I'm supposed to be doing something. Since I have always put off something or another, I wonder what it feels like to truly have nothing to do? Have put this feeling upon myself? Have I made my life feel lacking just because I haven't put my sheep in the right pasture?

       If I can commit to getting these priorities done, I definetely feel accomplished rather than always waiting for that next thing to take my mind of important matters. 

      "I can do all things through Him who strengthens me." Philippians 4:13 (NASB)

       

       

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    • 1 year ago
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  • The Exodus The Exodus

    • From: Lee Ann
    • Description:

      The sun is suspended at its highest peak. It’s rays that where once welcomed in the cold of winter, are now burning the very skin I walk in.

      Each step pulls the muscles tight in my calves, feeling as if the tendon will snap at any moment. The dust rises up as my foot stumbles against the parched ground. My lips crack as I pant.  Sweat rolls like rain off my forehead, its saltiness stings my lips and eyes.

      My destination is unknown. It is uncomfortably silent, except for the sound of my own heavy breathing.

      I feel like I’ve been wandering, aimlessly in the desert a lot like the Israelites did. Except I do not see the pillar of fire and cloud. I do not hear the rumbling of the voice of God. Manna does not appear in the dew of the morning. My eyes are calloused to the glories of the LORD.

      I have like a rebellious child, stubborn and assured that they know what’s right for them.  I have taken matters in my own hands, assuring God that my little GPS in my brain is sure to get me out of this wilderness. I know exactly where my Promise Land is.

      But now I’m lost, fading in and out of consciousness, thirsty and stumbling around blind. The wolves of the night are poised ready to sink their fangs in me. Rather than seeking help from Yahweh, I look up to the night sky and in a hoarse, straining voice ask, “Why God?! Why are you doing this to me? Why are you not blessing me? Where are you? WHERE ARE YOU?!”

      I came across a quote that hit me pretty hard.
       
      “ You can’t be connected with God until you’re at peace with who you are. If you’re still upset that God gave you this body or this life or this family or these circumstances, you will never be able to connect with God in a healthy, thriving, sustainable sort of way. You’ll be at odds with your maker. And if you can’t come to terms with who you are and the life you’ve been given, you’ll never be able to accept others and how they were made and the lives they’ve been given. And until you’re at peace with God and those around you, you will continue to struggle with your role on the planet, your part to play in the ongoing creation of the universe. You will continue to struggle and resist and fail to connect.”
         
      You see … I’ve been disconnected from God for a while now.

      I am upset with the circumstances God has put me in. I’m a well-rounded, intelligent journalist, with no job. Let alone, job possibilities. I’m like an athlete, trained, ready to go, with no race to run. I’m not at peace with where I am. I long to be anywhere but here. I am constantly looking to the horizon for some hope that might come. Some new adventure. A new job that might give me purpose to wake up in the morning.  I am my worst nightmare, a 22 year-old college graduate, living at home, and jobless.

      I hate the circumstances I am in.

      But until I am able to be at peace with where I am at and where God is taking me … I will not feel connected to the Maker.  I am sure that God gets tired of my complaining. But I haven’t really been seeking His direction, His will and to HIS Promise Land, not my own.

      Instead, I am fumbling in circles in a place of thirst and hunger. Complaining and grumbling.

      “During those many days the king of Egypt died, and the people of Israel groaned because of their slavery and cried out for help. Their cry for rescue from slavery came up to God. And God heard their groaning, and God remembered his covenant with Abraham, with Issac, and with Jacob. God saw the people of Israel – and God knew.” Exodus 2:23-24

      God hears my grumblings. He hears every word.  God knew. He understands what I am going through.

      So … now I am looking to Him, not in anger and cursing where I am in life but searching for peace.  Because, “God is not a God of confusion but of peace” (1 Cor. 14: 33). 

      I am desperately seeking His face, arms out searching to feel Him. I am more desperate for Him and His presence, to feel connected to Him again more than anything.

      I am falling to my knees in utter desperation, crying out to the God of Abraham, grasping for glimpses of Him in my everyday life. Because I know that when I hold out my hand, blind, broken and lost. His strong hand will find me. He will pull me up off my bleeding knees, and pull me in close.

      Then I will feel the closeness of my Savior, feel His heart beat. I will hear his voice again saying to me, “I am with you, my child. I was always with you. I have never left, but it was you who strayed far. But like a shepherd who loses a sheep, I searched for you. I chose you. I love you.”

      Though I have not yet found His hand, I wait searching for Him. I know He is not far. Like the children of Israel, I am still wandering in this desert. This is my journey to God’s greater purpose in my life, what I was meant for. This is my journey, where God will appear in the desert with miracles. This is my exodus.

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    • 1 year ago
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  • dearest lovie. dearest lovie.

    • From: angelafrancine
    • Description:

      so, lovie.

      today, do you remember?

      that time when we had a girl’s night. under the sky, sitting on a blanket in center field. and we talked about life’s little whatnots. with dill cheese and crackers. and evoo and bread. with the stars. you remember?

      you said something at the end. as we were packing our things. and i grabbed the sleeping bag - and left the heavy picnic basket for you to carry. you remember?

      before we hopped the fences in the outfield.

      lovie, you said something about how it’s hard for you to not be bitter towards boys in general. about how you think they all don't mean what they say. and i think it’s easy to associate that to all boys because a boy said he loved you. and then that love needed to move on.

      and well, that is hard on a girl. i've been there. five years ago. with a boy.

      and we have both grown since then. and we both needed to grow on our own. and i see that now. the heartbreak makes so much sense. and days were a long term cycle towards good. and now, i also see how he looks at people. and cares. he really cares about the care of people. he is the kind of passionate that some don’t know what to do with. so they label him too much. and you know that those are my favorites.

      and so, i see. that this heartbreak was good.

      but lovie. some days, if i am still. and invite those feelings back, my stomach still turns at my heartbreak.

      it twists. and turns in and out. and i say,

      i will never go through another break up again.

      that the next boy will be the real deal. and i know it will be the real deal because i will watch him and know him before he ever holds my hand. or kisses my cheek. or plays with my hair. i say,

      i will know him. i will see him be consistent in all surroundings before i let him look deep into me.

      i mean, really deep into me. before i hear what he says without saying it.

      before i speak.

      i will never go through another break up again.

      but, i put up walls a few years ago. and they were good walls. and i learned to be independent. and i learned to be me. and i learned confidence. and i experienced grace.

      but sometimes - now, fourish years later - these walls are concrete. and i want to tear them down. but it is hard.

      i am used to being just me and grace. and friends and family and batons and airplanes. i am good at being just me.

      i am not good at thinking about letting another boy look at me. and see me. and hear me.

      but i want to hear him.

      and i feel like i have all of these things i would want to say. and all of these things i would want to be. and how i would want to love and serve him.

      but lovie, these walls. they are such concrete.

      and here's the paradox: the walls - the breakup resulting walls - held my shape. as i was being molded post heartbreak. these walls were the healing. and the chipping. and the stretching and growing. and the breathing. and laughing.

      but now that those walls have served their purpose, i need to lower them down.

      but it's so hard, lovie. to lower the walls, i mean.

      so then i think of you. and your walls are being built so fresh. they are still settling in. shifting and finding their sturdy root in the ground.

      and i think about the hurt that lingers for months after. the vulnerability of still feeling exposed. and some days – it’s like the actual act of a breath hurts. it deeply hurts to just even take your breaths.

      and i want to tell you all of these things about how days get easier. and your mind doesn't trick or analyze you as often. and your appetite no longer fades in and out. and you begin to breathe without thinking.

      but i know you know this. and i know you'll know this as you continue to go through this.

      so instead. i want to pass on a good excerpt from a good book. by cs lewis. you may have read it before.

      but it is true. about true love. and our role of it on earth. i honestly believe this is where the catch phrase,

      it is better to have loved and lost, than to never have loved at all

      originated. seriously, i do.

      and if cs isn't credited with that cliché - then, well, i think some trick of a poser out there ripped him off.

      so, anyway, cs writes this in response to a letter from st. augustine.

      in the letter, augustine had someone very close to him pass away. and he was devastated. and he droned on about how this is what comes when you give your heart fully to someone other than god. and even more about how you shouldn't let your happiness depend on something you may lose. if love is to be a blessing, and not a misery, it must be for the only beloved who will never pass away.

      and cs agrees. and says something like,

      yes of course this makes sense. sure, augie. i am a safety-first creature, too.

      cs goes even further to agree with st augustine, and says,

      of all arguments against love, none makes so strong an appeal to my nature as "careful! this might lead you to suffereing."

      but (and this is why i wish cs was still alive. so maybe i could have coffee or doughnuts or a slice of pizza with him)

      but (this is where cs kicks it.)

      there is no escape along the lines that st. augustine suggests. nor along any other lines. there is no safe investment. to love at all is to be vulnerable. love anything, and your heart will certainly be wrung and possibly be broken. if you want to make sure of keeping it intact, you must give your heart to no one. wrap it carefully round with hobbies and little luxuries; avoid all entanglements; lock it up safe in the casket or coffin of your selfishness.

      but in that casket -- safe, dark, motionless, airless - it will change. it will not be broken, it will become unbreakable, impenetrable, irredeemable. the alternative to tragedy, or at least to the risk of tragedy, is damnation. the only place outside of heaven where you can be perfectly safe from all the dangers and perturbations of love is hell.

      oh man oh boy oh man. cs then challenges the walls.

      christ did not teach and suffer that we might become, even in the natural loves, more careful of our own happiness. if a man is not uncalculating towards the earthly beloveds whom he has seen, he is none the more likely to be so towards god whom he has not. we shall draw nearer to god, not by trying to avoid the sufferings inherent in all loves, but by accepting them and offering them to him; throwing away all defensive armor. if our hearts need to be broken, and if he chooses this as the way in which they should break, so be it.

      oh nuts. these times are nuts. being stuck inside this girl brain with rotating girl emoticons is nuts.

      but if broken hearts are our story. then broken hearts hope to point us to love.

      so then, lovie. no, we aren't nuts because we didn't see blinking signs - before we saw love. both sides did all they knew to do - to love. and thank god that he can take broken love and heal it and make us experience the deepness of a breath.

      my walls aren't cool. they aren't independent and admirable. they are my way of trying to defend my own self.

      but why do i try so hard to be own armor.

      my energy should, instead, be focused on loving like grace.

      and sweet grace will take care of all the heartbroken defense cop out-ness.

      you know?

      and, of course, it all comes back to our phrase.

      the desire to be known and then loved. that is the faithful thing of it all.

      but what if, even more, we now look at it and claim that

      we are already known and already loved.

      and now that. that is the faithful thing of it all.

       

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    • 1 year ago
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