Tuesday, April 14, 2009

We came, We walked, We conqured. Thank You!


The Oxfam Trailwalker- in my books, a grueling experience! We completed 100km over 32 hours on 4/5 April in Taupo. Our team, through its highs and lows hobbled to the end with the support of a crew who supplied our every need. This walk, I labeled 'epic' by the end. Epic for many reasons. The physical demands on our un-athletic and inexperienced bodies and the sheer mental determination that edged us on was overwhelming (and still is). More over, Epic, in the way that this event went far beyond ourselves, it was the partnershpip we had with those all over the country who encouraged us, sponsored oxfams work, and thought of us over that weekend. I feel as though, I am just one in a team of over a few hundred who have journeyed through this experience with us. You, our team have raised over $5000 for Oxfams work. Priceless.

This is what happens when we are connected, when we simply give what we have, when our values override our financial concerns. Thankyou, keep going, we have work to do!

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

The Resurrection Starting Now

Easter.
"The earth shook and the stone in front of the tomb moved”
(Matt. 28.1-15).

The Christian narrative of the Resurrection is not some death-defying futuristic hope of a new “…life without space, without history, without environment, with no sensuous elements in it…” (C.S. Lewis); nor is it a matter of hitching a miraculous ride to some happy other-worldly paradise suspended in the sky. The Resurrection narrative "earths" the possibility of God remaking and renewing the present today, starting now. The early church clearly got it and they drew from the Resurrection the resources and strength they needed to form counter-cultural communities with a radically new “concrete social and economic reality” (Rob Bell). The old and tired categories of economic division - master and slave, rich and poor - and the older categories of prejudice and religious violence - Jew and Gentile, male and female, in and out - lost what imaginative and political grip they had on these communities. A newer, gentler, fairer and more inclusive world started to emerge right under the nose of the incumbent economic and political regime. The Resurrection narrative signaled the end of the old political order ruled by violence, fear, suspicion, and initiated in these alternative communities a newer re-imagined order of economic generosity, embrace, and social justice. These new communities, literally a collection of collaborating households in neighborhoods, were characterized by a distinctive practice of:

- economics (Acts 2.44-45; 4.32-37; 5.1-11; 6.1-7;11.27-30; Romans 15.22-28; 2 Corinthians 8.13-15; 9; Galatians 2.10)

- justice and a gifting of voice to the voiceless (Acts 2.1-21; James 2)

- hospitality (Luke 24.13-35 – two discouraged disciples make space for a “stranger” who turns out to be the Christ; Acts 2.46-47)7

- a new humanity (Ephesians 2)

- reconciliation and strengthening community (Acts 6)

- seeing God, private property, others and the world (Acts 2.42-43; Acts 4.34-37; 5.3-4; Philippians 2).

These new communities“… made the grace of God credible by a society of love and mutual care which astonished pagans and was recognized as something entirely new. It lent persuasiveness to the claim that the new age had dawned in Christ. The word was not only announced but seen in the community of those who were giving it flesh. The message of the Kingdom became more than an idea. A new human community had sprung up and looked very much like the new order to which (Jesus) had pointed. Here love was given daily expression; reconciliation was actually occurring; people were no longer divided into Jews and Gentiles, slave and free, male and female. In this community the weak were protected, the stranger welcomed. People were healed; the poor and dispossessed were cared for and found justice. Everything was shared. Joy abounded and ordinary lives were filled with praise (and a new sense of wonder)” (Michael Green).

What could this look like where you're at? What if we were to rehearse something of these stories of reorganization, renewal and resurrection where we live, study and work? What if we were to reinvent something of the economics, something of the hospitality of sight and space of these stories in our own neighborhoods? What difference would that make? What would our neighbours see? Who could we collaborate with to make a stronger neighborhood possible? The narrative of the Resurrection is the only prophetic alternative we have to the same old same tired stories of the “solution gridlock” tyrannizing our world. “It is (now) up to us to produce (new) signs of the resurrection in (our) present social, cultural and political world” (N. T. Wright). The story of the Christ-event, Jesus resurrected and the world reorganized and renewed, now lives on in you and me. Take that thought with you next time you go shopping, to study, or to work.

Kiss of the future

I caught a glimpse this morning of the future, the "future that needs a big kiss" (Bono). Ebonie, our littlest, freely gave everyone the biggest, longest hug and sloppiest kiss I've even seen. We felt embraced, included, loved, and... slightly wet... and this from a kid who can prove completely impotent the most polished of parenting techniques. I felt a surge of hope. What or who have you kissed lately? What is the future looking like from where you're at?

Friday, April 3, 2009

Are you joking?


The G20 have generously pledged a phenomenal trillion dollars to solve the global recession (that's $1,000,000,000,000; that's 12 zeroes to the left of the decimal point; a trillion is a million million dollars. I'm thinking where is the money coming from? and if its possible to magically "find" this kind of money, why haven't we dipped into these "funds" before to eradicate global poverty?). Do the numbers stack up?  Is it going to make a difference, or is it simply the cruel humouring of politikal speak? What do you think?

Thursday, April 2, 2009

God please...


God help the G20 rediscover and remember.... reveal to them the life-giving words that can re-describe and remake our shared future possible.
Please.

Gordon Brown's speech at St Paul's

Dr Chris Marshall sent the following link and email saying: 'Can you imagine our current PM, or anyone in our government, being able to articulate such a vision? I do understand that the structural injustices in the world cannot be remedied by soaring rhetoric alone. But I am grateful that the Obamas, Rudds and Browns of our day speaking the way they are. Would that our own leaders were capable of the same depth of insight!'
Here's a teaser...."And I want to suggest to you today that this most modern of crises, the first financial crisis of the global age, has confirmed the enduring importance of the most timeless of truths - that our financial system must be founded on the very same values that are at the heart of our family lives, neighbourhoods and communities.
Instead of a globalisation that threatens to become values-free and rules-free, we need a world of shared global rules founded on shared global values. I know it’s hard to talk about the future when you’re having a tough time in the present. You don’t redesign a boat in the midst of a storm.
But we need to talk about the future - because it falls to us to shape it. When Dr Martin Luther King talked about the fierce urgency of now, he asked us to awaken to a tide in the affairs of men which if missed means you can end up being literally too late for history.

See: http://www.number10.gov.uk/Page1885 8 0- accessed 1/4/09

Monday, March 30, 2009

G20 - Prayer for a Better World

The G20 nations meet this week to try and re-imagine (and resurrect) something of the global economy. It could be a God-given moment to "make things right." It could be. It'd be good to join The Rise UP campaign of the Micah Challenge and pray for our national/international leaders. A prayer guide for the Summit can be got from www.micahchallenge.org.uk/g20/. Keep to the Way.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

There is hope - scandalous

I discovered this posting at earthabbey.com (a cool online community that deserves some of your cyber energy)...

"This is a story to put a smile on the face of anyone convinced that growing and eating our own organic produce should, perhaps, take precedence, even, over the front lawn of the Whitehouse. Michelle Obama isn’t thinking about this. She’s not weighing the pros and cons of a petition urging her to do this. She’s not allowing some local grower to plant some potatoes in a corner. She’s doing it herself with the help of some local school children."

I love it - this is the new kind of politics that could change the course of history. I'm cracking a smile and sensing some hope. I'm thinking, where could I/we plant a communal garden?

Economics Hit Home

Its personal now. The global economic crisis left the distant and safe space of intellectual posturing and moved a lot closer to where we're at. A friend of mine e-mailed today to say that she has lost her job. My friend lives in a developing nation. The global financial slowdown has meant a lessening of donors, a contracting of capital income and consequently a trimming of expenditure. My friend has been "trimmed." I've gotta tell you, its scary. How will my friend cope without a fixed income or without a robust system of welfare? Will she be able to find employment in a shrinking and over-crowded market? What can I do? How many of you know someone who is facing this same cost-cutting trimming? What can we do? What will we do? Will we now learn to live from within a story of "enough" and redistribute what we have with our friends/neighbours who have-not? Will I? Will you? Will we?

Evermore - Between the Lines










Anyone listening to the latest from Evermore? Some catchy tunes and some great lyrics too. Look at these from Between the Lines:

"The world is very different now,

for man holds in his mortal hands,

the power to abolish,

all forms of human poverty,

and all forms of human life."

Hear the echo of the sword or the towel? Which is most evident in our own little corners of influence? The aggressive efficiency of the sword or the patient servanthood of the towel?


Wednesday, March 25, 2009

100kms for Water




As you will recall Chris' Frazers last In Touch with the World focused on water...
By 2025, at least 3.5 billion people -- about half the world's populations -- will live
in areas without enough water for agriculture, industry, and human needs... Worldwide, water quality conditions appear to have degraded in almost all
regions with intensive agriculture and in large urban and industrial areas."
-- World Resources Institute, October 2000


These facts are astonishing and real. We are doing the Oxfam trailwalker, to partner with you to see the above crisis avoided. Oxfam do some amazing development work- some of which is to do with providing water and working with communities to provide sustainable living solutions. So As we walk 100km, and you give financial sponsorship, together we can contribute to dealing with the simple solutions to poverty around the world. Follow the details on the poster (double click to open larger)or leave a comment if you would like to partner with us!

Thanks to those who already have. We look forward to making you proud on April 4/5 at Taupo!

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Economics of Elephants

The latest discussion paper from the Social Policy and Parliamentary Unit of The Salvation Army has gone to press. Economics of Elephants is a look at what the current economic crisis could mean for the practice of our faith in Aotearoa New Zealand. You can get a look at it by emailing me (malcolm_irwin@nzf.salvationarmy.org) or by going straight to www.salvationarmy.org.nz/socialpolicy.

Let me know what you think.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

a prayer that is all too true to be funny?

Hat tip Mike Zook and Mike Brantley.

Source Naked Pastor.

Cross-posted from Gavin Knight .com

Fairtrade Fortnight 2-17 May 2009

Groups all over Australia and New Zealand are planning events to promote Fairtrade and encourage people to think about purchasing products made fairly. So why not join them, and get something planned to inform those in your church and community.

Some ideas include
  • A Fairtrade Church Service (a few corps did this last year with great results)
  • Mothers Day (10th May) Have a fairtrade morning tea, what Mother wouldn't want to support something that meant children got education.
  • Movie and Discussion - Black Gold and China Blue are both really good. I have a copy of each which can be borrowed.
  • Get in a speaker to talk about it.
  • Fairtrade T-shirt Tie dying
  • Write to companies like Cadburys encouraging them to use Fairtrade.
More ideas and info will be on the Fairtrade website soon, and packs are being put together to send out to Corps.

She has a point.























P.S. The cartoon is from www.nataliedee.com

Monday, March 16, 2009

Is the Economic Crisis Over?

There has been in the last seven days something of a renewed resurgence of "hope" in the market... 4 days of good trading and some commentators have even dared to hint that the economic crisis could be over. what? is it? for who? what is your experience of the economic downturn? I think larger and more scarier than the current financial crisis is our crisis of vision. We're simply not thinking that differently from how we got ourselves in this mess. The proposed solutions of stimulating economies, bailing out banks, and privatization, stink of the same old same tired thinking. There has to be more, doesn't there?

Disclaimer

The contents of 'just comment' [individual postings and comments] soley represent the views of the individual authors.