Category: <span>Social Justice</span>

church-2Despite Melbourne being decidedly cooler than last weekend, fires still burn. The wider region has begun to respond, with Singapore promising the use of helicopters stationed in Queensland, a woman in Paris doing the legwork to track down a missing person in Melbourne and people in Uganda praying for the state of Victoria. (*Yes that was a sad attempt at a too-clever-but-just-bad lead-up but I did think both former facts were fairly interesting, so bear with me…).

My father-in-law Ron, and brother-in-law Mark are currently overseas with a group called Hope Builders, working in Uganda to build houses for widows and orphans in an initiative to build a physical community that will provide mothers and children for each other -ultimately shared care and new families.

I finally managed to track down the blog of ‘Team 3’ which includes a bunch of people from YVV.

It would great if you could check out what they’re doing, laugh at the fact that Ron had to preach as soon as someone mentioned he was ‘a pastor’ (Preaching not his usual role, although I’m sure he did fine!) and pray for the team.

But jumping back to Victoria now…

I was listening to the Radio (774) yesterday and the presenter was beautifully tactful suggesting that perhaps we have something to learn in looking at how the community pulls together in a time of disaster. This community spirit – as it’s bizzarely called, is something that should occur more readily in the bland old every-day. I couldn’t agree more. There is a striking similarity and gaping difference here in the response to the fires to the physical implementation of building houses in Uganda. I think that places like Uganda are already close, if not there in getting the community thing right but simply lack resources where the disaster of poverty is the every-day – hence the need for outside intervention, or at least our assumed response of intervention. Where as our over abundance of resouces in the Western world needs the disaster to tease out the community. This I am sure is none-to an original thought.

Simply speaking:

Western World: Resources + Disaster (Fire) = Community

Third World: Community + Disaster (Poverty) = Resources

Naturally… the Third world equation does not always eventuate and here lies the rather huge problem that faces our world. Despite this, I think the Third world might be coming from a better position initally in at least they have community on the correct side of the equation. In many ways, Australia is very, very poor – as is my equation theory, but in the true spirit of being married to a guy who really likes his theories, this is mine.

Christianity Church Social Justice

THE FRESH AIR FUND, an independent, not-for-profit agency, has provided free summer vacations to more than 1.7 million New York City children from low-income communities since 1877. Nearly 10,000 New York City children enjoy free Fresh Air Fund programs annually. In 2008, close to 5,000 children visited volunteer host families in suburbs and small town communities across 13 states from Virginia to Maine and Canada. 3,000 children also attended five Fresh Air camps on a 2,300-acre site in Fishkill, New York. The Fund’s year-round camping program serves an additional 2,000 young people each year.

It is across the other side of the globe (to Australian readers), but as I know at least one person who shot over the US recently, then this is the Fresh Air Fund and it’s possible someone might run into the idea here and then go get themselves involved. I really love initiatives like this that add value to kids lives.

Although not always possible, offering camps free of charge is an ideal position. It leaves to wonder what it would take to organise something like this in Australia. I don’t know of any quite on this scale yet over here but if you poke your nose at the background of Fresh Air, then you’ll realise that it was just a small idea and a banding together of a church to serve those around them that kicked this off.

So if you don’t want to go lead, you could go and donate, or if you happen to live on the right side of the globe, you could even be a host family.

*A note about advertising on this blog. I was asked by email to promote this campsite and am gladly doing so because I think it contributes well to the world and adds to building the kingdom of God. I have been asked before to advertise random things/do a link swaps to things I don’t care about and really, don’t bother unless you think it might be something I would get on board with – otherwise I will just ignore your emails.

Camping Christianity Holidays Social Justice

It is entirely up to me to eventually work out which are feasible, but it is now 2009 and there are, however ridiculous: resolutions or I could term them idealutions, at least that way there is leeway in sidestepping the mark.

2009 came in moderation, not with a bang. There were no fireworks, but we had sparklers, music, champagne, a marquee and a few friends. I most enjoyed the early morning introduction to ’09. First up after a less than perfect sleep in a tent on less than flat ground, but there was an eggshell sky and sun, a silent field and moment of the same before it went to the crapper and the clouds and we got some rain.

The news continues to talk about 2008 as a non-highlight and begs hope out of the new year. I am inclined to disagree with the former statement however the word hope is a sweet one that should live on.

In a moment of introspection (aka. now) here are my highlights of the past and hopes for the present (with a few true aspirations and undoubtedly top shelf items that I won’t really reach, being short and all).

Highlights

  • January 5th I married my best friend. And consequently spent the rest of the year married to him (to be continued…). It’s been interesting and fun! Needless to say, I really love being married and I really love Geoff! It’s certainly been a wildly contrasting year in regard to all previous years.
  • Uni, second semester proved full of inspiring people especially in regards to tutors. I finally felt like I was pulling my weight effectively and got to try things like branding and animation. I have come to the realisation that I mightn’t fit the typical traditional stereotype of ‘graphic designer’ but can work from my interests and strengths and hopefully can levy more out of the web stuff and marry it with my ‘designish eye’.
  • Frustration. It seems a weird choice to include it here, but God has increased my frustration with how I live as a Christian and how church can/could operate. It hasn’t gotten too far but there is room for movement and there needs to be room for movement. Some of this is tied up with finishing up with leading youth and being dumped in the deepend of doing nothing.
  • And there are the miscellaneous things like: growing friendships with people like Beth and Bri, marvelous restaurants, some great movies  and books and some less than typical experiences – like seeing Wicked.

Un-Highlights

  • A bodgy start to the uni year with some super low motivation levels in regard to particular subjects.
  • Less investment in certain friendships and not because of want, but because I am a lazy and…
  • Feeling so busy and unorganised

Idealutions, resolutions and hopeings

  • A slower year, where priorities become priorities and the trivial things are thrown out with the bathwater
  • Invested time and head space to enjoy and get the most out of uni
  • To be more organised at home
  • Eat better, cook nicer food – to be bothered
  • Get more fit
  • To continue to investigate, read more about, and live out some of the results of the aforementioned frustration
  • More time for God…. listen more, write more
  • Be less critical of things like traditional church and learn to love what is good and do differently instead of simply getting annoyed.
  • Be a part of something that explores doing Church differently, try some things!
  • To freelance for a while and to do well at it in terms of being self-disciplined and gain useful experience
  • Put together a portfolio, get a design job
  • More head in the blog. More faithful writing, less crap. Perhaps make something more of it.
  • Release a WordPress Theme (and yes it is in production!)
  • Learn to use the Wacom properly and work on practicing drawing/illustration etc.
  • Learn more about Flash
  • Learn more about Illustrator
  • Learn some of the little extra things about webdesign and standards that I might otherwise ignore.
  • Get my head around Javascript/PHP etc..
  • Continue to work on building a really good marriage and be better at loving Geoff
  • Be better at maintaining and developing friendships
  • Invest in things like Soul Survivor etc.
  • Keep track of the money I spend
  • Spend less money
  • Own less, give more
  • Greater confidence and willingness to try things (especially re. design)
  • Days of doing different things, like taking my camera out somewhere foreign or less than usual
  • Finish uni, and do well in my final year
  • Righteousness and peace… Isaiah 32, Romans 14

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Ultimately, we have just one moral duty: to reclaim large areas of peace in ourselves, more and more peace, and to reflect it towards others. And the more peace there is in us, the more peace there will also be in our troubled world.

– Etty Hillesum,
died in Auschwitz in 1943 at the age of 29. From An Interrupted Life, a compilation of her diaries and letters.

(from Sojourners Verse & Voice)

Social Justice Words

I dropped by Myers today to check if they had any Christmas decorations worth bothering with (and not ridiculously expensive) as I no longer can leech off my parents supply being married and all… While I was there I overhead a woman say to her friend.

“We gave the poor our other stuff, so now we’ve just got the good stuff out”.

Naturally, this evoked a kind of (righteous – which is perhaps over justified) indignation. I still went and bought the decorations in my hand.

I’ve been thinking quite a bit about how to treat Christmas this year and how to balance how I think I want to live – unbound by consumerism, which I do so incredibly poorly, and how I actually live – which is mostly as I always have.

How do you balance the giving of presents, because you love particular people and it’s part of Christmas, with giving where giving is more about life than about making people feeling good?

I like the idea of Advent Conspiracy, because of the principle of cutting back and yet giving more where it counts works. It’s not flawless though.

Surely you can’t truthfully have a parallel philosophy in wasting money on mostly useless stuff to give to your family and friends, and using money on something as key to life as water, health care, security, food.

Undoubtedly I am driven my selfishness, by the expectations around me, the traditions I love… because I am inconclusive about how to deal with it.

So for yet another year I will sit on this wobbly middle ground, which in reality is probably still closer to the bank I started on, just as far from the side I would idealisiticaly like to want myself.

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