As Christians in culture, current events, and politics, have we forsaken the Sermon on the Mount? I hope for Christians to live as Christians: not as nationalists, morality enforcers, or sheltered isolationists, but as the next generation of Christians in a globalized world who care passionately about loving every single one of their neighbors as God desires.
Showing posts with label Christian response. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christian response. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

When Your Country Disappears

A heartbreaking plea from Avaaz.org:

Dear friends,


Imagine the sea rising around you as your country literally disappears beneath your feet, where the food you grow and the water you drink is being destroyed by salt, and your last chance is to seek refuge in other lands where climate refugees have no official status. This is not a dream, it's the fearful reality for millions of people who live on islands around the world, from the Maldives to Papua New Guinea.


That is why these small islands are planning the unprecedented step next week, ahead of the UN General Assembly meeting, of calling on the Security Council itself to address climate change as a pressing threat to international peace and security.


This is a creative move born of desperation, a challenge to global powers to end their complacency and tackle this lethal crisis with the urgency of wars. This effort could help shift the tenor of the world's debate -- from a far-off storm cloud to a life-threatening crisis here and how. But the island states' campaign will meet fierce opposition from the world’s biggest polluters, so they need our help. Sign the petition now to raise a worldwide chorus of support for this call -- our signatures will be presented to the UN by the islands' ambassadors as they introduce their resolution next week:


http://www.avaaz.org/en/sos_small_islands


For the first time in human history, the North Pole can be circumnavigated -- the Arctic ice is melting more quickly than almost anyone anticipated, pushing up sea levels week by week. Now, small island nations -- where homes are, at most, mere meters above sea level -- are preparing evacuation plans to guarantee the survival of their populations. They are on the frontline, experiencing the first wave of devastating impacts from climate change which soon will threaten us all.


President Remengesau of Palau, a small island in the Pacific, recently said:

Palau has lost at least one third of its coral reefs due to climate change related weather patterns. We also lost most of our agricultural production due to drought and extreme high tides. These are not theoretical, scientific losses -- they are the losses of our resources and our livelihoods.... For island states, time is not running out. It has run out. And our path may very well be the window to your own future and the future of our planet".

Beyond the islands, countries like Bangladesh -- population, 150 million -- face losing large parts of their landmass. The experience of our planet's most vulnerable communities serves as a warning sign of the future world we can all expect: extreme weather growing in intensity, conflict over water and food supplies, coasts disappearing and hundreds of millions made refugees.


The more signatures we raise to be delivered to the UN next week, the more urgently this call will ring out to protect our common future. Sign now:


http://www.avaaz.org/en/sos_small_islands


The small islands' brave campaign for survival is our campaign as well. Just as sea levels rise or fall everywhere at the same time, the choices of every person everywhere affect the future of our common home. By standing with the people at the front line of the climate crisis, we show them, and ourselves, that we recognize our fundamental shared humanity -- and the responsibilities that come with it.


With hope, Ben, Iain, Alice, Paul, Graziela, Pascal, Ricken, Brett, Milena -- the Avaaz team


PS: For a report on Avaaz's campaigning so far, see:
https://secure.avaaz.org/en/report_back_2


PPS: These are the States who are sponsoring the resolution: Fiji, Maldives, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Samoa, Seychelles, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu, Vanuatu, joined by Canada and Turkey.


For a draft of the Small Islands States Resolution, please see:
http://islandsfirst.org/draftres.pdf


For more information about those presenting the petition please visit:
http://islandsfirst.org


For information on Tuvalu's evacuation plan and climate refugees, see:
http://www.wwf.org.au/articles/climate-refugees-in-a-drowning-pacific/


For information about how rising sea levels will affect us all:
http://www.earth-policy.org/Updates/Update2.htm


For more information on the rapidly-melting Arctic ice:
http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/climate-change/for-the-first-time-in-human-history-the-north-pole-can-be-circumnavigated-913924.html


For more information about all of the island states:
http://www.sidsnet.org/aosis/



ABOUT AVAAZ

Avaaz.org is an independent, not-for-profit global campaigning organization that works to ensure that the views and values of the world's people inform global decision-making. (Avaaz means "voice" in many languages.) Avaaz receives no money from governments or corporations, and is staffed by a global team based in London, Rio de Janeiro, New York, Paris, Washington DC, and Geneva.
Click here to learn more about our largest campaigns.


Some Christians doubt global warming and I think that is a very uneducated assumption. You can argue it and hate it or just hate the hype, but when real people groups and nations and families begin to be affected by rising waters, I don't think it's just a little topic to argue over in the U.S. I hope to see some U.N. policy on this.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

$8.8 Billion In Religious Donations To The Developing World

Aid and relief is one of American Christianity's strongest outward signs of Christ-like actions. The immense amount of aid sent to developing nations by Christians, not to mention those who service in medicine, care, missions, and relief efforts, shows that American Christianity can follow the tenants of the Christ who served the poor. I would say that countries like those in Africa and some of Asia should not be labeled as only "poor" but as countries who suffer great injustice. Such famine, poverty, and lack of education are the result of corrupt choices, especially in areas like Sudan, North Korea, Myanmar, and the Congo.

These numbers prove that American Christians are aware of such atrocities worldwide and want to support causes to alleviate the suffering. We learn today that Christian relief has hit $8.8 billion!!! This is a news story worth coverage but completely lost in the media. The Christian Post explains,

The amount of $8.8 billion is equivalent to 37 percent of all U.S. government aid, pointed out the Hudson Institute’s Center for Global Prosperity (CGP) in its 2008 Index of Global Philanthropy. Previously, the religious giving for 2005 was reported at $5.4 billion based on limited available data...
More than half of U.S. congregations gave an average of $10,500 to U.S. organizations for relief and development in poor countries. And over 30 percent made donations directly to programs in developing countries as well as volunteering for short-term missions or service trips, according to the survey.

As the Church in America begins to see more and more suffering worldwide these numbers will continue to expand. Americans are learning the vast sufferings of those oppressed by injustice in lesser developed countries.

I am excited to see these numbers grow because it shows the world that Christianity is a force based on God's love, not an exclusive, uninformed clique. For an atheist to say that Christianity does more harm than good in the world is just grievously wrong. Christianity, unlike any other religion, is morally oriented around a commission against injustice and based on equality. I'm not talking about 'let's all just get along and leave each other alone' or 'you do what you want, I'll do what I want.' It's more like, "If you aren't treated fairly or you are suffering or starving I have a real problem with that and I have to look at my own responsibility in that."

Saturday, May 3, 2008

Litany of Resistance

This beautiful litany really helped me think through current events and the timeless person of Jesus Christ.

From the book Jesus for President: Politics for Ordinary Radicals, by Shane Claiborne, Chris Haw, Jim Loney and Brian Walsh.

One: Lamb of God, you take away the sins of the world.

All: Have mercy on us.

One: Lamb of God, you take away the sins of the world.

All: Free us from the bondage of sin and death.

One: Lamb of God, you take away the sins of the world.

All: Hear our prayer. Grant us peace.

One: For the victims of war.

All: Have mercy.

One: Women, men and children.

All: Have mercy.

One: The maimed and the crippled.

All: Have mercy.

One: The abandoned and the homeless.

All: Have mercy.

One: The widowed and the orphaned.

All: Have mercy.

One: The bleeding and the dying.

All: Have mercy.

One: The weary and the desparate.

All: Have mercy.

One: The lost and the forsaken.

All: Have mercy.

One: O God, have mercy on us sinners.

All: Forgive us for we know not what we do.

One: For our scorched and blackened earth.

All: Forgive us.

One: For the scandal of billions wasted in war.

All: Forgive us.

One: For our arms makers and arms dealers.

All: Forgive us.

One: For our Caesars and our Herods.

All: Forgive us.

One: For the violence that is rooted in our hearts.

All: Forgive us.

One: For the times we turn others into enemies.

All: Forgive us.

One: Deliver us, O God.

All: Guide our feet into the way of peace.

One: Hear our prayer.

All: Grant us peace.

One: From the arrogance of power.

All: Deliver us.

One: From the myth of redemptive violence.

All: Deliver us.

One: From the tyranny of greed.

All: Deliver us.

One: From the ugliness of racism.

All: Deliver us.

One: From the cancer of hatred.

All: Deliver us.

One: From the seduction of wealth.

All: Deliver us.

One: From the addiction of control.

All: Deliver us.

One: From the idolatry of nationalism.

All: Deliver us.

One: From the paralysis of cynicism.

All: Deliver us.

One: From the violence of apathy.

All: Deliver us.

One: From the ghettos of poverty.

All: Deliver us.

One: From the ghettos of wealth.

All: Deliver us.

One: From a lack of imagination.

All: Deliver us.

One: Deliver us, O God.

All: Guide our feet into the way of peace.

One: We will not conform to the patterns of this world.

All: Let us be transformed by the renewing of our minds.

One: With the help of God’s grace.

All: Let us resist evil wherever we find it.

One: With the waging of war.

All: We will not comply.

One: With the legalization of murder.

All: We will not comply.

One: With the slaughter of innocents.

All: We will not comply.

One: With laws that betray human life.

All: We will not comply.

One: With the destruction of community.

All: We will not comply.

One: With the pointing finger and malicious talk.

All: We will not comply.

One: With the idea that happiness must be purchased.

All: We will not comply.

One: With the ravaging of the earth.

All: We will not comply.

One: With principalities and powers that oppress.

All: We will not comply.

One: With the destruction of peoples.

All: We will not comply.

One: With the raping of women.

All: We will not comply.

One: With governments that kill.

All: We will not comply.

One: With the theology of empire.

All: We will not comply.

One: With the business of militarism.

All: We will not comply.

One: With the hoarding of riches.

All: We will not comply.

One: With the dissemination of fear.

All: We will not comply.

One: Today we pledge our ultimate allegiance to the kingdom of God.

All: We pledge allegiance.

One: To a peace that is not like Rome’s.

All: We pledge allegiance.

One: To the gospel of enemy-love.

All: We pledge allegiance.

One: To the kingdom of the poor and broken.

All: We pledge allegiance.

One: To a king who loves his enemies so much he died for them.

All: We pledge allegiance.

One: To the least of these, with whom Christ dwells.

All: We pledge allegiance.

One: To the transnational church that transcends the artificial borders of nations.

All: We pledge allegiance.

One: To the refugee of Nazareth.

All: We pledge allegiance.

One: To the homeless rabbi who had no place to lay his head.

All: We pledge allegiance.

One: To the cross rather than the sword.

All: We pledge allegiance.

One: To the banner of love above any flag.

All: We pledge allegiance.

One: To the one who rules with a towel rather than an iron fist.

All: We pledge allegiance.

One: To the one who rides a donkey rather than a war horse.

All: We pledge allegiance.

One: To the revolution that sets both oppressed and oppressors free.

All: We pledge allegiance.

One: To the way that leads to life.

All: We pledge allegiance.

One: To the slaughtered lamb.

All: We pledge allegiance.

One: And together we proclaim his praises, from the margins of the empire to the centers of wealth and power.

All: Long live the slaughtered lamb.

One: Long live the slaughtered lamb.

All: Long live the slaughtered lamb.


That's a lot to think about!

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Christians Decry Divorce

This is a headline long missing from the media. Today it is popular for Christians to loudly protest abortion and gay rights, issues Jesus never talked about specifically in the Bible. I often wonder why divorce gets away with so much, especially in the church. I never hear anyone complain that divorce is too popular, dangerous, and detrimental to society, especially not in the way the Bible does.

This lone headline caught my attention because I'd not seen anything like it before: 'Marriage Savers' Declares War on Divorce. Not only is the group Marriage Savers decrying divorce, they are attacking the cause of it: No Fault Divorce laws. They were quoted,

"Most view divorce as a personal issue, but in a larger sense No Fault Divorce, a law first signed in California in 1969 by then Gov. Ronald Reagan, has been the biggest killer of marriage in America. It swept the nation in the 1970s, pushing divorces up from 708,000 in 1970 to 1,036,000 five years later," the group said.

Most Christians want abortion rights overturned, but I've never even MET Christians who know about No Fault Divorce laws and see them as a problem.

Although I personally am torn between civic rights and the health of the family, I am just impressed to see Christians getting angry about something the Bible actually says angers God. Maybe if we focused more on lessing divorce and bolstering healthy families there would be less abortion, rebellion, crime and single-mother poverty.