Posts Tagged With: Jesus

A billion little cups

Poverty can seem like an enormous bucket that is impossible to fill.  The stories and the pictures make us cringe and look away.  We look at the size and scale of the bucket and we feel powerless because we know we don’t have the ability to fill that bucket.  And it’s true – none of us as individuals have the time or the resources to fill that whole bucket by ourselves.  So we look at the problem of poverty and it makes us sad, but we chalk it up as something that we can’t do anything about and we walk away sad, but unmoved.

But what if our perspective shifted.  What if we looked at the problem of poverty not as a gigantic bucket we can never fill, but as billions of little cups of varying sizes and shapes.  Poverty is a complex web of things not a monolithic thing.  Poverty is a kaleidoscope, a tangled weave, made up of billions of individual people suffering the impact of centuries of evil, systemic injustice and greed.

Poverty is a farmer one drought or flood from hunger. 

Poverty is a child watching himself become an orphan as a preventable disease takes away his mother.

Poverty is a child being forced to leave school and get a menial job to support the family after the father leaves.

Poverty is parents watching their daughter die because they can’t afford the medicine she needs.

Poverty is a mother watching someone steal her land after her husband dies.

Poverty is a mother forced to leaver her children at an orphanage rather than watch them suffer from malnutrition and a lack of education.

Poverty is all these things and more.  Billions of people suffering, but they are not a single problem to be solved.  They are unique individuals made in the image of God and deeply loved by God suffering from a variety of problems – we can’t solve them all at once, but we are not powerless to do anything.

You can’t fill the entire bucket. I can’t fill the entire bucket.  However, I can fill a couple of teacups and so can you.   It cost me something and it may cost you something.  If we choose wisely some of the teacups we fill might overflow filling some of the surrounding cups.  Those cups could in turn fill some more cups.  What you may have thought of as an insignificant contribution will multiply and impact exponentially more people than we ever imagined it might impact.

Moving from the theoretical to reality.  The amount of money required to be life changing is so small that we all have the opportunity to fill a cup and change lives.

Stop Malaria with a $10 mosquito net or provide a lifesaving dose of medication for another $10

Malnutrition can be prevented in a child for less than $30 a month

Vaccinating a child in the developing world from 12 diseases costs $45

Prevent an elderly couple from being evicted with $50

Send a kid to school for less than $100 a year.

This is a fact…. Empowering women is  the best investment we can make in the developing world.  The key to eradicating poverty is to empower as many women and girls as possible.  In too many places women and girls are an afterthought – they are not considered of equal value and the impact they could have on their communities is ignored.

Savings groups and microloans made to women have a chance to do more than just fill a single cup.

When we empower a female entrepreneur in the developing world to fill her cup they will fill the cups of their children and their children will have a chance to be educated giving them an opportunity to fill their cup on their own.

When their cup fills they will have a chance to fill the cups of others in their community by hiring people to help as their business expands.

When people see that they have filled their cup and they are filling the cup of others, people will become more interested in participating in a savings group to fill their own cup.

They don’t lack the desire – they lack the opportunity and the resources.  When we empower them we spark a transformation.  Instead of perpetuating a cycle of poverty a cycle of improvement and empowerment can begin in their community.

As a Christian I believe this is both an incredible opportunity and obligation.  Jesus tells us to love our neighbor as ourselves and Isaiah 1:17 succinctly lays out this obligation:

Learn to do right; seek justice.
    Defend the oppressed.
Take up the cause of the fatherless;
    plead the case of the widow.

But the opportunity is equally clear – by all measures 21st century American Christians are the richest people to ever live – our opportunity to make a tangible difference in the lives of the poor and vulnerable is immense.  With a focused and sacrificial effort we could improve the lives of billions of people across the globe.

 Command those who are rich in this present world not to be arrogant nor to put their hope in wealth, which is so uncertain, but to put their hope in God, who richly provides us with everything for our enjoyment.  Command them to do good, to be rich in good deeds, and to be generous and willing to share.   In this way they will lay up treasure for themselves as a firm foundation for the coming age, so that they may take hold of the life that is truly life. – I Timothy 6:17-19

This is why I’m so excited about the work that I will be doing with World Orphans in the area of economic empowerment. Because poverty is one of the leading causes of family disruption I will be actively seeking ways to serve and empower our caregivers to break the cycle of poverty.  The majority of our participants will be women and all the studies show that when women are empowered economically their lives and the lives of their children, their families, their communities and their countries are improved.

Will you help me fill some cups?

Click here to join

 

 

Categories: 2016, Economic Empowerment, Justice, Uncategorized, World Orphans | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Reposted from the World Orphans Blog: FROM IRAQ: EDUCATING HER FOR TOMORROW

It’s back to school time here in the United States… Check out this terrific blog from Dawn Ray, wife of the World Orphans Middle East Director, about her efforts to educate the girls as they serve the refugees in Iraq.
Click the link below to read the blog.
Every time I read a dispatch from one of our projects I am so thankful for the opportunities that my daughter has because she won the lottery of being born into a two parent educated family in the United States and I am also even more motivated to find every way I can to serve the millions of Elizabeth’s all over the word who aren’t as fortunate.
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Categories: 2016, Family, Justice | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

I’m a Basketball Coach & an English teacher – You didn’t expect me to be good at math too, did you?

On one of my first trips to Haiti my friend Ron took the team and I to a waterfall. After being led up the windy path of slippery rocks you reached the waterfall and the view was amazing.  At that point it was decision time – were you going to be content with seeing the waterfall or are going to experience it by stepping out and letting the water crash down all over you? After a few minutes and some gently prodding I decided I wanted more than a view and I stepped into it….

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IT. WAS. COLD! It literally took all my breath away for a moment.  But it was amazing and I experienced that moment in a much deeper way that I would have from just looking at it.

That’s where I am right now, again.  My last paycheck came today and I am about the experience the cold rushing water of the adventure that God has called me back to.  I get to live the words of a song I’ve loved since the first time I heard it, but I’m not sure I quite understood what it actually looked like to make this request of God.

Your grace abounds in deepest waters
Your sovereign hand
Will be my guide
Where feet may fail and fear surrounds me
You’ve never failed and You won’t start now

Spirit lead me where my trust is without borders
Let me walk upon the waters
Wherever You would call me
Take me deeper than my feet could ever wander
And my faith will be made stronger
In the presence of my Savior

That’s where I am.  Walking where my feet might fail and where fear surrounds me.  Any way you slice it the math doesn’t work.  Any way you spin it the numbers don’t add up.  I am literally stepping into a moment knowing that there is no way that I can make this work on my own.  If God doesn’t show up, if he doesn’t move in the hearts of people to support the work that I’m doing I will sink quickly. I’m walking away (a 2nd time) from a safe steady job.  I’m giving up my guaranteed retirement plan, my state sponsored insurance and taking a significant pay cut. I’m working extra jobs, but the numbers at the end of the month still project to be in red.  My security, my safety, my comfort, my margin for error are all gone.  Just reading this paragraph in its totality should scare me to death.  The only logical response to reading this paragraph is to crawl back to my boss and beg to get my job back.

However, that’s not what I’m feeling.  In my career as a basketball coach I have been trained that the key to success is to control everything you can possibly control.  A coaching mentor once sent me a letter that I posted in my office as a 25-year-old head coach and looked at every day.  The letter simply said “IT. ALL. MATTERS.”  The implication was clear – leave no stone unturned, leave nothing to chance.  Everything in your program impacts your program.   That advice served me well in my career even if did cause some occasional frequent personal conflicts.  So I’d be lying if I said I didn’t have some anxiety or even fear about the lack of control I have over what is going to happen next.  But that’s not where I want to focus my attention.

What I’m feeling right now is hopeful.  Confident even.  I 100% believe that God is going to provide what we need when we need it even if I have no idea how it is going to happen. An encouraging number of friends and supporters from the past have begun this journey with us again, but  the response has been very different this time to my support raising efforts. Initially this was discouraging – no one likes to be rejected or ignored by their friends, but God has reminded me lately that he is the provider of what I need, not anyone else.  So I remain fiercely confident in my future provision even when there is no tangible evidence to support that confidence. I don’t know when it is going to happen.  I don’t know what it is going to look like.  I don’t know if I will like it.  But this I know – when it does happen it will be because of God.  It will not be because of me.  It will not be because of my friends or family.  It will be because the God of the universe has provided it for me.

In my new role as director of economic empowerment with World Orphans I’ll be leading our efforts to break the cycle of generational poverty and to help the families in our projects move from finding ways to survive to finding ways to thrive.  I’ll be working with our leaders and partners on the ground in Ethiopia, Guatemala, Haiti and beyond to figure out how we can use tools like education, job training, savings groups and micro-finance tools to equip our families to use their available resources and talents in the most effective way in their unique context.  I’ll be communicating with churches, businesses and other organizations here in the United States to raise the funds we need to develop and implement these job training and development programs. If we do our jobs well and are successful in providing them with effective tools they will no longer need us to make sure that they can provide food, education and medical care for their families.  Our long term goal is to give them a hand up to independence and self-sustainability instead of needing to rely from assistance from our local partners.

Just typing that paragraph gets me fired up.  That is what inspires me to take this leap.

If I have to drive an Uber a couple nights a week so that I can help single mothers join a savings group or get trained on how to grow their businesses and provide for their families so be it.

If I have to downsize or skip  a vacation so that a mother can provide an education for her children, let’s make that trade.

If I have to “retire” a few years later so that a child in one of our projects isn’t one of the nearly 19,000 that die daily of preventable disease, then I’m okay with that.

If my kids get one less trip to Disney so that one of our families can break the cycle of poverty and despair they were born into, then I can live with that.

This is why we do this – there are 153 million reasons why.  153 million orphaned children that have names and faces and who are as precious in the sight of their heavenly father as Elizabeth, Tyler and Troy are to me.

 

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Do you want to be part of this adventure too?

Do you want to be part of our mission to serve children, families, churches and communities in the name of Jesus?

Will you be part our efforts to break the orphan cycle by helping these families use break the cycle of generational poverty?

Will you help us take on the effects of unjust systems and challenge the strongholds created by systematic injustice?

Will you join me?

Join my support team during August and become of my $5 friends – commit to a monthly gift of 5 dollars (.16 cents a day, $60 annually) and ask 5 other people to do the same and I’ll send you one of these awesome World Orphans t-shirts.

2016+wo+shirt

 “Living the gospel means desiring for your neighbor and your neighbor’s family that which you desire for yourself and your family. Living the gospel means bettering the quality of other people’s lives spiritually, physically, socially, and emotionally as you better your own. Living the gospel means sharing in the suffering and pain of others.”

John Perkins

Learn more about World Orphans by clicking here

Join my support team by clicking here

Read more Blogs

Why Orphans?

World Orphans – A Unique Kind of Orphan Care

What is Home Based and Wholistic Care?

 

Categories: 2016, World Orphans | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Bro, he’s a (expletive deleted) uber!

In the process of preparing for my upcoming transition to World Orphans I picked up a part time job as an Uber driver.  This is the first time since high school that I’ve had a job in the service industry.  Although serving as a teacher, a coach and a non-profit worker all revolve around service you are mostly treated a professional and a certain level of respect is given to you based on the perceived nobility of the profession you chose. Most people assume (based on your competence, of course) that you had other options for your career, but chose to work in ministry or education because you felt like it was a noble calling.  That same level of respect is not afforded to Uber drivers.  A lot of people assume that if you are an Uber driver you:

A) Have no other skill set so you drive

B) Are so desperate for money you will do anything

As an Uber driver you are seen as the hired help and treated as such.  Here is a small sampling of the comments I have heard:

  • Woman to her husband “Don’t talk to him like that”  Husband to wife – “He’s just a (expletive deleted) uber driver, he don’t care.

  • One passenger to another – “did you tip him, bro?” Other passenger responds “Bro he’s an (expletive deleted) uber, you don’t tip them (expletive deleted)

  • Passenger in car to passenger just getting in… “Hurry up, you’ve already made the driver wait”  Other passenger responds “(expletive deleted) him, he’s a (expletive deleted) uber, who cares?”

  • Angry drunk customer upon learning that I won’t come pick him up after he’s given me two wrong addresses already. ‘Come pick me up (expletive deleted), I’ll give you a $50 tip – that’s more (expletive deleted) money than your (expletive deleted) (expletive deleted) will make all (expletive deleted) night.  You know what, never mind, I don’t wanted your (expletive deleted) (expletive deleted) picking me up anyway. (expletive deleted) you!

Many other passengers in many other ways express the same thought.  The lady who asks you to stop for a lottery ticket and then decides do to do her grocery shopping while you wait at .13 cents a minute and then doesn’t even tip at the end of the ride.  The business man who barely acknowledges you on a 40 minute ride then tells you that you should really getting a bigger car if you are going to take people to the airport as you unload his bags from the trunk for a $1 tip.  The bro’s you pick up from the beach that don’t bother to shake the sand of the cooler they drop in your clean back seat.

As the driver you aren’t a real person.  You are the help.  It has been an great way for me to work on my humility and to treat others the way I want to be treated even when they aren’t treating me with the respect I crave.  I have to fight the impulse to let them know that I’m not a nobody.  I have a career, I have a family, I have accomplishments and a I am a well respected man in my real life.  But to them it doesn’t matter.  All they see is a blip on an app.  A means to and end.  The help.

After I got over the wounded pride I started thinking about how often this happens.  How often do we not see people as people, but as the help or some other means to an end?  How often do we justify the way we treat people, the way we think about people or our reaction to what happens to others by labeling people as something other than people?

How often do we treat the people who serve us as the help?  As if there only purpose in life is to do something for us or allow us to do something we want to do?  How would our behavior be different if we treated drivers, waitresses, flight attendants, cashiers etc the way we expect to be treated by them?

How often do we try to explain the actions or reactions of others away by labeling them as something other than human?

He’s not an immigrant, he’s a human just like you.

She’s not a refugee, she’s a human just like you.

He’s not a criminal, he’s a human just like you.

He’s not a cop, he’s a human just like you.

She’s not an addict, she’s a human just like you.

He’s not a Trump supporter, he’s a human just like you.

She’s not a Hillary supporter, she’s a human just like you.

She’s not a waitress, she’s a human just like you.

He’s not a custodian, he’s a human just like you.

How different would our world look if we stopped labeling people and started treating them all the way we want and expect to be treated by them?

How different would the world be if started caring for others as much as we care about ourselves?

How different would the world be if activism meant more than sharing a hashtag and a occasional check?  What if it meant actually getting involved in the cause and sacrificing something to see the actual people being impacted by the cause?

How different would the world be if politicians and their followers lived out their slogans instead of arguing about which one is appropriate?

How different would the world be if Christians truly lived out the Gospel and truly desired for others and their families what we desire for our own?

I started out this blog because I wanted to assert that i’m not just the help, but….

If I’m truly committed to living out the call of Christ in Beaufort and beyond maybe I am the help.  Maybe the way to peace and happiness is the consider the peace and happiness of others first.  Maybe the way to be understood is to seek to understand other first.  Maybe the way to true significance is to humble myself.  Maybe the way to be first is to consider myself last.  Maybe the way to become rich is to give away what I have.  Maybe everything I have has been given to me by God.  Maybe I am going to be held accountable for how it use it for others, not just on how well I take care of myself and my family.  Maybe the way to be free is to consider myself a servant.  Maybe I do exist to serve others.

Maybe I am the help… Maybe?

 

 

 

 

 

 

Categories: 2016 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

World Orphans – A Unique Kind of Orphan Care

On yesterday’s blog we talked about why World Orphans cares for orphans.  Today, I am presenting the mission and vision of World Orphans along with a video explaining how caring for orphans, families and communities is an expression of the Gospel.

VISION

To empower the church to care for orphans–until they all have homes.

MISSION

We equip, inspire, and mobilize the church to care for orphans and vulnerable children. Churches engaged. Children restored. Communities transformed by the Gospel of Christ.

 

 

Visit the World Orphans web site by clicking here: www.worldorphans.org

Learn how you can be a part of this ministry by joining my support team by clicking here

Yesterday’s Blog:  Why Orphans?

Categories: 2016, World Orphans | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Why Orphans?

“What does love look like? It has the hands to help others. It has the feet to hasten to the poor and needy. It has the eyes to see misery and want. It has the ears to hear the sighs and sorrows of men. That is what love looks like.”
— Saint Augustine

In a world inundated with hypocrisy, people are constantly looking for something pure and faultless. James 1:27 gives us hope by reminding us that “Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after the orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world.”

The most recent estimate shows there are approximately 150 million orphans in the world (UNICEF 2014). For this number, an orphan is defined as a child who has lost one or both parents.

The number of children under the age of 18 who have been coerced or induced to take up arms as child soldiers is generally thought to be in the range of 30,000. Over 50 countries currently recruit children under age 18 into their armed forces.

More than 17 million children have lost one or both parents to AIDS.
Of those children that have lost a parent/parents to AIDS, 15 million live in sub-Saharan Africa.

Worldwide, an estimated 300 million children are subjected to violence, exploitation and abuse.Practices include the worst forms of child labor in communities, schools and institutions; armed conflict; and harmful practices such as female genital mutilation/cutting and child marriage.

To read more on World Orphans website click here

To be a part of the solution click here

 

 

 

Categories: 2016, World Orphans | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Which Jesus do we follow?

Which Jesus do we follow? Which Jesus do we serve?  

If Ephesians says to imitate Christ  Why do we look so much like the world?

‘Cause my Jesus bled and died  He spent His time with thieves and liars  He loved the poor and accosted the arrogant

So which one do we want to be?

Blessed are the poor in spirit  Or do we pray to be blessed with the wealth of this land?

Blessed are they that hunger and thirst for righteousness  Or do we ache for another taste of this world of shifting sand?

‘Cause my Jesus bled and died for my sins  He spent His time with thieves and sluts and liars

He loved the poor and accosted the rich  So which one do we want to be?

And who is this that we follow  This picture of the American dream

If Jesus was here would we walk right by on the other side  Or fall down and worship at His holy feet? Holy, yeah

Pretty blue eyes and curly brown hair and a clear complexion  Is how we see Him as He dies for Your sins

But the Word says He was battered and scarred  Or did we  miss that part?  Sometimes I doubt we’d recognize Him

‘Cause my Jesus bled and died

He spent His time with thieves and the least of these, He loved the poor and accosted the comfortable  

So which one do we want to be?

This blog post is slightly modified lyrics from the song “My Jesus” by Todd Agnew

 

Categories: 2014 Posts, Justice, My Journey | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

We Just Don’t Get It – God, Help Me To Get It

“Living the gospel means desiring for your neighbor and your neighbor’s family that which you desire for yourself and your family.” — John Perkins

I’m not sure we get it.  My life in many ways reflects that I don’t get it.  To be fair I think it is very difficult to get it in the world we live in today.  Corporations spend millions of dollars selling us lies and they are very persuasive and skilled at convincing us that their version of reality is truth. What should be valued is mocked.  What isn’t worth a passing glance is celebrated.  The pinnacle of virtue is to be tolerant of anything – except those who believe that there is an absolute truth.   Turn on a television, a radio, or a computer and you can see all the ways that things are not operating as God intends them to.  Our culture is broken. 

The unfortunate reality is that even our Christian subculture is broken.   Too often church is just a place we go once a week to see our friends, be filled up, comforted, and served before we get back to the reality of the rest of the week. Too often church is used to shape Jesus in the image of what we value – a Jesus who looks like us, thinks like us, worships like us, votes like us, and loves like us – we use it as little more than an attempt to sprinkle a little Jesus on our pursuit of the American Dream.  Too often Christianity is turned into just organized religion, a luxury liner or a country club or just another corporation seeking to improve the bottom line.  I sometimes wonder what tables Jesus would flip over if he walked into our million dollar temples filled  with celebrity pastors and singers in skinny jeans, pretty carpet, comfortable chairs, shiny signs, lasers, smoke machines, and high def cameras and other evidences of our desire to worship Him in comfort while enjoying a finely tuned show with all the latest  bells and whistles in the name of attracting the masses.

Mark 12:30-31

And you must love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, all your mind, and all your strength.’ The second is equally important: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ No other commandment is greater than these.”

We just don’t get it.

We think that it is okay to care more about the Super Bowl or the Final Four than we do about the 3 billion people who live on less than $2.00 a day.

We think it is okay to be more invested in the success and failure of our college sports team than we are in the care for 153 million orphaned children worldwide.

We think it is okay to be more concerned about a new couch and chairs than we are about the 27 million people being exploited as  part of the modern day slave trade.

We think its okay to invest thousands of dollars educating, protecting, and providing excess for our children while showing little concern and making no real effort to help those children receiving substandard education or in need of protection or who don’t even have the essentials provided.

We think it is okay that our wallet reflects the belief  we deserve another vacation more than the poor and hurting in our community need food, shelter, and accessible and affordable medical care.

We think that it is okay to use the wealth that God has entrusted to us  to consume what we want, “need”, “deserve” and desire instead of investing it in bringing about His Kingdom and reaching the billions of people that don’t know Jesus.

Look at this quote from John Wesley

“It [wealth] is an excellent gift of God answering the noblest ends. In the hands of his children, it is food for the hungry, drink for the thirsty, raiment for the naked: It gives to the traveler and the stranger where to lay his head. By it we may supply the place of an husband to the widow, and of a father to the fatherless. We maybe a defense for the oppressed, a means of health to the sick, of ease to them that are in pain; it may be as eyes to the blind, as feet to the lame; yea, a lifter up from the gates of death! It is therefore of the highest concern that all who fear God know how to employ this valuable talent; that they be instructed how it may answer these glorious ends, and in the highest degree.”

Wesley practiced what he preached.  He didn’t make more just so he could consume more.  Every time his income rose so did his standard of giving.  At the height of his fame he earned  the modern equivalent of more than $300,000 and disciplined himself to live on just 2% of that amount and gave away the other 98%.

Matthew 13:44-46

“The Kingdom of Heaven is like a treasure that a man discovered hidden in a field. In his excitement, he hid it again and sold everything he owned to get enough money to buy the field.

 “Again, the Kingdom of Heaven is like a merchant on the lookout for choice pearls.  When he discovered a pearl of great value, he sold everything he owned and bought it!”

Our mindset is all wrong.  This is not okay.  We just don’t get it.  We have bought the lie that our culture is selling us.   But it is a lie. It’s not all about us.  It’s not about us at all.  This is not the Christianity that Jesus calls us to when he tells us to follow him.  

Jesus doesn’t call us to lives of safety, security, comfort and convenience being distracted from our purpose by ambition, sports, luxury, and all that we “deserve”.

He calls us to be a part of the Kingdom of Heaven.  

He calls us to live our lives completely for his kingdom.

He calls us to give up everything for His sake.  

Jesus calls us to die to ourselves and to sacrifice and relinquish control of all that we have in order that we can have that which is infinitely more valuable than all we sacrifice… HIM.

Matthew 16:24-25

Then Jesus said to his disciples, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must turn from your selfish ways, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it.

God, help me to get it.  God help me to value you over safety and security and comfort and convenience.  God help me to choose you over vain ambition and selfish desires.  God help me to love my neighbor and my neighbor’s family the same way I love my own.  God help me to have the courage and strength to lay down everything I value today so that I can have the one thing of ultimate value – You!

Categories: 2014 Posts, Justice, My Journey | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

What a Journey 117 trip looks like…

You have heard me talk about what my World Orphans Journey 117 trips are like several times.  Instead of writing a blog about this trip – I have decided to link you to the blogs written by Alexandra Satkowiak, a member of my December J117 Ethiopia team.  Due to some staffing changes at World Orphans the future of Journey 117 is in flux, but after this trip I am even more convinced that Journey 117 has an important role to play in the global orphan crisis by motivating ordinary people to reject passivity and choose to be lifelong orphan advocates by being obedient to God’s command to do good, seek justice, help the oppressed, defend the cause of the orphan and fight for the rights of widows instead of just walking away sad and continuing to live like life is all about us.

Check out the links below to hear about Allie’s J117 experience in Ethiopia.

Blog 1

Blog 2

Blog 3

Blog 4

Blog 5

Blog 6

To find out more about Journey 117 click here:

Categories: Justice, World Orphans | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Why all the Quack?

I get being angry and upset if you think someone is being mistreated. That’s great and we should be angry and upset by injustice.  I am just disappointed that so many Christians seem to be more irate about millionaires who can defend themselves easily being the “victims” of injustice than we are about the millions of true victims suffering each day without a voice.  Where is the outrage about this?  I know I am going to take heat for saying this, but I wish we Christians were as well known for our passion about global missions and social justice as we are about free speech for reality TV stars and chicken sandwich sellers.

I was questioned on my use of the term social justice so let me give my definition of social justice.

Social justice is not a Marxist term. It means justice in society. It means caring about an education system that serves the rich and the poor well, speaking up and demanding a criminal justice system that serve people of all races fairly, and supporting with our voice and our purchasing power economic policies that ensure that both workers and business owners are treated fairly. It means seeking justice for those who have been forgotten and ignored by society in our rush to make sure that we and our families have all that we need to do all that we want to do.

I was going to write a blog expressing my uneasiness with the outrage so many Christians are expressing with the “injustice” a millionaire reality TV star is facing, but I found out that one of my coworkers had already beaten me to it.  This is why I love working with the people I do!

Why all the Quack?.

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