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"I don't think of it as stealing. These things were planted by a person who was going to harvest them. That person no longer has the ability to. It's not like the bank people who sit in their offices are going to come out here and pick figs."
-- Kelly Callahan, Atlanta, on why she forages for fruits and vegetables in the yards of her neighborhood’s vacant properties (Source: New York Times)
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When the Earth Shakes
It was over in less than a minute. Three miles below the surface of the earth near a town in Virginia named Mineral, a fault line shifted. As a result, a 5.8 magnitude earthquake was felt from Georgia to New England and as far west as Detroit. The National Cathedral lost several stone spires, the Washington Monument cracked, and Sojourners' office was closed for the afternoon, as our building was checked for structural damage.
Tectonic plates move beneath our feet in the part of the globe that scientists refer to as the lithosphere. Over the course of a year, an average plate will move as little as 3 to 6 centimeters. The speed of their movement is 10,000 times slower than the hour hand on a clock and even slower than the rate of growth of human hair. For decades, sometimes centuries or millennia, a plate's movement might go almost entirely unnoticed. Then, in less than a minute, the world shakes and everything changes.
Over the past few weeks Sojourners' director of mobilizing, Lisa Sharon Harper, has written about social movements for the God's Politics blog. In the midst of what she referred to as our national "dark night of the soul," it can be difficult to see "movement" or feel any hope. Yet, there is still faith and even evidence of things yet unseen. Today, in the Sojourners office we are seeing some of that evidence.
From across the country, over 25 grassroots leaders have come together to learn, pray, train, and plan for movement. Our Mobilizing Summit has brought together a diverse group of leaders who are serving their local communities, while at the same time advocating for the structural change needed for social justice. While sometimes unseen, their work is moving us toward social and political change, centimeter by centimeter. By faith, we believe that this work will bear fruit, and that one day the earth will shake, and, in a moment, the world will change.
Sometimes, our focus is all on the moments when the earth shakes, and we forget about the long, slow movements that get us to these points. It's not always clear that our down payments on the kingdom of God are yielding an immediate return. Even though we are called to be faithful to God's call every day, we do not see results every day.
As Christians, we live in the tension between wanting to respond to the pressing needs of today and wanting to take the long-term view needed to build for the future. It's distressing to see politicians today cut funding for grants that fight human trafficking internationally by almost 24 percent and domestic funding by around 22 percent, while they put their energy and effort behind protecting corporate subsidies and tax loopholes and breaks for the wealthy. This year, these decisions are being made, and as a result of the priorities of our political leaders, women and children who could have been set free, will remain enslaved.
But we also know that on Christian college campuses across the country, students are joining the "Not for Sale" campaign, or joining their local International Justice Mission chapter. While these students may not be setting the priorities of our country today, the choices they make now will result in different priorities in the future. The choice to cast their lot in with the oppressed and the weak, not the rich and powerful, will change their character for a lifetime. It is hard for me to imagine many members of this generation arguing that the preservation of tax cuts for the wealthiest 2 percent of Americans is more important than a national commitment to ending human trafficking.
Every time we take a step to follow Jesus, we become more like him. The changes in our personal or national character may not always be immediately evident. As we find and connect with others who are on this same journey of transformation, we know that we are moving the earth, centimeter by centimeter. As we pray for God's kingdom to come, and God's will to be done, we wait again for the day that the ground will shake and everything will change.
Tim King is communications director at Sojourners. Follow Tim on Twitter @TMKing.
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Inside Sojourners Magazine |
A Convert to Peace
Rep. Walter B. Jones sits in his office in Washington, D.C., surrounded by photos and memorabilia of fallen U.S. soldiers. Though he voted in 2002 to authorize U.S. war against Iraq, the conservative Republican from North Carolina soon came to believe that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan violated his Christian principles. Jones, who has become one of the wars' most outspoken critics, reached across the aisle to coauthor, with Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.), the McGovern-Jones Amendment, introduced in July 2010, which calls for a clear timeline for the withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan. Sojourners editor-in-chief Jim Wallis talked with Jones this summer in his Capitol Hill office.
+ Read Jim Wallis' interview with Rep. Walter B. Jones in the September/October issue of Sojourners magazine
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ON THE GOD'S POLITICS BLOG |
+ See what's new on the blog of Jim Wallis and friends
Why Christianity and Comics Go Together by Gene Luen Yang I remember vividly the first time I went to a comic book shop with my mom. I'd sneaked there before. But this time was different. + Click to continue
Tools for Prayer by Christine Sine Yesterday afternoon I found out that ABC news plans to dedicate it programming today to "Hunger at Home: Crisis in America." It precipitated my writing of this post which I had planned to add as a later addition to a series on tools for prayer. + Click to continue
God's Wrath Caused East Coast Earthquake by Rose Marie Berger I want to beat televangelist Pat Robertson to the jump on yesterday's East Coast earthquake. Robertson is genius at knowing the mind of God when it comes to natural disasters. + Click to continue
A Hymn for Somalia by Carolyn Winfrey Gillette Below is a hymn written by Carolyn Winfrey Gillette to inspire churches to further support and pray for famine relief in Somalia and the Horn of Africa.
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Hubble, Hubble, Climate Trouble by Marie Dennis For the past 30 years, through my work with Maryknoll and Pax Christi International, I've come to know grassroots communities around the world in situations of war and poverty. + Click to continue
Coming Home From Killing by Michael Nagler The recent British film In Our Name is a returning-soldier drama featuring a married woman, Suzy, who leaves her husband and little girl to fight in Iraq.
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We're Connected by What We Eat by Brian McLaren To the farmers who grow our food, the harvesters who pick it, the transporters who bring it to market, the grocers who present it, and the cooks who prepare it. Here's the prayer we prayed at a nearby Publix grocery in the produce section on Friday. + Click to continue
A Lifestyle of Enough by Eugene Cho About two years ago, Minhee and I made one of the hardest decisions we've made thus far in our marriage and in our calling as parents. In our hope to honor a conviction of the Holy Spirit to give up a year's salary, we had begun the two-year process of saving, selling, and simplifying in 2007. + Click to continue
The Problem With Christian Labels by Cathleen Falsani A week or two after the 2004 election, I was dining with some friends in New York when the conversation turned to religion and politics -- the two things that you're never supposed to discuss in polite company.
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Isn't the Keystone XL Pipeline in Our National Interest? by Jacek Orzechowski Won't it reduce our dependence on Middle Eastern oil? Won't somebody else develop the Alberta tar sands if the U.S. doesn't do it -- someone like China, perhaps? I've been wrestling with many of these issues as I contemplate risking arrest...
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Embodied Theology by Julie Clawson Earlier this summer I attended a church service where the pastor, a man struggling with what appears to be his final bout with cancer, preached about the hope that Jesus promises to those who trust in him. + Click to continue
Jesus, Bombs, and Ice Cream by Shane Claiborne I was in Baghdad in March 2003, where I lived as a Christian and as a peacemaker during the "shock-and-awe" bombing. I spent time with families, volunteered in hospitals, and learned to sing "Amazing Grace"… in Arabic. + Click to continue
Friday Links Round Up: Sign Language. Fashion Tips. Thank You. Interns. by God's Politics Editor Sign Language. Fashion Tips. Thank You. Interns. Today we say goodbye and thank you to this year's Sojourners interns. + Click to continue
Life as a Homeless Youth by Jim LoBianco When it comes to homeless youth the facts are simple, services in the City of Chicago are falling far behind the need. A survey of Chicago public school students from 2009/10 revealed 3,682 children who identified as being homeless and in need of shelter. + Click to continue
A Tennessee Church Welcomes its Muslim Neighbors by Bob Smietana Rev. Steve Stone was just trying to be a good neighbor. Two years ago, the pastor of Heartsong Church in Cordova, Tennessee, on the outskirts of Memphis, learned that a local mosque had bought property right across the street from the church. + Click to continue
Tavis Smiley and Cornel West's 'Poverty Tour' by Thelma Young Broadcaster Tavis Smiley and Princeton professor Cornel West just wrapped up their 18-city "Poverty Tour." + Click to continue
Video: Practicing the Way of Jesus by Christine Sine I am currently reading Mark Scandrette's book Practicing the Way of Jesus: Life together in the Kingdom of Love. It is a great book with lots of very practical suggestions on how to follow Jesus in every part of our lives. + Click to continue
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