Christmas in Review: The God Who Gives a Damn

So much brokeness all around.

Can I begin to understand the new air raids between Israel and Palestine?

I can't.

My Tanzanian colleague, Philemon, lost his dad this morning. He was about 58 and riding his bicycle when an out-of-control taxi van hit and killed him.

If it hurts me to think about their loss, how do they feel?

Last week, a depressed guy in LA dressed up as Santa and took a handgun to a party at his ex-in-laws and killed 9 people.Shootings become "common" and that only compounds our sorrow.

The current economic disaster reveals a broken system and a habitual effort to satiate our souls with more.

Money and stuff. They don't actually heal our hearts.

The people of Zimbabwe are starving slowly. They are dying of cholera in the face of a leader who says there is nothing wrong.

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Giving Thanks in Africa

“Give thanks to the Lord for he is good.  His love endures forever.”
Psalm 136:1

In the countries where I have lived over the last 20 years, Thanksgiving rolls around unnoticed.  There are no cartoon turkeys on decorations in the shops and no children wearing pilgrim hats as they re-enact the feast from long ago.

Yet, unlike a list of other North American holidays, Thanksgiving is one of only a few special days that we have transported with us into our lives outside of our passport country.

Why is this?  I believe we’ve chosen to remember Thanksgiving because giving thanks is a celebratory and realigning spiritual activity that brings us back to the basics.  Thanksgiving encourages us to shed some stress and take time to reflect on the goodness of God.
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Of Fire and Loss and People Far Away

It's never good to wake up to several emails saying things like, "Just want you to know that your boys are O.K." or "The fire is approaching campus but they are all in the gym."


Don't get me wrong. I am tremendously thankful for a handful of people, (most notably Tanya, Jenelle and Kjaere) who went into over-drive to give me frequent news of Jesse and Trevor's safety, mood and whereabouts.
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The World was Watching as the U.S. was Voting

Tanzania is pretty far away from the United States. 
Still, Tanzania was holding her breath last week as the U.S. went into elections.

I was by myself in our bedroom when the electoral count on the BBC website jumped from 207 to 297. I was pulling my jeans on and calling out to my empty house, "Hey! Doesn't that mean he won? Doesn't that mean he won?"

Yes, that meant that Barack Obama had won. So I jumped into the car and drove through our early morning traffic to a gathering point in town where I could hear his acceptance speech live. (And I would have jumped into my car to hear McCain's speech as well, lest you wonder.)
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Questions as We Approach Elections

Is it ok to kill babies if they aren't wanted? 

I don't really think so.

But that's not the only question I have as I consider the up-coming elections.

I don’t know but... Do you that think that slashing forests and mutilating mountains and killing oceans is ok with the one who carefully created them? 

I sometimes wonder if unilateral decisions to go to war might possibly feel to the Prince of Peace a little like rebellion?

And when we keep our neighbors in inner cities trapped in cycles of under privilege and lack of hope, does this feel to the Father of the Fatherless like an overt ignoring of Biblical mandates, not to mention a brazenly revealing flash of hearts of stone?
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Our Stuff Has a Story

I have a lot of stuff!  All this stuff has a story; a history of where it came from and where it's going once I'm done with it.

It's an important story.  It's one that we all need to know because our stuff impacts the globe.  It impacts people, their economies and our environment.

Here's a great (as in creative, clever, educational, challenging, helpful) little video that explains the story of all this stuff we gather and use.  It's 20 minutes long but well worth your time.

Please take a break to ponder how you might love your Creator by taking better care for his gift to us: the earth and her people.

Make a cup of something you like and pull up a seat!

http://www.storyofstuff.com/

The World is Watching...(Get Ready to Vote)

It wasn’t until I moved to Kenya when I was 22 that I began to understand how truly global the audience is that watches what happens in U.S. politics. The event (indeed, the process itself) of the U.S. changing political parties, handing power from one to the other, or just replacing the incumbent president with a newly chosen one from within the standing party, is something that captures the imagination of people all over the world.

This fascination with what is happening in Washington is not necessarily due to the popularity of the U.S. Yes, her ability to hold free elections that are not marked by massive campaigns of intimidation and violence is greatly admired and envied by many. (I remember local elections in Kenya not so many years ago when voters had to line up behind the designated spot for their candidate. That wasn’t exactly what the people were hoping for in a “free and fair” election.) But that's not the entirety of it.

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The Contours of a Calling

Calling... it's a concept that I've not been able to define very clearly. Even after choosing to live cross culturally for 24 years, I feel sort of vague about what the word means.

I think this is because "calling" can come in such a beautiful array of shapes and shades. I know people who can confidently say, "I was called to (some specific spot or people group) when I was 10 years old." Others say, "I received the call during my first year in college," or "...at Urbana," or whatever.

But that's not really how it was for me.

I was raised by parents who were in full-time ministry. For 8 of my growing up years we lived in Europe, splitting time, 4 years and 4 years, between Sweden and England. It was great. I loved each place.

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The Sometimes Painful Path Called Cross-Cultural Living

Warning:  I have a feeling I might sound cynical in the post.

Disclaimer: I don't mean to be.  I just don't want to beat around the bush. 

OK, maybe it's just because every Christian young person I know right now in the States wants to come to Africa "for the children" that I'm feeling a stirring to rant a little about cross-cultural living.  Here it comes...

Making the choice to leave what is familiar and go take up residency where it is not familiar is not a game we play because we got high at Christian camp.  (Ouch.  That was harsh.)

This is not a vacation/adventure that is designed to ease my guilt about the fact that a vast majority of the world lives on less than $2 a day or that millions of people die every year without ever knowing the  freedom and fullness of Christ. 

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Zimbabwe (or How Do I Respond When Evil Prevails?)

On Sunday, June 29, Mr. Mugabe was sworn into his 6th term as the leader of  Zimbabwe.  

Though I have lived a good number of years in Africa, I confess to not being totally up on the sad history of this ravished country that has been pulled into despair over the 28 years that Mr. Mugabe has been in power.

This is what I DO know--

The people of Zimbabwe voted in March and their clear desire was that the ruling party exit immediately. The standing parliament and the president himself were shown to NOT BE the people's choice for their future.  The people spoke up and said it was time for something new. 

In the calm of the days after the election, the nation dared to believe that things were going well and that change was on its way.  But the calm was short-lived.

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About
I left the United States in 1984 with a real cute boy. We carried a suitcase and a backpack each. I've found the world to be wildly beautiful as well as full of terrible pain. I want to be a part of spreading the hope.


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