10 for 10 for 10

March 24, 2008

A couple weeks ago, I heard a statistic that grabbed my attention and hasn’t let it go.  I’ve been turning it about in my head but I can’t seem to shake it.  I read somewhere that 10 billion dollars would end world poverty.  Now, i have zero knowledge about world economics, and that figure seems frightfully low.  However, our country is spending $3 trillion (which we don’t have, but that’s another story) to bring death and destruction to the Middle East.  that’s $3,000,000,000,000.  In other words, and if that first number is anywhere close to correct, that’s enough to save this and 299 other Planet Earths.

Today at church, we had a special guest up from Arizona.  His name is Austin, and he’s the 14 year old founder of Hoops Of Hope.  It’s an organization that raises money for AIDS orphans in Africa.  Last year, they raised over $200,000 to build a medical testing center in Zambia.  (did i mention that, at the time, that kid was 13?)

Now, i’m not going to whine about how old I am or how little I’ve done with my life.  What I am going to to is take inspiration from what one person can do (as well as receive the gentle prodding from our home group’s study of James).   What I’d like to do is to begin something like an awareness campaign.  There’s a statistic floating around the Christian world about how much money the USAmerican church at large would have if attendees tithed their 10%.  I don’t have it, but I’m going to dig around and find it.  What I’m sure of is that it’s a big, big number.  The second thing I’m sure of is that 10% of that figure will also be a big, big number.  I’m not planning on starting a new organization or collecting money personally; there are plenty of clever, numerically-named and very worthy ones out there (for example: herehere, here, here, here, and here).  The goal is, as you would expect, $10 billion.  It’s an absurd amount, especially for someone that can barely pay his mobile phone bill on time (though that’s due mostly to my being an airhead).  Plus, like i said, I don’t want your money, so i truly won’t know how much is happening.  What I simply want is for churchgoers to start to believe the words of James 1:27, “Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress,” and to give to their local communities.  If those communities in turn give 10% in a missional way, i truly believe that we could see something amazing.

This is absolutely me going off half-cocked on some wild scheme, but I’m doing it in public to keep myself accountable.  However, if any of you have any thoughts or, better yet, any slightly more accurate numbers than the ones i threw out there, by all means pass it along.


kiva.org

November 12, 2007

I heard about Kiva a few months ago - my friends Chris and Kelly support them. Just in case you haven’t heard of it, Kiva is basically a micro-loans clearinghouse. You sign up to give entrepreneurs in the developing world small loans - everyone from Bill Clinton to Oprah has been talking about and supporting them. I’ve been meaning to check it out for a while, and today I finally sat down and started reading. It’s a great organization, helping people from places like Samoa, Afghanistan, Ukraine, and Peru. It’s pretty crazy, too, how successful it is. I signed up to help someone from Ecuador; I was the first one to help him, and in a couple of hours, he had raised the full amount ($550) that he needed. The cool thing is that you’ll eventually get your money repaid back into your Kiva account, so you can pull out your money if you want, or keep re-loaning it (which is better).


Africa

November 8, 2007

My very very good friend Chris Marlow is heading over (today!) to spend some time in Africa working with our friend Steven and ServLife, as well as doing a few other scary things.  Please keep him and the team in prayer as they have a very difficult few days ahead of them.


Red Letters

September 10, 2007

3d_red_letters

I’ve known Tom Davis for a while now (and mentioned him here, here, here, and here), so I jumped at the chance to get an early copy of his new book Red Letters. Like anyone who works in Africa (like Steven, for example), he has the desperate passion of someone who has literally changed the lives of hundreds but only sees the millions that remain.
(A word of warning; I’ve already passed this book along to a friend in North Carolina, so my apologies for being a bit vague here.)
The best (and by best, I mean “the most tear-inducing) parts of the book come through the stories of the children that Tom has met. There’s the girl that was so violently raped BY HER UNCLES that she is unable to control her bladder. Another girl who, after the death of her parents, has to provide and care for her younger siblings at the mature age of 10. These are stories that will make you cry, no matter who or where you are (it’s a bit embarassing on the bus, might I add).
Red Letters does a good job illustrating the ways that our (the Western world) help is needed. Tom walks the somewhat delicate line between conviction and guilt well, leaving the readers wanting to help in whichever way that they can. It’s not a high-art piece of literature; it’s a gritty, desperate plea for us to start to read the red letters of our Bibles and live accordingly.

May we all get the message.

Do_you_see_me_2_2
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5 For 50 Is Live!

July 31, 2007

Back in February, I mentioned my old quasi-boss Tom’s new project, 5 For 50. According to him:

In trying to figure out what I can do to provide justice to the weak,
here’s what I’ve come up with. My heart is to mobilize others to help
the widow, the orphan and the poor. In an attempt to do that, I’m
starting a foundation tied in with my book, Red Letters called Five for
50. It’s about 5 simple steps any of us can do to stand in solidarity
with the 50 million people in the world infected with HIV. Here’s how
it works:

  1. Give 5 minutes a day to pray for those suffering from HIV/AIDS.
  2. Give 5 hours a week to fast for those suffering from HIV/AIDS.
  3. Give 5 dollars a month to the Five for 50 Fund and support worthy causes.
  4. Give 5 days a year to travel overseas and help alleviate poverty and suffering.
  5. Give 5 people an opportunity to join you on your journey.

The site is up and running and has a link for you to donate enough to feed, educate, and clothe one, 5, 10, or more childern. The cost? $5 a month (per child). That’s it. Let me put it in terms we’ll all understand. That’s merely one grande iced mocha and a muffin. A month.

Click here to head to the site, and go here to request a sample chapter of Tom’s new book, Red Letters.

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Food Around The World

June 12, 2007

Time had a great photo essay  about eating habits from fifteen families around the world.  The families are photographed with their food, and Time lists what they spend on food, with the amounts ranging from $1.23 per week to over $500.  It’s both fascinating and tragic, and it makes me want to eat a bit less. 

thanks: 2+2=5

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Ricky Gervais and Jamie Oliver Visit Kenya

March 21, 2007

word to: YSMarko

This is oddly funny and tragic and makes me fear that it is real.

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Welcome!

March 13, 2007

If you’re wandering through here for the first time via RelevantMagazine.com (or anywhere else, for that matter), welcome!  I hope you stick around for a bit and let me know what you think.  I’m in the middle of redecorating, so don’t be alarmed if the digs change suddenly. 

By the way, more information about the three groups I mentioned in the article can be found below.   I sincerely hope you’ll check them out and perhaps be encouraged to participate with them!

My friend Steven ( Two and Two Make Five) works with ServLife in South Africa

My old quasi-boss Tom Davis is with Children’s HopeChest, working with orphans in Russia and Africa.  His video diary of his trip to Swaziland is available here.

Invisible Children - powerful documentary about children soldiers in Africa. 

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A Long Way Gone (part 2) Has Moved!

March 13, 2007

The majority of this post can now be viewed at Releventmagazine.com

To do so, especially for the sake of clinging to our last grasps of American naivety is to do an incredible disservice to the reality that Africa is facing.  Despite the attempts of people like my friends Steven in South Africa and Tom Davis and Children’s HopeChest in Swaziland, as well as the work of the people behind Invisible Children, it has still been hard to personalize the struggles of a land and people so foreign to myself.   The combination of reading A Long Way Gone, as well as hearing Ishmael Beah in person, got my attention the way nothing else has, and I can only hope that I can remain motivated to do something about it. 

Here’s a link to a clip from Ishmael’s appearance on The Daily Show.  It’s a testimony to the book to hear Jon  Stewart say, "It made my heart hurt."

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Bono at the NAACP Image Awards

March 6, 2007

I know that this has made the loop of the blogworld already, but if you haven’t seen it, the last two minutes or so are amazing. 

does anyone have clips of The Roots covering "Pride (In The Name Of Love)"?

edit: I found it.  Click here to watch The Roots cover "Pride (In the Name of Love)" with a little "Sunday Bloody Sunday" thrown in

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