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.


The 100 Greatest Worship Songs . . .

March 24, 2008

. . . according to Brett McCracken. It’s an interesting list, but one i ultimately don’t have too many problems with. I Radio Heaven faves:

97) From the Inside Out – Hillsong
94) Welcome, Ghosts – Explosions in the Sky
93) ‘Round Midnight – Miles Davis
92) Rejoice – Pedro the Lion
72) Lilac Wine – Jeff Buckley
56) Fix You - Coldplay
49) Intervention – The Arcade Fire
48) You Are So Good to Me – Waterdeep
46) Mothers of the Disappeared – U2
44) All Creatures of Our God and King – Francis of Assisi
28) Unchained Melody – The Righteous Brothers
27) O Sacred Head Now Wounded – Bernard of Clairvaux
18) Changes Come – Over the Rhine
17) Hallelujah – Leonard Cohen
14) Messiah – Handel
13) Where the Streets Have No Name – U2
12) Amazing Grace – John Newton
6) Untitled #8 – Sigur Ros
5) Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing – Robert Robinson
1) Be Thou My Vision – Irish traditional

You can check out the rest of the list here, which includes The Cure, Radiohead, Hem, Joni Mitchell, David Crowder*Band, and REM.


This Is My Favorite

March 24, 2008


My “Contributions” to Worship

February 25, 2008

Yesterday marked an interesting development in  my journey as a bass player.  We were doing the song “Everyday” from United, the Hillsong youth band.  There’s a little quarter-note bass solo preceding the bridge, and so I sort of developed a little riff to do instead.  Now, by “developed,” i mean that I stole the basic idea from another United song, “The Time Has Come”, and by “to do”, I mean “unzip my pants and urinate where the solo should have gone.”

I’m not sure what I was thinking, attempting to pull that out of my a.s hat, but a severe lesson in humility was what I got.  We all need a bit more of that in our lives, anyway.


Lost Party Wednesday!!!

January 29, 2008

9pm - after home group.  be there.

oh yeah . . . we’re making gumbo for Sunday.  I think there’s a football game on or something.  let me know if you’re coming.


Emperor Arcadia

October 2, 2007

emporor-arcadia.jpg

Mark Scandrette, an artist and author living in San Francisco, just posted a heartbreaking excerpt from his new book, Soul Graffiti: Making a Life in the Way of Jesus. It’s a story about a man named Emperor Arcadia, and it relates how Mark developed a friendship with him that ultimately saved his life.


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
Read the rest of this entry »


Keep Reading To Find Out Last Year’s Salary

August 26, 2007

The Rev. Ted Haggard, who left the megachurch he founded after admitting to “sexual immorality,” has asked supporters for financial assistance while he and his wife pursue their studies.
The former New Life Church pastor plans to seek a master’s degree in counseling at the University of Phoenix while his wife studies psychology, he said in an e-mail sent this week to KRDO-TV in Colorado Springs.

My Way News - Fallen Pastor Seeks Financial Support

technorati tags:

Read the rest of this entry »


Doing Evangelism

April 16, 2007

Mike DeVries (_awakening) has a great post about a conversation he had with a friend of his regarding evangelism.  The entire thing is great, but my favorite part was this:

Between the phone call and posting this, I shared this conversation
with my wife. Both of us came to a new realization. Perhaps
"evangelism" is not something you do to people, nor an event. [I really
struggle with that term and so many of the connotations that word
conjures up for me.] The better question is who you are doing life
with, who you are taking with you on your faith journey.

Jamie mentioned some other really good friends of ours and said
this, "You know, we’ve spent almost six years with these friends and
we’re just now getting into some of the most amazing conversations
about God. Maybe people just want to see it before they hear about it.
We didn’t enter into a friendship with an agenda. They’re just our
friends, you know."

There’s always the line that we have to walk between having an agenda and having a friend . . . I wonder what side we should err on? 

Read the rest of this entry »


The Swan Silvertones

April 9, 2007

Swansilvertones100

Here’s some old-school gospel that should bring a smile to your face. 

If You Believe Your God Is Dead, Try Mine

Jesus Is God’s Atomic Bomb

 

Apparently, they were really into clear and descriptive titles. 

Read the rest of this entry »