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Blog Action Day Wrap

The whole idea of the Blog Action Day is to get a bunch of bloggers talking about poverty, so I thought I’d collect a few bloggers who took up the challenge, for your reading experience.

Each has their own take on poverty and how we respond, so I’d strongly encourage you to have a read of these.

Know of any others I should have on the list here? If you’ve posted for Blog Action Day I’d be more than happy to give some link love.

(Edit - no sooner had I posted this and I see that Emergent Village have a wrap up on their blog. So check it out for more great Blog Action Day posts)

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Posted in General. Tagged with , .

Biting in proportion with chewability

One of my favourite things to do is to sit back on a couch, and chat with my ex-housemate Paul, and my wife Rebecca; usually about whatever’s been going on in little Paulie’s head. The second last time we did this, we had a great conversation about how Paul has transitioned in his thinking about poverty and our role in helping the world’s poor. And we got chatting, and I got excited. Hopefully the rest of this post will be some of the things that got me excited.

Every person understands that the plight of the poor and oppressed is a sad thing. And I’m not the first person to suggest (nor will I be the last) that the reaction to the enormity of the issue of global poverty for most people is one of being overwhelmed. The helplessness we naturally feel at the scope of the problem is a perfectly acceptable initial response, but it’s not enough to stay in that place.

So here’s where we need to start:

embrace your hypocrisy.

Recognise that to say that you want to help the poor, and do anything less than sell everything you have is an act of a hypocrite. Sit in the tension of not being ready to commit completely, and yet recognising that to do nothing is not a good enough answer. Let that tension eat at you, and boil inside you.

Then bite something. Bite off an amount that you can chew, that is just past being comfortable, but not so much that it makes you choke. Choose to put someone in front of you, and make a decision to change poverty for them. For me, a big part of it has been to lend money through Kiva - an organisation that makes micro-loans to budding third-world entrepreneurs, giving them an opportunity to break the poverty cycle, and provide themselves with meaningful employment (as well as often a number of other people around them). Is it enough? No. Will it end world poverty? Goodness no. But for the people I’ve chosen to put in front of myself, it represents a serious shot at changing their situations.

It’s not the perfect solution, and the idealist in me (which is plenty of me), sees that in some respects this is still a consumer-oriented decision. But the challenge is this: I have no doubt that for the majority of people - when face-to-face with extreme poverty - we feel obligated to act. And so, with the enormity of the problem, and the comfort of our current situation, we block it out and shut ourselves off. So stop. Choose to let just a little piece of hardship into your world. Don’t ignore it, but instead engage with it fully, and kill poverty off for someone. Start there, and don’t let the feeling that you’re being a hypocrite fade away. Let it constantly challenge you

Posted in General.

Know where your treasure is

In the wake of our economic system closely resembling a yo-yo in the hands of a toddler (sure it’ll go up and down, but it’s not going back as high as it used to be), there’s some fantastic thoughts from Eugene Cho over at beauty and depravity. The story below is great - but I’d recommend checking out the whole post.

That… reminded me of a meeting my wife and I had a meeting with a friend in Korea this past summer. She’s a “foreigner” living in Korea as a missionary and simply, a follower of Christ. She’s learned the Korean language and asides from being “white,” she’s pretty much “Korean.” She’s adopted the customs and cultures and grown a love for the people of Korea and beyond.

She and her husband have also adopted a lifestyle of simplicity. This is different from a life of poverty. They’ve simply chosen to live as simply as possible…free from the stuff we often find ourselves loving, lusting, and labeling.

During our conversation, she shared her enthusiasm for our vision to fight global poverty and her commitment to keep us in prayer. That in itself was enough: deeply edifying and encouraging. She proceeded to share that she didn’t really have any money to donate at this time. We explained that was not what we were asking for…her emotional and spiritual support meant a great deal.

What happened next…we will never forget.

She opened her shoulder bag and proceeded to take out 6 or 7 small boxes and explained:

“My husband and I have committed to a life of simplicity and we don’t have money to give. I love and believe in what you guys are doing. These boxes are my jewelry…my heirlooms. I don’t need this. I want to give this to your organization. Please sell it and use it to help the poorest of the poor.”

God convicted me with this question:

“Where is your treasure…Who is your treasure?”

[1] faith and money: where is your treasure? « beauty and depravity

Posted in God Stuff, News.

Blog Action Day - October 15

Those of you who have been reading TheGeoffRe(y)port for a while might be aware that I participated in Blog Action Day last year, and got on board with a worldwide group of bloggers to blog about the environment. Well, Blog Action Day is back, and this time it’s all about poverty. SO - if you write a blog, get yourself over to the Blog Action Day site, register, and post something (anything) about poverty on October 15th. I will be doing so here.

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Ranges Worship Photos

Anna’s Worship Photos « Ranges Community Church

I realise I’m turning into a bit of a link farm, but I wanted to share this one. The above photo comes from a great collection of worship photos over at the Ranges Community Church blog. Can’t put my finger on why they hit a spot for me, but they did.

Posted in God Stuff.