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September 2007

September 24, 2007

Wales

Sunday I went for a drive through Wales with Bro. Thomas from the OEF.  It was so good and refreshing.  Dsc_0142_2

Pray for DR Congo

Rebel 'breaks' DR Congo ceasefire
A child stands at a camp for internally displaced people in the eastern DR Congo. File photo
Children in the area are said to be at risk of abduction
Renewed fighting has broken out in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the United Nations has confirmed.

Gen Laurent Nkunda, a rebel commander, broke a fragile ceasefire and attacked government forces near Goma, the UN's Sylvie van den Wildenberg said.

There has been no word on casualties but over the weekend the fighting displaced some 4,000 refugees.

The UN says the situation is "very worrying" and called on both parties to respect the truce called this month.

DRC government forces were attacked by the rebels on three fronts, army spokesman Col Delphin Kahimbi told the French news agency AFP.

Clashes occurred in three areas in North Kivu province, he added.

The rebels say war has been forced on them as President Joseph Kabila has declined to negotiate with them.

Refugees

The UNHCR site at Bulengo saw some 4,000 people arriving in recent days, Masako Yonekawa, UNHCR head in the nearby town of Goma, told the BBC News website.

Map of N Kivu in eastern DR Congo

She said many of the refugees were fleeing from Gen Nkunda's troops, who are accused of looting and abducting children.

Ms Yonekawa said the site, about 20km (12 miles) west of Goma, was now housing more than 10,000 people.

The UNHCR says more than 300,000 people in the area have been displaced so far this year.

Children, it adds, are being forcibly taken from schools to join the rebels, with 280 children reported to have been abducted from one location alone.

September 23, 2007

England

I started my journey on Friday afternoon.  Alyssa graciously drove me to the airport and saw me off.  I finally arrived in Liverpool at around 4:30 in the afternoon on Saturday.  Bro. Thomas and his daughter and I went to Mass.  It was a lovely time and try as I might I could not stay awake past 8:00.  I slept great and woke up this morning refreshed and blessed.

There are many wonderful things happening in the Spirit.  This retreat is such a blessing.  I am definitely being prepared for great things in Africa.

September 17, 2007

Flooding

The floods: A regional disaster

helicopter aid

South African helicopters rescue flood victims
The flooding in southern Africa, which has left hundreds dead and around 1.25 million homeless, is the worst in living memory.

While Mozambique has borne the brunt of the disaster, South Africa, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Zambia and the island of Madagascar have all been affected.

Rivers across the region burst their banks last week as, Cyclone Eline, swept in, bringing new rains to lands already waterlogged by more than two weeks of storms.

displaced
Thousands  have been displaced
In Zimbabwe, more than 100 people have died, and an estimated 250,000 have been left homeless, exacerbating the country's worst economic crisis in 20 years.

Crops and village granaries have been washed away, destroying food supplies, and roads, bridges and dams have been destroyed.

Reports say an estimated $10bn worth of damage has been caused to crops, livestock, infrastructure and property.

The government is warning that thousands of people face starvation because food distribution had been virtually impossible in some areas.

Click here for map

Government critics say relief efforts have been severely hampered because a third of the army and much of its equipment is currently deployed in the war-torn Democratic Republic of Congo.



The government has totally neglected us. We are like lost sheep because there is no help at all that we are getting at the moment
Villager in southern Zimbabwe

"It's unfortunate that the government has sent so many troops, planes and helicopters to the aid of a foreign government when the duty of the army is first and foremost to help the people of Zimbabwe," Morgan Tsvangirai, president of the main opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), was quoted saying.

The disaster, which is bound to put pressure on embattled President Robert Mugabe, spells further misery for a population already faced with record rates of unemployment and inflation.

A state of emergency has been declared in the provinces of Manicaland, Matebeleland South and Masvingo.

The cyclone has also worsened Zimbabwe's petrol shortage as supply ships have been unable to dock at Mozambique's port of Beira.

Refugee crisis

South Africa is now bracing for a massive influx of refugees from both Zimbabwe and Mozambique as it continues to mop up after its own flood damage.

Squatters
Some of South Africa's poorest have lost their homes

Twelve South African helicopters and two from Malawi have been working around the clock to rescue people from treetops and roofs in Mozambique.

The tiny mountain kingdom of Lesotho and poverty-stricken Zambia have also committed their only cargo planes to deliver food and medicine.

Botswana has offered Mozambique 220,000 gallons of fuel for rescue operations and Zambia has contributed $1m.

"This is the first time in the history of the continent that we are seeing Africa-to-Africa solidarity and aid support," said an ambassador in the Mozambique capital, Maputo.

Corpses

The latest victim of the turbulent weather conditions is Madagascar where reports say 30 people were killed when Eline's successor, Cyclone Gloria, swept across the Indian Ocean island.

In South Africa, more than 90 people have died in Northern Province and neighbouring Mpumalanga since the start of the flooding in February.

Police said families had been forced to keep corpses in their homes for several days because access routes to mortuaries and hospitals had been cut off by the floodwaters.

The government has donated 15m rand ($2.4m) to the region for flood relief.

In Zambia, thousands of people face starvation because their crops were destroyed when the overspill gates of the giant Kariba Dam were opened amid fears it could burst.

And in Botswana, more than 10,000 houses have collapsed and 34,000 people are in desperate need of help. About 11 rain-related deaths have been recorded.

The government has appealed for international aid. Provisional estimates put the cost of damage to infrastructure at $8.5m.


September 13, 2007

Why Go?

Below is a copy of the sermon I preach September 9th.  As some of you know, I read a book by Rob Bell called Sex God.  He had a chapter in the book titled God Wears Red Lipstick and it is one of the best explanations I have read about why we matter.  The whole summer I have been teaching and preaching that: PEOPLE ARE NOT OBJECTS!!!!!!!!!!!  Anyway the sermon below is why kids in Africa matter.


The Image of God

As many of you know, in about two weeks I will be leaving for Africa.  I have been asked to train aid workers in Uganda and Kenya to help severally traumatized children to begin to cope with the problems associated with violent trauma.  Many of the children we will encounter are labeled “war affected.”  Most of the children have been victims of war or participated in war as child soldiers.  Some of the children have been brutalized as a result of war and other have been perpetrators because of drugs and behavior modification.  Now that the wars are quiet (for the moment) the children are in camps or slums awaiting the next phase. 
Often the child soldiers were given a steady diet of drugs and violence.  They were told you must kill this village because these people are responsible for the deaths of your family members.  They were given copious amounts of cocaine and marijuana to keep them numb but hyped up.  They were kept numb so the memories of the violence they have seen and participated in would not affect them.  They were kept hyped up so that at a moment’s notice they could continue the rampage that has so ravaged their land. 
Once the drugs begin to wear off and the children are no longer a part of the “army,” memories come and they become despondent.  The children are victims all the way around; either because they were child soldiers or because they suffered at the hands of soldiers.  The memories they are left with are overwhelming because they can recount first hand what it is to be stripped of their humanity.  They know what the term anti-human means. 
Why should this matter to Trinity Church?
Because children should not be soldiers?
Because kids shouldn’t have to experience these things?
Because one of our youth group members fled Freetown, Sierra Leone for his life?
Yes to all of the above – IT IS ANTI-HUMAN.
Being anti-human is anti-God.  The Bible begins with the book of Genesis and one of the first things we are told is that God created humans in his image.  We are created in the image of God!! Wow!!  Everybody everywhere is a bearer of the Divine Image. 
Imagine for a moment: a group of adult soldiers invading a village.  Immediately people are categorized – useful or not.  They become objects.   The problem is they are not objects but people with names and families.
Jesus had much to say about what happens when a child, an image-bearer, a carrier of the divine spark, becomes an object.  In the book of Matthew, Jesus teaches that, “Whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him to have a great millstone fastened around his neck and to be drowned in the depth of the sea.”
That sounds unpleasant.  Taken literally much of the human race would be dead in a matter of minutes.  It seems that the truth of Christ’s statement went beyond a horrible wet death.  How should we take this scripture? 
To understand how Jesus makes this connection, we have to explore the first-century Jewish understanding of heaven.
In the book of Psalms, it’s written: “The Lord has established his throne in heaven, and his kingdom rules over all.”  To the Jewish mind, heaven is not a fixed, unchanging geographical location somewhere other than this world.  Heaven is the realm where things are as God intends them to be.  Heaven is where things are under the rule and reign of God.
If heaven is a realm where things are as God wants them to be, what would hell be?  It seems to me that hell would be where God is not.  We often hear statements like “for the hell of it” or “that was a living hell.”  We have heard people refer to war zones as being “like hell.”  Wars that use children as pawns are hells on earth. 
And that is Jesus’ point on the millstone death.  His point isn’t that one should drown themselves if they hurt a child.  His point is that something seriously anti-human takes place – something hellish happens when people are treated as objects.  He warns us that PEOPLE ARE NOT OBJECTS.
Christ talks about the Kingdom of Heaven being at hand and Paul goes further in talking about the already but the not yet.  There are some serious paradoxical theological implications for us because I believe it is possible for heaven to invade earth but it is also possible for hell to invade earth.  Disrespecting the Image of God in another doesn’t just make the other an object; it’s about our humanity as well.
It is my intention to go to Africa to remind aid workers and the children they work with that they are indeed in the image of God.  I intend to take the message of a loving God to people who have been treated as objects – a people who have been shown that diamonds and oil are more important than they are - in order to remind them they matter.  I intend to invade hell with heaven. 
In the beginning God created us in His image, before male and female, before race, creed or color, before the diversity – he made in His image.  All too often we start with the differences – Hutu or Tutsi; Mexican or Indian; Rebel or National; Black or White; Serbian or Croatian; Male or Female - rather than our similarities.  We are ALL created in the image of God.  God’s humanity is about seeing people as God sees them.
When I first went to the reservation, I went with the pious zeal of many new missionaries.  God and I were going to change the world.  God had sent me to the Native Americans.  One of my first encounters on the reservation was with Johnny.  He was 12 and an obvious lover of God.  He was proof that God was working – (sounds a lot like an object).  One wintry Friday night, Johnny was home alone.  His mother worked the night shift because that was the only job she could find.  He would dutifully lock himself in for the night.  On this Friday night, shortly after his mother left, a pick-up truck was coming up the road.  This is not usually a good thing if you are not expecting anyone.  Johnny’s uncle and several cousins were in the truck and they were very drunk.  They knocked on the door and Johnny did his best to keep them out but they eventually got in and dragged Johnny out.  They wanted him to drink but he refused.  He tried to reason with them and tell them of His love for God but this made them angry.  To make an unpleasant story short – the next morning his mother found him beaten and frozen in the barbed wire fence.  Johnny literally died for His love of Christ.
I, the missionary, learned about loving Christ more than anything from someone I was supposed to be discipling.  I learned in that moment there is no us and them – only we.  The moments when a minister becomes a parishioner, a teacher becomes a student, a statistic becomes a reality.  When they become we.  When those become us.  When he becomes me.  Moments when all of the ways that we divide ourselves and rank each other and convince ourselves of how different, better, and unalike we are disappear, and we are faced with the fact that first and foremost, we are humans, in this together.  And not much different from each other.
9.11 brought this message to America.  On the day the towers fell there was no democrat or republican, no politics, no taxes, no rich, no poor, no race, no religion – we were all Americans and we were all in this together.
Jew.  Gentile
War affected child.  Traumatized Adult.
Minister.  Parishioner.
We could be them.

At my house, I have a plastic tub full of amazing artwork created over the years by my nieces and nephews.  I have this one particular piece created by my niece Brittany.  It is a large piece of white finger painting paper with a bunch of little white buttons glued to it.  It could be a study on the shades of white.  It is important to me and I have carried it all over the world.  You know why I keep it?  Because how I treat the creation reflects how I feel about the creator.  And I love her very much.
When a human is mistreated, objectified, or neglected, when they are treated as less than human, when they are treated as objects, these actions are actions against God.  Because how you treat the creation reflects how you feel about the Creator.
This week marks my one year anniversary at Trinity.  In this year, I have tried to treat each member of our youth group as an image-bearer.  I have watched their hurt as others have treated them as objects.  I have prayed with them and loved them and reminded them that they are not objects but that they are in the very image of God.  I don’t say this to pat myself on the back – because I am human and I know my weaknesses as do our youth.  I say this because with all of my heart I believe the church exists to be a display of a new humanity.  A community of people who honor and respect the poor and rich and educated and uneducated and African and American and black and white and young and old and powerful and helpless as fully human, created in the image of God.
These bonds we have with each other are why, for many, there is so much power in the Eucharist.  We take the bread and wine to remind us of Jesus’ body and blood.  To reflect the truth that we’re all in this together, one body, and that his body being broken and blood being spilled are for our union.  It is about our relationship with God and each other. 
I am going to Africa because I am a Christian.  Jesus commands his followers to feed and clothe and visit and take care of those who need it.  I am going as a Franciscan whose vocation is to love Christ and the world.  I am going as an extension of Trinity Impact EYC because we are image-bearers and the Africans are image-bearers, they are just like us, and when we love them we are loving God.  I am going as a fellow image-bearer hoping to reflect the image of God and in the process allowing heaven to invade hell.  Amen