Conversations of Faith at Common Ground

Faith issues we’re trying to live for the sake of Jesus.

Archive for March 2009

poverty – an underrated blessing

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Given our country’s current economic turmoil and crisis, this observation from Assault on Eden offers an insightful perspective check.  (This excerpt was written over 30 years ago but is as timely now as it was then.)

Poverty is viewed as the single greatest sin in our society.  It is an enemy to be annihilated, a shame to be hidden.  Whether springing from the conservative sources that say success is a sign of God’s favor or from liberal sources that say we must all enter the heaven of the median income, the message is the same: we must be saved from poverty.  But one has experiences when one is poor that are forever denied to insulated society, hermetically sealed in financial security.  Of course, like anything else, like drugs or education or geography, poverty is raw material.  It can be just as easily subverted as wealth, making its subject spiteful, petty, brutal.  But in our society, the positive potential of poverty has been obscured.  We scoff at its romantic advocates, pity its victims, ignore its Teacher.

I learned from poverty what I could learn from no other school.  I learned not to rely on possessions to supply an identity.  When you drive up to the bank in a rattletrap truck with slick tires and try to cash a check that you pull out of a worn flannel pocket with fingers permanently blackened from soot and axle grease, you learn to be prepared for people who don’t believe in you; yet even against that heavy wall of denial, you know your own worth.  You learn to stare down the insolent eyebrows of other customers who pay cash when you pull out your food stamps, refusing to accept their ignorant estimate of yourself and knowing that we all ultimately live by welfare and grace.  And, if you are very lucky, you learn how close to the edge all human life is lived, how we are held in existence from moment to moment by a power we don’t control.  You can rejoice in life as a gift.  In poverty there is no pretense and no protection.

What are we discovering in these trying times?

Written by derek

March 24, 2009 at 9:46 am

faith in a post-Christian America

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Has Christianity in the US jumped the shark?

The AP reports that Americans are disassociating themselves from religion (based on this survey).

George Barna also finds that Christians are becoming less Christian — less are having a “biblical worldview.”

What’s the problem?  Is it that people don’t believe or know what the Bible says?  Or, have people become “turned off” to God and are walking away from the Christian faith?

Written by derek

March 9, 2009 at 9:32 am

sad sack, oregon?

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Business Week has put Portland, OR at the top of it’s “unhappiest place to live” list. The list is,

based on their rates of suicide, depression, divorce, unemployment, job loss, population loss, crime, amount of green space, and cloudy days. We gave most emphasis to suicide and depression rates, crime, and economic factors.

They continue…

The city with the highest overall score in our index was Portland, the beautiful Oregon city that also has very high depression and suicide rates. St. Louis, New Orleans, and Detroit were high on the list largely because of their rates of crime, unemployment, and population loss. Other cities such as Las Vegas, Tucson, Sacramento, and Jacksonville, Fla., ranked high because of their suicide rates and difficult economic conditions.

Wow, we’re worse off than Detroit?  Bummer.

This raises a couple of good questions to ask, “What makes us happy?” and “When things stink, what gives us hope?”

Written by derek

March 3, 2009 at 12:05 pm