Monday, April 24, 2017

Sick Sunday Funday


Hello Everyone! Dealing with a lot of sickness this past week, but chugging on. Our vlog from this week is a normal Thursday morning:
Caid and I were able to go to our first marriage conference (thanks for the babysitting Grandma!), and that was a blessing. Plus big news about the Trek:
Don't forget--this is the last week to register AND GET A FREE TEE SHIRT!
Just one read from the interwebs: You are not a failure. Have a great week everyone!


Monday, April 17, 2017

Easter Sunday Funday

This weekly video is an interview with Em Bricker about Refugees:
And we also have our Easter vlog:

Hope you and yours had a wonderful weekend! He is risen indeed! 
Reads from the Interwebs:
1. Voices of Lent: (can't believe it is over now!) My favorite from the last week
4. Everything my church taught me about sex and marriage is wrong
6. Learning a second language is good for democracy

Sunday, April 9, 2017

Sunday Funday April

Our weekly vlog is all about Ana (you are welcome, mom!):
We are working away and enjoying this (weekend) lovely weather. Life is good and Caid is sharing/training/volunteering at Yeshua Society and Kids Inc. He loves being on the Worship team at church. We are looking forward to this Holy Week, as we take time to contemplate all that God has and is and will do. 
Reads on the Interwebs:
1. Brazil's new problem with blackness: a scholarly and interesting look at race from a different perspective/culture, and the struggle in trying to move forward. 
2. My child is LGBTQ, what should I do? A good resource for missionaries and others!
4. Voices of Lent: my favorite this week--you should check these out/sign up, even if it is the last week of Lent! 
5. Unspoken code of Motherhood: made me tear up
6. Eleven spring shows to know about: I always like new suggestions:)
7. Losing the celebrity status: this goes along with the third step of re-entry: humble pie:)

Sunday, April 2, 2017

April Sunday Funday

This week's video is about Pastor Flavio:
I also made a video with Caid's nieces and nephews for Ana Sofia: Cousins

I posted my highlights from Subversive Jesus, a really great book, and a poem for my husband:). Don't forget, next month is the Trek for Transportation

Reads from the Interwebs:
1. This world will never be enough: our kids with us as we do ministry
2. Daily Lent Readings (sign up!): my favorite this week
3. Any college bound kid I know gets a sit down conversation. This is the reality for TOO MANY.
5. When you are trying to love better: your heart in someone else's body is never safe
6. Inspiring! Love my friend's idea of redoing/fixing up/reselling furniture to raise money for giving to others. 
7. Six reasons why your husband taking a business trip does not make you a "single mom": shout out to some amazing true single moms I know! 
8. On being local: changing up the questions we ask


Tuesday, March 28, 2017

Subversive Jesus by Craig Greenfield

Loved this book! Here are my favorite quotes:
“A church that doesn’t provoke any crises, a gospel that doesn’t unsettle, a word of God that doesn’t get under anyone’s skin, a word of God that doesn’t touch the real sin of the society in which it is being proclaimed—what gospel is that?” Oscar Romero
“As we were faced with the reality of the poor each day, it was easy to examine our decisions in light of the lives of our impoverished friends, who might even ask us about those decisions, causing some awkward conversations. We could gain perspective simply by looking out the window or stepping through the door, because our well-being became tied to their well-being. We prayed that a local movement of Christians loving their poor neighbors might be raised up. We stumbled on an obscure Cambodian proverb: “It takes a spider to repair its own web.” Using this piece of cultural wisdom as our catchphrase, we began challenging young Cambodian Christians to take on one vulnerable child each. We dubbed the movement Alongsiders.”
“My friend Joyce Rees says that if you want to understand the good news that Jesus offers for the poor in a particular place, you first have to discover what the bad news looks like. During the excess of time Jason and I had to sit and contemplate, we learned that if the bad news of the inner city was rejection, isolation, and loneliness, the good news might look something like radical hospitality. We realized that Jesus would welcome these folks inside—not just into a drop-in center or shelter but into a family. 

“It’s no use walking anywhere to preach unless our walking is our preaching.” St. Francis 

“Jesus begins with the resources already available in the community. He takes a handful of loaves and fish from a little boy, thus including the poor and what they have to offer as a central part of the solution. He prays, inviting God to work, to be central to the process, for it is only when we are open to the Spirit that we will be inspired to share and welcome. Then he asks his disciples to organize the people, forming temporary mini-communities so they can break bread together, relationally. And the rest is history. A beautiful miracle of sharing and abundance takes place that meets the immediate needs of the people and revolutionalizes the way the disciples understand community transformation. Jesus subvers the usual power structures. He undermines the status quo in a time when soup kitchens have replaced radical hospitality in our own homes. He neither leaves folks to fend for themselves individually nor allows his followers to engage in a one-way act of charity that would set them up as benefactors and beneficiaries. Instead, he asks them to share.” 
“Charity ‘wounds’ because it excuses the recipient from obligations to repay that are deeply embedded in both culture and psyche and fundamental to human social life.” Anthropologist Mary Douglas
“As followers of Jesus, we need to figure out what that good news looks like as we respond to those who are suffering because of poverty and oppression, whether a beggar on the corner or an orphaned child in a slum halfway around the world. God wants us to not only care for the well-being of his children, but also to see that they are central to his redemptive purposes for the world.” 
“It is only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is ALWAYS a way to solve a problem without violence” –some jokester 

“We often fall into the trap of thinking that the solution to injustice is to gain power, hoping that once the roles of power have been reversed, the coercion will stop. But every bloody revolution in the history of the world shows that this does not work. The oppressed persons who seize control simply become the oppressors. When faced with oppression, Jesus tapped into the fruit of the Spirit and exerted self-control rather than using his power and privilege to control others.” 
“There’s something deeply unethical about using people’s poverty to force them to listen to our message. It is not the way of Christ, who comes gently to serve and offer freely and not to force his own agenda on people. More and more, our team was learning that one-way acts of charity would never bring freedom to our friends. We needed to not only learn their names but also to discover more of God’s purpose or their lives. “
“If we’re all busy running around raising money for charity or maintaining charitable organizations, who will be left to agitate for real change? Because most charitable word is donor driven, the entire system runs on money instead of relationships. Thus many donors demand tax receipts because they don’t want to give if they can’t receive some benefit.”
“I realized that whenever rich people like me want to follow Jesus, we are invited to sell our possessions and give to the poor.  Somewhere along the line, some of my great-great-great-great grandfathers got rich off the backs of those they exploited. And some of my ancestors traveled the world, plundering resources from Asia and Africa for their own gain. And some in my family were colonizers, who stole land from indigenous people and placated them with trinkets and liquor. Though our ties to ancestral connections may be remote, the wealth and privilege we have inherited remains in our hands in in our bank accounts. That wealth, both my family’s wealth and the wealth of my nation, is the foundation of my privilege, the head start I got in life. Though I didn’t steal it myself, I have some responsibility for it now. Like Zacchaeus, I come face-to-face with Jesus and am confronted by the realization of what my privilege has cost others.”
“Three phases of biblical justice: First, in SOLIDARITY, we tie our well-being to the well-being of those God leans toward—the poor. Next, we enter a season of RESISTANCE together, and as we are inspired by the Spirit, we speak truth to power and take symbolic actions to highlight injustice and ask for change. Finally, by God’s grace, we long to reach the place of LIBERATION, where both the oppressed and the oppressors are transformed when they open themselves to the work of God.”
“Through activism we confront the toxicity in our world, through contemplation we confront the toxicity in ourselves” Phileena Heuertz 


Thousand Choices Strong

Every time we roll to the middle
Every choice to be selfless
Every time you do the dishes
Every time I hold you close

Our love is made up of
A thousand choices strong
I can feel them bind together
And hold us up

My love for you was both
A choice and a chosen
As I stepped into it rationally
But it seized me without reason

The honeymoon ended long ago
But I still feel the sweetness sugar up my day
As you clean out the shower drain
And change that dirty diaper again

Our love is made up of
A thousand choices strong
I feel them bind up
And carry us along

If I lose my way
They are a rope to guide me
If I fall away
They are the net to catch me

And I will live my days with you
Making a thousand choices more
Of love strands that
Tie me to you

--To my husband

Sunday, March 26, 2017

End of March Sunday Funday

Here is our weekly vlog, just about life here and there:
Here are the videos this week we made for Living Stones:

Incredible drone footage

One moment changes everything

Reads from the Interwebs: