Friday, October 31, 2008

Do Justly


What does it look like, specifically, to do justly in Austin? How can we do this together?

Monday, October 27, 2008

A Biblical Concept of Justice


At the heart of the Biblical concept of justice is this; until everyone has enough, no one should have more than enough.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Blog Action Day -I Have Your Coat


Years ago I sat in a room full of middle schoolers and asked them how they felt about helping those in poverty. Expecting them to say that the problem felt overwhelming or that helping made them feel good, I was, instead, met with a quick barrage of reasons not to help those in need:

They won't appreciate it

They spend money on the wrong things

They'll go back to the same old life the next day

They wouldn't need help if they'd just work

Of course, I could hardly blame these middle schoolers. They were voicing what they'd heard spouted by adults, most likely around a dinner table.

Briefly at a loss as to how to respond, I recovered and asked them what would happen if God withheld His grace using the same reasoning.

They wouldn't need help if they'd just work

They'll go back to the same old life the next day

They spend money on the wrong things

They won't appreciate it

Now, I know that helping those in need is a complicated issue and that handing a guy on the street a couple of bucks can be as much about avoiding the issue as actually helping, but it concerns me how many of us are still looking for any excuse not to help. Our money is hard earned, our time is precious, our resources and what we do with them is no ones business but ours.

Me and my fellow Christians can be the worst of the bunch. We embrace the pursuit of happiness as if it were a part of our own story and not one handed to us by others. We cling to what it ours, say things like "honest work for honest pay", and accuse those in need of being lazy or con-artists or out and out thieves.

But the Bible takes an interesting view on theft. In the Old Testament, God's people not only viewed taking from others as theft, they viewed withholding from others as theft. 

This is echoed throughout Jesus' teaching and the New Testament as a whole. John the Baptist says in Luke 3:11, "The man with two coats should share with him who has none, and the one who has food should do the same."

I'm tired of hearing that this kind of teaching is communism or socialism, just because it isn't capitalism. The fact is that this kind of sharing is simply Christian. It is the understanding that if I have two coats and you have no coat, I have your coat.

And I should give it back to you.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

What's Your Response?






Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Dorothy Day


Love is a harsh and dreadful thing to ask of us, but it is the only answer.