Monday Funday
"Monday can only be improved by laughter" - there's no wrong way to read that. Enjoy!
"Monday can only be improved by laughter" - there's no wrong way to read that. Enjoy!
This Psalm - written by David himself - the appeal is complete. Total! Can you be more rescued than by God's own lovingkindness? If God helps you - what would He leave lacking? But if He saves you from disaster with His lovingkindness - what might be left out of that? You can have nothing amiss at all in your life - and yet God could still save you - from what you can't even see or hear - or fathom.
Yet for all the times God tells us how He feels about us - this isn't a compulsory chore ... a task on God's to to list. He delights in us - not very differently from how we delight in our children. What wouldn't we do to help them.
Have you asked for God to help you? To rescue you? To even save you?
It's icy here. Just this past week I literally used the entire front end of one of the school's mini-vans to keep myself from flying all over the ice like something you'd otherwise only see in a cartoon. I took a little comfort from the fact that even the youngest students were doing the "penguin" walk.
But the danger of ice can pale in comparison to the peril we feel when we feel ourselves falling in an existential way. Perhaps we didn't get the grade we needed, or the financial aid package, the internship, the graduate position, or the job. Sometimes the fall we dread - is the breakup, the medical test results ... that phone call late at night ...
Verse 17 of Psalm 94 sums it up - "If the Lord had not been my help - I would've soon have dwelt in the abode of silence."
There is a way in which God comes close to us when we are faced with what we couldn't imagine facing. He does steady us. He does indeed comfort us and make us feel secure. This doesn't mean that struggle become painless - or we morph into some lab-experiment-gone-wrong kind of freak and are immune to these things. Instead - God - in ways we could've never before hand even grasped - not with the most eloquent explanations - offers us truth, understanding, insight - and most of all lends meaning to our struggle.
The very things that threaten to bring us down - in His tender-loving hands - become the stepping stones we use to climb closer to Him still.
Today's post features a verse near the beginning of a Psalm composed to commemorate the special relationship David enjoyed with God - and the promises God made David as a result of that special relationship.
Of course - a Psalm is a song.
David loved the Lord - so the Lord loved David.
Of course - David couldn't have loved the Lord if God hadn't loved him and pursued him first.
Of course - there eventually came a day when David had to survive - so the Lord had to sustain him - to preserve him. David fought for his and his flock's life - while "just a child."
Why'd God love him as snot-nosed little shepherd? A stinker out in the wilderness?
Have you ever asked that question? Ever wonder - "why didn't God love me that way?"
Well ...
Who says He didn't?
Who says He doesn't?
What if God does love you - as He loved David? What if God loves you now - right now - in this moment - as much as He ever loved anyone in any part of the Bible? What if - God's got a whole list of promises - just like the ones we read here between Himself and David - but "customized" for you?
Can you wrap your head around that?
It's true.
And it's vastly more easy to comprehend if you allow yourself to revel in the depth of God's love for you a little every day. If it's hard to believe ... that means you need to hear it - think about it - and revel in it MUCH, MUCH MORE.
When I was a student in college - I used to put nails in my pockets - to remind myself of my sins that led Christ to face the cross on my behalf. My mom used to get so mad at me for ruining one pair of jeans after another.
David however - didn't put nails - or any other reminder of sin - in his pockets or his shepherd's pouch or whatever. He carried a harp around - and wrote Psalms - or "songs" as we'd call them if we composed them. Mostly his songs were about God's faithfulness, God's goodness, God's protection, God's leading David - as a shepherd leads sheep.
To be sure sometimes David talked about God's righteous anger or His wrath even.
But there's much more about God's love.
Maybe we don't feel more of God's love because we don't think about it.
Maybe today we can take a moment to ponder - and consider - and take a leap of faith to deeply inhale the beautiful scent of all the ways God's love for us shows up in our lives. Maybe in so doing we can see the special relationship that God longs to grow with us too.
What do you call your bff? - or your bae? I have a friend whom I call "Bolts". Growing up my brother's best friend's nick name was "Liver Lips". Er um. Ok?
But what if we're just copy-catting God (again) with fondness for nicknames?
If God gives you a nickname - is it a nickname - or have you just been renamed?
Well - that question aside - let's make a short list of people in the Bible who got new names. Lemme see - besides Abraham, his wife Sarai who's renamed Sarah in Genesis 17:15. God named Isaac right off the bat. Jacob - Isaac's son - God renamed "Israel" - a big change from his birth name by the way - in Genesis 35:10. Jesus also renamed Simon Bar Jonah (or Shimon) Peter - which means rock - in John 1:42. (Paul sometimes refers to Peter as "Cephus" which is Aramaic for "rock" too). The Apostle Thomas was nicknamed (generally I think) "Didymus" (see John 11:16, 20:24, 21:2) - but that's generally considered a more general nickname because Thomas was apparently a twin). There are more people with nicknames - but this suffices for now.
God doesn't give everyone a nickname - and neither does Jesus (and that's good - it's confusing enough). But there are plenty of folks who do get nicknames recorded in scripture. Can you imagine? Makes me wonder if any of those names my dad called my brother and I from the pulpit ever "counted" as official in God's book? Yikes! Let's hope not.
But - if God had to give you a nickname right now - what would it be? What name came to mind? Does that name speak to something about you - or something about God? Some people earned the nickname much later in life and it reflected who they'd become. What kind of nickname would you like God to call you knowing how much He loves you?
A couple of years ago Tim Keller tweeted: "Religion stresses holiness over grace. Irreligion stresses freedom over holiness. Christianity is freedom through Grace that leads to holiness."
Amen.
We're going to keep exploring this incredible Love God has for us.
We struggle to love all - but God doesn't. We struggle to obey in every situation - God doesn't. Our struggle stirs up God's Grace far more often than His wrath - so much so that in the Kingdom of God receiving God's Love is synonymous with receiving His Grace - and as often as not the result is the stuff of punch-lines. His love turns murderers into missionaries, fallen women into evangelists, angry fishermen into apostles, diminutive tax-collectors into tree-climbing philanthropists, and on and on. The Gospels are full of outcomes of encounters with God's Grace & Love that inspire.
What shocks me is how often - especially in the New Testament - Jesus risks extreme love and grace on people that even made the disciples wonder - such as the Rich Young Ruler (Mark I0) and the 9 lepers (Luke I7). I mean - Jesus doesn't go back and unheal the nine lepers who didn't stay to say thanks. They scurry off yet somehow their response inspires gratitude. Jesus' grace towards me makes the people in those accounts look like safe bets. And yet that's precisely the point. It's the "bad bets" that need Jesus. It's the "safe" bets that sometimes incur His ire. And it's not remotely about the "bets" bad or otherwise.
It is about that Lavish Love that started whole universe on a path towards the cross. It's the Lavish Love that morphs a symbol of shame and torture into a global symbol of Love & Grace - and a place where we take refuge.
This whole chapter of Isaiah is full of God's extraordinary promises to His people. He reminds them that He chose them, and called them from the farthest ends of the earth. He declares us the descendants of His friend. He promises to confound our enemies - and help us rise above them. He promises to rescue us when we're destitute and needy.
You might love ice-cream. You might love summer. You might love Batman. But God doesn't stop with these sorts of love. His love is complete. His love is a refuge. His love is a real comfort and a source of peace.
You might have had someone tell you that they love you - only to change their minds later on. God has no ability to respond to us in this way. In this verse - He's telling His people that His love goes back hundreds of years - dozens of generations. For us today - that's thousands of years and hundreds of generations.
But we already know from the verses covered earlier in this first week of Lent that God's love for us goes right back to the beginning of time. You have no power to change God's mind regarding His love for you. His love for you is as fixed as the universe itself.
If you're looking for something - how hard do you look?
My mom used to always tell me - "Look with your hands - not just your eyes!" She had a point - often what I was looking for was just under something else - or behind it.
This verse - like some of the others we'll cover this Lent - doesn't necessarily use the word love - but does imply a level of love that's inspiring.
Have you ever torn your room apart looking for something? Or your car? Or your whole house? How much would you have to want something to look all over town - or all over your whole state? What would you want so badly that you'd search all over the whole country for it?
God declares here that He's constantly searching the whole earth - looking back and forth - to and fro - for someone who's heart He can support -- not just any old support - but strongly. If God's strongly supporting you - what else could you possibly need?!
How do we make our hearts completely His though? Well - how about for starters - tell Him. Tell Him that you're volunteering. Tell Him that He has your heart. However much we might search for Him - it is but an echo of how He's searching for us.
Try it.
See what happens.
I dare you.
Double dog.
Happy Monday! Here's a laugh or two to start your week off right. Praying it's fantastic!
When was the last time you locked eyes with someone? Do you remember looking into their eyes - and letting them gaze into yours - and search - absorb?
It's intense.
There's nothing much like a meaningful glance shared - especially with someone you're inviting to know you. And as comforting as it is to lock eyes with someone you connect with - doing so with someone who makes you uncomfortable is clearly unpleasant.
What's mind-blowing about this verse is God's inviting us to seek Him in this way. It's not that He doesn't know our limitations. He knows them better than we do - and still He invites us to seek His face!
Take a couple of minutes to read all of Psalm 27 - you can read it here on Bible Gateway. David composed an encompassing word-picture of God's complete and unreserved love for him. If you'd been inspired to write this Psalm - what would you have written? What an incredible invitation to intimacy with God David's captured here. God's invitation to know Him is extended to us - just as generously as it was extended to David. David was a man after God's own heart not because David possessed some God-seeking super-power - but simply because He heard God's invitation - and stepped into it. So can we.
What question is God asking you? And why would He ask except because He loves you so much?
I'm not Jewish and I didn't grow up Jewish - but I have come to appreciate that in scripture and books I've read on Judaism - there is a great love of questions. The questions seem to teach so much more than the answers. Perhaps I love this because I'm full of questions.
But perhaps I love that God poses questions to those He loves.
So - today's post isn't as much about a specific verse - as much as it is this aspect of God's relationship to us. God posed this question to Solomon in 2 Chronicles 1 "Ask for whatever you want me to give to you" - but there are so many other people it seems possible God asked this of. I believe David's answer to this question can be found in Psalm 27:4 - unlike Solomon who asked for wisdom - David asked for God Himself. Elijah asked Elisha what he wanted - and while that's not directly out of God's mouth - the prophet's job was to speak for God and I doubt Elijah posed this question independent of God's direction. In 2 Kings 4 Elisha pays it forward and offers the same question to the Shunammite woman - granting her a son - and then raising him. There are other accounts besides these.
Jesus did this as well - allowing people to find Him - stop Him - and stand before Him. He'd ask them "What do you want?" (Mark 10:51) Jesus said those words to James & John's mother - and though He couldn't fulfill her request - He heard her and answered.
We too - will not always get what we ask for - but we will never be ignored. And it's a heck of a thing to even be in such a conversation.
In all these accounts - David is still the only one who's answer to God's question - is that He wants God Himself. Despite this - none of the other questions are diminished or rebuked. God dignifies us with His attentiveness.
So - I'll ask again - what question is God asking you?
This verse has always given me pause. Always.
It's not just these words though - it's the whole context - that the man and the woman had eaten from the forbidden tree - they'd seen that they were naked - they'd made themselves clothes to hide their nakedness ... and BOOM - God shows up.
It's the biggest possible version of that horror you felt as a kid when you heard your mom's car pulling in the driveway - and you knew you hadn't done the thing she asked you to do.
What gets me - is that though God knew what was going on - He showed up. He didn't boom thundery angry words at them out of some cloud. Instead He did what was - His thing. I love that coming to the garden to walk with the man and the woman in the cool of the day was His practice. I love that though He knew it was not going to be a good day - He came anyway - to be with them.
I love that God - having just made ... everything ... loves hanging out. I mean He exists in a manner that defies comprehension. He is omnipotently, and omnipresently there in every moment of every particle of the entire universe at all times with all omniscience about absolutely everything. He not only can comprehend infinity - but He can even step outside of it. He knows all that lies beyond infinity. And yet - among the many things He loves - is us. He still loved us even that day. This feels to me so - intimate and tenderhearted.
Listening to a lecture series by Dallas Willard last summer brought a startling truth into the light. Dallas as a side-note mentioned that he used to imagine that when the New Testament says in Romans 14:11 that "every tongue will confess" - this would because God would drag it out of them. I don't remember ever hearing that specifically - but that sounded like what I'd been taught one way or the other too. That makes God sound so mean. Dallas went on to say that really - it's that God, fully manifested in His full nature - would be so overwhelming - we'd have no more power to gaze on Him and not confess - than we do to fall into icy water and not gasp.
Of course - if we saw God in this way - even just once - we'd find our free-wills over-run - and our souls compelled to awe-filled confession. Oh man would we gasp. A lot.
God is however vastly more mindful of our free-wills than we are. We talk casually of "wishing" that people could do this, that or the other thing. God never does this. He instructs us about right and wrong - and then He lets us choose. He limits our power no more than He limits His own.
But He does hide Himself from us - so we can use our free wills to become curious - to draw closer to Him - to seek Him out. We cannot - hide ourselves from Him - as David spells out so beautifully in Psalm 139:7-12. "Where can I go from Your spirit?"
On that day in the Garden way back when - we hid ourselves from God. We hide still - and God waits for us to seek Him. He reveals Himself to us only as far as we are willing to subject our wills and come to Him. James 4:8 says "Draw near to God. He'll draw near to you." Of course - we draw near to Him because He is calling to us. He does this for us - for His love of us.
Day 2's verse like yesterday's looks at the unchangeable loving ways of God. "God was merciful and gracious - slow to anger and abundant in lovingkindness" as the Psalmist says even before the beginning of the universe. Before the existence of time. He cannot be more or less this way today - than He was yesterday - or will be tomorrow. This also means that nothing you can do can make Him love you more or less. He has always loved you as much as He can.
If you've been a Christian for a while - this is not new information.
But what if it could be a new inspiration?
Do you feel like He's merciful? Do you feel His graciousness towards you? At the end of a long day - that went - well - you know - do you ponder Him being blessedly slow to anger AND abundant in lovingkindness?
Ever get to sit in a hot tub and soak your aching muscles at the end of an active day?
In Jesus' day - people carried around enormous burdens of guilt, misery, despair - and they saw no relief for it. Wherever they looked - they saw brutality. Yet when they heard Jesus speaking and teaching - they flocked to Him. They followed Him for days. Jesus told them plain as day - "my words are my Father's" (John 12:44-46). They acted as if Jesus words - God's words - were as soothing to their souls as a hot tub is to a tired and aching body.
I know it can be a challenge - but try to listen to what God's telling you about Himself in this inspired poem written by David so long ago. Go ahead and even read the whole thing if you like. Soak your sore and aching soul in it and rest. Even if you're not so sore - a good soak is good for the soul.
Ever run out of gas? Or cash? Or how about time? I have surely run out of all of those more than once. I've also run out of patience, and sleep, and once - I even ran out of humor. On at least one or two occasions (depending on who you talk to) I've pushed the limits of my family members' love. I've had break ups. I've broken up. I've had friendships end. I've ended some.
God's love operates in an entirely different way though.
God's love - was never, is never and has no ability to ever run out. His love is truly inexhaustible. There's no measure of it. There's no limit to it. No one has ever run out of it. Even all of us put together cannot consume it's unlimited supply.
This verse was one of many that King David sang in a song he composed and performed on the day the Ark of the Covenant was placed into the tent he'd put up for it. His song was known as a song of thanks. Infinite, limitless, measureless and eternal love from God for ... even you and me - now that is something worth singing about.
haha - now you have that song stuck in your head!
Even when Lent doesn't start on Valentines Day (but it sure is cool when it does) the whole point of Lent is grow in our understanding of what Jesus did on the cross.
Traditionally - Lent involved fasting, praying, and giving. Over the centuries - Lent has fallen in and out of favor. In fact - even though I grew up going to church more than most people go to Walmart - I had no idea at all of what Lent even is. But since I first started learning about it - and practicing it - Lent has become my favorite season of the year.
Just a couple of months ago we were getting read to celebrate Christmas. What Christmas is really about - is only meaningful because of what happened on the first Easter. And what happened on that first Easter would've been impossible without Jesus's love for us. And Jesus' love for us is God's love for us. Jesus could've only gone through what He did and done it as well as He did - because His love for us was that huge.
You may have given up chocolate before for Lent. You may have given up Facebook or Netflix - and those sorts of goals for Lent can teach us a lot for sure. This Lent - I'm inviting you to dig deep into Jesus' amazing love for you - and God's amazing love for you. John 3:16 is one of the most memorable Bible verses ... and it teaches us a profound truth. Join us this Lent as we reflect on a verse or passage each day that illuminates another aspect of God's boundless love for us. Believe me - it was hard to narrow down the list of verses to go over ... there are so many! From before the Big Bang - every encounter humanity has had with God - was all because God loved us and wanted us to understand this. Every Christian truth we understand - grows richer and brighter when we really understand that It was all for the Love.
Did you notice the picture included in my last post about slavery? 45.8 million people are estimated to be slaves in the world, and 68% of them are forced into labor.
Wait, so what are the other 32% of slaves forced into? Isn’t slavery about labor?
Only sometimes.
Sometimes slavery is about sex.
Around the world, women, children, and (and sometimes men) are kidnapped, lied to, illegally hired, coerced, drugged, physically abused, cheated, or frightened into sexual slavery. Oftentimes the enslavers (or “pimps”) are making mega-profit. Oftentimes they are forcing their victims to pretend they are peddling sexual favors by their own free will. If the victims refuse or attempt to escape?
Physical abuse.
Threats to harm family.
Death.
Many of these people are forced into sex slavery in their pre-teen or teenage years. The psychological abuse and scare tactics that have been used on them over the years have so shaped their young minds that they don’t even know what freedom is anymore, let alone how to fight for it. They don’t dare disobey their captors. They don’t dare not meet their quota of “clients” – sometimes as many as 40 per night.1 They fear for their lives.
Of all forms of slavery, this is the one America is particularly guilty of. We are the source and the destination of sex slaves from around the world.
So where are these people? The Polaris Project tells us, “Sex trafficking occurs in a range of venues including fake massage businesses, via online ads or escort services, in residential brothels, on the street or at truck stops, or at hotels and motels.”2 People mistakenly think women in the commercial sex “business” are free, but professor and researcher Dominque Roe-Sepowitz tells us that’s a delusion. In fact, "‘All those women care about is that they meet their quota and get the money to their pimp or trafficker,’ she says. Otherwise, they often face dire consequences. Ads perpetuate this myth, often worded as though they are written by the women themselves, and that they ‘can't wait’ to meet their buyers.”3
And there are plenty of buyers here in the US.
A study published in 2014 found that in one city alone (Atlanta, GA), the sex slave trade has an economic value up to $290 million.4
Think what Atlanta could do with $290,000,000 if it were not spent on sex slavery.
Think what all those women and children could do if they weren’t enslaved for sex.
The point is not to blame Atlanta. The point is that sex slavery is here. It’s everywhere.
Since 2007, the National Human Trafficking Resource Center has received reports of approximately 40,000 victims in the US.5 The actual number of victims is much higher since many instances go unreported.
I could tell you heart-wrenching stories that would tie your stomach in knots. But I won’t. I’m not trying to just make you angry or sad of empathetic or shocked if you’re still helpless to end it.
What I really want to do is tell you that you – yes you – have power to fight against sex slavery. It’s different than fighting labor slavery, but there are small yet powerful things you can do. I’d just like to share them with you.
Be ready: You never know when you’ll see something suspicious – especially now that you are more aware. Enter the National Human Trafficking Hotline number in your phone so you’ll know whom to contact if something doesn’t seem quite right: 1-888-373-7888. Also, download the Smartphone app “TraffickCam.” When you stay in a hotel, take pictures of the room and submit them via this app. Many ads for exploitation of trafficked women include pictures of the victims in hotel rooms. By creating a database of hotel room photos, we help investigators locate the actual places where exploitation is happening.
Say no to pornography: Our culture condemns the injustice of sex trafficking while embracing porn as an expression of freedom. But a little digging shows this to be a false distinction for at least 3 reasons.6 First, pornography feeds the sex trafficking industry because it’s “a primary gateway to the purchase of humans for commercial sex.”7 Second, pornographic material is often created by exploiting trafficking victims on film or photo. Third, the making and consuming of pornography actually fit the legal definition for sex trafficking. America, enough of this double standard. You can’t condemn the sex trafficker while consuming the product he helps create. So use your own eyes, internet, movie choices, etc. as a weapon AGAINST injustice.
Help them heal: Organizations like International Justice Mission, Better Way Imports, and A21 have many opportunities for you to support the freedom and healing of sex trafficking victims. From funding rescue missions to writing encouraging letters…from providing after-care packages to buying products made by survivors who need a source of income…you can help them in their journey of recovery.
We are not helpless. They are not hopeless. Our voices must be heard:
Sex is not for sale because humans are not for sale.
Footnotes:
1. Sacharay’s story: http://www.cnn.com/2015/07/20/us/sex-trafficking/index.html
2. The Polaris Project: https://polarisproject.org/sex-trafficking
3. Dominique Roe Sepowitz interviewed by Deseret News: http://www.deseretnews.com/article/865620752/The-Super-Bowl-is-the-largest-human-trafficking-event-in-the-country.html
4. Research Study of Sex Industry in Major US Cities: https://www.urban.org/research/publication/estimating-size-and-structure-underground-commercial-sex-economy-eight-major-us-cities
5. National Human Trafficking Hotline Stats: https://humantraffickinghotline.org/states
6. Connection between Porn & Sex Trafficking: http://www.covenanteyes.com/2011/09/07/the-connections-between-pornography-and-sex-trafficking/
7. Supply & Demand of Sex Trafficking: https://sharedhope.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/DEMAND.pdf
8. Image: https://www.tes.com/lessons/j2880sRPYQGZ8g/human-trafficking
Today's post is 2 of 3 by Mrs. Jennafer Ort - who's been invested in understanding this problem for quite a few years now.
Hey again,
In my last post I introduced the problem of modern-day slavery. It’s a problem so huge that 45.8 million people are trapped in slavery around the globe. It’s a problem so pervasive that essentially every country in the world has slaves, including the United States. And it’s a problem so personal that many of the daily purchases we make are directly supporting - even demanding - that this slave labor continues.
So did you take the slavery footprint questionnaire to learn how many slaves are working for you? (www.slaveryfootprint.org) It’s a bit unreal to think of dozens of people working in violent, filthy, abusive, dangerous, and inhumane circumstances just so I can have a closet full of clothing, a house full of gadgets, and a cupboard full of food.
So what do we do about it?
Before you freak out, I’m not going to tell you to get rid of everything you own and commit to a life of self-sustaining simplicity in the wilderness. That’s just not practical (for most of us, anyway!). But in light of your new knowledge, I’d challenge you to not ignore the problem either. Let me recommend 3 concrete options for reducing your slavery footprint starting today. These are the same 3 things I did to bring my own slavery footprint down nearly 20% in less than 2 years.
The solution for us all comes down to knowing where your money is going. If you don’t want to support slavery, don’t spend your money on items that were produced by slaves. You have three ways to avoid this:
1. Ditch it.
2. Research it.
3. Localize it.
These actions steps are simpler and more powerful that you’d think:
1. Ditch it: Not sure whether the item you are planning to buy was ethically sourced? Just don’t buy it. If you are not certain whether an item is ethically sourced, it probably isn’t. Most major brand names for anything we buy – from bananas to running shoes – do not verify their raw materials are ethically sourced. So ask yourself, “Do I really need ____?” If the answer is “no,” just don’t buy it – at least not until you’ve found an ethical source. If the answer is “yes,” (or “no I don’t need it, but I really, really want it,”) then choose option 2 or 3 below!
2. Research it: There has been a recent wave of counter-action to the problem of slavery and unfair wages: it’s called “fair trade.” A growing number of organizations are ensuring their laborers are earning fair wages for their work – all the way up the supply chain. This isn’t about raising minimum wage. It’s about eliminating slavery. So look for brands with one of the fair trade symbols OR buy from companies who verify their products are fair trade or ethically sourced. (See the end of this post for some websites to help.) As a bonus, you can also buy products that are organic. Since organic items have to verify their sources to prove they’re organic, it’s very unlikely they can hide unethical labor in the process.
3. Localize it: When I say “localize,” I don’t mean you have to only buy products that are made locally. What I really mean is making sure your proceeds are staying local. You can most easily do this by buying items second-hand. Think about it: If you buy a t-shirt from Goodwill, the only people benefiting from your dollars are the local Goodwill employees. None of that money makes it back to unethical original sources, so you just made an ethical purchase. But when you buy that same t-shirt brand new from a store like Walmart, your dollars are directly supporting the manufacturing of that product – even if the manufacturing used slave labor somewhere along the line. Buying secondhand not only saves you money, it saves you from supporting slavery. This strategy can be used for electronics, cars, clothes, any of those items you can’t seem to find fair trade – or at least not fair trade and in your budget.
Personally, I’ve used each of these strategies to some degree. For example, I’ve given up chocolate unless it’s fair trade. I’ve researched ethical sources to purchase tennis shoes and dress shoes. I’ve started buying some produce from the local farmer’s market instead of the chain grocery store. And I’ve committed to buying most of my clothing items and electronics secondhand until I can find or afford to buy them fair trade.
Sometimes these choices are inconvenient or expensive. But each change is worth it to know that none of my dollars are being used to exploit slaves.
So now you know.
You can’t do nothing anymore.
You are no longer innocently ignorant.
Your informed silence would implicitly
support the slavery
you now know exists.
So instead, I’d like to invite you to fight against slavery.
I’m asking you to re-think your purchases.
I’m challenging you to try the strategies above, starting with just 1 category or purchase.
You can build from there.
We can all build from there, until, together, we put slavery out of business.
Will you join me?
p.s. For a list of companies who are fair-trade certified or made by survivors, check out this website. It lists companies for everything from accessories to food to makeup to clothing: http://www.endslaverynow.org/act/buy-slave-free/slave-free-companies
The longest recorded sermon Jesus gave - the Sermon on the Mount, as recorded in Matthew 5, 6 and 7. And the longest single sermon Paul gave - as recorded in Romans 6, 7 and 8. This fall in our Sunday night meetings in the UW-L Student Union JC's Village is going to cover these two sermons. Jesus' sermon of course - is His longest teaching on how as citizens of the Kingdom of Heaven we can live. Paul's sermon, is one of his most complete discussions of just how salvation and grace changes everything. The whole testament teaches both of these - but so much of the entire New Testament's teachings on these two crucial topics is crammed into the chapters that cover these two sermons - that the better we can under stand just these few chapters - the more we can understand the big picture. Our discussions on these invaluable chapters - some of the most quoted and most familiar passages in all the Bible - focus on practically understanding what it really means for our lives that Jesus said what He said - and that Paul preached what He preached. These two sermons are barely longer than the Constitution of the United States - and yet though they were first spoken to so few - they've had a far wider impact on the entire world.
Today we have the privilege of coming along side Jennafer Ort - who I introduced last week - and journeying with her as she learned about the global human trafficking problem. There are two more posts after today's - so stay tuned!
Hey there, I’m Jennafer Ort. You’ve probably never heard of me, or – if you have – it was as “Jenna” Young during my 2 years being discipled by Amy Jo in JC’s Village. I’ve been invited to write a 3-part guest series on Amy Jo’s blog. Not because I’m a blogger – I’m not. Not because I’m working with Amy Jo – I’m not. Just because I have something important to share, and it’s too important to limit it to my own sphere of influence. With that, brace yourself. This isn’t a peachy inspirational post. It’s heavy. It’s heart-wrenching – if you let it sink in. But please do because it’s important.
It’s slavery.
If you’re anything like me, your first associations with the word “slavery” might be the Civil War, Africa, William Wilberforce, or some other historical character or time period. You might suppose slavery died with the Emancipation Proclamation of the 1860s. But what if I told you slavery still exists? Then what would you think of? Distant countries? Primitive people groups? Rare horror stories?
Yeah, me too. Until I learned I was wrong.
I first heard about modern-day slavery in my junior year of high school in 2008. At the time, all I knew was the story of a teenage girl giving up chocolate because she learned cocoa was often farmed using slave labor. I was shocked. I admired this girl for giving up chocolate. I considered following her example. And then I promptly forgot about it and moved on with my care-free life. When I heard the same statistic during my sophomore year of college, I was convicted to actually do something by giving up chocolate for a year. I had very little information at the time. And I had absolutely NO IDEA the extent of the slavery problem.
It wasn’t until December of 2015 that I became aware of the vastness of modern-day slavery. Over seven years after I’d first heard slavery still existed, I learned that an estimated 45.8 million people are enslaved across the world.
That’s like the entire populations of Canada, Ireland, and New Zealand combined. That’s a lot of slaves.
And the sad thing is, they’re everywhere. In 2016, the Walk Free Foundation ranked 167 countries from most to least estimated slaves in that country. Sorry, but the United States was not ranked last. It was ranked #72 out of 167, with an estimated 57,700 slaves in the USA.
Granted, it could be more. In fact, compared to the estimated 18 million slaves in India, it’s easy to think we’re doing pretty well. The problem is that many of us in the United States directly support the slave industries of other countries without even knowing it. How do we do this??? Through our purchases.
Chocolate bars, steaming coffee, smart phones, rubber tires, shrimp, fruit, tennis shoes, cheap t-shirts…the list goes on and on. Many of the items we buy or consume every single day have passed through the hands of a slave. It’s not that the companies selling the items are enslaving people. But these companies don’t demand or investigate ethical standards from their suppliers, so they – and we – end up supporting the slavery cycle through our purchases.
Let’s get more personal. Right now – today – there are people around the world working in factories or farms or brothels or fishing boats to support your seemingly harmless lifestyle. To see an estimate of the number of slaves required to support your lifestyle, I challenge you to take this 11-question survey: http://slaveryfootprint.org
When I took the survey on December 24, 2015, my score was 44. Forty-four real people somewhere in the world were working in slavery so I could enjoy my privileged lifestyle as a college student. Something had to change. And it is.
When I took the same survey today, my score was 36.
36 is 36 too many. But it’s nearly a 20% decrease from my first score, so I think I’m onto something. I’d like to share that “something” with you. Please tune in later this week to hear how I’m decreasing my slavery footprint, and how you can decrease yours.
In the past JC's Village has had many themes to orient our discussions around ... we've had "All In" - and Road Trip ... but this fall we're doing something different. This fall we're playing a game! We're playing "Heroes & Zeros" - an RPG based game that allows us to play all sorts of Heroes of the faith - and some not so heroic sorts from the Bible - "Zeros" you might call them. Everyone will have the opportunity to play a different character each week. There will be quests, power-ups and side-quests - with prizes for the highest score of the week and a grand prize for the high-score for the semester. If you're into growing your walk with Jesus - and have fun while you're at it - then come to UW-L's SU 2100 at 7pm this coming Sunday - September 10th for JC's first meeting of the semester - we'll introduce the game and get going.
Looking forward to seeing you there!