Jim Wallis and Chuck Colson have been in the news a lately talking about their differences in the way they see the defining moral issues of our time. Check out the article at www.sojo.net from Jim Wallis in his "open letter to Chuck" and follow the links to see where this letter is coming from...
http://www.sojo.net/index.cfm?action=sojomail.display&issue=050224#3
2.25.2005
Bush's Energy Plan...it's ghetto hooptie
check out this article on drilling in the ANWR...
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/21/politics/21refuge.html
2.24.2005
genocide in darfur
please check out this links about the genocide in darfur - these links are important. click on the link on the right of the first link at the NYTimes under the 'special report' section. please do not be idle. pray. give. act.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/23/opinion/23kristof.html?ex=1109826000&en=6dcbb8193aaae4e7&ei=5070
www.savedarfur.org
www.darfurgenocide.org
big churches and little people
the oudekerk is one of the oldest churches in amsterdam... it's one of the largest churches in amsterdam... and it's in the heart of the infamous red light district - literally surrounded by lights of red. unfortunately, the oudekerk no longer serves as a place of worship, but rather as a place of art and pictures - a museum. the oudekerk is dirty and run down, with nothing but old tombs, battered columns and chipped paint to fill its vast space. it has fallen victim to an area of darkness and spiritual turmoil that haunts this beautiful city. maybe one day, just maybe, people will fill this huge church having come into it to seek something bigger than any church walls can hold within.
2.21.2005
consumerism...
Even walking across the oldest bridge in Amsterdam, the Magere Bruge, I find myself annoyed by the ever present Coke can. At times, it seems like the Coke can is everywhere. You can cannot escape it. You cannot run from it. It is everywhere you look. The red can is engrained in my mind. It distracts me and disturbs me... all I'm trying to do is enjoy one of the most beautiful images in Amsterdam - the Amstel River on a sunny day.
wal-mart:: an enemy of social justice
I can think of no more destructive force in our society today than the Wall Street bohemoth - Wal-Mart. It may be huge and it may have every consumer product known to man packed within it's walls, but it is not good for America and it is not good for the world. I invite you to check it out for yourself at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/walmart/
Think about it, question it, act on it.
2.17.2005
God's Politics
Jim Wallis, editor of SoJo Magazine, just released a new book called "God's Politics: Why the right gets it wrong and left doesn't get it" - I just purchased it myself and am very excited to dive in. I found this excerpt from the book online (http://www.sojo.net/special/items/050210_GPch1.pdf) and it only served to fuel the desire to know more about how politics and faith do not need to collide and create a vacuum of hope, nor does the faithful Christian have to sit in the back seat while politicians drive us through issues like abortion, the death penalty, hunger, AIDS, and fair trade only to serve the greater needs of power and fame. It is indeed time to take our faith back.
2.14.2005
signs on the street
Riding a bike is a great way to get around. It's good for the environment, good for the lungs and good for the soul. Sometimes, the rain and wind don't make it so pleasant, but overall. I like riding a bike.
2.12.2005
dogs and well...never seen a cat...
Everytime I see a dog on a bike it makes me smile. Once I saw a woman, who was on her bike, carrying one dog, another was in a basket on the front of the bike (both little guys of course) and then a german shepherd was running along side the bike. It was a good laugh. It sort of tickles me inside and I appreciate every time I see such events unfold before me on the streets of Amsterdam. Good stuff.
2.11.2005
normal and not normal
what is normal and abnormal. it's all the way someone sees reality i suppose. if you see someone different than yourself, you see abnormal. if you see the same, you see normality. doesn't that make us all abnormal though - god made us all different from each other.
it's the funny thing about fashion. we are always trying to differentiate ourselves from the next person or group of people, but in reality we just want to be accepted, or in other words - we want to be the same. people want to be different and they will shop at the gap, abercrombie and fitch and old navy just so they will look the same. the same is true for people who dress "black" or "punk". a mohawk, some interesting earrings, a black trenchcoat... it's all to look abnormal, until you see that person together with his/her friends and you realize that reality is just looking the same. comfort and security are desires of the heart that are only fulfilled in consistency not in abnormalcy. so, we all look the same, but we never will be.
it's the funny thing about fashion. we are always trying to differentiate ourselves from the next person or group of people, but in reality we just want to be accepted, or in other words - we want to be the same. people want to be different and they will shop at the gap, abercrombie and fitch and old navy just so they will look the same. the same is true for people who dress "black" or "punk". a mohawk, some interesting earrings, a black trenchcoat... it's all to look abnormal, until you see that person together with his/her friends and you realize that reality is just looking the same. comfort and security are desires of the heart that are only fulfilled in consistency not in abnormalcy. so, we all look the same, but we never will be.
2.10.2005
nazi's doomed to death...?
So, I was watching a CNN Insight program last night on Professor Churchill from the University of Colorado. He is becoming famous for comments he made almost three years ago in an essay shortly after the Sept. 11 attacks, when he made a claim that the people who died in the attacks sort of - "deserved to die."
It's controversial no doubt. Why he made comments in this way, I'm not sure, but he makes some interesting points about how Americans often do not understand how the things they do affect the rest of the world (showed more completely on Insight than in this article). However, to make a comment calling the victims "Nazi's" was downright stupid. Check out this article to read more about this issue. Is it a free speech issue...? Why did he make comments that were so obviously directed to create controversy...?
http://edition.cnn.com/2005/EDUCATION/02/02/speaker.protest.ap/
It's controversial no doubt. Why he made comments in this way, I'm not sure, but he makes some interesting points about how Americans often do not understand how the things they do affect the rest of the world (showed more completely on Insight than in this article). However, to make a comment calling the victims "Nazi's" was downright stupid. Check out this article to read more about this issue. Is it a free speech issue...? Why did he make comments that were so obviously directed to create controversy...?
http://edition.cnn.com/2005/EDUCATION/02/02/speaker.protest.ap/
2.09.2005
July 15th - U2 in Amsterdam
Tickets sold out in less than an hour and half for three shows here in Amsterdam, but our good friends Sam and Patricia braved the early morning cold and the lines to get us tickets on the field... thanks to them we will finally get to see Bono, etc... check out www.U2.com for more info.
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