Tuesday, September 29, 2009

A Disease of the Soul


That’s what Wall Street Journal correspondent and author Roger Thurow saw when he looked into the eyes of starving people throughout his career reporting on issues of global hunger.

Last week, as he stood before an audience of LWR staff, board members, and guests, it was apparent that Thurow, co-author of Enough: Why the World’s Poorest Starve in an Age of Plenty, has been deeply affected by this disease of the soul.

He has spent years reporting on global hunger, looking into the hollowed eyes of mothers and children dying from lack of food, and, most significantly, seeing with his own eyes how preventable those deaths are. As he and fellow Journal correspondent Scott Kilman prepared to write Enough, Thurow remembers remarking, “Our souls will not rest until we write this book.”

And his soul is still not at rest, which is why he visited the Lutheran Center, on the opening day of our board meeting, to share his experiences.

Thurow says he has always associated Lutherans with food. Raised in Illinois, Thurow grew up attending Immanuel Lutheran Church in Crystal Lake where he attended his fair share of potluck dinners. Having traveled the world for many years, Illinois remained his home base—he and his family are members at Faith Lutheran in Lake Forest—his memories of those dinners still elicit a feeling of home and comfort.

But it is not that way for everyone. In his travels, Thurow saw that in the world’s poorest countries, especially in Africa, people were starving to death every day. Even worse, from what he learned through his reporting, he saw it didn’t have to be that way. As he describes it, global hunger is not only a man-made disaster; it is “a crime of neglect.”

According to Thurow, the goal of Enough is to “outrage and inspire” readers. Outrage because although the crash of a jumbo jet will be splashed across the pages of major newspapers, you will not see the faces of those who die of starvation—even though the number of people who die every day of starvation is equivalent to 60 jumbo jets crashing. Outrage, because there is enough food grown to feed every single person in the world, yet so many millions go hungry.

And he hopes to inspire us, as people of faith, to action. Because there is something that each and every one of us can do to play a part in ending the scourge of chronic hunger. Thurow put it best when he said, “Churches and faith-based organizations can seize this opportunity and drive this momentum.”

My soul was stirred as I thought about the timeliness of Thurow’s message as LWR works to bring relief to the people of East Africa, who are suffering through a crippling drought. The rains have not come for a long time for the people of Kenya, Tanzania, Sudan, and Uganda. Food is not growing. Stomachs are going empty.

In Roger Thurow’s mind, Lutherans will always be inextricably tied to food and fellowship—with the loving hands and hearts that served him hot, nourishing food. I pray that your hearts will be moved to extend that same Lutheran compassion and love to the people of East Africa.

What Thurow says is true—nobody has to die of hunger. With your help, we can see that many fewer people do.

Monday, September 21, 2009

The Go Factor
St. Matthew


Today, September 21st the church remembers and celebrates the life and witness of St. Matthew, an apostle and evangelist of Jesus. I checked out and listed some of the times we hear the call to go in the Bible’s book of Matthew:

Matthew 5:41
“If someone forces you to GO one mile, GO with him two miles.”

Matthew 9:13
GO and learn what this means: 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.'”

Matthew 10:7
“As you GO, preach this message: 'The kingdom of heaven is near.'”

Matthew 11:4
Jesus replied, “GO back and report to John what you hear and see:”

Matthew 18:15
“If your sister or brother sins against you, GO and show them their fault, just between the two of you.”

Matthew 20:4
“You also GO and work in my vineyard”

Matthew 22:9
GO to the street corners and invite to the banquet anyone you find.”

Matthew 28:7
“Then GO quickly and tell his disciples: 'He has risen from the dead.’”

Matthew 28:19
GO and make disciples of all nations.”

Matthew’s Gospel (Good News) message is simply this, as God has been merciful to us by sending us Jesus, and sending us the Holy Spirit.

We now GO into the world to make a positive impact in God’s name. Think about a person, place, problem or possibility to which the Spirit is calling you to go. Know that going is never easy. It is work. But you can’t spell God or Gospel without the “G-O!”

Likewise, the historical writings to which Lutherans subscribe tell us that God’s people are called to go, not to retreat or run away from the world, but to be busy. By actively living out our faith everyone can “demonstrate in these works of life Christian love and true good works according to each person’s calling.” Book of Concord: The Confessions of the Evangelical Lutheran Church. Edited by Robert Kolb and Timothy J. Wengert. Minneapolis: Fortress, 2000): 49, 50:5.

Friday, September 18, 2009

Knowing the Place for the First Time


T.S. Elliot once remarked:
We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.

Several years after my family moved to Canada from Jamaica, we finally landed in a family of faith. This congregation’s first face of holiness was in the form of hospitality. Pilgrim Lutheran in Hamilton, Ontario. Many immigrants, global pilgrims, came to Pilgrim Church from around the world: Latvians, Indians, Guyanans, former Yugoslavians, and Chinese. Grounded in the best of the rigorous LCMS tradition of biblical and confessional Lutheranism, this place was dynamic and welcoming, a home of creative fidelity.

On Labor Day weekend I visited there again, and preached, for only the second time in the 28 years since I moved away. My eyes have not improved in the ensuing time, but experience has helped me see better, some things anew, many things I didn’t see while growing up there in the 1970s. For example, the degree to which my appreciation for the wondrous diversity we so highly value at Lutheran World Relief was shaped by that place. Their commitment to evangelical diversity continues. Seeing the newest group of Canadians, these Sudanese pilgrims, being welcomed into this fellowship helped me to know the place where I first came to know and love the Lutheran faith …as if for the first time.

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