Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Darfur opportunity and "troika" possibilities
In the context of that e-newsletter, the site http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2007/06/pdf/axis_of_peace_paper.pdf was noted. It provides an interesting and informative overview of some of the issues, challenges and opportunities for the world to, quote George Bush and, say "not on my watch" relative to this on-going violence and genocide.
Friday, June 8, 2007
NPR.org - When it Comes to Faith, Partisan Lines are Blurring
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=10785980&sc=emaf
Saturday, June 2, 2007
Final word (for now) on using the blog: helpful update
Hey everyone! I promise I’ll stop switching things around, but hopefully, this will help all of us to ensure we’re posting and sending what we intend.
2 ways to post on the blog
1.) Login at www.blogger.com and then create a new post.
2.) Email wieucajepr@gmail.com (this replaces the horrendously long email I gave you earlier: mattbrich.wrbcaroundthebend@blogger.com)
Thanks!
Matt
Mysterious Email for another google Group
Please disregard an email that you may have received that says something about "Forward Account"
Currently, the best way to send a message to the Around the Bend blog is to login to www.blogger.com and post it from the web. You may also email: mattbrich.wrbcaroundthebend@blogger.com to post.
The secondary way is to send a message to the google groups account wrbcaroundthebend--but that's not the most reliable way to do it since it may or may NOT make it to the blog itself that way.
So, if you email in something to the google groups account, it will make it to everyone's inbox, but it's not guaranteed that the BLOG will accept it.
However, if you post to the blog, everyone will get an email AND the blog will record it. The main purpose of the goolge group is for it to be a forwarding agent so you'll know when the blog has activity, not for actual activity itself. So when you get an email with around the bend stuff in it, only hit "reply" if you DON'T want it going on the blog.
In sum:
Either post via the blog website. Or post via the blogger.com address listed above.
Thanks!!
Matt
Come to the Pyrons' on Monday night, 6/4
Scott and Debra are last-minute inviting a motley (certainly the JEPRites qualify) crew over for a "watching," some talk, and some food. We never have done this, but it seems like fun, as well as timely and interesting. Clearly dealing with justice issues, playing off recent messages from Michael, Bill (Givens) and Jake. Be nimble. Please seriously consider joining us.
Feel free to invite anyone else you think might be interested. If practical, let me know who is likely to come; if not, come anyway. With a guess of numbers, we can detemine how many pizzas, or whatever, to get.
See below for a blurb on the program.
Use Mapquest or ? on our address, or be in touch (EM or cell phone) and I can direct you to the Pyron abode. Let me know if other questions arise.
Scott Pyron
13 Village Walk Drive
Decatur, GA 30030
H 404-378-7078
Mobile 404-822-9550
===========================================
WHAT: Presidential Forum on Faith, Values, and Poverty
WHEN: Monday, June 4, 2007, at 7:00 p.m.
WHERE: Lisner Auditorium, George Washington University, Washington, D.C.
WHO: Senator Hillary Clinton, former Senator John Edwards and Senator Barack Obama
Sojourners announced today that it will host a candidates forum on
faith, values, and poverty on Monday, June 4, 2007, at 7:00 p.m. featuring the
three leading Democratic presidential contenders. CNN has joined Sojourners as a
media partner and has agreed to broadcast the forum live from the campus of
George Washington University in Washington, D.C.
Jim Wallis, the author of God's Politics: Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn’t Get It, and a founder of Sojourners, invited the leading Democratic candidates to participate in a substantive national conversation on faith and values, with a particular emphasis on poverty, and the candidates have agreed to participate in the forum.
The question and answer format will be used with each candidate, who will appear
on stage one candidate at a time. Sojourners has extended an invitation to the
leading Republican candidates for a September forum in Iowa. The
forum will be co-sponsored by Catholics In Alliance for the Common
Good, the ONE Campaign, Oxfam America and Eastern University.
"We are excited that the leading candidates will be meeting with
faithful voters who are hungry for a real conversation about the big moral
issues of our time," said Wallis. "The forum will focus on faith and values,
with a special emphasis on poverty. This conversation will offer faithful voters
insights into each candidate’s moral compass and help to guide their decisions
as they consider the candidates running for president of the United
States."
Monday, May 28, 2007
What is "Justice"?
Many folks hear the word "justice" and think of punishment/courts/laws. So instead of biblical justice and mercy, the combination of the two terms is understood as "punishment and being nice." To paint an extreme spectrum, justice is for the government and tough-minded people and mercy is for bleeding-heart liberals or little old ladies. One example of how fixed that kind of understanding can be, I heard someone acknowledge that justice and mercy had a direct relationship in that God, in God's sovereignty is mysteriously fully just and fully mercy. That was the explanation, as if we were discussing how divinity and humanity were made one in Christ. The lesson was that mercy & justice were polar opposites and it takes a huge God to do both perfectly. How easily we do mental gymnastics with the lesson to get it to fit our pre-existing paradigms is astounding.
Our society does not give people a chance to think beyond a quid-pro-quo response. Even when justice is understood as "doing the right thing," folks often default to the right thing being punishment. Biblical justice is also misunderstood sometimes to be the wrath of God (plagues, etc.). It's also mostly understood as an individual ethic. Granted, governments and legal systems are necessary, but it seems as if our understanding of justice is based on pop-religion rather than any kind of substantiated Biblical basis. This reinforces for me the need for the Biblical view of (restorative) justice to be highlighted consistently.
I can't tell you how many comments I heard where people said things like, "Oh yeah, I'm the mercy person in my marriage--my spouse is justice person who will take it to you."
I only hope that the message came through that Justice & Mercy are the same package--but I wonder since I heard about as many comments like I referenced after the sermon.
What have the rest of you heard in regard to this?
Sunday, May 13, 2007
Footprint of our Products
I wear garments touched by hands from all over the world
35% cotton, 65% polyester, the journey begins in Central America
In the cotton fields of El Salvador
In a province soaked in blood,
Pesticide-sprayed workers toil in a broiling sun
Pulling cotton for two dollars a day.
Then we move on up to another rung—Cargill
A top-forty trading conglomerate, takes the cotton through the Panama Canal
Up the Eastern seaboard, coming to the US of A for the first time
In South Carolina
At the Burlington mills
Joins a shipment of polyester filament courtesy of the New Jersey petro-chemical mills of
Dupont
Dupont strands of filament begin in the South American country of Venezuela Where oil
riggers bring up oil from the earth for six dollars a day
Then Exxon, largest oil company in the world,
Upgrades the product in the country of Trinidad and Tobago
Then back into the Caribbean and Atlantic Seas
To the factories of Dupont
On the way to the Burlington mills
In South Carolina
To meet the cotton from the blood-soaked fields of El Salvador
In South Carolina
Burlington factories hum with the business of weaving oil and cotton into miles of fabric
for Sears
Who takes this bounty back into the Caribbean Sea
Headed for Haiti this time—May she be one day soon free—
Far from the Port-au-Prince palace
Third world women toil doing piece work to Sears specifications
For three dollars a day my sisters make my blouse
It leaves the third world for the last time
Coming back into the sea to be sealed in plastic for me
This third world sister
And I go to the Sears department store where I buy my blouse
On sale for 20% discount
Are my hands clean?
-"Are My Hands Clean?" by Sweet Honey In the Rock
Some websites on more ethical spending:
http://www.cleanclothes.org/companies/04-04-alternative-ethical-clothes-review.htm
http://www.fairlabor.org/index.html
http://www.sweatshopwatch.org/index.php?s=59&PHPSESSID=52a241ef26b6e65c1b375d08e156701f
Friday, May 11, 2007
Test Post
Monday, May 7, 2007
Steve's 1st post

Wednesday, May 2, 2007
Posting, etc.
can both of you attempt to make a new post? I want to make sure the permissions are set up correctly.
Thanks!
Matt