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Living in the Shire
You cannot have a good conversation in London without getting around to the issue of the role of government in modern society. One night at dinner our distinguished guest was very direct about her dismay that a country calling itself a “Christian” country could allow anyone to be without a minimum of health care. After all ” the role of government is to take care of all the people –not just those who can afford it. There were a few in our group who disagreed! It’s a basic division between those who are adamant about the limited role of government and those believing government needs the latitude to make…
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“Prosperity Knits a Man to the World”
While I knew the story of the rich young ruler long before I ever read those words in C.S. Lewis ” I've never heard it put better. Many times” ” the best way to understand a person is to see them in contrast to another in similar circumstances. I've done that with Bonhoeffer and Hitler. The differences are stunning and studying them together only puts each of them in sharper relief. This week I did that with the rich young ruler and Zaccheus. While they had one thing in common – wealth – they could not have been more different. The rich young ruler was more than comfortable approaching Jesus…
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"Prosperity Knits a Man to the World"
While I knew the story of the rich young ruler long before I ever read those words in C.S. Lewis ” I've never heard it put better. Many times” ” the best way to understand a person is to see them in contrast to another in similar circumstances. I've done that with Bonhoeffer and Hitler. The differences are stunning and studying them together only puts each of them in sharper relief. This week I did that with the rich young ruler and Zaccheus. While they had one thing in common – wealth – they could not have been more different. The rich young ruler was more than comfortable approaching Jesus…
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Blowing Up Bridges
Early on in the life of The Gathering I had a conversation with Anne. We had never met but she wanted to know more about the mission of The Gathering. When I told her we were hoping to be a “bridge” between donors and what they needed to make good decisions she smiled and said “Well aren’t you the good little social worker? You really need to be needed don’t you?” She then drew a graphic I will never forget. Two lines down the middle of the page represented a river. On one side was The Gathering and on the other side she drew a blank circle with a…
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A Little Brush With History
I enlisted in the Navy in 1968 at the height of the Vietnam war. I discovered six months after enlisting that my draft number was #1 so I saved myself some time as it turned out. As well, by enlisting I was promised the opportunity to travel. That’s one promise they kept! While I was not by any stretch a fit for the structure of the military there were benefits. In July 1969 I was stationed in Sicily and working as a clerk in the base legal office. We heard a rumor that the Secretary of the Navy John Chaffee was going to visit Sicily. After a quick visit to…
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Letting Go
I had a chance to listen to a ministry founder this morning talk about his struggle with turning loose of the ministry. It’s glib and not really helpful to say “Let go and let God.” All entrepreneurs are high control. It’s their/our nature. In our desire to make it right we sometimes smother the baby and shut down the people around us. In the earliest years of The Gathering, a Board member saw this in me and told me I needed to let go…but I did not know how. So that weekend I went to the story of Moses and his mother and found some help. Maybe it…
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The Architecture of Evangelical Philanthropy
We spent two weeks on the Danube river recently and part of the tour was a variety of churches chapels and sanctuaries. One of our guides a nonreligious person ” was also one of the most knowledgeable about Gothic and Baroque architecture. In the course of looking at a number (a large number!) of cathedrals she talked about the theology and world view each represented. I had never thought about it but it got my mind going about other things. Briefly” Gothic architecture was built around the transcendence ” awe and majesty of God. Everything pointed vertically and the effect was to draw the congregation’s attention to heaven and…
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A Friendly Exchange
A young friend (let’s call him Cole from Chattanooga Tennessee) and I are having a back and forth conversation about the intrinsic value of donors becoming more competent and skilled. While we are in agreement on the value of competence ” we are probably on different pages (for now) on how to define that. The exchange started with our both seeing the difficulty of donors first encountering complexity. They believe (and sometimes ministries encourage this) that a gift to a particular cause will make everything in life better for a child. If we can improve their access to water or health care or education or Bibles then their whole…
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Fixing The Crack In Creation
I'm not ordained so I cannot do weddings or funerals. But sometimes friends ask me to say a word that is not ordained and binding. It's just me talking. This was the case in the wedding of a former student…but permanent friend. "The first wedding of the world was on a Saturday…just about this time of day. Five times it was morning and evening ” and then it was the sixth day and somewhere around three o'clock in the afternoon the Lord God straightened up from his work…and declared that everything up to that point was very good…so good in fact that it could not have been better. Everything had…
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My Philanthropy Reading List
A few weeks ago a friend at a foundation in Michigan asked me to put together a list of books and/or other resources that would be helpful to him in his work in philanthropy. I had never put a list together before and as I thought about what I would recommend to him I realized philanthropy is about so much more than the simple act of giving away money. It involves understanding and working with individuals and organizations. It relies on history psychology theology the arts ” business and economics. So…here is what I sent him. Jayber Crow by Wendell Berry. I am part of a community to which I…