Saturday, April 18, 2009

Our Need for Recovery

Brian McLaren on Inward/Outward has published the following on "our need for recovery":

For many people, economic recovery means getting back to where we were a few months or years ago. That means recovering our consumptive, greedy, unrestrained, undisciplined, irresponsible, and ecologically and socially unsustainable way of life. I’d like to suggest another kind of recovery, drawing from the world of addiction. When an addict gets into recovery, he doesn’t want to go back and recover the “high” he had before, or even to recover the conditions he had before he began using drugs and alcohol. Instead, he wants to move forward to a new way of life—a wiser way of life that takes into account his experience of addiction. He realizes that his addiction to drugs was a symptom of other deeper issues and diseases in his life—unresolved pain or anger, the need to anesthetize painful emotions, lack of creativity in finding ways to feel happy and alive, unaddressed relational and spiritual deficits, lack of self-awareness, and so on.

Similarly, I’d like to suggest whenever we hear the word “recovery,” we as a nation see it not as a call to get back our old addictive high, but rather as a call to face our corporate and personal addictions . . . .


Brian McLaren is a speaker and author, most recently of Everything Must Change and Finding Our Way Again. This piece is taken from the God’s Politics blog at Sojourners.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

2009 Peacemaking Conference at the Big Tent

2009 Peacemaking Conference at the Big Tent



The General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) has long envisioned a world without nuclear weapons. Since 1946, the General Assembly, acting out of faith in Jesus Christ the Prince of Peace, has recognized that working for God's intended order and life abundant involves seeking international disarmament and arms control measures [PDF].This has involved opposition to specific weapons programs and various measures that they believed stood in the way of disarmament and peace. The General Assembly has also advocated positive steps to control, reduce, and eliminate nuclear weapons. In a Palm Sunday speech, President Obama declared that the United States will seek a world without nuclear weapons. Call your Senators and urge them to support the President's efforts.Pursue Peace for Israelis and Palestinians

Churches for Middle East Peace invites messages to President Obama thanking him for his strong support for a two-state solution and for making clear that both Israelis and Palestinians have responsibilities in the pursuit of peace. Both statements resonate with long-time positions of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). In our messages, we can encourage the President to have his administration play a role as a peacemaker.

Register now for the Churches for Middle East Peace 2009 Advocacy Conference, "Israeli-Palestinian Peace: Hope for Things Unseen" to be held June 7-9, 2009, in the Kellogg Conference Center at Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C.

Peacemaking Program Notes Learn about upcoming events. Use the prayers on Spiritual Nurture for Peacemakers in personal devotions and corporate worship.Follow Swords into Plowshares, the Presbyterian Peacemaking Program blog. Contribute to the Peacemaking Offering.

KFTC Meeting, April 15, 7:00 p.m.

The Central KY chapter of Kentuckians for the Commonwealth would like to invite you to our next chapter meeting, this Thursday April 16th from 7-9pm.

This is a special meeting focused on educating us about energy issues in KY, so we wanted to extend the invite to you. Martin Richards who is KFTC's high road strategy organizer is coming to share with us what KFTC is doing to promote renewable energy and jobs in KY.

Also joining us will be Emily Gillespie who is head of KSEC (Kentucky Student Environmental Coalition) to talk with us about student activism around green initiatives.

Please join us at the Episcopal Mission house at 203 East Fourth Street (on the corner o f4th and MLK, just north of downtown Lexington). Feel free to bring a friend and a snack!

Ondine Miranda Quinn
Kentuckians for the Commonwealth
Central Kentucky Organizer
250 Plaza Dr. Suite 4Lexington, KY 40503
(859) 276-0563 (office)
(859) 368-4438 (cell)
(859) 276-0774 (fax)
ondine@kftc.org

KFTC is a 26-year-old grassroots organization that believes in the power of people, working together, to challenge injustices, right wrongs, and improve the quality of life for all Kentuckians. Visit us online at www.kftc.org!For frequent updates about KFTC's work, please visit our blog: www.kftc.org/blog.