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church is made out of shipwrecks

humbled by this poem (and brilliant video).

Is this how you look out on you congregations and the world around you? “When he [Jesus] saw the crowds, he had compassion on them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd.”

Listener “Wooden Heart” from Nathan Corrona on Vimeo.

WOODEN HEART (sea of mist called skaidan)
We’re all born to broken people on their most honest day of living
and since that first breath… We’ll need grace that we’ve never given
I’ve been haunted by standard red devils and white ghosts
and it’s not only when these eyes are closed
these lies are ropes that I tie down in my stomach,
but they hold this ship together tossed like leaves in this weather
and my dreams are sails that I point towards my true north,
stretched thin over my rib bones, and pray that it gets better
but it won’t won’t, at least I don’t believe it will…
so I’ve built a wooden heart inside this iron ship,
to sail these blood red seas and find your coasts.
don’t let these waves wash away your hopes
this war-ship is sinking, and I still believe in anchors
pulling fist fulls of rotten wood from my heart, I still believe in saviors
but I know that we are all made out of shipwrecks, every single board
washed and bound like crooked teeth on these rocky shores
so come on and let’s wash each other with tears of joy and tears of grief
and fold our lives like crashing waves and run up on this beach
come on and sew us together, tattered rags stained forever
we only have what we rememberI am the barely living son of a woman and man who barely made it
but we’re making it taped together on borrowed crutches and new starts
we all have the same holes in our hearts…
everything falls apart at the exact same time
that it all comes together perfectly for the next step
but my fear is this prison… that I keep locked below the main deck
I keep a key under my pillow, it’s quiet and it’s hidden
and my hopes are weapons that I’m still learning how to use right
but they’re heavy and I’m awkward…always running out of fight
so I’ve carved a wooden heart, put it in this sinking ship
hoping it would help me float for just a few more weeks
because I am made out of shipwrecks, every twisted beam
lost and found like you and me scattered out on the sea
so come on let’s wash each other with tears of joy and tears of grief
and fold our lives like crashing waves and run up on this beach
come on and sew us together, just some tattered rags stained forever
we only have what we rememberMy throat it still tastes like house fire and salt water
I wear this tide like loose skin, rock me to sea
if we hold on tight we’ll hold each other together
and not just be some fools rushing to die in our sleep
all these machines will rust I promise, but we’ll still be electric
shocking each other back to life
Your hand in mine, my fingers in your veins connected
our bones grown together inside
our hands entwined, your fingers in my veins braided
our spines grown stronger in time
because are church is made out of shipwrecks
from every hull these rocks have claimed
but we pick ourselves up, and try and grow better through the change
so come on yall and let’s wash each other with tears of joy and tears of grief
and fold our lives like crashing waves and run up on this beach
come on and sew us together, were just tattered rags stained forever
we only have what we remember
credits from Wooden Heart Poems, released 06 July 2010

Churches Caring

image from thenewsstar

Some churches in the USA celebrated “A Day of Caring”, by reaching out to those in need in their communities.  Margaret Croft, from The News-Star, reports that volunteers from five different Christian denominations gathered  to put together 500 “flood” buckets with emergency supplies for flood victims.

Bishop William W. Hutchinson said about the day: “It is our great hope that through this endeavor, United Methodists can show how much they care about their communities and want to be a ‘part of the solution’ in the elimination of poverty…”

Read the full article here

Resources: domestic squalor / hoarding

The City of Sydney’s Community Services Grants program has put together a toolkit to assist those assisting those battling with domestic squalor/hoarding.

This toolkit aims to provide direction for both service providers and community members within the City of Sydney to respond to situations of Squalor and Hoarding.

Currently, our church is supporting a man living in domestic squalor, whom we met through our Free monthly Community Lunches. In partnership with Catholic Services & North Sydney Council, Church by the Bridge hopes to help restore this man’s home to  more suitable living environment. And additionally provide ongoing friendship and support.

And I quote

Our young men are going into the professional fields because they don’t ‘feel called’ to the mission field. We don’t need a call; we need a kick in the pants. We must begin thinking in terms of ‘going out,’ and stop weeping because ‘they won’t come in.’ Who wants to step into an igloo? The tombs themselves are not colder than the churches. May God send us forth.” – Jim Elliot

Why mission week is worth doing?

This is a review of last year and why we will do it a third time in 2011.

Thought of the week… What the world needs now is love!

A true love and esteem of God will dispose the heart to acknowledge God’s right to govern and that he is worthy of it; and so will dispose it to submit.

Love to God will dispose to walk humbly with God.

For he that love God will be disposed to acknowledge the distance there is between God and him.

It will be agreeable to him who loves God to exalt him and set him on high above all, and to lie low before him.

A true Christian delights to have God exalted in his abasement, because he loves God.

He is willing to own that God is worthy of this; and it is with delight that he casts himself in the dust before God, because he loves God.

So a due consideration of the nature of love will show that it will dispose men to all duties towards their neighbours If men have a hearty love to their neighbours it will dispose them to all acts of justice towards them.

Men are not disposed to wrong those whom they truly love. Real love and friendship will dispose persons to give others their due. romans 13:10 “Love worketh no ill to his neighbour.”

- Jonathan Edwards ‘Sermon One: Love the Sum of All Virtue”

Edwards goes on to say that love will dispose us to many more things that will be for good of our neighbours.
Love will dispose us to:

  • truth towards neighbours (not lies or deceit)
  • walk humbly among men to honor one another (not pride or arrogance)
  • contentment in the station in which God hat set him. (not coveting)
  • meekness and gentleness in their carriage towards neighbours (not violence or hatred)
  • a sweet disposition and affection of the soul (not bitterness)
  • peaceableness (not broils and quarrels)
  • forgive injuries received from their neighbours (not harbouring grudges)
  • acts of mercy toward neighbours who are under any affliction or calamity (not laughing at their misfortunes)
  • give to the poor and bear with one another’s burdens, to weep with those that weep and rejoice with those that rejoice.

I want to love more.

Not only because Jesus is worthy of being exalted in my love towards him, but also in my love towards others.

Sounds like heaven.

What’s stopping you…? and 3 tips to get you going again

This morning at VibeWire’s FastBreak the following questions were asked, What’s stopping us? What stops us from doing the things we want/have to do?

The Fast Speakers gave some great and intimate insights into their worlds and the hurdles that are stopping them:

  • Being Overlooked.
  • Depression.
  • The Inner Voice (IV) & the voices of others.
  • The day-to-day. Starting a business is like “climbing up a hill wearing roller-skates“.
  • Lack of clarity, awareness & appreciation/ thankfulness: “yet there are happier people in refugee camps?”

Maybe you resonate with these obstacles. Are these the things dragging you down or hindering you?

Personally, what is stopping me is actually myself. Sounds crazy to blame myself, doesn’t it?
But, why do we always assume the role of ‘victim’ in our circumstance. And when I ask myself what is stopping me, its me?

I, like Annie, want to live a life that “values moral integrity, sustainable practices, collaboration, empathy, and understanding”, yet, if I am truly honest with myself, what holds me back from seeking out such a life is my own  selfishness,  individualism and narcissism.

selfishness | Who isn’t consumed with self? We find it hard to share especially our success! How often to you catch yourself not wanting to share any of the glory of projects, achievements, ideas with anyone but yourself? How often do you think if only there were more people like me, and did things the way I do and to the standards I produce? I do, and unfortunately too often!

individualism | We live in an incredibly individualized culture. We are very used to living in networks of terminally casual relationships, whereby deep, intimate and long-lasting connections becomes just some nostalgic gesture of the yester-years.  The right to live our lives our own way and the belief that within and of ourselves we have everything in we need as individuals to do what we want to do and become, is delusion. Autonomy and self-sufficiency, although ever present in each of us, is a lie. We need each other. We need community and partnerships to succeed and prosper (physically, socially, vocationally and spiritually).

narcissism | Social media itself is testament that we all have ‘egos’ to preserve. Motivation for our tweets, status updates, comments, or posts is to promote the self and paint ourselves in a better light than perhaps what is the truth and reality. How often do you read about people promoting ‘others’ interests and standing up for the voices that are struggling to be heard?

In short, it is my own S.I.N that holds me back.

So, what is the remedy to being held back by these things?

top 3 tips to get you going

  1. Don’t think of yourself more highly than you ought.
  2. Appreciate others. Don’t overlook them. Serve them. Seek their good.
  3. Look up to others, who look out for others. (Check this out)

Surprisingly (or perhaps not, perhaps this is the way we are actually wired to operate?), other-person-centredness benefits the self in the long run. It brings awareness, clarity and thankfulness. It equips us with a gracious objectivity, flexibility, empathy and understanding.

Looking outside of ourselves to the needs of others brings greater motivation to get on with life & its projects.

A Conversation about God and Japan…

Status Update by Friend A:
Just following my post regarding the wonders of god in the tragic Japan Quake… I guess this answers it??????
http://www.ebaumsworld.com/video/watch/81374648/

7 hours ago · Like · Share

Hayley Neal
While I want to and do affirm God is in control, I’m know there is a need to be filled with greater humble compassion. Because, I know if God were to shake, who could stand? Not the girl in the video, not any of us. We would all be stuffed.

These calamities make me look up & think why? Why didn’t that happen to me? I feel so fortunate to not have been in that place at that time. In many ways I could have easily been caught up in that?

I don’t want to be cliche Christian – but it makes me see my need for God even more. Left to ourselves, what hope is there? It’s why we need a God who wasn’t thankful for human suffering (unlike this young girl whom i think is misguided) but was willing to endure human suffering, taste death, (i.e. the cross) so that we wouldn’t have to.
6 hours ago · Like

Friend B
Left to ourselves, what hope is there? Answer – Ourselves.
5 hours ago · Like

Hayley Neal
What hope is there for us in ourselves?
5 hours ago · Like

Friend B
You have no hope for yourself?
4 hours ago · Like

Hayley Neal
do u really think we can prevent ourselves from disappointments, hurts or ultimately death? what kind of hope in ourselves r u talking of?
3 hours ago · Like

Friend B
I’m talking of the hope that let’s you decide which path you take. You can’t prevent death, but you can prevent disappointments and hurt (mental). What is a disappointment? It’s when you expect an outcome and it doesn’t happen right? The reason people get disappointed is because we don’t see reality as it is. Mental hurt (as opposed to physical hurt) is merely an effect to how we deal with a situation. You can learn to react to situations in different ways so mental suffering loosens its grip.
3 hours ago · Like

Friend C
What ever is going to happen, will happen, the biggest illusion is that we get to decide on what happens to us. We are all here to progress and that also means facing sorrow head on.
about an hour ago · Like

Hayley Neal
The grief &/or disappointment of knowing your partner will not be coming home from work because they were killed in the earthquake, is responding to reality as it is. To say they just need time to deal mentally with the physical situation and wait for it to loosen its grip, is mere poetry.

We are holistic beings whereby our emotions are, more often than not, rooted in a very real and physical or relational reality.
We need a hope that does not come from within but from outside. Otherwise when I or my situation change so too would my hope. But if hope comes from outside then it will sustain me even when I or my situation (whether physical or emotional) may change.

….

I’d love to know…

 

I’m interested in finding out some stats on evangelism in the life of those who read/stumble across this blog.
After a several weeks I will share the results.

 

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