encounter peeps serving and loving others

Date: 29 November, 2008  |  Posted By: Jonathan Blundell  |  Category: Reflection, Take Action, encounter  

This morning 16 encounter peeps joined with folks from The Mission in Dallas and several other churches to serve meals for the homeless living in and around downtown Dallas.

Everyone had a blast working for and serving those who are often overlooked and miss out on some of the daily blessings we have in our own lives.

I talked to several who said that the holidays are always the hardest time of the year because of family and friends they’ll miss seeing for various reasons.

Others told me they just simply wanted to find a job. And had been moving from city to city simply trying to find steady work.

Another guy lost his wife to cancer three years ago and just returned to Dallas after spending the last three years with family in Jackson, Mississippi. I got the impression he felt like he simply needed to get back to Dallas and try and get his life back in order. He’s been living on the street in Dallas for the last several months.

They all had a story of their own and were usually willing to share it with anyone who listened.

It’s a lot harder to bypass or overlook these individuals when you stop and hear their story. It’s hard to paint them with the same old broad paint brush once you get to know their name and their story.

Below are some of the photos Theo took today at The Mission ::


Created with Admarket’s flickrSLiDR.

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The Wanderers

Date: 23 November, 2008  |  Posted By: Jonathan Blundell  |  Category: Faith, Music, Reflection  

Bono

Back in the early 1990′s my friends turned me on to the music of U2. It was right before the release of their album Achtung Baby (yes Todd, I was a late comer to the band’s music). In fact the first CD I ever bought was U2′s One single, followed soon by the Achtung Baby album.

As I came to learn more and more about the band I was even more intrigued by the suggestions that they might be a “Christian band.” The continual argument against their “conversion” was the rock lifestyle they led and the fact that they wrote and sang lyrics that often talked just as much about doubting their faith as accepting what God was doing in the world around them.

I’ve come to see more and more that perhaps that’s also what attracts many people (and me more and more) to their music – they’re real, authentic and don’t claim to have it all figured out.

@U2 shared a list of U2′s Top 10 Spiritual Songs last month.

The list included ::

Tomorrow
Drowning Man
The Wanderer
Love Rescue Me
The Playboy Mansion
Wake Up Dead Man
Mercy
Yahweh
I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For
40

I’m glad they included “Wake Up Dead Man” on the list. The first time I heard that song I thought perhaps Bono and U2 had given up on any faith they might have had. But then I came to see it as real, raw, honest seeking of God.

@U2 writes ::

Bitter, enraged and at times desperate, the final song on the Pop album is a fierce antidote to any rose-tinted view of the spiritual life. Bono states his predicament bluntly and uncompromisingly in the first few lines, painting a grim picture of what is perhaps his boldest depiction of a life lived in isolation from both God and the wider world.

Crying out to a deity who may or may not have abandoned him, in “Wake Up Dead Man” (the lyrics of which were partly written by the Edge), Bono describes a bleak situation, one of being so consumed by naked anger with God that it makes hard listening for any believer. However, I’ve often found it the perfect sound track to those blackest of black moments, as the song almost perfectly articulates what it feels to have what Bono has called that “very valid” sense of outrage at a God who at times seems indifferent to the awfulness of the human condition.

The song goes to prove that sometimes we will feel lost, confused and alone in the world. And those times may leave us asking “God, why have you forsaken me.” Yet, the picture doesn’t remain bleak – as the next song U2 released was “Beautiful Day.” The song contrasts the previous one like Good Friday contrasts with Easter Sunday.

I’ve come to realize in my own life that it’s those deep, dark, lonely moments that make the moments of resurrection and reconciliation that much more beautiful.

What songs would you add to the list? Are there other songs, albums or movies that paint beautiful pictures of God’s reconciliation with you and the world around us? Are there other stories that you’ve heard that have brought about new understandings of God’s working in the world?

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streaming video today

Date: 23 November, 2008  |  Posted By: Jonathan Blundell  |  Category: technology  

We’ve moved to Justin.tv/jdblundell for our streaming this morning.

Please visit :: http://www.justin.tv/jdblundell to watch the video stream live.

Update :: we’re chatting on the justin.tv page as well.

Sorry for any confusion.

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if starbucks marketed like the church

Date: 18 November, 2008  |  Posted By: Brian  |  Category: Media, Ministry, encounter  

Man.  This puts things in a shameful perspective for the church.  Ouch.  God forgive us.

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A love like that…

Date: 18 November, 2008  |  Posted By: Jonathan Blundell  |  Category: Faith, Reflection, community 2.0  
a love like that...

a love like that...

Even after all this time, the sun never says to the earth – “you owe me!”
Look at what happens with a love like that, it lights the whole sky.

(HT: the corner)

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