Lazarus at the Gate
This fall the Boston Faith and Justice Network is starting up its fourth season of Lazarus at the Gate, the BFJN’s lifestyle discipleship Bible Study! Lazarus at the Gate is a small group discipleship experience designed to impact global poverty. One of the premises of Lazarus is that Christians are called not just to believe in Christ, but also to follow Christ by deciding to live and act as Jesus did. For all, this process of modeling our life decisions after Jesus’ provides an invitation both to be transformed by God’s grace and to know Christ and his love more completely. As the Christian philosopher Dallas Willard writes,
“Practicing Jesus’ word as his apprentices enables us to understand our lives and to see how we can interact with God’s redemptive resources, ever at hand.”
A second premise of this group is that money is a critical object of modern Christian discipleship. Those of us who live in the United States spend most of our time either making money or spending it. As Christians in the U.S., we easily forget that Jesus identified his own ministry and person with the needy and the downtrodden. Today, globalization has placed Lazarus at all of our gates while we all remain aware that half of the world’s population lives on less than $2 a day.
Over a 12-session study Lazarus discipleship groups will support each other in making four individual commitments:
• Spend joyfully: Regularly give thanks for the blessing of wealth Spend justly
• Make one lifestyle change to consume more justly Spend less
• Make one lifestyle change in order to buy less for personal consumption
• Give more: Make a substantial gift to fight global poverty
Near the end of the course, the group selects one to four international charities. They then they pool their individual gifts and give collectively.
Lazarus is an incredible opportunity to explore yourself and your giving potential. The Boston Faith and Justice Network invites you to join us in taking steps to understanding God’s plan the blessings He has bestowed upon us. Contact us immediately if you want to:
1. Participate in the Lazarus at the Gate leader training: The training sessions will be led by the course author, Mako Nagasawa. Although the materials for this course are free there is a $25 dollar charge for the two-session training, which includes lunch. The first session will be held at Park Street Church on September 25th and a follow up session will be offered in early November.
2. Join a Lazarus group: We’ve had a number of individuals reach out to us who would like to join other Christians in and around Boston in this course. Please let us know if we can put you in touch with others who share an interest.
The Lazarus at the Gate curriculum is available upon request and if you interested in leading a group please contact Ryan McDonnell asap as space is limited.
ryan@bostonfaithjustice.org
No commentsFaith & Justice Networks: New Wineskins for Justice
The beginning of this month, a group of BFJN-ers headed down our nation’s capital to connect with other Christ-centered justice movements emerging and growing through the country. This gathering, called CONSPIRE, encouraged Christians to be people of imagination and of action. The leader of the Cincinnati Faith & Justice Network, Troy Jackson, wrote about our time together and about the emerging justice movement. Read what Troy wrote as a follow up from our gathering:
Over the past decade, discussions about justice have reached a tipping point in the evangelical world. Everywhere I go, people are talking about justice: from missionary gatherings to church planting conferences, justice is hot.
Of course the prophet Micah, in his verse that gets quoted more than the entire rest of his prophecies put together, said this: “He has told you, O mortal, what is good; and what does the Lord require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?”
We prefer to translate Micah’s words as “Talk about Justice” or “have a conference about Justice” or “drink a cup of coffee for Justice.” But Micah says God requires of us not conversations about Justice, but Doing Justice!
To use a metaphor Jesus employed, the new wine of justice conversations is flowing in the United States. The unanswered question: do we have new wineskins to harness this new move of God, so we can move from conversations to action?
In early June, more than 50 people gathered in Washington D.C. to help craft new wineskins so we can truly DO JUSTICE in communities around the United States. Alexia Salvatierra, the director of CLUE-California, led a three-day training on what she calls “Faith-Rooted Organizing.”
The new wineskin of “faith-rooted organizing” is that our engagement with issues of injustice in the public arena begins not from self-interest or anger, but from our deep and abiding faith that God’s kingdom will come and God’s will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.
Instead of traditional organizing, which labels people as targets and enemies, faith-rooted organizing calls us to always remember that every person is created in God’s image and can be redeemed and converted, even those perpetuating injustice.
Salvatierra challenged us to not shy away from quoting scripture in city counsel meetings, telling mayors and congress people that we are praying for them to do the right thing, and speaking out in the public arena from a place of moral authority rooted in the gospel.
So this week, in Phoenix and New York City and Boston and Minnesota and Oregon and Los Angeles and South Carolina, people are working to do justice in their local communities through Faith and Justice Networks.
Here in Cincinnati, we are working to encourage our city council to adopt a fair hiring process that will allow rehabilitated ex-felons to compete for civil service jobs in our city. To that end, we will be informing every council member and the mayor that we will be praying for them daily over the next week so they will be compelled to pass a fair hiring policy by the end of June. In Cincinnati and around the nation, Faith & Justice Networks are springing up, intent on not just having conversations about Justice, but on Doing Justice.
Troy Jackson is senior pastor of University Christian Church in Cincinnati, a graduate of Princeton Theological Seminary, and earned his Ph.D. in United States history from the University of Kentucky. He is author of Becoming King: Martin Luther King Jr. and the Making of a National Leader (Civil Rights and the Struggle for Black Equality in the Twentieth Century)and a participant in Sojourners’ Windchangers grassroots organizing project in Ohio.
No commentsYou’re Invited! Free Film Screening of “Countdown to Zero” on June 16
Hello all,
My name is Savanah, and I am currently interning with the Boston Faith and Justice Network, which is co-hosting a film screening that I am incredibly excited about. The featured film is an exciting new documentary about the escalating nuclear arms race, Countdown to Zero. Produced by the award winner Lawrence Bender (An Inconvenient Truth and Inglorious Basterds) and written and directed by Lucy Walker (Blind Sight and The Devil’s Playground). Countdown to Zero features an array of important international experts and statesmen and makes a case for world wide nuclear disarmament.
This film is of particular interest to me because of my background as a student of international politics. The issues associated with the large-scale production of weapons of mass destruction among nations, especially among rogue states has moved its way to the forefront of American Foreign Policy. This screening is such an exciting opportunity to learn more about the global nuclear situation and how you can be part of the movement in the countdown to zero.
Who?
Co-hosted by:
Rev. Richard Cizik, The New Evangelical Partnership
Dr. Ira Helfand, Physicians for Social Responsibility
Ryan Scott McDonnell, Boston Faith & Justice Network
Dr. James McCarthy, Union of Concerned Scientists
& Global Zero
When?
Screening is on June 16, 2010
7:00 – 9:00 PM
Where?
Coolidge Corner Theatre
290 Harvard Street
Brookline, MA 02446
RSVP
Seating is limited, please RSVP at
rsvp@globalzero.org
No comments
