Many of Threeow's readers know about my lovely wife Emily's significant involvement in the national foodswapping movement. Along with great friend and insigator/conspirator Bethany R., she was instrumental in founding PDX swappers, one of the most influential and media covered swapping groups in the nation. Their story has been filmed by Cooking Up a Story, covered by HuffPo, mentioned by the NY Times, and has been significant in inspiring and equipping similar events and community organizing nationwide.
If you're coming late to the party, food-swapping is a currency free exchange of homecrafted food, beverages, goods and services.
Showing posts with label Intentional Living. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Intentional Living. Show all posts
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Brueggemann on Ezekiel, Occupy, and Good Shepherding
As part of HuffPo's On Scripture series, Brueggemann explicates Ezekiel 34 in connection with the recent Occupy movement. The passage is a scathing condemnation of oppression, especially that of leaders ("shepherds") who fleece their flocks. The clear reading of the passage opposes leaders who exploit their position for imbalanced gain of any kind. Ezekiel takes a dim view of the 1%.
Ezekiel takes the long view though, recognizing that the abundance of abusive and mutton-hungry shepherds points (ironically) to a servant-leader, a "good" shepherd, a priest-king that will pasture the nations well, for the flourishing and feeding of humanity.
Brueggemann recognizes the potent messianic hope that the early church hailed in Jesus' declaration that he is the "good shepherd." He finishes by drawing the principles that society can learn from such an example of sacrificial leadership:
"...the news of Ezekiel is that because of God's resolve, mediated for Christians through Jesus, the Son and regent of God, it need not be so. As Israel need not have poor self-serving kings, so a democratic society need not suffer poor outcomes from an exploitative oligarchy. The promissory nature of Ezekiel's oracles articulates what good leadership looks like -- in government, in corporations, all through the private sector. That rule consists in,
-Seeking the lost,"In a word, good leadership consists in the restoration of the common good so that all members of the community, strong and weak, rich and poor, may live together in a common shalom of shared resources. The text is a powerful reminder of what might be; it is at the same time a summons to a political will for leadership that is not occupied, through ideological cant, with feathering its own nest. It is not enough to recite, in pious tones, the 23rd Psalm about "The Lord is my shepherd." What is envisioned (and required) is the formation of a different leadership that has in purview all members of the community. Ezekiel knew that is the only way to have a future that does not replicate the failed past. It is still, among us, the only way!"
-Bring back the strayed,
-Binding up the injured,
-Strengthening the weak,
-Feeding the hungry.
It is still the only way. May the lies of the many fleecing shepherds be silenced and swallowed by the peace, the security, the truth of the Good one.
Read the full piece at HuffPo.
photo credit
Friday, November 18, 2011
Richard Foster on Psychotic Affluence
| photo credit |
-"Celebration of Discipline"
Well said, Mr. Foster.
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Happy Birthday, Columbia River Gorge!
Today marks the 25th anniversary of the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area Act. As the Oregonian's editorial today points out, the law has both preserved the remarkable, fragile beauty of this national treasure, while simultaneously boosting local economy.
And there is no better place that I can think of to protect. I have lived life more fully in this 85 miles than I have anywhere else.
Just a few personal highlights of my Gorge experiences:
-My proposal to Emily in a harsh storm on the edge of Angel's Rest
-Weekly night hikes in college (numbering in the low 100s I'd guess) with my best friends
-Many well spent days and nights at a family cabin by Bridge of the Gods-Kayaking and fishing on Wauna Lake
-Exploring Eagle Creek with my brothers
-A dear friend's wedding on a wind whipped bluff overlooking Hood River
-Salmon fishing
-Bear chases
-Covering my body with Poison Ivy while free climbing Angel's Rest
-Foraging and eating lots of delicious natural foods
-Hiking to try and induce labor for our first kid
-Getaways from that first kid at Skamania Lodge
Many of my best memories are of the rocks, waterfalls, forests, and trails of this land.
I am profoundly and inexpressibly grateful for the preservation of the most wonderful place I have ever seen.
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
A Good Quote from Mr. Nouwen
| photo credit |
I came across a good reminder from the venerable Henri Nouwen today:
“Somewhere we know that without silence words lose their meaning, that without listening speaking no longer heals, that without distance closeness cannot cure.”
May we find silence and listen well, embracing both distance and proximity.
Health and wholeness to you.
Kindle Fire Ignites Security Concerns
In the words of Steve Vaughan-Nichols over at ZDNet "Silk looks to be very fast and about as private as a bathroom stall without a door."
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
A Rant about Hands and iPads
I recently caved and sort-of joined Twitter. (I'm sorry, self-respect).
It was almost worth selling my soul, though, to find a tweet from landscape architect/good friend @bethanyrydmark. She shared an excellent essay with her followers by Bret Victor, titled "A Brief Rant on the Future of Interaction Design." (Link to full piece below).
Victor puts into words a sentiment that I've felt for a long time, but lacked language to express. Contemporary visions of the future (he highlights a particular ad campaign) portray the future of interactive design as a world where humans manipulate images under glass.
The problem? "...This vision, from an interaction perspective, is not visionary. It's a timid increment from the status quo, and the status quo, from an interaction perspective, is actually rather terrible."
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
How to Move Your Money Local
A great how-to article over at Mother Jones is the perfect follow up to my earlier post about why my family banks local.
Read the piece for a helpful FAQ if you're curious about shifting your funds to a Credit Union or other local banking option.
You won't be alone. As Josh Harkinson comments:
"Credit unions across the country have added upwards of 650,000 new customers since September 29 (the day Bank of America unveiled its now-defunct $5 monthly fee for debit cards), according to a survey of 5,000 credit unions by the Credit Union National Association. The group also estimates that credit unions have added $4.5 billion in new savings since then, likely from these new members and transfers from other banks."
Read the full article here.
Read the piece for a helpful FAQ if you're curious about shifting your funds to a Credit Union or other local banking option.
You won't be alone. As Josh Harkinson comments:
"Credit unions across the country have added upwards of 650,000 new customers since September 29 (the day Bank of America unveiled its now-defunct $5 monthly fee for debit cards), according to a survey of 5,000 credit unions by the Credit Union National Association. The group also estimates that credit unions have added $4.5 billion in new savings since then, likely from these new members and transfers from other banks."
Read the full article here.
Monday, November 7, 2011
A Good Quote from Helmut T.
This quote struck me deeply when I came across it today.
"Truth seduces us very easily into a joy of possession: I have comprehended this and that, learned it, understood it. Knowledge is power. I am therefore more than the other man who does not know this and that. I have greater possibilities and also greater temptations.
Anyone who deals with truth—as we theologians certainly do—succumbs all too easily to the psychology of the possessor.
But love is the opposite of the will to possess. It is self-giving."
-Helmut Thieckle, A Little Exercise for Young Theologians
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Pollution, Consumption, Oregon.
An interesting study was recently published by Oregon's DEQ (Department of Environmental Quality).
The inventory demonstrates that higher levels of harmful emissions and pollutants are produced by the buying habits of Oregonians than by our driving or other transit choices.
In the words of Jonathan Maus over at Bike Portland, this shows that what "we buy emits more greenhouse gases than what we do."
The implications of this study (the first of its kind) are wide ranging. Theoretically, the data shows that a shut-in who compulsively buys stuff on Amazon potentially has a worse effect on environmental quality than a daily car commuter. Practically speaking, it should put our buying habits in a sobering perspective.
This study provides helpful nuance to our current thinking on consumption, environmental stewardship, and lifestyle. It shows unequivocally that our production practices carry profound cumulative harm for both global health and local communities that produce the things we buy. It's a compelling reason to produce and purchase locally made, grown, and crafted goods.
The wrong response to this study is to say that "what I drive doesn't matter then." False. Those of us interested in stewarding our communities and land need to continue to advocate for wise production practices in addition to savvy transit choices. Fundamentally, this requires simplification of our consumer lifestyle, local involvement and careful attention to the difficult wheres and whats of buying.
Buy to live where you work. Work to buy where you live. You may be surprised at the impact that your household's choices can have on creating a vibrant local economy and a healthy region. It's worth the investment.
Oregon's study is helpful in framing the discussion. It is also sobering in its implications. In the end, will you and I choose to change the way we view possessions, transportation, and consumption?
I hope that we will.
(Via Bike Portland)
Photo Credit
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Low Tech Education in Silicon Valley
A recent piece in the New York Times highlights a Waldorf School in Los Altos, CA. Like other educational institutions and philosophies that share values with the Waldorf system, the vast majority of learning methods and resources are low tech, and low profile. Hands on learning is facilitated by a wide variety of methods. Ideas are captured on paper with old fashioned pens by students, on blackboards by teachers. There is a marked absence of computers.
So should it surprise us that top executives and other employees from eBay, HP, Google, Apple, and Yahoo send their kids here? In fact, 3/4 of parents work in the tech industry. It feels like it should.
Mike Richtel from the Times comments:
"Schools nationwide have rushed to supply their classrooms with computers, and many policy makers say it is foolish to do otherwise. But the contrarian point of view can be found at the epicenter of the tech economy, where some parents and educators have a message: computers and schools don’t mix."
Thursday, October 27, 2011
Top 3 Most Invasive "Patriot Act" Provisions
10 years after the passing of the Patriot Act, the Electronic Frontier Foundation has put together a "Greatest Hits" collection of the Act's most invasive and dangerous elements.
In case you've been living in a bunker since 2001, the Patriot Act is a collection of
"...decidedly unpatriotic principles barred by the First and Fourth Amendments of the Constitution. Provisions of the PATRIOT Act have been used to target innocent Americans and are widely used in investigations that have nothing to do with national security."
Take the time to read the full article at EFF.
Via BoingBoing
In case you've been living in a bunker since 2001, the Patriot Act is a collection of
"...decidedly unpatriotic principles barred by the First and Fourth Amendments of the Constitution. Provisions of the PATRIOT Act have been used to target innocent Americans and are widely used in investigations that have nothing to do with national security."
Take the time to read the full article at EFF.
Via BoingBoing
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Shane Claiborne on Jesus and OWS
Shane writes
"One of the constant threads of Scripture is “Give us this day our daily bread.” Nothing more, nothing less. Underneath this admonition is the assumption that the more we store up for tomorrow the less people will have for today. And in a world where 1% of the world owns half the world’s stuff, we are beginning to realize that there is enough for everyone’s need, but there is not enough for everyone’s greed. Lots of folks are beginning to say, “Maybe God has a different dream for the world than the Wall Street dream.”
Maybe God’s dream is for us to live simply so that others may simply live. Maybe God’s dream is for the bankers to empty their banks and barns so folks have enough food for today."
Maybe, Shane. Well said.
Read the full article at Out of Ur.com
(Photo credit)
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Mobile Chapel of Love (Video)
My friend (ex-coworker and member of infamous rogue yarn group The Crotcheteers) Mary S. is highlighted in this video by OregonLive.
Mary runs the Mobile Chapel of Love, a Portland icon of... well, love. The bike powered chapel performs both legally recognized and above-the-law weddings, to anyone or anything you'd like.
Or rather, that you'd love... be that a bike, a Voodoo Donut, or the City of Portland.
Our marriage culture is more polarized than ever in America. As we (at the best of times) humbly discuss, and (worst of times) rant vitriolically about what marriage is and what makes it holy, let's take a minute to enjoy this. Whatever your views, it's a unique visual representation of something every husband or wife knows: much of your marriage is made of what you bring to it.
Mary runs the Mobile Chapel of Love, a Portland icon of... well, love. The bike powered chapel performs both legally recognized and above-the-law weddings, to anyone or anything you'd like.
Or rather, that you'd love... be that a bike, a Voodoo Donut, or the City of Portland.
Our marriage culture is more polarized than ever in America. As we (at the best of times) humbly discuss, and (worst of times) rant vitriolically about what marriage is and what makes it holy, let's take a minute to enjoy this. Whatever your views, it's a unique visual representation of something every husband or wife knows: much of your marriage is made of what you bring to it.
Labels:
Community,
Creativity,
Culture,
Fun,
Intentional Living,
Love,
Makers,
Weird
Monday, October 24, 2011
The Vatican on Fiscal Theology and Financial Reform
| A City on A Hill |
Released today, the Vatican's document on Global Financial Reform is an interesting and inadequate proposal for worldwide financial overhaul.
Phillip Pullella of the National Post summed up some key talking points of the paper:
“The economic and financial crisis which the world is going through calls everyone, individuals and peoples, to examine in depth the principles and the cultural and moral values at the basis of social coexistence,” it said.
It condemned what it called “the idolatry of the market” as well as a “neo-liberal thinking” that it said looked exclusively at technical solutions to economic problems.
“In fact, the crisis has revealed behaviors like selfishness, collective greed and hoarding of goods on a great scale,” it said, adding that world economics needed an “ethic of solidarity” among rich and poor nations.
In addition to this, the paper articulates a strong ethic of Christian involvement for the common good:
Coffee Break Commentary: Why I Bank Local
| Safer than a sock under the mattress! |
An ancillary benefit of the Wall Street occupation has been to bring attention to the benefits of keeping your money local.
Though attention was given to the "move your money" concept during the 2008- 2009 meltdown process by the HuffPo and others, we're hearing it again as protests and general grumpiness about our fat and shattered system continue.Now may be the time for a personal exodus from Wall Street finance to community banking.
My family switched to a local credit union several years ago.
We've experienced several benefits after moving our money from one of the Big Six banks to a local credit union:
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
Lunch Link: Faeth Fiada
- I arise today
- Through a mighty strength, the invocation of the Trinity,
- Through the belief in the threeness,
- Through confession of the oneness
- Of the Creator of Creation.
Thursday, October 13, 2011
Whispers of Innovation
Last night we heard from pastor Thurman Williams of Baltimore, MD as our plenary speaker.
Williams expressed theological and biblical foundations for innovation and creativity in ministry, connected with the concept of God as a profoundly innovative doer of new things.
Wind, Fire, Whisper
Williams grounded his call for innovation in 1 Kings 19, where the discouraged prophet Elijah encounters a difficult question from God while on the run from the powers that be.
The text is an interesting one. God asks the fleeing prophet: What are you doing here, Elijah?
Paraphrased, his answer is "Running for my freaking life because I'm the only one in the whole wide world who gives camel spit about you and your justice."
God's response is to tell him to go outside the cave he's squatting in, onto the side of the mountain. You know what happens next:
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Paul writing from CCDA, Indianapolis
I'm honored to be attending the Christian Community Development Association conference in Indianapolis, Indiana today through Saturday.
The schedule of speakers and workshops is out, and it looks like an incredible list.
I'm looking forward to connecting with friends old and new, as we ponder together the communal and social implications of the Kingdom of Heaven and grounded holistic ministry in varied contexts. I expect conversations relating to reconciliation, social justice, advocacy and policy, and robust theologies of community, vocation, and cultural engagement.
I'm sure that I'll be posting thoughts and updates as the week progresses, so stay tuned.
Will you be attending the conference? Please comment so that we can connect.
(photo credit)
Saturday, October 8, 2011
Holy Vandals and Heavenly Subversion
“We’re here to put a dent in the universe. Otherwise why else even be here?”
—Steve Jobs
This weekend, I've been on retreat in Yelm, WA with the Murdock Trust - the organization that provides the funding for my current Editorial Residency at Leadership Journal.
For those of you unfamiliar with the trust, it's a foundation dedicated to spending the money of M. J. Murdock (inventor of the oscilloscope), for the common good of the citizens of the Pacific NW. Their pockets are deep, their generosity is legendary, and you would be surprised at the many many wonderful things they support in our region.
I can almost guarantee that if you're a citizen of Cascadia, then you owe these guys a thank you note for something.
The retreat has been a very positive experience. Aside from some kayaking and pesto covered prawn skewers, I've enjoyed interacting with Steve Garber of the Washington Institute.
Garber is a key contemporary thinker on the intersection between faith and vocation, and the radical application of "common grace for the common good." He's very interested in helping people make deep dents in the universe, and he has a powerful reason for doing so ... a reason that I wholeheartedly share.
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