Clarion: Journal of Spirituality and Justice

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  • Author - Agora
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Clickworthy

  • Peace Theology with Ted Grimsrud
  • Al Sergel
  • Streams of Justice
  • SoulStream
  • Sojourners - Jim Wallis
  • Greg Boyd
  • Bob Ekblad
  • Kevin Miller
  • vivelecanada.ca
  • Brad Jersak - The God Who Speaks

"Honour" by Michelle Wiebe-Santschi

A while ago, I started getting frustrated with some of the things that I was hearing people saying about people with disabilities.  I didn’t like hearing people in my community referred to as “residents” or “the disabled”.  These are my friends.  These are my brothers and sisters.  I just wanted everyone to be equal, for each one of us to be given a fair chance, to be treated as worthy human beings.  I don’t like there being “us” versus “them.  …I vented to those around me and to the Lord.  He answered my questions with one word.  The word that God kept bringing to mind was “honour”…both as a verb and as a noun. So I started to think about what this word meant.  What does it mean to honour someone?  What does it mean to give someone honour? And what does it mean to take away somebody’s honour?

Continue reading ""Honour" by Michelle Wiebe-Santschi" »

July 20, 2006 in Author - Santschi, Theme - Community | Permalink | Comments (0)

Untitled 2 by Ryan Santschi

i went down the street
and saw a man
i felt the cold
his desperation
i touched the unknown
his deprevation
he asked me
for some change
“tell me
what are our prayers worth
when the poor testify
against us?
what do our tithes mean
when the broken have
no where to sleep?”
i felt the pain
his descention
i held the abuse
our generation
yeh, we need a lot
of fucking change...

June 09, 2006 in Author - Santschi, Theme - Poetry & Journals | Permalink | Comments (0)

Untitled by Ryan Santschi

when i was a child
i didn’t believe in accidents
i knew there had to be a reason why
but i know now that the lack of answers and the pain
will only make this a more beautiful goodbye
and this sunday
i saw heaven in a wheel chair
he could not even say, “hi”
but i saw the most divine crucifix proclaimed
in his half shut eye
you might be the weakest
you might be despised
but in the deepest, blindest hell
you will find Jesus Christ.

June 09, 2006 in Author - Santschi, Theme - Poetry & Journals | Permalink | Comments (0)

The Red Tent by Michelle Wiebe-Santschi

Last spring I went to a conference called “The Red Tent” at Eastern Mennonite University in Virginia. It was a really great experience in which Mennonites gathered to celebrate women, worship, theology, and the arts. It was open to both male and female participants, but all of the speakers and artists were women. What I would like to share about is why I am sad when I think about the conference.

I think it’s really good that women get together to talk about “women’s” issues, but that’s not what this conference was about. It was simply women being given a safe place do gender-neutral things. I am sad, because women needed to have a special conference like this to teach, discuss theology, preach, and so forth. I am sad that only a handful of men-mostly college students or husbands of speakers-attended. And I am sad that I was so shocked to discover so late in my life that women can be wise theologians and preachers.

Our problem is not that we need more safe places for women to be active and to be who they are created to be. The problem is our culture’s view toward women and their talents. We have submitted to cultural structures in which human beings are placed on their appropriate level on a hierarchy. The problem is that we judge each other according to gender, income, mental competency, deeming certain people more valuable than others.

My dream is similar to Jesus’ prayer in John 17, for all believers to be one as God is one. There are three persons in the Trinity, each different and equal, but one God. Another example of this oneness is in a marriage, where two people become one but remain two separate persons. We don't need to segregate because we’re different. God created each human being in His image-including men, women, children, the young, the old, the sick, and the healthy. God's plan is for all of us to live as one. I don’t want to have to go to a special place to be given a voice and treated as an equal, and neither should anybody else.

So what is the Church's responsibility? First of all, we don’t need to do the liberating. Jesus died so everybody could be set free and the walls between us could be torn down. “There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:28). But this is obviously not the way it is everywhere in the world.

So, second, we need to repent for putting up walls, for judging the worth of God’s creation, for submitting to our culture’s faulty hierarchy, and for committing structural sins. Everybody should be free now and can be, but we’ve messed up. We must admit our wrongdoings and ask God for reconstruction. We are all guilty of these things, including those who have been marginalized. And it won’t change enough if an individual or an individual church changes their thoughts and ways. This is not an individual issue or sin but a structural one.

Third, once we have asked God for forgiveness, we must be careful not to expect the previously oppressed people groups to “snap out of it” immediately and begin to live totally free. We must encourage them, teach them, and give them time to gain back their God-given confidence. Healing doesn't happen overnight.

Finally, we must not be surprised any more to see everyone being treated equally and walking in freedom. We should be excited to see women teaching intelligently or people with disabilities ministering at church or little children giving prophetic words. This is what God wants for his people. This is what unity is all about.

June 09, 2006 in Author - Santschi, Theme - Church | Permalink | Comments (0)

Love by Michelle Wiebe-Santschi

Jesus said that the greatest commandment is to love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength (Mark 12:30). The second greatest commandment, He said, is to love your neighbor as yourself (Mark 12:31). God is good and perfect and unconditional in His love. He deserves to be loved by us. But how can we love our neighbor? How can we love people who sin and make mistakes? How can we love people who are very different from us? How can we love people when they may never love us back? How can we love those who hate us and hurt us?
They don't deserve it! Or do they?

Whether or not someone is worthy to be loved is not a question that should even be asked. Everyone is worthy of love and in need of love. And not because of anything other than the fact that they are human. It does not depend on whether or not a person has the right education, the right amount of money, or wears the right cothes. It does not matter where they come from, what they look like, or how they talk. It is also not dependent on whether or not they believe in God or belong to a certain denomination. We do need to care about these things and others like gender, race, age, and personality because they are a part of who people are.but these things do not determine whether we should love people. We don't need to like everybody or agree with everything they believe--but we do need to love them.

We definitely need help with this. We need God's perfect love. We need to see people through His eyes. He has created every single human being. We are His artwork and He takes great delight in what He has made. So should we. By not loving people we are not appreciating what God has made. We are telling the Creator of the Universe that He has made a mistake (and that we could have done better!). For those of us who struggle with loving others, we need to begin by asking God some questions when we look at people. Ask Him why He made them, why He likes them, why He loves them. Ask Him what He enjoys about them. When we listen to His answers, it becomes extremely difficult not only to love them but also to appreciate them and find enjoyment in them like He does. And the really miraculous thing is that when we start to see people the way that God does, we ourselves are changed. The heavy weight of judgment is lifted and we are free.free to love and enjoy God's creation, free to love ourselves and everyone we meet. Life becomes richer, fuller, and a lot more fun.

June 08, 2006 in Author - Santschi, Theme - Spirituality | Permalink | Comments (0)

I See Jesus by Michelle Wiebe-Santschi

I see Jesus all the time. I saw Him today. in the Bible. He was teaching and preaching. He was healing the sick and raising the dead. He was loving people and forgiving them of their sins. He was performing miracles. He was leading his followers into a new way of life. What did He look like? Like a little baby in a manger surrounded by barn animals. Like a shepherd leading a flock of sheep. Like a crazy person, speaking about things that cannot be seen or proven. Like a criminal, beaten and insulted, hanging on a cross. like an angel or God Himself, shining and pure, resurrected from the dead.

I see Jesus at church each Sunday. He's in the midst of us as we gather in His name. He's in the reason we gather as a community. He is the message that is preached and the words of Truth that are spoken. He's in the people with disabilities and the workers who bring them. He's in the laughter and the playfulness of the children who realize that church isn't just about sitting in a pew. He dances and sings with us as we praise Him with our songs. He has His hand of healing on those who are in need of comfort and freedom. He meets with people in the middle of their pain. He is in the joy of those who are going through good times and are excited about life. He speaks words of life and encouragement and promise to individuals who hear Him. And it turns out that Jesus isn't only found in the particular church congregation I am a part of. He's actually the biggest church-hopper and is a part of every congregation that invites Him.

I see Jesus in other places--seemingly unexpected places. For example, He hangs out in the same places I hang out in every day. He looks like my server at the coffee shop who goes beyond the call of duty to sincerely care about me and ask me how I am doing. He looks like my waiter at Denny's who takes the time to sit down at my table and talk with me. Another example is a new friend I made this year. At the time she was not yet a Christian. but as we talked, I realized that she thought and acted more like Jesus than a lot of Christians I knew. Jesus was in the way she lived. I passed by a homeless person on the street one day. He asked me if I had any money to give. I said that I didn't, which was a lie. I simply didn't feel like parting with the change in my wallet (I wanted to spend it on a drink later on at the coffee shop). As I walked back home I remembered the words of Jesus in Matthew 25. Whatever I do unto the least of these, I do unto Him. And whatever I don't do unto the least of these, I don't do unto Him. I wept as I realized I had passed Jesus by. I felt like the least-no, the worst-of these.

I see Jesus when I close my eyes. His Spirit is inside of me and He walks with me throughout each day. This is particularly exciting because I can talk to Him wherever I am and whenever I want. And He's there when I open my eyes and look at what and who is around me. He's in my friends and family, He's in nature. He's everywhere! I just pray that I will always be aware of His presence and not pass Him by. And I pray that everyone else will see Him, too.

June 08, 2006 in Author - Santschi, Theme - Spirituality | Permalink | Comments (0)

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