"Hope is belief in spite of the evidence; then watching the evidence change." The quotation may not be exact, but this the the gist of it. Jim Wallis reminded the several hundred gathered at Shiloh Baptist Church last Sunday night, April 26, at the opening worship service of the Mobilization 2 End Poverty campaign . That notion wove through the plenary sessions and worship services during the 3-1/2 days. You couldn't miss it, not with living reminders of the civil rights struggles (Rep. John Lewis, Dr. Vincent Harding, and John Perkins) or present-day examples of hoping and working for change in spite of the evidence, like Alexie Torres Fleming, founder of Youth Ministries for Peace and Justice, who organized her neighborhood against the drug lords of her community, in spite of death threats, arson, and fear; and Rachel Anderson and Lisa Sharon Harper, who, along with other believers, formed the Boston Faith and Justice Network (working, among other things, to make Boston a "Fair Trade City") and the New York Faith and Justice Network, respectively.
There were the historical reminders that people of faith and people with hope have fought against fears and systems to change what others thought could never be changed. Richard Stearns, of World Vision, recounted the story of the British abolitionists who fought to abolish the trans-Atlantic slave trade--a system that fueled an empire and an economy.
And of course, throughout the entire M2EP, we were reminded about our biblical call to abolish injustice and bring about change in spite of the cost, in spite of the odds, in spite of what seems realistic.
But back to the statement, "Hope is belief in spite of the evidence, then watching the evidence change." What if we lived that way? What if Christians, people who profess belief, profess faith in the Almighty (think about that word!) really lived out life that way? I must admit, while I think I have strong faith about my personal, private, and family life, I have meager faith when it comes to the kingdom of God here on earth. Now. Eliminate poverty? Eliminate starvation? Make sure every human being has clean water to drink? Eliminate slavery? Stop the illegal trafficking of over 1 million children each year? The Millenium Development Goals?
My faith has been too small. My hope too weak. I have fallen into the trap of rationalism and reality of the day. "No one has ever...." "How can you think that...when the deficit is...$$?" I don't know. I don't have rational answers. But I believe in an Almighty God, the power of the Holy Spirit, and the love of Jesus. And there are plenty of reminders of God's greatness "in spite of evidence." Esther. Ruth and Naomi. David, the shepherd. Mary and Martha and the friends of a dead Lazarus. Daniel surviving a lion.
My faith may be small; but I'm trying to grow it.
Saturday, May 2, 2009
M2EP-"Belief in spite of the evidence"
Labels:
faith,
faith and justice,
human trafficking,
m2ep,
MDG
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