“…Even though people technically hold the power to make money valueless, in practice they are slaves to it. It is very hard to conceive of money sacramentally, because its very nature is the negation of transcendence and thus sacramental value. Obviously, the world requires us to engage in the exchange of money for the sake [...]
» Read the rest of this entry »The real battle: demons vs. sacraments
June 29th, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink
The Vatican is at Odds with Social Justice Nuns
May 30th, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink
Video: Maureen Fielder of Interfaith Voices calls for a lay-led, feminist church. “(CNN)–The board members of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, an umbrella group whose members represent 80% of America’s Catholic nuns, is meeting in Washington this week to decide how to respond to a Vatican doctrinal assessment that accused the group of espousing [...]
» Read the rest of this entry »Corporate Reform Could Unite Occupy Wall Street and the Tea Party
May 23rd, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink
“Rarely portrayed as such, the American Revolution was as much anti-corporation as it was anti-government. Before the revolution, most of the entities that we now know as states were run like corporations chartered by the British government. The Virginia Company and other “pre-states” were granted to individuals and run by their will. The Virginia Company [...]
» Read the rest of this entry »The Table is the Microcosm of a Practical Faith
May 17th, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink
…”Our relationships are holy, and so they must be sustainable: wrought with great care for the integrity of communities and creation. Our tables are a microcosm of the way we live out our faith. We know that hospitality is a sacred duty, as are all of our relationships within our economic system. A sacred relationship [...]
» Read the rest of this entry »Why the leadership movement is leaving your church leaderless
May 15th, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink
“Christian leadership is about listening for vision from God within community and then being given the authority and power to execute that vision — to take new Kingdom ground. That’s the birthright of every Christian…to hear the voice of their Father. But in the way we do leadership, suddenly it’s like we are pre-Reformation where [...]
» Read the rest of this entry »Arrested...Again
May 4th, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink
“As we left those sad sites of Zuccotti and Trinity I recalled what I had said to Rector Jim Cooper after a forum the prior week. “Let’s move on; Trinity’s old news.” His only reaction was relief still apparently missing the deep sadness of our Church missing something special in history.”
» Read the rest of this entry »A Baptism of Humility
May 1st, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink
“Occupy provides an opening to reexamine the basic teachings of Jesus, rediscovering the radical call to economic justice and self-sacrificial love that is at the heart of the gospel. … We begin to see that, if we want to be like Jesus, we must imitate his humility.”
» Read the rest of this entry »No Revolution Without Religion
May 1st, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink
“The Occupy movement has been largely a white, urban phenomenon, and one with a bit of a tendency toward vanguardism, which makes it not entirely surprising that it’s often blind to the fact that there is no force more potentially revolutionary in U.S. history or in the country today than religion. But the movement remains [...]
» Read the rest of this entry »Occupy Comes to Virginia Theological Seminary
April 29th, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink
“I read in the Hebrew Scriptures that the land doesn’t belong to us – we are actually tenants of the land. The Lord is our landlord and we owe and account to God for how we are going to treat the land people on the land. We need to be really careful about strict ideas [...]
» Read the rest of this entry »It All Turns on Affection, by Wendell Berry
April 24th, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink
“Obviously there is some risk in making affection the pivot of an argument about economy. The charge will be made that affection is an emotion, merely “subjective,” and therefore that all affections are more or less equal: people may have affection for their children and their automobiles, their neighbors and their weapons. But the risk, [...]
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