Author Archives: Obie Holmen

West Bank YAGM team plant trees


Thanks to ELCA Missionary the Rev. Shadra Shoffner for submitting this picture and caption. On Earth Day (April 22) give thanks and pray for those who plant trees and plant peace. Sue-s
During their mid-year retreat, the Jersusalem/West Bank ELCA Young Adults in Global Mission (YAGM) team planted trees near Nahalin Village, West Bank. The property belongs to a Palestinian Lutheran family who advocate for peace, saying “We refuse to be enemies.”

Front: Nikki Schmidt, Marta Spangler.
Back: Paul Kacynski, Martin and the Rev. Shadra Shoffner (YAGM coordinators), Daher Nassar (local host), Chelsea Mathis and Kendra Kintzi.
(Unless otherwise noted, the pictured are ELCA Young Adults in Global Mission. 2009 Photo by Meredith Harber, YAGM.)

Make Earth Day Resolutions

I don’t want to rain on the parade, but I’m not 100 percent in love with Earth Day. Don’t get me wrong—I love the awareness and the fact that projects get done on (and around) April 22. But what about the other 364 days of the year? So this Earth Day, I am challenging you to make Earth Day every day.

Sit down on April 22 and make your own Earth Day Resolutions—a list of day-to-day eco-friendly goals and challenges that will help you live a greener, cleaner and healthier life over the next 365 days. Don’t know where to start? Naturally Savvy has some great suggestions.

Ditch plastic wrap (some of it contains PVC—yikes!)

Stop using paper plates. This is one of my biggest pet peeves. It’s wasteful and completely unnecessary. If you’re worried about family time, make washing dishes or loading the dishwasher a rotating chore that you do with one of your kids each evening.

Use public transit

Walk or take your bike whenever possible

Stop using chemical cleaners. Switch to natural products or homemade solutions.

Choose organic foods—particularly when it comes to pesticide-heavy produce and genetically modified foods.

Grow your own fruits and vegetables to eliminate pesticides and a huge part of your carbon footprint.

Start composting!

Stop using chemical fertilizers and pesticides. There are tons of natural alternatives on the market and all sorts of home remedies. (Trust me, people with chemical sensitivities will thank you.)

Use cloth diapers.

Volunteer with a local recycling program or environmental group.

Paper or plastic? Neither. Always take along a reusable bag when you leave the house.

Learn one new thing about the environment every week, then pass it on. Knowledge is power.

Reduce your garbage to a maximum of one bag per week. (It’s the limit in my town, and with four people in my house, we rarely fill the bag.)

Send one letter or postcard to a politician—local, state, federal or international—each month concerning an environmental issue. A politician once told me that one letter or postcard represents about 50 people who feel the same way. Politicians won’t take the environment seriously unless you show them you do.

Cut your paper footprint and switch to recycled paper products—paper towels, toilet paper, printing paper.

Ditch wrapping paper and paper gift bags in favor of eco-friendly and reusable alternatives.

Refuse to use polystyrene (Styrofoam). If a restaurant or take-out joint uses it, point out that it’s unhealthy and bad for the environment.

Don’t buy products made with PVC (polyvinyl chlorate). PVC is difficult to recycle and a recent study links the phthalates in vinyl flooring to autism. Other places PVC is lurking include: shower curtains, rain gear…

This list could go on and on. Planet Green has tons of great advice on living a little greener, so take some time to browse the site if you’re looking for other options.

So what are my resolutions? I already do a lot of the things listed above, but there’s definitely room for improvement.

Cara’s Earth Day Resolutions

Plant a fruit and veggie garden

Switch to organic, free range chicken and eggs

Find a non-toxic, natural hair dye

Send one letter per month to a politician concerning an environmental issue

Always carry a reusable bag (I’m forgetful, but I’m vowing to remember!)

Cara Smusiak writes on behalf of Naturally Savvy.com about how to live a more natural, organic and green lifestyle.

Book Review: The Chronicles of Narnia, by C.S. Lewis

Here, we will mention an author and his entire body of work since his importance ranges across all his novels and other writings. My introduction to Lewis was in my freshman English class at Dartmouth, under the esteemed conservative, Professor Jeffrey Hart, where Perelandra (part of the Space Trilogy) was assigned reading. The extra terrestials (eldila) in this fantasy novel bore a remarkable affinity to angels.

C.S. Lewis – Clive Staples Lewis (1898 – 1963) – was a leading figure of the English faculty at Oxford University and a close friend of J. R. R. Tolkien, the author of The Lord of the Rings. Although an academic himself, Lewis was critical of the historical approach to evaluating Scripture prevalent in the universities of the mid twentieth century, and he became a Christian apologist in essays and novels.

His most famous apologia, Mere Christianity, was a compilation of BBC radio essays broadcast during the early 1940’s.

Out of the Silent Planet (1938) was the first of The Space Trilogy soon followed by Perelandra (1943) and then That Hideous Strength (1945). Although space travel provides the setting, the books have little to do with the science of planetary exploration, which is merely a mythological framework for his treatment of Christian themes with a heavy dose of Lewis’ views on Christian theology. The storyline is apocalyptic, with battles of good vs evil, fallen angels, and a final decisive struggle. It has similarities with Tolkien’s fantasy world and themes of cataclysmic battle.

The Screwtape Letters (1942) is a fictional account of a series of letters from a senior demon, Screwtape, to his nephew, Wormwood. The premise of the letters is the temptation of humankind. Set in a contrived bureaucracy of Hell, Screwtape, Wormwood, and others attempt to lead humankind astray and thus render them candidates for damnation. Along the way, Lewis offers his hard hitting, conservative views on a variety of theological and moral issues.

Written between 1949 and 1954, The Chronicles of Narnia are Lewis’ most famous works with nearly 120 million copies sold. The seven books of this children’s fantasy series have achieved classic status with multiple reprints, foreign translations, and television and movie adaptations. If William Young receives rebuke for his imagining of God as a sassy, black woman in The Shack, Lewis paved the way by treating the talking Lion Aslan as a Christ figure. These stories are reaching the current generation of children through the popular movie series underway. The recurring storyline has human children magically transported to the fantasy world of Narnia where they join Aslan in the battle of good vs evil.

Book Review: Ben Hur, by Lew Wallace


Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ was first published in 1880 and established a new literary genre, the Biblical novel, as a sub-genre of historical fiction. The essence of the genre is a story set in Biblical times with Biblical characters in greater or lesser roles. The novel was wildly successful, surpassing Uncle Tom’s Cabin as the best-selling American novel until 1936 when Gone With the Wind became number one. In 1912 alone, a million copies were printed and sold for thirty nine cents apiece. Wallace’s work changed the attitude of the clergy toward popular fiction, who encouraged their congregants to read the novel. The Pope blessed it.

Read more …

Book Review: Barabbas, by Par Lagerkvist


We will start with a personal favorite, Barabbas by Par Lagerkvist. Lagerkvist was a Swede, and he won the Nobel prize for literature in 1951. The short novel was translated into English that same year. Of course, Barabbas was the criminal who was released by Pontius Pilate instead of Jesus of Nazareth. This Biblical character then becomes Lagerkvist’s protagonist, and the novel traces Barabbas’s wonderings and wanderings for the rest of his life.

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It’s 2009. Do You Know Where Your Soul Is?

Bono – Guest Op-Ed piece in NY Times

I AM in Midtown Manhattan, where drivers still play their car horns as if they were musical instruments and shouting in restaurants is sport.
I am a long way from the warm breeze of voices I heard a week ago on Easter Sunday.

“Glorify your name,” the island women sang, as they swayed in a cut sandstone church. I was overwhelmed by a riot of color, an emotional swell that carried me to sea.

Christianity, it turns out, has a rhythm — and it crescendos this time of year. The rumba of Carnival gives way to the slow march of Lent, then to the staccato hymnals of the Easter parade. From revelry to reverie. After 40 days in the desert, sort of …

Carnival — rock stars are good at that.

“Carne” is flesh; “Carne-val,” its goodbye party. I’ve been to many. Brazilians say they’ve done it longest; they certainly do it best. You can’t help but contract the fever. You’ve got no choice but to join the ravers as they swell up the streets bursting like the banks of a river in a flood of fun set to rhythm. This is a Joy that cannot be conjured. This is life force. This is the heart full and spilling over with gratitude. The choice is yours …

It’s Lent I’ve always had issues with. I gave it up … self-denial is where I come a cropper. My idea of discipline is simple — hard work — but of course that’s another indulgence.

Then comes the dying and the living that is Easter.

It’s a transcendent moment for me — a rebirth I always seem to need. Never more so than a few years ago, when my father died. I recall the embarrassment and relief of hot tears as I knelt in a chapel in a village in France and repented my prodigal nature — repented for fighting my father for so many years and wasting so many opportunities to know him better. I remember the feeling of “a peace that passes understanding” as a load lifted. Of all the Christian festivals, it is the Easter parade that demands the most faith — pushing you past reverence for creation, through bewilderment at the idea of a virgin birth, and into the far-fetched and far-reaching idea that death is not the end. The cross as crossroads. Whatever your religious or nonreligious views, the chance to begin again is a compelling idea.

Last Sunday, the choirmaster was jumping out of his skin … stormy then still, playful then tender, on the most upright of pianos and melodies. He sang his invocations in a beautiful oaken tenor with a freckle-faced boy at his side playing conga and tambourine as if it was a full drum kit. The parish sang to the rafters songs of praise to a God that apparently surrendered His voice to ours.

I come to lowly church halls and lofty cathedrals for what purpose? I search the Scriptures to what end? To check my head? My heart? No, my soul. For me these meditations are like a plumb line dropped by a master builder — to see if the walls are straight or crooked. I check my emotional life with music, my intellectual life with writing, but religion is where I soul-search.

The preacher said, “What good does it profit a man if he gains the whole world and loses his soul?” Hearing this, every one of the pilgrims gathered in the room asked, “Is it me, Lord?” In America, in Europe, people are asking, “Is it us?”

Well, yes. It is us.

Carnival is over. Commerce has been overheating markets and climates … the sooty skies of the industrial revolution have changed scale and location, but now melt ice caps and make the seas boil in the time of technological revolution. Capitalism is on trial; globalization is, once again, in the dock. We used to say that all we wanted for the rest of the world was what we had for ourselves. Then we found out that if every living soul on the planet had a fridge and a house and an S.U.V., we would choke on our own exhaust.

Lent is upon us whether we asked for it or not. And with it, we hope, comes a chance at redemption. But redemption is not just a spiritual term, it’s an economic concept. At the turn of the millennium, the debt cancellation campaign, inspired by the Jewish concept of Jubilee, aimed to give the poorest countries a fresh start. Thirty-four million more children in Africa are now in school in large part because their governments used money freed up by debt relief. This redemption was not an end to economic slavery, but it was a more hopeful beginning for many. And to the many, not the lucky few, is surely where any soul-searching must lead us.

A few weeks ago I was in Washington when news arrived of proposed cuts to the president’s aid budget. People said that it was going to be hard to fulfill promises to those who live in dire circumstances such a long way away when there is so much hardship in the United States. And there is.

But I read recently that Americans are taking up public service in greater numbers because they are short on money to give. And, following a successful bipartisan Senate vote, word is that Congress will restore the money that had been cut from the aid budget — a refusal to abandon those who would pay such a high price for a crisis not of their making. In the roughest of times, people show who they are.

Your soul.

So much of the discussion today is about value, not values. Aid well spent can be an example of both, values and value for money. Providing AIDS medication to just under four million people, putting in place modest measures to improve maternal health, eradicating killer pests like malaria and rotoviruses — all these provide a leg up on the climb to self-sufficiency, all these can help us make friends in a world quick to enmity. It’s not alms, it’s investment. It’s not charity, it’s justice.

Strangely, as we file out of the small stone church into the cruel sun, I think of Warren Buffett and Bill Gates, whose now combined fortune is dedicated to the fight against extreme poverty. Agnostics both, I believe. I think of Nelson Mandela, who has spent his life upholding the rights of others. A spiritual man — no doubt. Religious? I’m told he would not describe himself that way.

Not all soul music comes from the church.

Bono, the lead singer of the band U2 and a co-founder of the advocacy group ONE, is a contributing columnist for The Times. Click here for the NY Times link.

Progressive Alliance of Baptists

The Alliance of Baptists is a movement of progressive Christians–individuals and congregations–seeking to respond to the continuing call of God in a rapidly changing world. The Alliance offers a clear voice for Christian freedom, distinctively Baptist and intentionally ecumenical in an interfaith world.

From its inception in early 1987, the Alliance has called Baptists to stand for those values which have distinguished the Baptist movement from its beginnings four centuries ago–the freedom and accountability of every individual in matters of faith; the freedom of each congregation under the authority of Jesus Christ to determine its own ministry and mission; and religious freedom for all in relationship to the state. Alliance members and churches mark our commitment to God and each other by the annual renewal of our uniquely Baptist founding covenant.

The Alliance is grounded in a story that still matters. Rooted in a noble tradition, our members and churches continue to respond in faith to the One who makes all things new. In addition to the historic Baptist principles, traditions and freedoms expressed in the Alliance covenant, the life of the Alliance today is increasingly shaped by:

§ A commitment to inclusiveness, each person valued as God’s beloved, uniquely gifted to reveal and enable God’s work in the world;

§ A respect for freedom, each voice affirmed as an expression essential to our gathered witness, whether lifted in agreement or dissent;

§ A devotion to discernment, each action crafted in the context of active listening and careful and deliberate thought, with a goal of lasting consensus;

§ A reverence for mystery, each Christian awed by the transcendence of God, open to being surprised by God, and humble enough to admit that she or he is not God;

§ A hunger and thirst for social justice, each believer called to do the transformative work of Christ in the compassionate spirit of Christ; and

A passion for partnership, modeled in how we do Alliance work together and in our relationships with other people of faith, each collaboration celebrated as an occasion for that spiritual synergy which grows from connecting God’s people with one another.

Read more at the Alliance website.

The Mobilization to End Poverty

The Mobilization to End Poverty will be a history-making gathering. Christians from across the country will come together in a powerful movement committed to the biblical imperative of reducing domestic and global poverty.

Join a movement rooted firmly in Christian faith that has the will and capacity to reduce poverty by half within 10 years both domestically and globally.

April 26 – 29, 2009
Washington Convention Center
801 Mount Vernon Place, NW
Washington, DC 20001

Hosted by Sojourners Magazine. Click here for more info from the Sojourners website and review registration info.

Homophobia Is Killing Our Youth

Dissolving hatred in our society starts with each of us on an individual level. Whether we are straight, LGBT, black, white or all shades in between, if we want to heal hate among youth we must engage in a process of introspective exploration to reveal where we ourselves have held onto hatred, ignorance, fear, and anger. Amidst all this homophobic murder, and without dismissing accountability; even those of us who feel justified in our animosity towards those who hate, must forgive our judgments. Hate in any form is still hate and it contributes to its survival. In the story of the crucifixion (whether myth or fact) Jesus says himself, “Father forgive them, they know not what they do.”

Read more of Joseph Mannino’s essay in the Huffington Post

Peace In The Middle East: Is Yoga Kosher?

For those of us too lazy, poor or contrary to jump on the yoga bandwagon, there are many ways to justify our indolence. But rarely do we invoke higher powers. Not surprisingly, yoga’s getting big in Israel. But for the country’s sizable Orthodox population, it’s the subject of hot debate. The issue? Many yoga practitioners involve Hindu chants dedicated to multiple deities in their practices, which flies in the face of the Jewish injunction to worship only one God.

Read more of this post from Jezebel.com “Celebrity, Sex, Fashion for Women”