I write today from the Way Out Porch in
Aside from just being glad to be at Montreat, I am also grateful to say that this is potentially the best Montreat conference I have ever attended, and if you know me, you know I’m in the double digits as these conferences go. The theme is “World on Fire,” a double metaphor for the world being on fire with pain, injustice, and hatred but also for us to be refined by the purifying, holy fire of God in order to fight these fires with the fires of love and justice. The preacher, who leads us in worship every night, is an older man from
The themes of the week so far have included global warming, countering violence with peace, economic injustice, righteous anger, global awareness, and the Great Cloud of Witnesses of the past, present, and future that help us work toward justice peace, and love in all of these great “fires” that plague our world. I feel moved and challenged every day, particularly in our nightly worships, to change my life to one of radical simplicity for the sake of our earth and radical justice for the sake of our people. I actually just bought a book called Radical Simplicity that I hope to read throughout my year in
On a slight side-note, there is a YAV program in
I look forward to the last two days of this conference and the way that it will inspire and challenge the youth and their adult leaders like Andy and me.
On the subject of my actual YAV experience and
However, what struck me the most in these articles was their mention of Ira Rennert, the owner of Doe Run. While innocent people suffer, starve, and die because of his polluting factory and the shamefully low wages its workers are paid, Rennert is a billionaire that has multiple houses around the world. Such a disconnect sickens me – that someone could cause so much suffering yet enjoy so much wealth and privilege without second thought. However, I am humbled and sobered by the realization that every time I consume food, wear clothes, or buy products marketed unjustly, I am participating in this same situation of oppression. Any time I spend my money on “that which is not bread” and indulge my own selfish desires without thinking of others, I commit the same sin as Ira Rennert. We all do. Such rampant injustice and selfishness is unbelievably discouraging. How could there be hope? However, as a Christian, or rather, as a member of any world religious tradition, I am called to hope – to have faith that the
May we all work, as unselfishly as we are able, toward this Kingdom on earth. Amen.