Joel Osteen is the pastor of Houston’s Lakewood Church. In the video below he addresses the issue of eating scripturally.
Joel Osteen is the pastor of Houston’s Lakewood Church. In the video below he addresses the issue of eating scripturally.
Posted in Religion & Spirituality | Leave a Comment »
Leprosy is a wicked illness. Fortunately enough we are making the right steps to eradicate it worldwide. The World Health Organization reports that the global registered prevalence of leprosy at the beginning of 2007 stood at 224,717 cases (http://www.who.int/lep/en). That is still many people, bu the cases are decreasing every year and if we compare it to the 6.5 billion inhabitants of the Earth, we get a better perspective on the size of the problem. However. at one point leprosy was a lot more of a threat. Every community had a “leprosy slum” – a part of town where people with leprosy were confined, people in good health avoided any contact with these people and did not even get close to these neighborhoods.
Posted in Theology | Leave a Comment »
We recently had an Easter play at church. I Just wanted to share some of the fun we experienced by posting a video with some clips and pictures.
Posted in Fun Stuff | Leave a Comment »
This morning I had great conversation with Liana Paris, a young woman who is making her life an example for everyone out there. My Rotary club is sponsoring her to be an ambassador in the Arab country of Jordan. I admire Liana for her determination and clear vision for her future. Liana is building her career in global awareness and international conflict resolution.
There is a principle valid across the board: communication helps reduce and prevent conflict. This principle is simple and effective in the smallest form of community, such as a friendship or a romantic relationship. We have all been in a conflict with someone who did not understand our point of view, our intimate beliefs — or vice versa, we did not understand the other person’s perspective. Most of the times we get upset not because we disagree on a given issue, rather because we feel like the other person does not respect our convictions. Conflicts can be resolved or avoided if the quality of communication between the two parties increases. That is, if both parties make it a point to listen to the other and learn the other person’s culture.
The same principle works in larger communities as well, such as a church context, an organization, or among neighbors. I have had many chances to experience how true that is in my own congregation. To give you an example, different generations have different ways of expressing the same faith. Two groups will be in a generational conflict, until some people from both generations start having a dialog about the nature of their beliefs and the roots of their traditions. When we make an effort to understand the other, we activate the most effective form of preventive conflict resolution.
My friend Liana is applying that principle on an even larger scale. She is committed to immerse herself in a culture that, in many ways, is opposite to her own with the purpose of bridging her culture and the one she is exploring. Liana takes to her Arab friends a picture of America that they do not get from traditional media broadcasts, she shows them the face of millions of Americans that do not necessarily agree to our current foreign policy. She also keeps a blog which allows us, on this side of the globe, to understand what it’s like to be immersed in that culture. She brings a picture of the Arab/Muslim society that we do not get from the mainstream media. Liana is bridging two cultures.
Hopefully, the people she comes in contact with, from both sides of the spectrum, will be more aware of a culture that is so different than their own. Hopefully, a better knowledge of “the other” will bring less demonizing and more understanding. Hopefully, coexistence will take the place of intolerance, and peace the place of conflict.
Liana’s life journey inspires me. I believe, the kind of bridging work she is involved with is what our world needs for a better tomorrow.
Wherever we are, we can be bridging agents. Starting within the intimacy of our household, to our neighborhood, to our friendships, to our world. We can make a difference just by making an effort to understand one another.
Find Liana’s blog in my links (From Paris to Amman).
Peace!
Posted in Contemporary issues | Tagged diversity, global awareness, middle east | 1 Comment »
Very recent data by the FAO shows that in the United States 95 percent of cabbage varieties and 94 percent of green bean varieties have disappeared. In Mexico, the crop variety has decreased of 20 percent. These are just a couple of examples of vegetables that are disappearing from the marketplace.
So What?
It is well known that a crossover of genetic material between different groups within a species, generally gives birth to stronger and healthier progeny. That is true in animals, humans, and plants as well. Mass-quantity farming endeavors prefer homogeneous commercial cultivations. Unfortunately, this way of doing business is eliminating the variety in the genetic material of our vegetables.
Experts are suggesting that currently the small farming businesses are the only entity that is guaranteeing bio-diversity on our tables. Also, home vegetable gardens usually contain a greater variety of seeds than commercial farming. Small farmers and home gardeners are bio-diversity heroes!
If you have a piece of land, why not grow vegetables? It is healthy, it relieves stress, it gives you a sense of accomplishment… and it is good for global genetic preservation. Just a thought.
Posted in Contemporary issues | Tagged agriculture, food, health | Leave a Comment »
It is common, and to a certain extent normal for human beings to resist change. Most people have a tendency to nesting, that is arranging life around us so to make it the most comfortable place we can. Then we try to dwell in that comforting place, and we fight change with all our strength, because in our mind change will shake our nest and consequently make our life feel uncomfortable. How many times do we hear the affirmation, “We’ve always done it that way.” This is the typical answer of someone who is afraid of welcoming change.There is nothing wrong with trying to make our own existence a comfortable one.
The problem with keeping things the same is that we not only fight against change, we also fight against improvement. In fact, there is no improvement without change. In order for something to get better, some changes need to occur. Continue Reading »
Posted in Religion & Spirituality | Tagged change, innovation | 2 Comments »
Today (9/28/07) the Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Massimo D’Alema, made a proposal to the UN General Assembly for a worldwide moratorium on the death penalty. One can easily predict that powerful countries that apply the death penalty, including China, the United States are likely to lobby against it.
D’Alema stated that capital executions are an “extreme, visible act of violence, which belongs to a culture that should be of the past.”
I deeply agree with his statement. Capital punishment is a drawback in global advancement and international human rights.
More than 130 countries have abolished the death penalty. Mr. D’Alema is hopeful that a change can happen. He believes the international public opinion is changing on this matter.
Portugal strongly supported the Italian’s initiative and the UN Secretary General, Ban Ki-Moon, seemed in favor of such proposal.
One question remains, is Italy and Portugal’s effort in vain, as long as some of the most influential and powerful nations in the world are in favor of death penalty?
Posted in Contemporary issues | Tagged International rights, Italy, ONU, UN | 3 Comments »