Monday, February 28, 2005

Buying the poor for a pair of shoes

Last night we heard Jim Wallis, the author of God's Politics and editor of Sojourners, speak at a nearby church. He critiqued modern politics and offered an alternative which focused on hope, common ground, and bi-partisan solutions. He quoted from Proverbs, "Without a vision, the people perish." His experiences have taught him God is personal but not private. The prophets of old were quite clear that God was very political in his concern for justice, the poor, and the oppressed. He ended with this thought, "We are the ones we've been waiting for." He also quoted my favorite Irishman! There is a quick interview online at the San Francisco Chronicle. Thank you Eric for the link.

I read the book of Amos this morning. These words are ringing through my head, "Listen, you who swallow the needy and destroy the poor of the land! ... buying the needy for money and the poor for a pair of shoes. ... Enough! I will make all this crush you." Buying the poor for a pair of shoes...Wallis called a budget a moral document which shows our priorities. Fox ran a story Saturday night called "Tsunami: Story of Tragedy and Hope". They interviewed a woman who has devoted her life to rescuing children from the slave trade. The tsunami wiped out the last ten years of her work. Children are now easily being bought and sold again. For the price of a pair of shoes? Fox also told of a group in the Bay Area who worked through World Vision to purchase a home for a Srilankan family that lives on less than a dollar a day.

I just bought Quicken 2005. It's free after a rebate.

3 comments:

James said...

Here are some more related links:
1) Sojo's GP link (requires a quick registration).
2) Wallis on NPR's Talk to the Nation.
3) Wallis on the Daily Show with John Stewart.
4) The first chapter of the book.

Anonymous said...

Jamie -

Glad you went, I heard him in the City on Thursday. My Westmont Program is doing a partnership with them next year in the summer, a SoJo Institute. You might also like to learn more from David Batstone, a Westmont alum, Executive Editor of Sojourners, ethics teacher at USF, many other things as well as a Bay Area resident in Montara.
http://www.sojo.net/index.cfm?action=about_us.display_staff&staff=Batstone

Anonymous said...

Thanks for the Amos highlights. Leave it to Scripture to express our neglect of the poor most poignantly.