Christmas season creates a favorable vibe in our hearts.
It is advent, to carpe diem an expectation. As we hope to receive a gift from family and friends, pause for a brief moment during this season to wonder what God’s gift is or was for you.
If you have done Niko this year either as a staff, alumni, retreatants or a participants, the days spent up in the mountains with a group of people, Iwould “expect” was one of the gifts God has given you. How’s are you using the gift of Niko? Have you opened this gift? Have you forgotten about it, shelved it, maybe discarded it?
On behalf of our Niko leadership community, we are expecting a fresh infusion of God’s power and spirit in our beloved program we call Niko. We on the leadership team, are really excited to announce a realligned, upgraded, refreshed Niko this coming new year.
Daniel Cheung will spell out the details. . .
Archive for December, 2009
NIKO
December 18, 2009Soren Kierkegaard in Copenhagen, what would he say?
December 10, 2009Kierkegard in Copenhagen, what would he say?
As the green world wishes to turn the global temperature back to room temperature, the village gathers together in Copenhagen- Kobenhavn- Each brings their own questions and answers. If you were there what would your Q&A be?
I lived in Denmark for 2 years as a missionary, I had my own questions asked and partly answered there. Well, suppose Kierkegaard is still alive and happy to have the global village around in his own village. What would his questions and answers be?
Here’s a tiny little bitzy piece of his mind from his little book ” Purity of Heart is to Will One Thing”
“. . . But whether your occupation is great or mean, is it of such a kind that you dare think of it together with the responsibility of eternity? Is it such of a kind that you dare to acknowledge it at this moment or at any time?”
Kierkegard imagined Jesus-”the transfigured”- visiting an individual: ” Suppose he visited you and that you there before him, before his piercing gaze, dared continue in your present occupation!
” The proof that a man’s occupation is the right one is that he is able to practice it.”
Coram Deo- my i live and occupy my space living before the face of God.
urban youth workers spirituality
December 6, 2009This blog is a series to map out an urban youth workers’ spiritual growth experienced working with urban youth.
Compassion, emphathy, solidarity are graces initiated by God to take us to the poor taking us closer to Jesus.
One summer outreach in Los Angeles’ skid row, we have about 30 kids reaching out to the homeless. The kids made peanut butter and jelly sandwich, salami sandwich, chips, a drink and a cookie to share with a homeless person. We have them write something on the brown bag to personalize each sandwich bag. Kids wrote Jesus loves you, God bless, John 3:16 verse and drew happy faces, to name a few of their personalized message for each person they are about to meet. To prepare our team to our one hour event, we talked about things we have in common with the homeless to help them be human with fellow humans.
I recalled a Spring break backpacking trip that showed how my spiritual life is the lens that I wear to see the disadvantaged youth I care for. One of our teenagers on the trip, living on the skid row, had a bad case of skin rashes due to poor hygiene. I noticed how sensitive I was to him, I wanted to care for him more than the suburban teenager also on our team.
As I have evolved over the last seven years from working directly with children, teenagers and family to working with youth workers, I am now more about the spiritual life of youth workers and the care of their soul- the vitality needed to be in the urban mission frontier.
Most urban youth workers I listened to were drawn to disadvantaged youth through compassion. Whether they’ve heard about the urban youth angst and plights in college, seminary, experienced it during summer outreach, or for some, they simply grew up in it.
Through compassion, we see a broken down, alienated and dis-enfranchised youth and romanticized how we can love them to health, wholeness and lead them to Jesus. We unknowingly put them on a pedestal disguised in compassion. We see them as victims, survivors and most vunerable to abuse and neglect. We will soon find our compassion- what we sometimes call honeymoon stage- to be fading and when it does we hope to be moving on.
To move prematurely from the way of compassion is trying to grow up too fast to quickly. At this passage, perpetual freshness and boundless energy dominates personal newsletters. Young people we touched are angels no matter what they’ve done and rightly so. We are filled with gratefulness for what we have seeing what they have. We are full of hope for them, unbridled optimism and all because of compassion. The sweet call of Jesus for us to visit the poor, imprisoned and disadvantaged youth.