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  • Archive of "environment" Category

    Give the Gift of Hope

    December 4, 2010 // 5641No Comments »http%3A%2F%2Flifeasmission.com%2Fblog%2F2010%2F12%2Fgive-the-gift-of-hope%2FGive+the+Gift+of+Hope2010-12-04+15%3A57%3A57JR+Rozkohttp%3A%2F%2Flifeasmission.com%2Fblog%2F%3Fp%3D5641

    I am a huge fan of redeeming the overly-commercialized holiday seasons for the purposes of the Kingdom.  One the best ways to go about doing that, in my opinion, is giving people gifts that exhibit something of eternal worth and significance.  All the better if that gift also equates to something life-giving to someone else.  I’ve written before about Advent Conspiracy and continue to love what they’re about.  But I’ve recently heard of another option along similar lines that I wanted to share as well.

    A while back I had the chance to conduct an interview with Scott Sabin, the author of Tending to Eden and the Executive Director of Plant with Purpose – a Christian humanitarian organization dedicated to helping the rural poor through environmental restoration, economic empowerment, and spiritual renewal.

    Plant with Purpose has put together a Holiday Village Market.  Through the market you can buy or contribute toward..

    Animals

    Trees

    Eco Items

    A Family Garden

    Business Skills and Micro-credit Loan Management Training

    Spiritual Renewal

    I think it would be simply brilliant to buy one (or way more!) of these gifts on behalf of a friend or family member and give them some token of it as a way of stimulating conversation or even direct involvement with regard to the basic and urgent needs around the world.  Please leave a comment here if you plan to make use of this Holiday Village Market this Christmas.

    Posted in environment, justice, kingdom, stewardship

    Tending to Eden: An Interview with Author, Scott Sabin

    March 3, 2010 // 17291 Comment »http%3A%2F%2Flifeasmission.com%2Fblog%2F2010%2F03%2Ftending-to-eden-an-interview-with-author-scott-sabin%2FTending+to+Eden%3A+An+Interview+with+Author%2C+Scott+Sabin2010-03-03+17%3A56%3A15JR+Rozkohttp%3A%2F%2Flifeasmission.com%2Fblog%2F%3Fp%3D1729

    About a month ago I offered a book review of Tending to Eden: Environmental Stewardship for God’s People by Scott Sabin.  Scott is the Executive director of Plant with Purpose.

    Plant With Purpose is an international environmental organization that transforms lives in rural areas where poverty is caused by deforestation. For over 25 years, Plant With Purpose has provided lasting solutions to heal the relationship between people and their environment by planting trees, revitalizing farms, and offering loans to create economic opportunity.

    Yesterday, I had the chance to actually interview Scott and ask him a few questions about the book.  Besides providing an overview of Plant with Purpose and the book, Tending to Eden, we spend some talking about the devastation in Haiti, one of the places where they serve, the vicious cycle of poverty and environmental degradation, and the relationship between creation care and the gospel.  The whole interview (~ 22 mins.) is worth the selection of the book that Scott reads toward the end.

    Interview w/ Scott Sabin Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

    If you’re reading this in a feed reader and don’t see the audio player, click through to see it.

    If you buy the book through the Amazon link on this page, a portion of the proceeds will directly benefit the rural poor.

    Posted in books, creation, environment, interview, justice, stewardship

    Book Review – Tending to Eden: Environmental Stewardship for God’s People

    February 6, 2010 // 16523 Comments »http%3A%2F%2Flifeasmission.com%2Fblog%2F2010%2F02%2Fbook-review-tending-to-eden-environmental-stewardship-for-gods-people%2FBook+Review+-+Tending+to+Eden%3A+Environmental+Stewardship+for+God%27s+People2010-02-06+19%3A36%3A00JR+Rozkohttp%3A%2F%2Flifeasmission.com%2Fblog%2F%3Fp%3D1652

    I was fortunate enough to receive a pre-release copy of Tending to Eden: Environmental Stewardship for God’s People by Scott C. Sabin from Judson Press.

    Sabin is the Executive Director of Plant with Purpose, a Christian relief and development agency.

    Christians have a responsibility to love and care for our environment as part of God’s creation and Sabin gets that for sure, but that’s not the genius of the book.  The real beauty of this book comes in the author’s ability to explain to readers, with remarkable insight and simplicity, the inherent connection between caring for the environment and caring for the poor and oppressed. He does so by providing a relational framework for understanding the issues throughout the book.  Through first-hand stories and lessons learned from years of experience, Sabin unmasks the naivete and ignorance of the brand of evangelicals for whom creation care is auxiliary to (their version of) the gospel.  He suggests – at times more implicitly than explicitly, that all the challenges we face, as well as the solutions to those problems, are relational in nature

    Throughout the book, the author tackles issues such as deforestation, sustainable agriculture, sanitation, grassroots enterprise, and climate change.  In each case, his aim is to point out how our engagement with these issues has everything to do with out concern for those who are most globally at-risk.

    For Sabin,

    …without God, all the development and environmental restoration in the world will not bring transformation.

    At the same time, he is able to articulate that transformation is not something other than God-infused labors of development and environmental restoration.

    As someone who believes that one of the hallmarks of the missional church is listening to voices from the margins, I was struck by this comment from the author.

    The idea that stewardship and conservation are part of a liberal agenda seems ludicrous in much of the developing world.  I remember the shock on the face of our Dominican director when I tried to explain the suspicion with which many U.S. churches regarded the environmental aspects of our work.  It was a horrifying thought to him that American Christians would be less than enthusiastic about caring for the earth.  Many of our brothers and sisters in the developing world are way ahead of us in their understanding of stewardship, and there is much that we can learn from them.

    For anyone wishing they could find a book that offers a global view of some of the most pressing environmental challenges without getting lost and confused in technical jargon, this book is an excellent resource. The book even features a discussion guide at the end for each chapter making it an excellent choice for groups interested in studying and talking about these issues together.  Through raising our awareness and offering practical suggestions, Sabin offers readers a hope for the future that is rooted not in our ability to affect change, but in God’s invitation to join him in his mission of the reconciliation of all things.

    Posted in books, environment, missional, stewardship

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Toward a Missional Vision of Theological Education

One of my main areas of interest is the shaping of a missional paradigm of theological education in Post-Christendom. To that end I wrote a series of 9 posts on the subject that have become foundational for work that I am continuing to do in the current context of seminary education.

  1. Preliminary Thoughts
  2. The Root of the Problem
  3. The Fruit of the Problem
  4. New Soil
  5. Community Rootedness
  6. Character Formation
  7. Conviction Shaping
  8. Contextual Training
  9. Cultural Pioneering

You can also download a combined PDF of these posts here.

Important Female Voices

  • Elizabeth Paul
  • Emily Jones
  • Jo Saxton
  • Kathy Escobar
  • Rachel Held Evans
  • Sarah Styles Bessey

Ecclesia Bloggers

  • Ben Sternke
  • Bob Hyatt
  • David Fitch
  • Doug Paul
  • Geoff Holsclaw
  • J.R. Briggs
  • Jim Pace
  • John Chandler
  • JR Woodward
  • Matt Tebbe
  • Todd Hiestand
  • Winn Collier

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