Archives For Richard Twiss

Repaso: February 15, 2013

February 15, 2013 — 1 Comment

juarez-guns

1. Swords into plowshares, Kalashnikovs into xylophones
While watching this short BBC clip about what’s become of 7000 guns seized by police in Ciudad Juarez (the infamous “Murder Capital of the World”) I couldn’t help but think of the words of the prophet Isaiah and the hope that one day, all things will be made new.

2. Remembering Richard Twiss
Many of us were saddened to hear the news that Native American author and theologian Richard Twiss passed away last weekend after suffering a heart attack. I really appreciated his reconciliation work, including his writing and speaking. A number of tributes to Richard have been written over the past week, including this one from the Out of Ur blog, this one from Sojourners, and this one in Charisma by my friend Mark Charles.

3. The redemption of hipsterdom
Paul Bowers – “a skinny-jeans-wearing, Pitchfork-reading, banjo-playing writer for an alt-weekly newspaper” – writes in Patrol:

A word to my generation: It’s fine to make jokes, but know that not everything is a joke. We talk about hipsters on the internet not only because we love to hate them, but also because looking at them is a good way of looking at our own values. Well, I’m here to report that there are good and honest hipsters in our midst. But you’ve probably never heard of them.

4. Keeping a holy Lent
Father Thomas McKenzie writes:

Keeping Lent is designed to make more room for the Holy Spirit in your life. Keeping Lent may or may not lead to feelings of joy, sorrow, happiness, or anger. You may or may not alienate a friend, have a spiritual experience, lose weight, or feel grouchy at work. Keeping Lent will not make you more holy or beloved in the eyes of God. Keeping Lent will not save you. Keep Lent anyway.

5. Obama, literature, and drones
Novelist and photographer Teju Cole (whose book Open City I reviewed last year), has written a troubling but important piece for the New Yorker about the drone program being executed by our “reader in chief”:

This ominous, discomfiting, illegal, and immoral use of weaponized drones against defenseless strangers is done for our sakes. But more and more we are seeing a gap between the intention behind the President’s clandestine brand of justice and the real-world effect of those killings. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s words against the Vietnam War in 1967 remain resonant today: “What do they think as we test our latest weapons on them?” We do know what they think: many of them have the normal human reaction to grief and injustice, and some of them take that reaction to a vengeful and murderous extreme. In the Arabian peninsula, East Africa, and Pakistan, thanks to the policies of Obama and Biden, we are acquiring more of the angriest young enemies money can buy. As a New York Times report put it last year, “Drones have replaced Guantánamo as the recruiting tool of choice for militants.”

6. New York Biotopes

Repaso is intended as a thought-provoking compilation of news and commentary related to the intersections of faith, development, justice, and peace. As always, I welcome your thoughts on any of the links and ideas in this roundup!

[Photo credit: "This drumlike instrument is among those that Mexican sculptor Pedro Reyes creates from parts of seized weapons" via azstarnet.com]

justice-sign

One of the highlights of 2012 for Katie and me was the opportunity to attend The Justice Conference in Portland in February. We loved the chance to hear from provocative and thoughtful speakers (my notes are here), to participate in the topical pre-conference breakouts, to mill around in the exhibit hall, to catch up with friends new and old, and simply to experience Portland’s weirdness.

In 2013 (February 22 and 23, to be precise), the conference is moving across the country to Philadelphia, and once again the lineup is top-notch. For those who can make the trek – and for those already near the Philly area – it’ll be well worth your time to be there in person.

But for many others who don’t have the time, the money, or the inclination to travel, there’s great news: the conference will also be simulcast to cities across North America, including Phoenix! I happen to be coordinating the Phoenix simulcast, so if you live in this neck of the woods, I’d like to invite you to come (and to help us spread the word).

When? The simulcast will be live, corresponding to the main conference’s schedule, with two sessions Friday evening (the 22nd) and seven more on Saturday (the 23rd).

Who? The jaw-dropping list of speakers includes:

Where? The Phoenix simulcast will be held at New City Church (4331 N. Central Ave), conveniently located in Phoenix along the light rail and, as a matter of utmost importance, just a stone’s throw from Lux Coffee.

TJC_Simulcast_NoYear_Pos_RGBHow Much? All the basic info is available at the conference’s simulcast page, including pricing and the registration form. If you can, I’d recommend taking advantage of the Holiday Rate available through the end of the year (that’s next Monday!). We don’t know how quickly it’ll sell out, but space is somewhat limited, so please do register sooner than later.

If you have any questions, feel free to email me, tweet me, message me, or call me (if you’re privy to my number, that is).

All registration will happen through the conference’s site (here’s that link again), but we’ve also created a Facebook event page to help us (and you) spread the word. Please join us!

1. Carpooling in Mexico
Alejandro Cartagena is a Dominican-born photographer who lives in Monterrey, Mexico. His recent project features overhead photos from an overpass of workers riding in flatbed pickup trucks in Mexico. I first heard about it via the New York Times Lens blog, which provides some background info, but I actually prefer viewing the project on his site, where the photos lie side by side.

2. Os Guinness interview
Skye Jethani (senior editor of Leadership Journal, author of With) and Phil Vischer (creator of VeggieTales) have started a new podcast. The fact that their most recent episode features a nearly hour-long conversation with Os Guinness caught my attention. They discuss topics like evangelicalism, the Religious Right, and pluralism in society. I’d love to see Os’s face when Phil sings his impromptu opening and closing songs.

3. Who’s who among development bloggers
Aaron Ausland, a great international development blogger in his own right, has a new “who’s who” list of bloggers in the genre. If you’re really interested in digging in and becoming conversant with some great thinkers and practitioners in the field of development, follow Aaron’s blog and the others on his list.

4. Toward better short-term mission trips
In last week’s Repaso, I included the first two parts of Darren Carlson’s series on the benefits and drawbacks of short-term mission trips. Here’s part three, suggesting a better way to approach the phenomenon.

5. Richard Twiss on a theology of place
Richard Twiss, a Native leader really worth listening to, was a recent guest speaker at Antioch Church in Bend, Oregon. The full video of that message is here. If you have a shorter attention span, at least check out this four-minute clip about the importance of developing a theology of place:

Repaso is intended as a thought-provoking compilation of news and commentary from the past week related to the intersections of faith, development, justice and peace. As always, I welcome your thoughts on any of the links and ideas in this roundup!

[Photo credit: alejandrocartagena.com]

I’d hoped to live-tweet The Justice Conference in Portland last weekend with quotes from speakers throughout the two days, but spotty phone coverage served to sort of nix that plan. I did take notes in my trusty Moleskine, however, so belatedly, and in lieu of a barrage of tweets all day Friday and Saturday, here are some quotes (admittedly paraphrased at times) from the different speakers, an all-around top notch bunch.

This could get longer than usual, so I’ll omit notes from breakout sessions, and just include those from the main sessions I attended: Ken Wytsma, Miroslav Volf, Walter Brueggemann, Richard Twiss, John Perkins, Stephan Bauman and Francis Chan. For some speakers (Rick McKinley, Maddy DeLone, Shane Claiborne & Ben Cohen), I just listened without taking notes, and I missed hearing Rachel Lloyd while meeting a friend for coffee, so nothing from her either.

Please feel free to weigh in with any thoughts on what different speakers had to say. It’s a lot of good stuff, some of which could be controversial, but all of it is worth pondering, I think. Also, I want to mention that all the photos in this post are from The Justice Conference’s Friday and Saturday albums on Facebook.

1. KEN WYTSMA - founder of The Justice Conference, pastor of Antioch Church, and president of Kilns College.

- You are 4,000 people who believe it’s better to give than receive.
- It’s a bit crazy to be spending a weekend being told to die to self.
- We don’t worship the word justice, but it’s a helpful, important word
- Truth is what IS; justice is what OUGHT TO BE; both are uncompromising.
- Justice is a theological necessity – why do we have such a hard time with it?
- The way we’ve come to understand the biblical word “righteousness” – purity, morality, personal piety.
- Those who thought they were okay because they’ve majored on purity, morality and personal piety, but have neglected the REAL MAJORS are NOT righteous, according to the Bible.
- When you push against the powers-that-be, they push back – “blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ [justice’s] sake.”
- “The just will live by faith.”
- Where am I missing the story because of my presuppositions?
- Many of us grew up hearing the David story in the Bible as a morality story; it’s a JUSTICE story.
- Bonhoeffer: “Being a Christian is less about avoiding sin than about courageously and actively doing God’s will.”
- Justice is deep, broad, necessary – we need a humble posture.
- Justice both surfaces the need for, and is made complete by, grace.

2. MIROSLAV VOLF - a theology professor at Yale, director of the Center for Faith and Culture, and the author of books like A Public Faith (which I plan to blog about soon).

- In the story of Job, how is it that one can do justice, but then experience injustice? Who was unjust?
- Job discovers God as an incomprehensible One.
- We need justice, but we need more: we need a God of mercy and gratuity, who can hold us when the world has abandoned us, or has turned against us.
- Topic tonight: respect & honor of others.
- We live in an inter-connected, inter-related world – if religions are violent, what are we to do about it?
- Is violence the bastardization of religion? (Crusades, Jihad, etc.)
- Authentic Christian faith indeed serves others, but we have seen that violence has been done in the name of Christianity.
- “Honor everyone.” (I Peter 2:17)
- Honor is even stronger than respect.
- Honor. Period. Not conditional on how you’re treated.
- It’s easy to internalize the violence done to us.
- Most of us want to be more than tolerated, though in some places, mere toleration would be an improvement.
- Christians are called to more than tolerance – honor and respect those made in the image of God.
- Respect others’ integrity and help others develop their potential, even if they may end up becoming your enemy.
- Speaking the truth is also part of honoring – and being willing to hear the truth from the other.
- Honor without conditions – don’t just tolerate, but honor by speaking the truth in love.
- The reach of God’s love is the scope of our respect.
- Honor EVERYONE.
- Everyone who loves separates the doer from the deed.
- Can we respect not just the person, but even the opinions, conclusions or convictions or someone with whom we disagree?
- In other faiths, can we respect not just the adherence of other faiths, but even in some sense the faiths themselves? Can we find in them something that may be true, despite our deep differences?

3. WALTER BRUEGGEMANN - renowned Old Testament scholar and author of about a million books and articles, including Journey to the Common Good (my thoughts on it here). He was interviewed on stage by World Relief’s Don Golden.

- Turning the world upside down is what I sense among us.
- Hosea 2 has a lot to teach us about what justice is.
- Five words that describe fidelity and risky/costly relationship: steadfast love, righteousness, justice, mercy and compassion.
- All five should characterize our relationship with God, and we know they are how he relates to us – when they’re in place, we experience shalom, or wholeness.
- Baal is a false god representing bad religion, but also represents bad politics and bad economics.
- Steadfast love: tenacity to stick with it, no matter what.
- Righteousness: has to do with shalom of the community.
- Justice: everything necessary for good living.
- Compassion: being with others in their hardship.
- Mercy: complete self-giving.
- These five words provide a kaleidoscope of fidelity, which touches religion, economics and politics.
- Everything depends on loyalty to God and neighbors.
- Bad religion/economics/politics says loyalty to God and neighbor isn’t really necessary – the biblical prophets called that a lie.
- “Go tell John” – that everywhere Jesus goes, the world is changed and justice is done – that’s what happens when fidelity in relationship takes root.
- “Justice and righteousness” is a key slogan of the prophets.
- The coming of the Kingdom is about relationships with all kinds of economic, political and social ramifications.
- The staying power of justice requires that our guts are stirred, realizing this isn’t right, it can’t be sustained, and it must be changed.
- Television ads are designed to make us numb because numb people are compliant consumers.
- In Hosea, we see God held nothing back in relationship and we see how scandalous it is that he loves us.
- We sometimes understand righteousness as avoiding messes – but we need to be there.
- Jesus intentionally and publicly chose his natural companionship among those disinherited by the power structure – justice requires casting our lot with them.
- Walk and talk are both essential – justice walkers need justice talkers, but walking is most important.
- “Those who wait on the Lord” (Isaiah 40:31) – promises us certain things, but we can see that those who DON’T wait on the Lord can’t expect these things.
- Is there one program or party that can best serve the cause of justice? No.
- Go in the mode you can (whether through the state, private sector, nonprofit, etc.) and do the most you can for the neighborhood – injustice is rampant and we need all kinds of approaches to do justice.
- The vulnerable need to be on the screen of theologians, economists and politicians.
- Eucharist (holy communion) is the pivot point of God’s generosity to his people – God gives God’s self, along with mandate to give yourself away for the neighborhood.
- When you give yourself away you get yourself back, enhanced. It’s a miracle, but it’s the truth.

4. RICHARD TWISS - president of Wiconi International and author of One Church, Many Tribes (my thoughts here).

- As Native Christians, “We’re trying to rescue theology from the cowboys.”
- God brings life through the soil, in community and relational context.
- To the victor goes the spoils of re-writing history.
- Europeans believed land was worthless if not developed.
- Doctrine of discovery: if inhabitants didn’t belong to a recognized kingdom or nation, Europeans  decided they could put a cross on it, claim it and establish it as their own.
- The Bible became an instrument of injustice, instead of a message of freedom and liberation.
- “Kill the Indian, save the man” – boarding schools were established to strip children of their “Indian problem.”
- God put Indians here to be stewards of the land, keepers of the land, who were willing to share – but Europeans took it and used it how we wanted, because we don’t even know they’re here.
- How can non-Natives join hands with the Native people, believing we need each other?
- When was the last time you read a theology book by a Native person or heard a Native speaker at a conference (other than me)? Do you believe Native people are equal members of the church?
- We’re establishing the North American Institute for Indigenous Theological Studies (NAIITS) in conjunction with George Fox Evangelical Seminary to train Native pastors and leaders.
- My prayer is that you’d no longer see Native people as the mission field, but as co-equal partners in pursuing shalom together.

5. JOHN PERKINS - was a leader in the civil rights movement, is the grandfather of Christian community development, and has been a big hero of mine (evidenced here and here, for example). He was interviewed on stage by Dr. Paul Louis Metzger.

- The gospel itself is an explanation of God’s justice – the good news that redemption has been worked out.
- To have a gospel without justice is to have no gospel at all.
- The basis for justice starts with Creation and Psalm 24.
- It’s a big theological problem when we leave justice out of it.
- Our language too often contributes to racism & bigotry – we’ve got to learn a new language and a new way to sing songs.
- You folks are part of the possibility of revival in our day.
- Discipleship is an urgent social issue – needs to happen among neglected urban people.
- It’s difficult for those who’ve benefited from colonization to identify with the poor and vulnerable (referring to the importance of listening to and learning from Richard Twiss and other Native Americans).
- What is grace? God taking the initiative to make us his workmanship.
- Grace is taking all the redemptive biblical thought and bringing it all together.
- Tremendous discipleship problem: helping people understand the gospel and the need to plant churches where real discipleship will take place.
- Church planting and finding/joining with existing churches are both worth pursuing.
- Discipleship happens when you’re near people and able to nurture them.

6. STEPHAN BAUMAN - president of World Relief and quite the poet. I like him a lot, but during this session I didn’t take as many notes as I should have. Here’s the little I have of his interview with Lynne Hybels.

- Injustice wears skin; it’s personal.
- We so easily forget injustice is embodied in human flesh.
- Miroslav Volf: “The demands of justice and the extravagance of love meet on a wooden tree.”
- In reference to one of his poems about those he has met in the Congo: a lament is a consolation and a protest against suffering.
- Flannery O’Connor: “The truth doesn’t change according to our ability to stomach it.”

7. FRANCIS CHAN - former pastor in southern California and author of Crazy Love and Forgotten God. I copied some of these quotes/concepts from Katie‘s notes, as my brain was too fried by that point to take any more notes of my own.

- I said a lot of stuff, and people challenged me on it, so I was quiet for a while. I’m done being quiet.
- True religion, according to James, is to care for orphans and widows.
- Some parts of the Bible are hard to understand, but a lot of it is straightforward – we just don’t want to live that way.
- A lot of people in our churches live lives that don’t make sense biblically.
- Do we get this? Our life is so brief, then comes forever.
- Get rid of stuff, and pursue justice.
- Jesus will come in all his glory and will gather all the nations before him – live in light of that.


Which of these thoughts jumped out at you? If you were at the conference, what were your big take-aways?

[Photo credits: The Justice Conference via Facebook]

A couple of weeks ago I read One Church, Many Tribes (Regal) by Richard Twiss, a member of the Rosebud Lakota/Sioux tribe and the head of Wiconi International. Through Wiconi, Twiss serves Native groups through education and practical help to improve their quality of life and build relationships that point the way to a hope-filled future for those who have not previously been given much reason to hope. Twiss and his wife started Wiconi with one seemingly simple concept in mind: “You can be Native and a follower of Jesus.”

That may not seem very groundbreaking, but for many it is, since the relationship between Christianity and Native peoples here in North America has never been a particularly good one. Pastor and author Mark Buchanan writes about the arrival of the “people of the Black Book” in what is now Vancouver, British Columbia:

The Tswassens have a prophecy 500 years old. One of their ancient holy men foretold that a people pale as birch would one day come from across the great water in large canoes. They would bring with them a Black Book. The Black Book was Truth, end to end, a gift of inestimable good. The people lived for many years awaiting the prophecy’s fulfillment.

And then one day it happened. The big canoes— bigger than the Tswassens ever imagined—arrived. They teemed with people pale as birch. And, yes, they brought with them a Black Book.

Then the killings started. The Tswassens became an obstacle to the pale men, and the pale men slaughtered them, and those they didn’t slaughter they enslaved.

Given this history, and compared with the justified indignation that saturates the pages of classic accounts like Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, Twiss’s book is surprisingly hopeful and gracious. He doesn’t skirt around history’s ugliness, but he doesn’t stop there either. He wants to show Native Americans and the rest of us that Native culture isn’t antithetical to following Jesus; rather, the Gospel can be incarnated in Native forms just as easily — and perhaps even more so — than it has been in Western culture. Native Christians don’t need to follow our cultural customs when it comes to church and worship, in other words; instead, they may be better off without them.

But he isn’t out to sow resentment. Instead, he shows how the Gospel is what will bring true reconciliation between us and God, and between Native and non-Native groups. He even suggests that the testimony of Native Christians can be used in powerful ways around the world among others who have also been victims of terrible injustices. In his conclusion he writes:

If we, as Native followers of Jesus, are to emerge from our pain and absence to find our place in the Body of Christ, we need the love and help of all our brethren. Can we be seen as equal partners by the rest of the Body of Christ? Will we be allowed to develop new ways of doing church that honor God’s purposes for the creative expression of our cultures? Will new ministry partnerships and coalitions form? Will you help be a part of this wonderful process of reconciliation, restoration and release?

Twiss is among those I’m most excited to hear speak at The Justice Conference later this month. Here’s a video introducing his topic.

[Photo credit: Rachel Fortney]