Wednesday, December 1, 2010

the way of love by john fischer

Here an article my homeboy Cody passed my way. Thanks Cody, it's a good word.

The Way of Love
by John Fischer

"The poverty of being unwanted, unloved and uncared for is the greatest poverty. We must start in our own homes to remedy this kind of poverty." - Mother Teresa

In her thoughts on homelessness yesterday, Marti brought up something we would do well to spend more time discussing. It's this idea that homelessness may be closer than we think. Not so much that anyone of us could find ourselves homeless given the right set of circumstances, but that there is a type of homelessness that goes on even in the most secure of homes - a kind of absence of love that leaves family members fragmented and alone. Homelessness is having no one there to love you in your own home.

So disheartened are we who do not know every neighbor on the street much less their stories. When did our God-given consciousness no longer recognize our neighbor as our responsibility? When did we stop caring? Was it during the time we stopped treasuring our families with warmhearted concern and started arguing with each other until we dissolved into faceless fragments of our own isolation?

This has been one of the glaring inconsistencies in evangelical Christianity for some time. Everything revolves around evangelism and yet our homes are falling apart from the inside. So much focus on "outreach;" so little "inreach." You can't love "out" if you can't love "in."

"By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another." (John 13:35) Inner love stimulates an outer revelation. As Mother Teresa admonished us, let's start addressing the poverty a world away by remedying the poverty in our own homes.

No comments:

Post a Comment