Posts Tagged ‘conspire magazine’

the simple way: a glance back

this is a newsletter sent out by shane claiborne in the fall of 2009 just to give you a glimpse of some of the exciting stories that are associated with this place we are privileged to live in and this family we are a new part of…

Family, Friends, & Partners

Let me start with the bad news . . . A few days ago, another young man was shot and killed on our block, on the corner of H and Westmoreland. He was in his twenties, walking home around midnight. It was the 248th homicide this year in Philadelphia, nearly one kid killing another kid per day.

Now for some good news. This year something extraordinary happened here in the City of Love. The faith community came together in an unprecedented way – the historic black church alongside the Mennonites, Quakers along with Catholics, mainliners, and evangelicals… the Church came together to call for an end to the violence on our streets. It started with the realization that we have over 900 gun shops in Philadelphia. Over 900! (There just aren’t that many deer in Philly.)

Out of the 900+ gun shops, there were a few that stood out as particularly notorious for selling guns which were later used in violent crimes, shops like Colosimo’s Gun Store in downtown Philly. After much prayer and preparation, a delegation of religious leaders approached the gun shop owner, Mr. Colosimo, with a request for him to sign a 10-point code of ethics, a covenant to sell guns in a way that would decrease violence (that even Wal-Mart has signed). Before long, it became clear that Mr. Colosimo would not sign the covenant, and a few things happened. Weekly prayer vigils began outside of his store, which culminated in a Good Friday service. Outside the gun shop, we remembered the suffering of our Lover Jesus, and recalled the stages of his execution. We listened to the Gospels speak of the women at the cross as they wept over Jesus’ bloody corpse. Then we heard stories of mothers who had lost their kids to gun violence, like one mom who told about how her Harvard-bound boy was shot down outside a movie theater in a random act of violence. And finally, we were reminded by some good Gospel preachers … that it was Friday… but Sunday is coming. The Great Story ends with resurrection and an empty tomb.

Another thing happened at Colosimo’s gun shop. As Mr. Colosimo refused to sign the covenant, a group of clergy and religious leaders who remained inside his gun shop in prayerful vigil were soon arrested, charged with such things as defiant trespassing and conspiracy. This is where it gets good. They went on trial and it was everything you would hope for in a trial. Hundreds of folks packed out the courtroom. Some teachers even brought their kids on a field trip so they could see justice at work. And they did. The defendants had a female African-American judge who allowed them to present an argument of justification… that they were justified in breaking a law in order to prevent greater harm. What happened was phenomenal. The judge found all the defendants not guilty on every charge; and basically, what happened was the gun shop was put on trial. In the ensuing months charges were brought against Colosimo, who pled guilty and his gun shop was closed down.

In the end we are people who believe, not in punitive justice, but in restorative justice. We don’t want Mr. Colosimo to waste away in a prison cell, but we would like to make sure he doesn’t sell any more guns… and we would love to see his heart stirred and transformed by God, as he could become a major player for good, like ole Saul of Tarsus… or any of us for that matter. The story is not over. That was just one gun shop. There are still over 900 left.

What we learned through it all is the power of the Church working with the Spirit of God. We are reminded that we can do more together than we can do on our own – it is the story of communities and movements. This is the same work you have been supporting here at The Simple Way, some of you for over a decade now. We are not just closing down gun shops, we are launching new projects of hope.

After all, for too long we Christians have been known more for what we hate than for what we love, for what we are against than what we are for. So we will keep rolling with the gun shop stuff, but we will also continue building alternatives to the things wrong in our world.

This year you have helped birth all sorts of goodness. 2009 marks the birth of Conspire Magazine, which is creating all sorts of holy mischief. This year, we worked with Eastern University to create our first scholarships for kids here in Kensington. We had neighborhood field trips to the zoo, the beach, and Taco Bell. This year we saw over 400 kids get school supplies in the best Labor Day block party we’ve ever had (we had a bubble machine, a magician, about 20 drummers and African dancers, all sorts of festivities… and not a single fight). Hundreds of folks have gotten food and clothing this year in Kensington thanks to your support. We were able to purchase the heroine house on our block along with 2 other houses that belonged to an absentee landlord (which are now being restored!). A few weeks ago we broke ground on the neighborhood green space, which will have a playground for the kiddos and an area for families to hang out – all on the land where the fire burnt everything down 2 years ago. Thanks to your support we get to bear witness to the power of resurrection – a God who is restoring broken hearts, broken neighborhoods, and a broken world.

It doesn’t stop. TSW is helping create a prayer book this year that will weave together songs, prayers and liturgy to help the Church and our communities pray together. We have a new director of all things local, Coz Crosscombe, who is an incredible gift, and we just moved in half a dozen new young folks to join the fun here on the block. In the works is a partnership with Timeteo (http://timoteofootball.com/home.aspx), the flag football league and mentoring outreach, one of the most redemptive things going on here in Philly for young men, to create new futures and possibilities. Over the next few months we hope to launch our plans for an Apprenticeship House that will start next fall. In a few weeks we will share toys with hundreds of families here; but more than presents, we want to give presence, a steadfast love for neighbors and God here in one of the abandoned corners of the empire. Pray for us as we continue to build our little village… and know that you are loved and appreciated. As you send us gifts and checks, we don’t mail you prayer cloths and anointing oils… but we do think of you often with big smiles and prayers of gratitude. You are loved.

the Wild Goose part overall

so… wow! playing a theatresports game of word-at-a-time story with shane claiborne [a flippin good one involving an armadillo and a reconciliation within the neighborhood] in the van on the way home from the wild goose festival brought home how surreal this whole adventure is – i don’t put him on a pedestal or anything as he is just a man, but this is the guy who wrote the book that changed my life, inspired me to seek out community and continued to fuel my struggle with the acts 2.42 picture of church and what we see today in that weekly meeting’d thing we attend.

but ja, a couple of blogs are not going to do much justice or come close to explaining clearly my and our experiences at the wild goose festival but hopefully i can give out some tastes at least. this is the first time the wild goose festival has taken place and i strongly imagine it will happen again next year [at worst the year after] and become a regular thing on the calendar and i imagine it will grow pretty huge. not sure of numbers this year but i would say 2000 is a rough idea of how many people were there – the camping spots were so spread out and there is always so much on the go that it’s really hard to estimate because you never have everyone together in one spot at the same time but hearing the numbers as people were registering i imagine it was somewhere there.

okay so quite a big bunch of us headed out from the simple way – the five village people [me, tbV, A-Ron, E-beth and Erica] as well as Shane and Katie-Jo and Darin and his family and Didi and family and Janelle [from the office] and then our master chef Taehu [spelling?] who is a Korean American and amazing servant and food-producer and a bunch of his friends from different places, oh and also Kassim and Mike, two young guys from the neighborhood and then we met up with A-Ron’s kids [Ocean, Cana and Silome] and so we were quite a big group with a communal kitchen area that kept growing as we invited new friends in [really saw community working in the fest which was one of my highlights] to eat and vibe with us.

so basically the programme was a bunch of talks and bands and workshops and small group discussions happening all at the same time [5 to 8 at a time usually] and a very difficult-to-understand programme or schedule [but pronounced shedule] to try and follow to try and get to what you want to see/hear/be a part of… i probly could have used another week or so to go and attend all the sessions i wanted to but i did get to experience a lot of good and interesting and challenging and some perturbing stuff, but glad about everything i participated in i think, even the stuff that i was really not sure about

shane’s talk was probably my favourite, even though a lot of it was stories from ‘the irresistible revolution’ which i’ve already read but he did an exercise where we handed out blue pieces of material as scarves to a bunch of people in the crowd and we got people to hold them high to symbolise that we are under the same blue sky as a bunch of afghanistan children shane is in relationship with and so we video’d that and will send it along [same thing happened at papa fest] and that felt really significant and moving and just his message of Jesus and love and serving the pool stood out from a lot of the other discussion i heard or participated in. our new friend matt pritchard did a great workshop vibe in living in community together [some of the pitfalls most communities fall into] which was also a highlight and then one or two of the bands we saw…

as part of the village house we had to work shifts at the simple way booth handing out free copies of the latest issue of Conspire magazine [which a lot of the [people speaking at wild goose had contributed to] and selling subsccriptions and shane’s books and dvd’s and that was an incredible way to meet people and many of our new friends joined us in the booth helping us chat about the stuff with people as they got interested… one of the highlights was definitely new friends and especially new friends in community or trying to practically figure out what living intentionally in community looks like…

lowlights were three ticks, two of which were in places i cannot post pics about and so definitely not so amped about that – survived two full days ticks free while everyone else was getting mauled [think tbV survived tick-free] and then BOOM, too close… it was pretty heck-youknow…

so yes, overall an incredible experience and hoping we’ll be around next year for the second one to see how things go – huge room for growth and improvement but i think this is a festival that will provide some great conversations and dialogue on topical and relevant issues and will hopefully provide life change and kingdom growth for years to come…

[for  those who missed it before the wild goose is a celtic symbol for the Holy Spirit]

Brett Fish

Live life better.

Dalene Reyburn

Truth | Courage | Hope

365 Days of Bacon

Every day. Bacon-fied.

The Daily Post

The Art and Craft of Blogging

WordPress.com

WordPress.com is the best place for your personal blog or business site.