'Giving Back' Through Consumption ≠ Transformational Development
“In a culture where giving back through consumption is increasingly popular, and where myriad…
View Post

#dc comics#dc#batman#batfam#bruce wayne#dick grayson#tim drake#batfamily#dc fanart



seen from China
seen from Argentina
seen from Yemen

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Switzerland

seen from Switzerland
seen from United States
seen from Switzerland
seen from Switzerland
seen from Switzerland
seen from Germany
seen from Switzerland
seen from Germany
seen from Switzerland

seen from Australia
seen from Qatar
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from United States
'Giving Back' Through Consumption ≠ Transformational Development
“In a culture where giving back through consumption is increasingly popular, and where myriad…
View Post
World Relief Indonesia featured on Charity.org. Follow the link and read away!
HIV/AIDS in Papua: Longing for Transformation
...reflection from Indonesia Country Director for World Relief, 2/8/13.
I once knew a leper. He was close to me. Apart from his leprosy, he was just like any one of us. A creation made in the image of God. Without touching me, he taught me music, math, and how to laugh at myself. He contracted this dreaded illness when he was a child, at a time when there was no definite cure for it. The stigma of the illness was so great, that his own family was ashamed to tell others. And so his parents kept this dark secret to themselves while they can. The teenage boy did not enjoy what others enjoyed. He was kept inside the house, not brought to big family gatherings or to be "displayed" publicly. He wore clothes that would conceal his open lesions. Even when he was in a crowd, he felt alone. He suffered all this by himself, not understanding what it was. His parents, perhaps not knowing what to do, just pretended to the world that he did not exist. He grew up to be an adult and married and had children and tried to live a normal life. But the world wouldn't let him. He died a lonely man, alone in a room, visited by only a handful.
As I remember this leper and feel his isolation and pain, I remember the people we serve in the highlands of Papua. The ones infected with AIDS. What could they be feeling? Whatever it is, it couldn't be much different from what the leper felt. Alone, isolated, shunned. The stigma against AIDS is so strong, the oppression against people with AIDS so overpowering, that I ask…. What can we do? How can we change all this? This should not happen to people, God's own creatures made after His image and likeness.
This is why I feel so strongly about God's children learning to love those that the world has shunned, ridiculed, thrown away, isolated. I long to see the church in Papua embrace back those who are afflicted with AIDS, to care for the children orphaned and made vulnerable by AIDS, and to make sure that this disease is wiped out of Papua.
I pray that God makes this happen soon. So that no one will have to suffer, and suffer alone.
As I prepare for the 2012 Accord Developing Excellence Forum (where I'll be co-facilitating the WASH Summit), I ran across this video talk that Bryant Myers prepared for the Transformational Development Summit at last year's event (via @tjhoiland). Excellent summary of the development of TD thinking, along with a compelling call to action.