Sunday, November 16, 2008

christmas presence

Back in July I posted about a documentary I watched called What Would Jesus Buy? I was inspired to try an alternative approach to the Christmas season and promised that I'd post again when I had come up with that approach. Well, I found my answer! The following is the letter I sent to my family and friends on November 1st:

Seasons greetings!

As you may remember from last year I have started to change my approach in the celebration of Christmas! In order to do so, I must compete with all the holiday marketers who will begin to fill our television sets and radio stations with reminders of the coming Advent as soon as we put away our Halloween costumes!

This year I watched a hilarious and moving documentary called What Would Jesus Buy? about an activist group called “The Church of Stop Shopping!” that toured the country during the Christmas season and spread the message about the “Shopacalypse”: the mass commercialization of Christmas. The movie challenged me and other viewers to examine: why we buy so much, where we buy, and how we buy in an effort to identify what we can do to transform our habits and communities…not just during Christmas, but year round.

The movie also asked a fascinating question. What would Jesus buy? A Nintendo DS for the disciples? A spa day for Mary Magdalene? A new GPS system for Joseph and Mary? Economists predict that the average American will spend $801 this season, which ends up at a national total of about $241 billion. Something tells me that our friend Jesus Christ (the birthday boy) wouldn’t choose to spend that $241 billion at Amazon.com. So for as much as I love waking up to a tree bearing beautifully wrapped surprises with my name on them I had to ask myself: Is there a way to celebrate the birth and life of Jesus Christ without also celebrating material excess? Can I still retain the tradition of gift giving without also endorsing sweatshops, wasted packaging, and holiday debt? Yes!

Christmas Presence 2008


I approached the pastor at my church and told her that I was interested in creating a service project on Christmas Day to fill a need in the community and provide an alternative way to honor Jesus Christ’s life on the holiday. We discussed the large number of members of our congregation who end up spending the day alone because they are far away from family or simply do not have loved ones with which to celebrate. For them, Christmas is a dreaded and lonely holiday, not full of the joy and excitement I have been lucky to experience throughout my life.

So I devised my response: Christmas Presence, a community celebration to take place in the church basement that focuses on the gifts of fellowship and sharing and provides a place for people to gather and celebrate the joyous day with their extended church family. The benefit of Christmas Presence is twofold: it provides a celebration on Christmas Day for those who otherwise would be alone and also allows for an alternative to the usual fare of wrapping paper and batteries not included.

But Christmas Presence cannot happen without you! On this Christmas, I respectfully request that you not give me a traditional gift. I am a lucky girl and nothing I need can be bought at a store! (Unless you know of somewhere selling The Perfect Man. Because I’ve been looking for him everywhere and he seems sold out.)

If you planned on giving me a gift this year, the best present you could give me is a donation of $20 to Lake View Presbyterian Church designated for the Christmas Presence program. With your donation, I will be able to fund my Christmas Day service project and help to bring joy to the community and honor the life of Jesus Christ in a unique way. Money raised in excess of the program costs will be donated to Unitus, a non-profit that works to reduce global poverty through microfinance services, empowering millions of people throughout the working world. You are also warmly invited to participate in Christmas Presence.


You are invited to
CHRISTMAS PRESENCE

“No presents, just your presence!”

A holiday celebration for our extended Lake View Presbyterian Church family

Christmas Day 2008
4 pm to 7 pm

The purpose of the “Christmas Presence” event is to provide an alternative celebration for the Lake View Presbyterian Church community that focuses on the gifts of fellowship and sharing.

The idea behind this event is to approach giving presents in new and alternative ways. People attending the event can choose to give of their time or talents or provide the present of their presence; because the greatest gift one can give is companionship and love. The event provides a place for those otherwise alone or away from family on Christmas to engage in celebration with their “extended” family. It also provides people with a different way to honor the birth of Jesus Christ, with friendship and love instead of wrapping paper and shopping lists! Members can choose how they enjoy the event, but not pressured to do anything but show up and celebrate!

The church basement will be set up with different stations, where people can choose how they want to celebrate and spend time together. The stations will provide different opportunities for people to give “presents” in alternative ways. Stations include:

1. “Joy To The World” Music Station
Live holiday music provided by church members giving the gift of their artistic talent

2. “Deck the Halls” Christmas Card Station
People are encouraged to make cards for an unexpected recipient, the mailman, their favorite pizza delivery guy, or the new neighbor, to give some surprise holiday cheer. Paper, stamps, art supplies and markers will be provided

3. “Visions of Sugarplums” Cookie Decorating Station
Kids of all ages can decorate holiday sugar cookies. Cookies, sprinkles, frosting, and fun will be provided

4. “Prince of Peace” Letter Writing Station
In the spirit of peace, people are encouraged to write a letter to a soldier away from home, a political prisoner, or a lawmaker influencing foreign policy. Sample letters, addresses, stamps, and envelopes will be provided

5. “The Little Matchstick Girl” Community Art Project Station
Church members will donate t-shirts before the event and during the evening participants can decorate t-shirt patches that will be sewn together after the event to make a t-shirt quilt. The quilt will be a collective gift that will be donated to a local shelter.

Christmas dinner will be served.

The event will include holiday refreshments, games, carols, fellowship, and more!

If you are reading my blog and would like to get involved with Christmas Presence, then please email me at rachaelkay@gmail.com!

*Graphic design donated by Nate Stoner*

Friday, October 24, 2008

god's politics

I am a Christian that finds it offensive when other people of faith cite abortion, gay marriage, stem cell research, etc. as the top issues influencing their vote and compelling their political participation.

I am further offended and disgusted when Christians fight fiercely and unapologetically to keep their money at the expense of the suffering world. They hide behind economics and the convenience of a capitalist society, endorsing a system of global oppression. While discussing politics with a group of conservative Christian men last month I stated that America has 5% of the world's people yet is gobbling up at least 25% of its resources. These churchgoing men essentially said it was America's manifest destiny and that we are not responsible for fixing the world's problems. (Except for Iraq's, apparently...)

Why is it disgusting/wrong/sinful/dangerous for two men or two women who have loving, supportive, committed relationships to be legally married?
-BUT-
Completely acceptable for a single mother with three children to labor twelve to sixteen hours in a factory seven days a week for pennies an hour?

Some Christians I know would picket gay marriage but still shop at the Gap without a thought.

Christian or not, the real issues facing our country and the world today are not your stereotypical right wing fare of guns, gays, and fetuses. How about environmental destruction? Genocide? Civil war? AIDS? Poverty?

I have a love/hate relationship with the Bible. I believe there is truth in its pages but am not a literalist. When I last read it through I remember feeling a lot of frustration with some of the strong statements that can be found in the famous verses of Leviticus or the offputting rants of Paul. But, while the much cited references to "fornication" and "sodomy" certainly exist, they are trumped a thousand times over by the real theme of the Bible: justice, compassion, and generosity for the poor, downtrodden, ailing, and needy. While a verse about something like sodomy (gasp!) rarely pops up- any reader will find herself constantly tripping over references to the widows, the orphans, the outsiders, the oppressed, the forgotten, the desperate. The worst and most reviled villains of the Old Testament were the ones who cheated and stepped on their people in the pursuit of power and money. (Does this become less wrong in a free market economy?)

Interestingly, the sexual indiscretions of many famous biblical characters were largely spared the rebuke of the writers. Rahab, the prostitute, housed and protected Joshua's men when they were spying on Jericho shortly before overthrowing it. (A whole section of the Bible I take great issue with. George W must love the foolhardy Joshua.) But no one took Rahab aside and counseled her about her eternal damnation. She is, in fact, an ancestor of Jesus. Why aren't more right wing fundamentalists down on Rahab? Is it the whole Jamie Lynn Spears/Bristol Palin conundrum? Bristol Palin's on the holy rolling side, so she is spared the nasty and brutal right wing media attacks that her unmarried pregnant teen predecessor Jamie Lynn received only a few months before her? And Jesus didn't scream at Mary Magdalene and tell her she was going to burn in Hell for being a prostitute either.

Many Christians today ignore their own supposed biblical "history." The pages of the Bible are filled with stories of supposed religious zealots selling out their faith for greed and wealth, and ignoring the exploited and oppressed. The psalms are full of the laments of the abused and the disenfranchised, trying to make sense of their cruel fate. If Jesus Christ were a real dude today, would he give a shit about gay marriage? Do you think he would spit on a little girl who got raped and chose to have an abortion?

I think he would hold her hand while she had it.

Thankfully, I know many Christians and non-Christians who believe their faiths and/or ethics compel them to fight for social and environmental justice and strive for real peace and equity for others, bucking today's consumer culture and the purported virtuosity of capitalism.

Please check out Jim Wallis' blog on Sojourners. He writes about his priorities this election from a faith perspective and fully captures the issues that motivate me as a Christian and a global citizen.

Love your neighbor; Vote Obama; Read this!

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

holy war

"Pray our military men and women who are striving to do what is right also for this country — that our national leaders are sending them out on a task that is from God...that's what we have to make sure that we're praying for, that there is a plan and that plan is God's plan."
-Sarah Palin

After a law school induced blogging silence, I felt this was definitely post-worthy.

Oh, and utter bullshit.