JR. Forasteros - April 12, 2015

Plenty of Mushrooms

Go There!

We live in a world of scarcity, where we’re convinced there’s not enough to go around. But God created a very good world, one that was not a zero-sum universe. In the wake of Pentecost, we see the early church living into this abundant creation by selling everything and living in common. How can their radical example challenge us to live in abundance today? What does a radically generous church look like?

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When you hear the word ‘diversity’, what comes to mind? Maybe you think of diversity as a noble goal, something to be pursued. Maybe you roll your eyes, hearing a trendy buzzword. Or maybe you’re on the other side – you’ve heard ‘diversity’ trumpeted for so long without any real change that it just makes you cringe.

I’m somewhere in the middle of all that. I can’t stand the folks who use it as a buzzword – especially when it’s a marketing ploy that doesn’t translate into real diversity. 

But what, exactly, is good diversity? 

For the last several years, anytime I think about diversity, I think about Derek Black. 

You might have heard his story before (I love to tell it). Derek is the son of some of the most prominent white supremacists in the country. His godfather is David Duke, the former grand wizard of the KKK. He started a blog to indoctrinate kids with white nationalist values. And at 19 years old, he was hailed as the leading light of the next generation of white nationalism. 

But Derek was worried he might be in an echochamber, so he decided to go to college at the most liberal school in his state. 

The story of what happened to Derek at college is the story of why he has renounced white nationalism and works today to bring others out of the movement. And the key to Derek’s transformation was his movement out of homogeneity into diversity. 

In other words, diversity is good not because it’s trendy but because diversity teaches us how to see the image of God in people who are not like us. Diversity teaches us to love our neighbors as ourselves.

God created us to be diverse, and to love diversity.

Join us Sunday as we explore how we can love diversity even in a pandemic.

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