Sunday, December 27, 2009

Merry Christmas and best wishes for a peaceful, holy New Year

Dear friends and family,

Reflecting on the Christmas message of Pope Benedict XVI, I was pleased to hear him specifically mention the “little flock of Christians” who live in Iraq.

At just 3% of the overall population, Christians in Iraq suffer great persecution from fellow Iraqis who see Christianity as a western, foreign religion.

For example, recently, a Christian doctor in Iraq was kidnapped by an unidentified group. For a month, he was tied blindfolded to a pole and unable to use a washroom or take a shower. Finally, he was released to his family after they paid a ransom for him. This is just one example of the kind of treatment Christians are suffering in Iraq.

I would like to join with Pope Benedict and call all Christians to pray for our Iraqi brothers and sisters in the Lord. For we know that Christ, the Savoir of the world, though born in the middle east, sees no boundaries on the Earth that God created.

This fall, International Teams established a new program in Iraq, led by Iraqi-Canadian, Insaf Safou. Impact Iraq is a compassion ministry that cares for refugees and internally displaced people by partnering with home churches, encouraging pastors and Christian workers in existing Iraqi churches, building up marginalized women, and developing income-generating projects for impoverished people.

Please consider helping us as we seek to support and encourage Christians in Iraq. To learn more about Impact Iraq go to http://www.iteams.ca/impact_iraq.php.

May the Savoir of the world, grant you a peaceful, holy New Year.

Blessings,

Neil Ostrander
CEO, International Teams Canada


Saturday, December 19, 2009

Six Advanced Facebook Page Strategies for Nonprofit Organizations

Six Advanced Facebook Page Strategies for Nonprofit Organizations: "

Nonprofits that have been using Facebook for a year or more consistently comment “OK… Facebook is great, but how can we take our Facebook Page strategy to the next level?” Below are six advanced Facebook Page strategies in response to that question:

1) Create Customized Tabs.

Advanced strategies requires advanced tech skills. If you know html and have a good graphic designer, then you can use the Static FBML App to create and completely customize Tabs on Facebook Pages. For example, the “Get Involved!” Tab on the Special Olympics of Northern California Facebook Page and the numerous customized Tabs on the Facebook Page of The Humane Society of the United States were created using the Static FBML App.

If you don’t know html and want customized Tabs for your Facebook Page, then you have two options: 1) Pay for a service like Sprout.com or Involver.com. Neither publish their fees online for customized Tabs which usually means they are too expensive for most nonprofits. It doesn’t hurt to ask for a nonprofit discount though. Many of these new services want exposure and buzz. 2) Hire someone who knows html and Facebook, like myself. My fees start at $300 for a Facebook Page with one cusomized Tab using graphics and content from your website.

2) Create a customized Tab for your default Landing Tab.

When you click on Central Michigan University inside of Facebook it goes to a a customized Tab called Unleash the Power. First impressions are important on social media sites, and this page sends a clear message that CMU gets Facebook and is taking it seriously. Compared to other pages by universities of their size, they are definitely doing much better in terms of number of fans. My guess is that this strong first impression is making a significant difference in building their fan base.

Greenpeace International has also set their default Landing Tab to a customized Tab called Take Action. Definitely a best practice, though the Tab could be improved by adding some images and possibly a video. It’s a good start.

Once you have created a customized Tab for your default Landing Tab, simply go into “Settings” on your Facebook Page and under “Default Landing Tab for Everyone Else” select the Tab you want for your default Landing Tab in the pop-down menu.

3) Integrate Facebook “Share” buttons and/or Fan Box Widgets into your “Donate Now” Page(s) and online petitions.

After someone makes a donation on your website or signs an online petition, how about asking them to “Share” with their friends on Facebook that they donated to your organization or signed your petition? At the very least, prompt donors and signatores to become fans. For example, after someone signs the online petition at Forest Ethics’ Do Not Mail campaign, they are then prompted to become a fan of the campaign on Facebook:



The campaign has almost 7,000 fans… a good indicator that this simple strategy works.I would also suggest that nonprofits add a fan box widget to the Web page that thanks online donors for their contribution.

Another possible strategy is adding “Share” buttons to your “Thanks for Signing/Donating” pages. Ideally, the Share post should say something like “I just donated to [Organization Name]!” and then links to your organization’s Facebook Page. The donor gets thumbs up from friends, and your organization hopefully gets some new fans!



4) Incorporate your Facebook Page into your Thank You emails.

Most nonprofits send immediate thank you emails to online donors and signatores of petitions. Make sure to add a simple “Become a fan of [Organization Name] on Facebook!” into your email.

5) Incorporate your Facebook Page into your mobile campaigns.

Ask your text alert subscribers to fan your Facebook Page, but make sure you link to the mobile version of your Facebook Page, such as: m.facebook.com/nonprofitorgs. Also, on your mobile website, make sure you link to the mobile version of your Facebook Page. See www.nonprofitorgs.mobi as an example. Most nonprofits haven’t even begun to think about mobile tech, but mobile Web usage is on track to hit 1 billion+ users in 2010.

6) Incorporate Facebook Connect into your organization’s blog.

If your organization blogs via WordPress.org, there is a Facebook Connect Plugin for WordPress.org Blogs. Facebook Connect allows individuals to post blog comments via their Facebook login. For those with super duper tech skills, you can customize Facebook Connect in order to add it to your website or blog, where useful. I do not know of any nonprofit currently using Facebook Connect, but Mashable has compiled a list of 10 Great Implementations of Facebook Connect. Ironcially, in 2010 your going to see MySpace on that list. They are fully integrating Facebook Connect into their website which is great news for those nonprofits utilizing MySpace.

For a complete audio and visual demonstration of beginner, intermediate and advanced Facebook strategies for nonprofits, please take the How Nonprofit Organizations Can Successfully Use Facebook Pages and YouTube webinar offered by DIOSA Communications (which is me!).




"

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Psalm 36: 5,6


God's love is meteoric,
      his loyalty astronomic,
   His purpose titanic,
      his verdicts oceanic.
   Yet in his largeness
      nothing gets lost;
   Not a man, not a mouse,
      slips through the cracks.

Reading this made me feel connected.

Monday, December 7, 2009

November 2009 Weather Summary

November 2009 Summary: "A very warm and dry month with the lowest snowfall ever (possibly, maybe?)

November started out with 6 colder than average days, however that changed when the rest of the month (24 days) all came in warmer than average. Overall it was an amazing 3 degrees above average making it the warmest November since 2001. It was also the most above average month since January of 2008.

It was also the driest month since 2001 with only 34.8 mm of precipitation including a dry stretch that lasted 12 days. Almost all of it came in the form of rain as we only recorded a single day with some trace snow (November 27th).

So now the big question: was this the least amount of snow ever in November for the region? Unfortunately, it is not an easy question to answer as it all depends on how you interpret the trace readings of snow you often get at this time of year. A trace amount of snow is when there is less than 0.5 cm but definitely some on the ground. There have been many years with less than 1 cm of snow in November, for instance in 2006 we only had 0.5 cm.

Looking back in the long term records the last time there was 0 cm of snow was back in 1963. However, the daily records show that there were 6 days with trace snow in 1963 and going back further I was never able to find a year with 0 cm of snow and less than 3 days of trace snow. So using that as a criterion we can say that this November had the least amount of snow of November in the recorded history of the region which goes back to 1914.

The total precipitation for the year (819.5 mm) is very close to the average (830.3 mm). So unless we get less than 15 mm or over 350 mm in December, this year will end up in the average range for precipitation.


Summary for November 2009:
Maximum Temperature 18.0 °C
Minimum Temperature -5.0 °C
Average Daily High Temperature 9.3 °C (Long term average 5.9 °C)
Average Daily Low Temperature 0.9 °C (Long term average -1.6 °C)
Total Precipitation 34.8 mm (Long term average 82.3 mm)

(Long term averages based on 1971-2000 data for the Waterloo Wellington Airport)



Friday, November 20, 2009

Genuine Love

I've been reading on Sojourners site a bit and came across this quote ... and I love it!

Genuine Christian love is forged against the anvil of our selfishness and possessiveness. It is important to remember that love is more than a feeling. It is active and transitive. The real test of my loving is not that I feel loving, but that the other person feels loved by me. Love is what I do to create this sense of feeling cared for.

Morton T. Kelsey
From his book, "Companions on the Inner Way"

Friday, November 13, 2009

Media Hype

About this Video

During 13 days, up to May 6, WHO has confirmed that 25 countries are affected by the Swine flu and 31 persons have died from Swine flu. WHO data indicates that about 60 000 persons died from TB during the same period. By a rough comparison with the number of news reports found by Google news search, Hans Rosling calculates a News/Death ratio and issue an alert for a media hype on Swine flu and a neglect of tuberculosis.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Choose your customers, choose your future

Choose your customers, choose your future: "

Marketers rarely think about choosing customers... like a sailor on shore leave, we're not so picky. Huge mistake.

Your customers define what you make, how you make it, where you sell it, what you charge, who you hire and even how you fund your business. If your customer base changes over time but you fail to make changes in the rest of your organization, stress and failure will follow.

Sell to angry cheapskates and your business will reflect that. On the other hand, when you find great customers, they will eagerly co-create with you. They will engage and invent and spread the word.

It takes vision and guts to turn someone down and focus on a different segment, on people who might be more difficult to sell at first, but will lead you where you want to go over time.



"

Sunday, November 8, 2009

I'm here - Jared Redekop

I'm here: "well i made it here safe and sound. funny story though, John, the guy i flew over here with and am living and working with, made friends with an air traffic man for Air Canada. So on our 13 hour flight on Air Canada from Toronto to Japan John and I got to fly first class because John's friend was able to bump us up. it was incredible, such a blessing from God.

I'm living in an apartment that has an amazing view of the city's skyline. I am living with John, Brett and a filipino named Toph. we've split the room into two, the bed room and a multi-purpose room. i would show you some pictures but im having some problems with my camera so when i figure that out i'll put some pictures up. the part of the city i am in doesn't really have any lingering affects from the floods that happened but i heard we might be helping some of those affected soon.

some of my roles have already changed like I have been put in charge of the youth in the church that i thought i would be doing children's ministry. so i guess for a lack of a better word i would be called the youth pastor. the chruch is of about 40 people but still i'm a little nervous. their youth ministries have fallen off recently so i really want to grow their youth again. there is also a day care the church is setting up this coming week from tuesday to friday so i want to help out with that. i will hopefully get involved with more ministries as well.

thanks again for all the prayers, love, and support. May God Bless you"

Jared

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Frank's Five Dollars

Our local “Ride for Refugees” is a great event that empowers many churches to get off the sidelines and become involved, raising funds and increasing awareness for the plight of refugees. http://www.rideforrefugees.com/ At our sixth annual event recently, 1,000 people gathered at Creekside Community Church in Waterloo, Ontario.


Over the course of the day I had several conversations with one of these participants, an honorary team member I’ll call "Frank" who lives on a disability pension that leaves him with next to nothing to spare. At times I was busy talking, making introductions and solving little issues as they arose and, well, Frank was constantly there ... a little in the way, really.


After the riders returned from their time on-the-road, had great food and were on their way, Frank found me one more time and looked at me directly and I saw emotion in his face. He placed a rolled up five dollar bill in my hand and said, "Here, this is for the refugees."


I was thrilled with his “widow’s mite.” Within 10 minutes his donation was matched and doubled! I was no longer annoyed. Rather, I was convicted. Seeing “one of the least of these” helping refugees prompted me to repent and change my attitude. “God looks on the heart.”



Friday, September 4, 2009

Words of Anguish

"Confront me with the truth and I'll shut up,
show me where I've gone off the track.
Honest words never hurt anyone,
but what's the point of all this pious bluster?
You pretend to tell me what's wrong with my life,
but treat my words of anguish as so much hot air.
Are people mere things to you?
Are friends just items of profit and loss?

Job 6:25-27 The Message

I've been thinking about this passage of Job quite a bit recently. From my own journey, to those close to me who go through really tough times. Sometimes our words do "belong to the wind", because we speak from our pain. More difficult to deal with however, is the feeling that our words fall on deaf ears and we become less human for a moment.

I am thankful that Jesus hears me whenever I cry out, he hears my groans as clear expressions of a heavy heart. Yes, he does hear and I know that with certainty. But, if I'm fully honest with myself, I still need a person to look into my eyes as they listen to me, and to acknowledge my feelings. Then my humanity is restored and I can journey on and give myself to others in that same kind of 'human listening'.


Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Hope

Hope is the strongest driving force for a people. Hope which brings about change, which produces new realities, is what opens man's road to freedom. Once hope has taken hold, courage must unite with wisdom. That is the only way of avoiding violence, the only way of maintaining the calm one needs to respond peacefully to offenses.

Oscar Arias Sanchez

excerpted from his 1987 Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

A Few Personal Reflections On Teamwork

Yvonne and I are in our 20th year of service with International Teams. It feels like yesterday we joined Kim Loney for our first trip into Eastern Europe, but as I look back I see many changes over the years.

One of the constants over these years is teamwork. When training new people with IT, I’ve often said that, “Long before teamwork was a management approach and long after the teamwork fad has faded, we at International Teams have been doing team.”

However, as you spend time living life on a team you discover it can be really tough! We know there are various types of teams but what they have in common is, that when it’s working, teamwork increases effectiveness exponentially!

Here is my personal, bottom line for teamwork effectiveness. That is, teamwork is built on trust. Full stop. People who choose to be trustworthy, come together as a team, with a mandate and they work hard together to build, preserve and when necessary, restore trust. That is my personal conviction and my goal, to build trust.

Go and build your team on trust!

Thursday, July 16, 2009

An 'inter-cultural church'

Winnipeg Free Press - ONLINE EDITION

New life for historic West End building

Hundreds of parishioners from diverse cultural backgrounds attend City Church on Maryland Street.

RUTH.BONNEVILLE@FREEPRESS.MB.CAEnlarge Image Enlarge Image icon

Hundreds of parishioners from diverse cultural backgrounds attend City Church on Maryland Street.

Minutes before the morning worship service begins, musicians warm up their instruments, the pastor confers with worship participants and people dressed in their Sunday best chat with their friends in the pews.


This grand old brick church with its dark oak pews, soaring ceilings, and stained-glass windows depicting Bible stories has been a place of worship for more than a century, but what’s going on here on Sunday mornings is very new.


"What we call ourselves is an international, inter-cultural church," explains Tim Nielsen, one of two pastors of City Church, which meets in the former First English Lutheran Church just north of Maryland Street and Ellice Avenue.


"We believe we’re doing what the Scriptures ask us to do, reflecting the heart of God."


In the case of this new West End congregation, reflecting the heart of God means reaching out to new Canadians from countries such as Burma, Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Somalia. Most of the 400 people connected to City Church live within a 20-minutes walk of the former Lutheran church, which closed its doors in 2005 after 100 years of worship.


The language of worship is primarily English, with Nielsen’s sermon projected on a screen mounted on the left side of the building, opposite a showy organ with white and gold-painted pipes. On most Sundays, translators huddled in booths in the cantilevered balcony repeat the message into Chin or Karen, languages of two cultural groups from Burma, and Swahili or French, for the people from the various African countries.


Although the spoken words are mostly in English, the music reflects the cultural diversity of the worshippers. After a congregational song sung in English, Karen, Chin and Swahili, two choirs garbed in traditional dress present traditional Karen and Chin music, and a pair of sisters from Burundi sings a gospel song in their native tongue of Kirundi.


Nielsen says there’s a solid reason for this ethnic smorgasbord: avoiding the trap of equating faith and language which can happen in an ethnically specific congregation.


"When the second-generation Canadians reject their culture and language (then) they don’t reject their faith," explains the American-born Nielsen, a missionary from the Christian Brethren tradition, formerly known as Plymouth Brethren.


Nielsen, 49, and his longtime friend and associate Indiana Cuncgin, 47, began this evangelical Christian congregation last September in co-operation with Grant Memorial Baptist Church. Landlocked at their current location of Waverley and Wilkes, the Baptists wanted to begin a new congregation in Winnipeg’s inner city, the original home of the large suburban congregation of 2,000.


"Our long-term strategy is to plant a church every three to five years," explains leading minister Rev. Tom Castor, who is a resident of the West End.


"We also believe the more healthy churches there are in Winnipeg, the healthier the city."


Since last September, Grant Memorial has been renting the former Lutheran church building for City Church and is in the process of buying it. The congregation has commissioned Nielsen and Cuncgin, who were already working with immigrants, as pastors of the new church, paying them a small stipend. The two pastors who raise the rest of their salaries from friends and family and other churches, work long hours every day of the week to meet the needs of their parishioners as they adjust to life in a new city far from home.


For three months, their daily duties included ferrying parishioners in minivans to and from their jobs at an agricultural manufacturer in Rosenort, one hour south of Winnipeg. Now the employer sends a bus for the several dozen employees connected to City Church.


"We saw it as an opportunity to root them in good employment," explains Nielsen of his former taxi duties.


A refugee from Burma himself who has now lived in Canada for the last 12 years, Cuncgin understands the challenges of adapting to a new culture and country and spends much of his time translating for other new immigrants as they attempt to navigate Canadian medical and legal systems.


"It’s totally different (here)," says Cuncgin, whose is nicknamed after the movie character Indiana Jones for his exploits in engineering the release of 100 Burmese citizens from a Thai jail.


"We’re totally different. We’re in culture shock."


Before his work at City Church, Cuncgin held worship services for members of the Chin community in his home, and has organized a national network of Chin people in Canada, which meets annually.


He says Chin and Karen ethnic groups are persecuted in Burma, which has been under dictatorship since 1964.


Cuncgin and Nielsen agree the most important aspect of their work in the new congregation is treating people with respect and dignity. Nearly all the immigrants have come to Canada within the last two years, and many were teachers or doctors in their homeland.


"They taught us we are equals, which we very much appreciate," says Cuncgin, who identifies with the plight of the immigrants he works with. "The City Church treats us like humans."


"Here we have refugees coming from all over the world, and they are in touch with the needs in their countries," adds Nielsen, who is nurturing leaders of different ethnic groups within the congregation.


"We have former doctors, we have principals, we have many people with different professional backgrounds. We can love and respect them."


Although the Lutheran congregation has dispersed, the ministry of City Church to people in the West End has a spiritual connection to what went on before at that location, says Rev. Ted Chell, longtime pastor of First English Lutheran Church.


"It’s rather exciting. I think there’s obviously such a need for a place that can bridge the cultures," he says, adding he is pleased to hear that the building again houses a Christian community.


"That’s a bold effort to bring people together of different languages and cultures."

We Belong to Each Other

Every seventh year you shall grant a remission of debts. And this is the manner of the remission: every creditor shall remit the claim that is held against a neighbor, not exacting it of a neighbor who is a member of the community, because the Lord's remission has been proclaimed.


Deuteronomy 15:1-2


If we have no peace, it is because we have forgotten that we belong to each other.

Mother Teresa


From the Sojourners Blog

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Time to redefine refugees as 'survival migrants'?

Written by: Katie Nguyen

LONDON (AlertNet) - Imagine fleeing your country and having to walk for several days before being able to sneak across the border into a foreign country that views outsiders with hostility.


Now imagine you are seven years old and making the trip alone with no food or water and just the clothes on your back.


Hundreds if not thousands of Zimbabwean minors have done just that in recent years - driven from their homes by chronic food shortages and an economy brought to the brink of collapse by recession and hyper-inflation.


Many have ended up in neighbouring South Africa, where they often face poverty, harassment and xenophobic attacks. But because most are not refugees as defined by a 1951 Convention that applies only to people who have fled violence and persecution, they receive limited legal protection.


There has long been an argument to expand the definition of a refugee to take into account the changing face of forced migration in the decades since the convention was drawn up.


Advocates of reform say warnings that climate change will force up to 250 million people from their homes by 2050 mean a rethink is needed more than ever.


However, critics say widening the "refugee" category would erode asylum seekers' rights and face opposition from states reluctant to sign up to new laws obliging them to provide protection for more people.


In a recently published paper, two academics from Oxford University have come up with a new term, "survival migrant", to accommodate groups who do not fall within the legal refugee definition.


They say "survival migration" refers to those fleeing "an existential threat to which they have no domestic recourse" due to a combination of state collapse, livelihood failure and environmental disaster.


"What constitutes existential threat? It's not just about the threat to life but the rights without which it is impossible to enjoy other rights, namely basic subsistence, basic liberty, basic security," said Alexander Betts, who co-wrote the paper.


"The existing refugee definition, in only looking at persecution, speaks to the narrowest element of security but doesn't speak to the other two," Betts told AlertNet. "Recognition of the survival migration status would ensure that civil, economic and social rights would be respected."


KINDNESS OF STRANGERS


The paper is based on a case study of Zimbabweans living in South Africa and Botswana. An estimated 2 million Zimbabweans have fled their country since 2005 - for many, resorting to the only available means of survival, Betts says.


Yet only 10 percent of Zimbabweans arriving in South Africa have been officially recognised as refugees.


As part of their research, Betts and his co-author Esra Kaytaz tracked down more than 3,400 Zimbabweans who had taken refuge in Johannesburg's Central Methodist Church, relying on the clergy's goodwill for shelter.


Among the group were more than 100 unaccompanied minors as well as pregnant women and people suffering from HIV/AIDS, cholera and tuberculosis.


"The government's main response to the church has been to try to forcibly clear the building, and local businesses are litigating to have the church emptied," the report said.


Betts says the legal quandary faced by these Zimbabweans is shared with many groups of Congolese, Somalis, Haitians, North Koreans and Iraqis, among others.


Although he said it would be tough to get states to endorse "survival migration" as a legal definition, he noted the success of attempts to protect other groups who have also been forced from their homes - in particular internally displaced people (IDPs), or those who have been uprooted within their own borders by violence or persecution.


An attempt to address the needs of survival migrants could draw upon the precedent of the United Nations' "Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement", which was drafted in 1998.


Though not legally binding in themselves, they consolidate states' existing responsibilities under international human rights law within a single "soft law" document.


The need to protect the rights of IDPs, who outnumber refugees globally, has prompted African countries to consider adopting a ground-breaking convention that will for the first time provide internally displaced people with similar rights to refugees.


"There are a number of reasons to be optimistic," Betts said. "The new realities of forced migration - climate change, livelihood collapse, state collapse - underpin the fact that the definition of refugee under the 1951 convention is not adequate. There's a growing acceptance that something needs to be done to supplement the convention."


The paper, "National and international responses to the Zimbabwean exodus: implications for the refugee protection regime", is due to be published on the website of the U.N. refugee body, UNHCR.


For more humanitarian news and analysis, please visit www.alertnet.org



Monday, July 13, 2009

Clean Water and the Water of Life in S. Sudan

Wages for the Poor

You shall not withhold the wages of poor and needy laborers, whether other Israelites or aliens who reside in your land in one of your towns. You shall pay them their wages daily before sunset, because they are poor and their livelihood depends on them; otherwise they might cry to the Lord against you, and you would incur guilt.

Deuteronomy 24:14-15



Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Social Justice

For six years you shall sow your land and gather in its yield; but the seventh year you shall let it rest and lie fallow, so that the poor of your people may eat; and what they leave the wild animals may eat. You shall do the same with your vineyard, and with your olive orchard.

Exodus 23:10-11


Charity is commendable; everyone should be charitable. But justice aims to create a social order in which, if individuals choose not to be charitable, people still don’t go hungry, unschooled, or sick without care.

Bill Moyers,
television journalist and social commentator

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called sons of God.


I miss my dad. Howard M. Ostrander (1929 -2005) was a man of peace. He was described by his co-workers and friends as someone who could "spread his warmth and humour to all those around him". His former boss called my dad, "A pillar in his community in Elmira, Ontario ... and someone with an endless number of jokes up his sleeve!" How true, that was my dad.

But at a deeper level, my dad was a man of peace. As he was spending his last week with us on planet earth, I was so impressed with how he could bless others as he was so ready to die. Not easy to say, but a great memory. A man who lived at peace with those around him, no one, not anyone from anywhere had to rush to his death bed to make amends. All who came to his hospital bed, came to have a final visit, to share a memory, a song or a verse of two from scripture.

If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone. Romans 12:18
Dad, thanks for the great example. I'll see if I can live my life in such a way that I honour memory and our lord.



On Fathers Day We Need to Bring Peace



Wednesday, June 17, 2009

You matter

Quoted from Seth Godin's Blog
http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2009/06/you-matter.html
  1. When you love the work you do and the people you do it with, you matter.
  2. When you are so gracious and generous and aware that you think of other people before yourself, you matter.
  3. When you leave the world a better place than you found it, you matter.
  4. When you continue to raise the bar on what you do and how you do it, you matter.
  5. When you teach and forgive and teach more before you rush to judge and demean, you matter.
  6. When you touch the people in your life through your actions (and your words), you matter.
  7. When kids grow up wanting to be you, you matter.
  8. When you see the world as it is, but insist on making it more like it could be, you matter.
  9. When you inspire a Nobel prize winner or a slum dweller, you matter.
  10. When the room brightens when you walk in, you matter.
  11. And when the legacy you leave behind lasts for hours, days or a lifetime, you matter.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Letters of John Newton

A friend sent me this article today and thought it might be of encouragement to you. . .this is written by the man who wrote "Amazing Grace."

Thank God our redemption is in His unfailing hands.
"I will put My fear in their hearts--so they will never turn away from Me." Jeremiah 32:40

Jesus, to whom I have been led to commit myself, has engaged to save me, absolutely, and from first to last. He has promised not only that He will not depart from me--but that He will put, keep, and maintain His fear in my heart--so that I shall never finally depart from Him! And if He does not do this for me--I have no security against my turning apostate! For I am so weak, inconsistent, and sinful; I am so encompassed with deadly snares from the world; and I am so liable to such assaults from the subtlety, vigilance, and power of Satan--that, unless I am "kept by the power of God," I am sure I cannot endure to the end!
I do believe that the Lord will keep me while I walk humbly and obediently before Him; but, were this all--it would be cold comfort! For I am prone to wander--and need a Shepherd whose watchful eye, compassionate heart, and boundless mercy--will pity, pardon, and restore my backslidings!
For, though by His goodness and not my own--I have hitherto been preserved in the path of holiness; yet I feel those evils within me, which would shortly break loose and bear me down to destruction, were He not ever present with me to control them.
Those who comfortably hope to see His face in glory--but depend upon their own watchfulness and endeavors to preserve themselves from falling--must be much wiser, better, and stronger than I am! Or at least they cannot have so deep and painful a sense of their own weakness and vileness, as daily experience forces upon me. I desire to be found in the use of the Lord's appointed means for the renewal of my spiritual strength--but I dare not undertake to watch a single hour, nor do I find ability to think a good thought, nor a power in myself of resisting any temptation! My strength is perfect weakness--and all I have is sin.
In short, I must sit down in despair--if I did not believe that He who has begun a good work in me, will carry it out to completion.

"Hold me up--and I shall be safe!" Psalm 119:117


Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Ride for Refugees to offer 'Spring RIDE Date' in 2010

May 16, 2009 - For cities in Canada, USA and Australia who prefer to host the Ride for Refugees event earlier in the year, International Teams Canada recently announced a May 15th, 2010 Spring RIDE date.


Mika Takamaki, Director of RIDE site development commented on the new offering in a recent phone discussion:

"The RIDE date in October has worked very well and many of our site locations prefer that timing. But, this May 15th date will give more cities the flexibility to chose a date that works best for them. Fall or Spring - they can choose. Cities like Winnipeg, Edmonton and Calgary will embrace the warmer weather I'm sure."

For 2009 the RIDE changed its date from the third to first Saturday in October. For a number of years the event had skirted some bad weather issues and organizers didn't want to wake up to the snow they faced during the 2006 RIDE or the cold wind during the 2007 event.

Takamaki talked about the decision to move the date this year:

"I was talking to Brian, our RIDE Chair and I said to him, 'The fact is, if there is bad weather on October 3rd most people will shrug it off and chalk it up to poor timing; but if the weather is bad on October 18th, they'll look at us and ask what were we thinking!' "

For more information go to www.rideforrefugees.com



Saturday, May 30, 2009

Giving to the refugee, orphan, widow

When you beat your olive trees, do not strip what is left; it shall be for the alien, the orphan, and the widow. When you gather the grapes of your vineyard, do not glean what is left; it shall be for the alien, the orphan, and the widow. Remember that you were a slave in the land of Egypt; therefore I am commanding you to do this.

Deuteronomy 24:20-22



Tuesday, May 26, 2009

The Buzz of Learning

Still having a great time learning, I am getting such a buzz from it all.

Had an academic and an author talk to us the other day, and he referred to
some very fascinating people. One of whom was Paulo Freire.

Freire wrote this:
"The Right in its rigidity prefers the dead to the living; the static to the dynamic; the future as a repetition of the past rather than as a creative venture; pathological forms of love rather than real love; frigid schematization rather than the emotion of living; gregariousness rather than authentic living together; organization men rather than men who organize; imposed myths rather than incarnated values; directives rather than creative and communicative language; and slogans rather than challenges"
(Freire, Paulo. Cultural Action and Conscientization pp.72-73).

I found this statement very challenging and very confronting but very
helpful. Just wanted to share it with you.

Wikepedia has a section on Freire, very interesting character.

Andrew Collins
Enjoy your journey

Thursday, May 21, 2009

International Teams Program Approach

International Teams Canada is a Christian mission organization that has a program and project approach to serving the poor, disadvantaged and vulnerable in our host countries: Canada, Ecuador, Romania, the Philippines, Rwanda, Uganda, Southern Sudan and Kenya. We focus on refugees, street children and orphans, along with marginalized women.


We operate by partnering with local churches who get involved by sending short term teams and by going deeper with a 3-5 year commitment to become engaged in a program.

The programs are led by host country program leaders who are involved in all decision making.

Our Canadian support teams consist of staff and high capacity volunteers, who play an important role, fundraising and working with the host country leadership teams to make it all happen.

Our short term teams play a significant role as well. They are often the hands, feet and face of International Teams. They roll up their sleeves, cross the time zones and pour their love and energy into the lives of the people we serve. Often they return home with a new vision and an infectious passion for serving God and serving the poor.

Gary Sharpe

Gary Sharpe, P.Eng.
Director, International Programs
gary.sharpe@iteams.org

We accomplish our goals by setting specific plans, budgets and measurable objectives for spiritual and social renewal, and strive to achieve them together as a team. We are accountable to report on our progress every six months.

Our resource partners are individuals, churches, businesses, teams, foundations and other funding sources such as the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA). International Teams events like the RIDE for Refugees are another source of funding for our refugee related programs.

Together, we are passionate about serving God and serving the poor.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

VALUES CLARIFICATION

VALUES affect so many decisions and actions in our lives, it is best that we understand them and that we align our choices, behaviour and actions with our values. When we make an effort to understand our values, it is easier to keep our priorities in the right order and our actions in line with our beliefs.

Values clarification is a process a person might go through to discover and clarify their values and to bring his/her values in line with behaviour.

Clarify Values

  1. Ask yourself, “If I only had 24 hours left to live, how would I spend them?”

  1. List twenty possible values and rank them from most to least important for you.

  1. Make a pie chart of your top fine values and compare it to your calendar. Are you really spending as much time as you would like on your values?

  1. Associate consistent and inconsistent behaviour with each of your top five values.

Identify Full Values

A FULL VALUE is one which is truly and entirely held by a person. Raths, Simon & Harmin (1996) developed seven questions to help identify full values. By taking a value and answering yes to all seven questions, one would define a full value. Please take each of your top values and identify if they are full values.

  1. Was the value freely chosen?

  1. Was the value chosen from alternatives or was it the only choice?

  1. Was the value chosen after considerations of the consequences of this value?

  1. Do you cherish the value? Does it make you happy?

  1. Are you willing to publicly affirm this is a value to hold?

  1. Are you acting on the value (or is it something that is said)?

  1. Do you display this value repeatedly and consistently?


Sample Values List

Accuracy

ChoiceTranquility
AdventureGrowthResilience
AuthenticityHarmonyResults
IndependenceHumorRisk
BeautyHonestyRomance
NatureFitnessSuccess
AestheticsWellnessSecurity
CollaborationFreedomSpirituality
CommitmentJoyTradition
ServiceFunSelf-expression
CreativityIntegrityTrust
DirectnessJusticeVitality
EleganceLeadershipZest
EmpowermentNurturingRecognition
MasteryOrderPower
ExcellencePeaceLearning


Article adapted from a content session at the "Milestone April 09", A leadership course offered at the Soderquist Center for Leadership and Ethics. http://www.soderquist.org/




Saturday, April 25, 2009

Shock and Awe

Christianity stands or falls with its revolutionary protest against violence, arbitrariness, and pride of power, and with its plea for the weak. Christians are doing too little to make these points clear ... Christendom adjusts itself far too easily to the worship of power. Christians should give more offense, shock the world far more, than they are doing now.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer

On Holy Ground

A few things on my mind and my heart this morning and I would like to share them for prayer. Here is a summary:
  1. Bob Fukumoto in hospital again with post surgery complications. (He donated a kidney to his nephew)
  2. Gerry Fowler taking the funeral for his mother-in-law today (Sat.)
  3. Thankful for a good meeting with Stephen Freed and some of my leadership team
  4. Thankful for good board meeting and great board members at ITCA
  5. Thinking/planning/praying ahead of ILT meetings this next week
It is a beautiful summer-like Saturday morning and Yvonne is away with an old and dear friend, so I have some quiet time to reflect and pray. Once again, we have come through a very productive and powerful week of life, work, ministry and relationships.

We had our ITCA Annual Meeting and Board meetings on Wed. and, the Annual Meeting is when the audit of the prior year's books is reviewed. Thanks to some great work by our team, we had a good and clean audit which, is never taken for granted. With a lot of growth and mobilization last year, we find ourselves in the tightest cash position we have experienced in years. Again, thanks to good people, good leadership decisions and great teamwork, we are making adjustments that should reduce this stress but, it will take us the balance of this year to address these issues.

Stephen Freed (International Director) joined me and some of my leadership team on Thurs for a broad ranging discussion on organizational, philosophical and historical matters relating to our mutual commitment excellence in mission and effective missionary mobilization and deployment. It was a good time and my team said they learned a few things. Stephen and I both commented that it felt a bit like old times. Thanks Stephen.

Friday our team of business and ITCA leaders gathered for an Africa reunion and debrief. What a great group! We laugh easily, share our lives and even the tears come as we look at pictures, see names in print and remember the people who impacted us. We gathered for an evening presentation at Pastor Bill Horne's church and that too was meaningful. I positioned myself so I could see Enoch (former refugee) during the presentation and his face would light up with joy as he saw pictures of his old friends and former home. I was touched by his spontaneous response to go stand by Pastor Bill and ask if he could say a word of thanks to his church. With sincerity and elegance, he thanked his new church of brothers, sister, mothers, fathers and grandparents. We stood on holy ground last evening as we witnessed the transforming power of Jesus in this man. And, Bill's church has been transformed by the presence of these African 'former' refugees.

As the Africa presentation was ending I got a call from Gary Sharpe who was at the home of Bob and Jan Fukumoto. He said, "Neil, its not good, Bob is in rough shape." Bob will have more tests in hospital today, but he is in a great deal of pain post the surgery two weeks ago when he donated a kidney to his nephew. There are complications with the blood flow to the bowel and it is quite serious. Please pray with us for Bob (and Jan and family).

Gerry Fowler joined us for much of this week although, he had to get back home Thurs night so he missed the Africa Team reunion and, we missed Gerry. I'm amazed at the time Gerry gives to IT and thankful for his deep commitment and experiential wisdom. Those of us on the ILT will see Gerry next week, as he makes his next investment into our lives and ministry. Today however, he is with Betsi and the extended family, being husband, dad, grand dad, friend and pastor. Betsi's mom 'graduated' to glory this week and the family asked Gerry, the eloquent and sometimes emotional speaker, to conduct the funeral. We will pray with you Gerry and "give 'em heaven!"

Thanks for reading, thanks for caring and thanks for praying. I'm reminded this morning ... "No one does this alone."

Blessings today,
Neil

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Fighting Injustice

"And so the poor continue to hope, while injustice is bound and gagged." Job 5:16


We fought injustice wherever we found it, no matter how large, or how small, and we fought injustice to preserve our own humanity.

Nelson Mandela


Saturday, April 11, 2009

My '2x4' weekend is half done

Its a long weekend and Tues morning I'm off to a Leadership Development course for the week. Yvonne is away in Regina with two of her girlfriends, and I am at home, alone with tons to do before I leave. Lately, I've hit a whole new level in my 'multitasking' and my mind and spirit are weary. You might say, 'mega multitasking'. But then again, who would say something like that? In any case, you get my drift!

It has been another long winter but for me, the spring always brings with it inspiration! These days, I don't feel like I have the same level of fitness I did say, this time last year. So, let's put the multitasking on hold, and for four days I'm doing two cardio workouts per day. That's my '2x4' weekend!

So, its the evening of day two and I'm half way. Now what?


I had a good run in the morning. The sun was bright and warm, but the wind had a damp bite to it. Thanks to some good gear I have (not new but good), I was able to be comfortable temperature wise, but my legs got heavy from the middle point onward. The last small but long hill was a killer. As I use this running as training for my participation in the annual Ride for Refugee (http://www.rideforrefugees.com), I pulled memory images of refugees I've met over the years. I called to mind the fact that they can't quit the journey, so, I am not going to quit either!

[Rest]

In the early evening, I hit the trails on my off-road bike and even though it was still sunny, the North wind had power and bite. The idea was to ride easy, get a little lactic acid out of the muscles, but the wind and the soft trails made the ride more challenging than I expected. Sections of the trail were still soft from the spring thaw and I saw some snow, hiding in gullies away from the suns rays.

It was neat to observe the wildlife going about their spring chores too. A beaver was startled as I approached, several ground hogs scurried for cover and lots of birds sang me along the track. Taking it all in, the trail, the wildlife, the setting sun, is half the pleasure for me!

At the end of the day I have that sense of satisfaction that comes with pushing myself and seeing how I respond physically and mentally. Today, I did okay.

Tonight I'll do a little stretching, a lot of resting and see what tomorrow brings.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Things don't change that much ...

God was executed by people painfully like us, in a society very similar to our own ... by a corrupt church, a timid politician, and a fickle proletariat led by professional agitators.

- Dorothy L. Sayers,
The Man Born to Be King (1943)


Note:
The proletariat (from Latin prollees, "offspring") is a term used to identify a lower social class; a member of such a class is proletarian. Originally it was identified as those people who had no wealth other than their sons. The term was initially used in a derogatory sense, until Karl Marx used it as a sociological term to refer to the working class. From Wikipedia.


Monday, April 6, 2009

St. Augustine

Charity is no substitute for justice withheld.

St. Augustine



Sunday, April 5, 2009

‘Regard others as better than yourselves’

Do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility regard others as better than yourselves. Let each of you look not to your own interests, but to the interests of others. Let the same mind be in you that was in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the form of God, did not regard equality with God as something to be exploited, but emptied himself, taking the form of a slave, being born in human likeness.

- Philippians 2:3-7

I read this verse today while scanning the sojourners blog and it 'hit me' again. You see, I have a lot of writing and corresponding to do today and, I realize the my attitude aint a whole like like Jesus'. Sometimes I feel like I've taken on the 'role of a slave' -- but can I really take on the 'attitude of a slave'?

I know I need to get my 'tude' adjusted before I start my writing.

Comments anyone?


Friday, March 27, 2009

Economic Recovery

I red this on the Sojourners Blog recently. Its a quote from my friend, Brian McLaren, taken from a larger article on "Mobilization", an initiative to end poverty. He's looking at the illness in the US economy. Take a read ...

So our economy is in the emergency room, and the doctors are doing triage but they still haven’t reached a full diagnosis of the disease — or better said, the complex of diseases — with which our economy is afflicted. We, as people of faith in the God who proclaims good news to the poor, have every reason to suspect that a key element in our as-yet undiagnosed economic disorder is a failure to properly care for the poor.

We, people who believe in the God who identifies with the least of these, have every reason to believe that if you want to check the health of the economy, you begin by checking the blood pressure of the poor. If you want to treat our economic illness, you begin with those most weakened by poverty. If you want to measure improving health, you check the vital signs of the poor.


I'm with Brian, and a host of people from our generation and those who have gone before us. That is, the way we respond to the "least of these" in our world, is an accurate barometer on the health of our economy and our culture.

What say ye?

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Problems? What problems?

"Intellectuals solve problems; geniuses prevent them."

-Albert Einstein

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Leadership Intelligence

I came across this the other day and its another "wow".
Humility: Knowing the danger of getting educated beyond your intelligence.

That makes me think ... hmmm?
What say ye?

Monday, March 16, 2009

Leadership Quote

"People who want to appear cleaver use their memory -- people who want to get things done, make lists".
I read this the other day and wow, it hit me. I tend to depend on my memory, for lots of things - not calendar, but lots of other "mental lists". Right now, I've got lots of important information rolling around in my head ... moving toward some decisions.

Conclusion: I've made some lists. I will make more, paper first - then onto my computer.

Saturday, February 7, 2009

On not giving up

"The difference between the impossible and the possible lies in a man's determination."
~ Tommy Lasorda



Friday, February 6, 2009

Hearing the cry of the poor

If a man shuts his ears to the cry of the poor, he too will cry out and not be answered. Proverbs 21:13

So, what do you think? I'm hoping my ears still hear!