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    the good samaritan

    Explore " the good samaritan" with insightful episodes like "Jesus Is Woke Pt 3 - The Gospel of Luke", "The Story: The Story of FCC", "Day 316: Absolute Surrender (2023)", "Showing Mercy: Training Camp | Luke 10 | Steve Huber" and "Episode 59 - Luke 10:12-37" from podcasts like ""One Question with Pastor Adam", "Farragut Christian Church Podcast", "The Bible in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz)", "Covenant Church Doylestown Sermons" and "Lectio Divina Podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (29)

    Day 316: Absolute Surrender (2023)

    Day 316: Absolute Surrender (2023)
    Fr. Mike discusses our call to deny ourselves and take up our cross, specifically focusing on God’s call to renounce all that is ours and trust in him. He also highlights the story of Mary and Martha and encourages us not to allow the cares of life to choke the life of God out of our lives as Martha allowed her troubles and anxieties to do. Today’s readings are from Luke 9-10 and Proverbs 26:4-6. For the complete reading plan, visit ascensionpress.com/bibleinayear. Please note: The Bible contains adult themes that may not be suitable for children - parental discretion is advised.

    Episode 59 - Luke 10:12-37

    Episode 59 - Luke 10:12-37

    Listen as we meditate on Luke 10:25-37.  The scripture is from  NIV.

    This week’s public prayer of the church a  “Increase in Us Faith, Hope and Love,”  from the  Leonine Sacramentary, 

    https://acollectionofprayers.com/2016/09/19/increase-in-us-faith-hope-and-love/
     —

    Music by Lara Marriott. Breathe In (The Presence of God) from her I Will Follow album, available in iTunes and Amazon.


    Thanks for Listening.

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    194 – Who Are You in the Parable of the Good Samaritan?

    194 – Who Are You in the Parable of the Good Samaritan?

    194 – Who do you identify with the most in the parable of the Good Samaritan?

    We usually like to think of ourselves as always being like the Good Samaritan, but sometimes we play some of the other roles.

    When I take an honest look at my life, there have been lots of times I have been more like the priest and the Levite.

    But there are several other characters in the story and this week's episode talks about all of them and what we can learn from them:

    Here they are. Which ones have you been? Who are you now?

    • The priest
    • The Levite
    • The Good Samaritan
    • The innkeeper
    • The donkey
    • The thieves
    • The man who was robbed and beaten

    If you're like me, you've been several of these characters. 

    As I said earlier, we usually like to think we are always the Good Samaritan in this story, but sometimes you may be the innkeeper or the donkey. All three are important and work together to bless the one who needs help. 

    And  sometimes you need to be a Good Samaritan, an innkeeper or a donkey to yourself, especially if you’ve been the thief, the priest, or the Levite to yourself.

    I’ll leave you with these questions: Who is your neighbor? And whose neighbor are you? What will you do about it?

    To read the full transcript and  Bible quotations in this episode, go to thebiblespeakstoyou.com/194.

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    James Early, the Jesus Mindset Coach, is a Bible teacher, speaker, and podcaster. His focus is on getting back to the original Christianity of Jesus by embracing the mindset of Christ in daily life.

    Love Like Jesus #75

    Love Like Jesus #75

    The world sure could use more love these days.  But worldly love and Godly love are two different things.  Our goal as Christians is to love like Jesus.  His perfect love is infinite, enduring, never failing and completely UNCONDITIONAL.

    In this episode of Finish Strong, we examine what Jesus had to say about true love.  He tells us that it is the trademark for the Christian.  It is what we need to truly “love our enemies.”

    As the song says, “…no not just for some but for everyone!”

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    Who Is My Neighbor? - Steven Murphy

    Who Is My Neighbor? - Steven Murphy

    In this episode, I take an interesting look at The Parable of the Good Samaritan.

    At the end of a brutal mid-term election season, it's vital to look at what is diving so many people and consider what God would have us do.


    From chapter 10 of the Gospel of Luke

    The Most Important Commandment 

    25 One day an expert in religious law stood up to test Jesus by asking him this question: “Teacher, what should I do to inherit eternal life?”

    26 Jesus replied, “What does the law of Moses say? How do you read it?”

    27 The man answered, “‘You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, all your strength, and all your mind.’ And, ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’”[a]

    28 “Right!” Jesus told him. “Do this and you will live!”

    29 The man wanted to justify his actions, so he asked Jesus, “And who is my neighbor?”


    Parable of the Good Samaritan

    30 Jesus replied with a story: “A Jewish man was traveling from Jerusalem down to Jericho, and he was attacked by bandits. They stripped him of his clothes, beat him up, and left him half dead beside the road.

    31 “By chance a priest came along. But when he saw the man lying there, he crossed to the other side of the road and passed him by. 32 A Temple assistant[b] walked over and looked at him lying there, but he also passed by on the other side.

    33 “Then a despised Samaritan came along, and when he saw the man, he felt compassion for him. 34 Going over to him, the Samaritan soothed his wounds with olive oil and wine and bandaged them. Then he put the man on his own donkey and took him to an inn, where he took care of him. 35 The next day he handed the innkeeper two silver coins,[c] telling him, ‘Take care of this man. If his bill runs higher than this, I’ll pay you the next time I’m here.’

    36 “Now which of these three would you say was a neighbor to the man who was attacked by bandits?” Jesus asked.

    37 The man replied, “The one who showed him mercy.”

    Then Jesus said, “Yes, now go and do the same.”



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    Day 316: Absolute Surrender (2022)

    Day 316: Absolute Surrender (2022)
    Fr. Mike discusses our call to deny ourselves and take up our cross, specifically focusing on God’s call to renounce all that is ours and trust in him. He also highlights the story of Mary and Martha and encourages us not to allow the cares of life to choke the life of God out of our lives as Martha allowed her troubles and anxieties to do. Today’s readings are from Luke 9-10 and Proverbs 26:4-6. For the complete reading plan, visit ascensionpress.com/bibleinayear. Please note: The Bible contains adult themes that may not be suitable for children - parental discretion is advised.

    The Samaritans

    The Samaritans

    We all know the parable of the Good Samaritan and the story of the woman at the well, but who exactly were the Samaritans? Where did they come from? What did they believe? What happened to them? In this episode of Bible Backdrop, I take a look at the history of the Samaritans and their affect on the nation of Israel. Stay for a few minutes after the main episode is over to hear some unscripted thoughts from your host! If you enjoy Bible Backdrop, tell a friend and have them subscribe. You can also get in touch with the show at the e-mail address in the episode.

    Phil Allen Jr on Racial Trauma, Resilience and Solidarity

    Phil Allen Jr on Racial Trauma, Resilience and Solidarity

    Phil Allen Jr is author of Open Wounds, a filmmaker, theologian, poet and PhD Candidate. He is founder of Racial Solidarity Project, an organization committed to justice through solidarity, community building and healing. 

    You can connect with Phil work at: www.philallenjr.com
    Twitter @philallenjr
    Instagram: www.instagram.com/philallenjrig/  
    facebook www.facebook.com/philallenjr

    Get his new book is Open Wounds: A Story of Racial Tragedy, Trauma and Redemption

    Check out his podcast "Intersections with Phil Allen Jr." wherever you get your podcasts. 

    Support his organization Racial Solidarity Project committed to justice through solidarity, community building and healing. 

    We start our conversation by checking in with Phil on how his life has been impacted by COVID. Danielle asks him to share how he’s doing during the pandemic and where he is located. Phil is located in Pasadena, CA. He is perpetually quarantined. He reads and goes out running, when out he wears a mask and is vaccinated. He’s been good through the pandemic. He’s highly introverted, learning this about himself about 7 years ago. The pandemic hasn’t affected him emotionally or mentally but in fact has allowed him to be very productive—he’s has nowhere to go, nowhere to be. He said since it hasn’t been too bad for him there, he’s more concerned with others.

    His new book Open Wounds came out this year in February; Danielle asks how the process was to write the book. 

    Phil got the idea write book while taking a class at Fuller Seminary called Theology and Ethics of Martin Luther King. They were watching the series Eyes of the Prize about the Civil Rights Movements and he saw a picture of Emmett Till. Right then and there he made the connection to his grandfather’s murder (which happened in 1953)—he imagined that’s how his grandfather would have looked. He was in the river several days before his grandfather’s body floated up and they found him. 

    “I can’t see Emmett Till without seeing my grandfather.”

    The response of his classmates really surprised him – he didn’t think it would matter to them but they were in tears. It was then that he realized he needed to tell this story. But he didn’t start writing right away. He went to Sundance [Institute] for a filmmaking class on directed reading, which turned out to be the most impactful class he has taken in his PhD studies because it’s produced the most work, and he did the same thing: He told the story of his grandfather and people were blown away. 

    He says he had made the content of film they were studying at Sundance real for his classmates. It became personal now because he had shared his family’s story. They encouraged him to make a film. He didn’t know he was going to make a film when he took that class. He didn’t start writing the book until after that. He outlined everything, wrote four chapters but had no prospects and thought maybe he would self-publish. A professor of Phil’s advocated for him with Fortress Press (publisher) and sent what he had over, they loved it. Phil said he has a tendency to start something and not finish it. With half the book written and having a full class load, he didn’t want to keep working on the book unless it was going to be published (not self-published). Once he signed the contract with Fortress Press, he wrote the rest of the book in three months. It was at the start of the pandemic, went through four rounds of edits, and got it done for release in February 2021. 

    Phil did not expect the process to be so emotional or taxing. He said the editing process was triggering—He said, after you’ve written it you have to be out of your emotions and back in analytic mode. He described incidents that would happen after he would be writing for two or three hours. He would go out and encounter someone, say at a grocery store, and it would be an older white guy who would do something or say something that would trigger him. One time he was almost hit (with a car) in a parking lot, the guy never slowed or stopped but came within 12 inches of him and Phil had to maneuver his body to jump out of the way. This led to an altercation with him. After writing for three hours, Phil said he was already at an “8” or “10” and then had this encounter happen. He realized then how much the writing was affecting him. He added accountability and ways to check in with trusted people so as not to be an outflow of the intensity of writing the book because it wouldn’t be healthy. 

    Maggie named that what happened was a blurring of past and present. Phil had been deep in his story and how his past has shaped him when in the present he encountered this altercation/incident. She said that is what is so profound about his book—it is a way to look at the past and how it is shaping us in the present. One the things in his book that impacted Maggie was how he described the layers of racism involved in his grandfather’s murder: structural racism, passive and active racism. Often times we want racism to be inside a tiny little box, but through the sharing of his family’s story Phil illustrates how much bigger and how layered racism is. 

    Phil says when he was writing that section of the book, he wanted to make sure people could understand the layers, dynamics and iterations of racism. He said racism goes beyond bigotry—that is active racism—the racists acts that you can see; these are the ones we would put in the tiny little box and label racism. “If it’s in that box you can say ‘oh I don’t do that thing’ or ‘I don’t know anyone who says those things’ … so ‘racism is not that big of a deal.’” The point he is illustrating is that his grandfather’s story is a microcosm of what plays out in our country. 

    Racism, he believes, is not like just any other sin or injustice. He believes racism is so destructive because it permeates all aspects of society. “Our society was organized along race, class and gender. But even among class and gender, when you overlay race you will see the distinction between the experiences” like between a white woman and a Black women, for instance. Between the two, the Black woman still comes out on the bottom. “There is still that hierarchy based on race.” He says a poor white guy still has the potential to “have it better” than a middle class or even wealthy Black guy because of race. 

    The bigotry or active racism in his family’s story was the person who shot his grandfather, or the guys who held him down. “Those are in the [racism] box. We can see that. That’s wrong.” But what people don’t often see is the passive racism of the witness who saw something but said nothing. Or the men who held his grandfather down; maybe they didn’t think he was going to get killed but just scared… but “their conscience wasn’t pricked enough to say anything.” They were complicit and chose not to report it. Silence and doing nothing is a form of passive racism. Another example of passive racism is the lack of investigation by law enforcement—they are complicit because they were unwilling to look any further even though there was a bullet hole in his grandfather’s head. Then there was the medical examiner who signs off on the death certificate that it was “accidental drowning.” There was a whole network operating cohesively coherently together—that is the picture of racism that he wanted to convey in the telling of his grandfather’s death. Racism is not just one thing, it’s a network that our whole society is organized around. To talk only about bigotry keeps the conversation narrow. And to ignore that would be to dismiss people’s experiences so we must talk about both—we need to view individual acts of racism like bigotry in the context of the institutional, structural or systemic racism. It is the latter than keeps perpetuating racism and allowing it continue generation after generation. 

    Phil describes a conversation he had with a pastor he knows who can’t understand why we keep talking about the past. The Pastor wanted solutions for moving forward and Phil challenged him by asking “how can you get solutions to move forward when you don’t even know how we got here. You’re just compound the issue or potentially cause more trauma, more problems because you don’t know how the past shapes us today. The legacy of the past is living out today and you want to skip past that…That’s not part of the solution…. That is the solution, that’s the first step! To know how we got to this place so that we can start to undo and get to the root causes of the issue in our society when it comes to race.” 

    Phil said that the Pastor didn’t want to hear that and it’s been the battle. The pastor told him he didn’t like all of Phil’s post on social media that were focused on the past. And Phil responded, “Then stop preaching the gospel! Stop quoting scripture because the entire Bible is a story about the past.” 

    “So why can’t we do the same when we talk about the past?”

    Maggie said Phil did this really well in his book—weave the past and the present—especially with his theological reflections which were at the end of each chapter. In his book, Maggie liked how he returned a number of times to the story of the Good Samaritan, a story so many are very familiar with and in fact has made its way into our collective conscious. There were two things that Phil pointed that were new thinking for her: the winding road as an active part of the story / an active participant in what happens to the man, which translates to structural and systemic racism today, and (what you won’t hear in white evangelical spaces) is the fact that Jesus intentionally and purposefully identities the ethnicities all the characters. For their ethnicities to have not been included the story, the story would have a far different meaning.

    Phil said the Good Samaritan story is so rich you could write an entire book on just that story alone. He said the first time he heard about the analogy of the winding road was from Dr. King in one of his speeches and also in his book Strength to Love: He (MLK Jr.) talked about having to fix the winding road so the next person traveling doesn’t have the same experience. No one really wants to change the winding road; the winding road has always been this way. And only certain people are experiencing problems on this road but it’s not that big of deal, and that’s how we look at injustice. The question really is, Phil asks, “who really benefits from the road staying the way it is?” The powers that be don’t want to answer this question; who benefits from the status quo?

    Danielle says we live in a democracy that was created for white men; they were the ones with the right to vote and they created a system for themselves. This was not a system who was created for everyone. The Indigenous peoples of this land were not even seen as human and they were not included in the concept of “democracy” or “rights.” She says, “When we look at the Declaration of Independence, it is not a declaration for anybody other than white male men and then therefore benefits their spouses and families.” She believes it’s important to name that. There’s a difference between she says, looking at our history and feeling so shamed by it that we become paralyzed and can’t move, versus than looking at our systems and saying we actually want to create a move equal system. She believes we are up against powers, structures and principalities and that manifests in the real terrorism against Phil’s grandfather. 

    Phil says that the reason change is so slow is because those who dominate power, those who are in control, have to give something up. He believes that the problem is not just about policies, it’s about personnel. “Who’s sitting at the table making decisions? Who’s representing who?” This is where a lot of the fight is. The foundation of this country is built for white men. Phil’s spiritual dad told him; “You cannot build on another man’s foundation. If that foundation is compromised, why do we continue to build on it? Why do we think we can just tweak it and all will be okay? Why do we think we can use cosmetics—tokenism and things like that—to make it look better. The system is still compromised.” He says until we get a change in personnel, the people who are sitting at the table making decisions for everybody, we’re going to be having this same conversation a generation from now. Saying that the country was built for white men upsets many white men, but it’s the truth. Until we reckon with that, Phil wonders what are we doing?

    Danielle says there’s the idea that “the truth will set you free” but she believes it also makes you miserable if you have to face it. There’s a bind there for white men—the concept of freedom and yet it’s been taken from all these other people and assumed rights, therefore you’re miserable. 

    Phil adds it’s these very people that are trying to claim the very thing they have a right to – freedom. 

    Danielle said this leads her mind to Phil’s discussion in his book about the difference between reconciliation and solidarity. 

    Phil used to say “racial reconciliation” all the time until a professor, Dr. Love Sechrest, would cringe when because it has been so diluted and watered down and weakened. This usually happens, he adds, when the masses get ahold of a term. Her argument was that reconciliation deals with the interpersonal relationships. Phil uses the three of us an example—We can be good and have a reconciled relationship and not be in solidarity. “In other words, we will be friends but if there another entity, outside of our community, that’s affecting me but not you, and you do nothing about it; you step aside and you allow me to keep experiencing this thing but you’re not willing to stand in with me against that outside entity, then the question is are we really reconciled?” Solidarity says I stand with you against entity that is affecting you, even when it’s not impacting me. There’s risk involved. We can’t get to reconciliation without solidarity. 

    In 2 Corinthians 5 it says we’ve been given the ministry of reconciliation; we are reconciled to God. But Phil asks, what allows us that to happen? He says it is the solidaric act of God. It is because God took on flesh – that’s solidarity! God could have remained in the mystery and invisibility of God’s self and still be God. But God chose to take on human flesh (John 1:14) and dwell among us—that’s solidarity. For Him [Jesus], that solidarity led to fatigue, temptation, suffering and ultimately going to the cross to die on behalf of humanity and creation. That is solidarity. And Phil says it is solidarity that gets us to the conversation of reconciliation. Reconciliation, he says, asks us to forget so that we can be good, united and get along. If we keep remembering the offenses it’s going to be hard to be reconciliation. Solidarity requires us to remember, that’s the very thing that brings us together and inspires us. 

    Danielle asks, “Is our faith big enough?” She says, “We don’t to have to believe. We don’t even have to have faith as big as a mustard seed to reconcile because we don’t have to remember. We don’t have engage our faith. Faith is about remembering. Faith is not just about the present. When we talk about a mutual faith, we’re talking about a mutual remembering. We do not share faith unless we remember. And faith cannot be engaged without justice and mercy.” Danielle goes on to say we have to remember what happened to Phil’s grandfather if we are to have a shared faith. 

    Amen amen amen, Phil says, that’s it. 

    Maggie recalls from Phil’s book when he talked about solidarity being required for the kind of communal trauma that we’ve all experienced, he wrote that trauma disorients and solidarity reorients. 

    Phil says with trauma we’ve become so good at compartmentalizing and fragmenting that we don’t appreciate how much of a shared trauma we have. When he thinks about to his home town people might say, “what happened to your grandfather,” but what he wants to say “no, what happened to us.” The community was wounded, Black and white folks alike, but they don’t recognize it. He said it made him look at his community differently because they don’t even realize that collectively they were traumatized. Even the white folks don’t realize that it’s affecting them too. Phil believes this is where the sickness remains: we are unwilling to diagnoses or be diagnosed with what the trauma has caused. “I present this as ‘this is our story’” he says, “and not just my hometown but even beyond.” 

    Phil recalls a white guy coming up to him in tears after he was speaking and the guy told Phil about the pictures of his grandfather standing in front of lynched bodies. The pictures were all around the house and what is a little kid, 7, 8 or 9 years old supposed to do with that? That’s not normal, it may be normalized but it isn’t normal. This white man has been carrying that around inside him for decades, he’s carrying trauma. His mind was forcing his soul, his being, to accept that as okay until he heard a young man (Phil) preach on it and now he’s forced to remember and he’s in tears and he doesn’t know what do with that but his body is responding. 

    Maggie says Phil invites all people (in his book) to listen to their bodies. Trauma fragments and disconnects us from our bodies, both white people and people of color. These are the coping mechanisms that we have used to get through collective trauma, shared trauma. 

    Phil said this is something he just recently learned for himself: to listen to his body. He said, “we have submitted to the sovereignty of reason. This is the way we know things. And the reality is that our bodies know things too. Things that our minds may have suppressed.” He says this is where the healing happens if we are brave enough to step into what our bodies remember. 

    “What was my grandmother’s body saying to her when I asked her the question about my grandfather’s death? She didn’t know. She didn’t have the language for it.” And Phil says he didn’t know at the time either but he knows now that her body did not want to remember or revisit—her alarm system was now on and she didn’t know what to do about it. Phil thinks if she had the resources, someone could have walk her through it. 

    Danielle asked him, how do you see, through your studies and through embodying healing for his family, the resilience of your ancestors and the resilience he is creating to make new paths forward? 

    He clarifies her question, how am I understanding the redemptive part?

    Yes, she says, how do you see the ways of your ancestors for building resilience in the face of collective trauma and how do you see your own resilience? What old ways of resilience does he notice and what new ways of resilience is he building?

    Phil replies, “I think telling the story, narrating my story, it’s empowering. Even if it’s painful, it’s empowering. Once I began to tell my story it was like I was unleashed. It empowered me and strengthened me.” The fact that he could go through the process and make the film, write his book are evidence of resiliency. Phil said it really began the second time he asked his grandmother the question (about his grandfather’s death), and she was able to answer. It was a very difference response 5-10 years later. He said it was as if this time (when he asked her) she was prepared. 

    He sees the resiliency of his dad and his sibling to have the conversation about how their father died. By Phil asking questions of them, it gave permission for them to tell the story and to talk about the thing they hadn’t allowed themselves to talk about. It opened up new pathways of healing. Telling that story fired up the juices of resiliency for both he and his dad. 

    Phil says it is the same as going to therapy—being asked a lot of questions helps to you start telling your story. It’s painful but if you can get passed that initial pain and realize you’re okay, then you’re more likely be able to continue telling the rest of your story. “Someone is listening. And I think that empowers people or stirs up this resiliency in people.”

    Maggie was struck by what Phil said about his grandmother—she was more able to engage the second time he asked her about his grandfather; she had had the space and freedom to be thinking about it after Phil had initially asked her. “It’s not that we just tell our stories one time. It’s that through the telling and the re-telling, that’s where the resiliency is built. That’s where we hand down the wisdom...” like when Phil was talking to his father about his father, it’s in that space of storytelling that we are given the room to grown and stretch. This reminds Maggie about when Resmaa Menakem (In his book My Grandmother’s Hands) talks about clean pain vs. dirty pain—clean pain is pain that leads to growth and healing. Dirty pain is the pain of avoiding and denial that ultimately leads to more pain. Storytelling is the clean pain that leads towards healing, resilience and invites the community to do it as well. 

    “And towards solidarity,” Phil adds. He said when you add creativity to storytelling, things like filmmaking, sketching poetry, you tell the story creatively that adds to the healing and building resiliency.

    Danielle says there is such beauty in that and yet there is also a cost—a cost to his body and to his grandmother’s body to do this kind of storytelling. She feels the weight of that, that there even has to be resiliency there.

    Phil says he has felt the cost to his body as he was going through his PhD program with his research: The intersection of race, racism, theology, justice. He was reading, writing, researching and reflecting all the time. For him, he runs. He says he tries to match the weight of what he is doing (with work, with the history he his remembering, with the future he is envisioning) with practices of wellness. And not in a reactionary way but a proactive one. For his 48th birthday ran a marathon. As he was saying this, he recalled that his grandmother went on walks everyday for 2 or 3 miles—she too knew her body needed movement and she had practices like working in her yard, going for walks, that were the practices of wellness that sustained her just above survival, helping her to maintain, be strong and accomplish things. 

    Maggie mentioned that in his book Phil remembered her grandmother rocking, her body responding. There was a sweet moment where he pondered if she danced with her husband. 

    Phil said, “That hit me.” He sighs. “Whenever I pictured her rocking she was holding herself, bracing herself.” When he wrote that he asked “Could she have been remembering my grandfather? Imaging him hold her dancing.” When Maggie said that it took Phil back to being a kids and seeing her rock. “I wasn’t ready for that one.”

    Maggie said, this is exactly what we’re taking about: where the past meets us in the present. And then feeling it in our bodies. And the question is are we going to listen to that or ignore it? The invitation then is to engage in kindness, the wellness practices as Phil called them, in a proactive way to build the kind of resiliency needed to just live in his skin in this world without becoming disruptive. 

    Phil says “I’m going to be reflecting on that all day: grandma rocking. Was she dancing with my grandfather. And now framing that as a proactive of wellness for her. I just wish she had the language to recognize what she was doing, and that was good.

    Danielle says that he carries in his body, these practices that are from long ago, before his grandmother, honed and passed down.

    Phil says we talk about my people we like to dance. And that goes back to before his ancestors got here. Dancing is built into many cultures. That’s why we so naturally, the beat comes up, and we’re home. Music is a safe space. And this (dancing) is a practice of wellness that is woven into their DNA. 

    Maggie remembers one other piece from the book about a white pastor (Bobby) who was going to meet with some folks to pray about something that had happened in the community and all of a sudden the pastor was life, “is this a Black Lives Matter march?” The wellness practices with your feet, here talking about dancing, and in the book it was taking your feet to the streets. Marching is the rhythm, what our feet sound like together. Our bodies know what to do. 

    Phil says this goes back to reversing our fragmentation through integrating our bodies and appreciating our bodies. Christianity holds a binary where the body is bad and doesn’t matter; All that matters is our soul. Seeing our bodies, integrating and moving our bodies in practices of wellness, is an important part of our healing. And Pastor Bobby needed it—he will do more than just remember what he saw, he will now remember what he felt in his body in the march. 

    Phil remembers what he felt in the Summer 2020 at the protest he attended. He remembers who he was standing next to, whether his feet hurting, how the sun was on his skin. This is inviting his body to be a part of the process of remembering.

    You can connect with Phil work at: www.philallenjr.com
    Twitter @philallenjr
    Instagram: www.instagram.com/philallenjrig/  
    Facebook www.facebook.com/philallenjr

    Get his new book is Open Wounds: A Story of Racial Tragedy, Trauma and Redemption

    Check out his podcast "Intersections with Phil Allen Jr." wherever you get your podcasts. 

    Support his organization Racial Solidarity Project committed to justice through solidarity, community building and healing. 

    Phil is reading Willie Jennings 

    Phil is listening to 80s and 90s Hip Hop and R&B: “the golden era.” He also listens to worship as he’s running. 

    Phil is inspired by the next generation who are seeing what's happening and are stepping in to make an impact. As an example he named Amanda Gorman and the young adults who were organizing protests in the Summer of 2020. 

    E79: Ilse van Goth and Keith Trimels - The Power of Paying it Forward

    E79: Ilse van Goth and Keith Trimels - The Power of Paying it Forward

    Learn more about Ilse van Goth at:

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/ilsevangoth/

    Learn more about Keith Trimels at:

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/katrimels/

    Keith recommended the following book by Bob  Burg:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Go-Giver

    Please leave a review or send us a Voice note letting us know what you enjoyed at:

    Back2Basics reconnecting to the essence of YOU (podpage.com)

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    God's Attributes: Love

    God's Attributes: Love

    The topic of God's love is vast! Where do you begin to give justice to a topic that is often misunderstood and taken out of context? This morning, our guest speaker, Joel Van Sant, helps us to consider some of the most basic elements of God's love and even at a "basic" overview, we are left in wonder of the depth and breadth of the love God has bestowed on us.  

    Season 2, Episode 6: Pastor Michael Walker on Racism, Social Justice and the Bible PART ONE

    Season 2, Episode 6: Pastor Michael Walker on Racism, Social Justice and the Bible PART ONE

    Pastor Michael Walker has been follower of Christ for 47 years and served in ministry since 1986. He is a black American male, married to his college sweetheart, they're a biracial couple happily married for over 30 years. He has served as a youth pastor, missionary in Africa for 11 years, the Director of Love Botswana Bible School, and as Director of Word to Africa Mission school in Botswana, Outreach Director for Love Botswana Outreach Mission and a Church planter. He has been an Associate Pastor in multiple churches and Senior Pastor in two churches, one of which was an all-white Southern Baptist Church. He congruently served as a Chaplain for a Sheriff’s department for five years. Currently he is serving as the Corporate Chaplain for CRISTA Ministries and is Board Certified Pastor Counselor. He and his wife Heather have five children: Three are grown and two still at home. He considers his most significant achievement to that all of our children are following Christ.

    Maggie has known Mike since 2001 when he baptized her in the Puget Sound, and in matching wet suits!

    Checking in with how life has shifted since COVID in his family life and with work – Mike doesn’t miss the commute and he enjoys more time with this family. He hates not being able to see people’s faces or give hugs. 

    Maggie asks Mike, having lived in several countries in Africa (Uganda, Botswana and South Africa), how has he seen race engaged differently or the same as in the States?

    Mike recalls the renaming of streets in South Africa from Afrikaner names to Zulu names. He named this as showing progress and change in the atmosphere, and it was done so much faster than in America.

    He noticed that when people found that he was from America, he was treated with more respect and honor. Mike saw that even missionaries there held bias and it made him realize that some Christ-followers also walk in bias and bigotry like anyone else, and it invited him to turn inward and ask what biases he is holding?

    Regarding his experiences here in America he says, “You really don’t understand what my life ha been about because you haven’t had to walk in my skin.”

    Mike was 7 years old when he first experienced racism. Living in a neighborhood with mostly white families and only one other black family, he remembers them coming over and their families agreeing to “Watch each other’s backs” in the neighborhood after their little girl was beaten with a hose by a white-bodied neighbor. 

    As an adult both he and his wife have faced racism together. Mike recalls driving in Virginia with his wife when another car started honking at him and telling him to pull over. When he did he was cussed out and called derogatory names just because he was married to a white-bodied woman. The man tried to run him off the road. 

    Some of Heather’s family said they would disown her if she married Mike. So from the very beginning she has had to experience these things with him. And even though her skin is white she is treated as if it is black because she is married to a black man. 

    Danielle named the continual collective trauma we are in and even bearing witness to Mike’s story now, it doesn’t feel like things have gotten better.

    Mike recalls how back in 2016 he mentioned Colin Kapernick’s name in the church he was pasturing at the time, which was all white, and his congregation was enraged he even mentioned him from the pulpit. 

    For him, George Floyd epitomized what has been going on in our country for years. People were literally crying out for the police to stop, pleading for mercy and asking for someone to step-in. This has been the experience of people with Black and Brown bodies in America. 

    Mike believes we are seeing a new Civil War in America. He feels grief and anger. 

    There is a sacrifice to be a polarizing figure.  But he knows he has to be a part of the solution. When he tries to make people aware, the color of his skin effects their ability to accept what he says. He wants to help people see what is still plaguing our country, if he says certain words or phrases he immediately gets shut down. We [as a country] are still in a raw place of denial of racism. 

    As a church, Mike believes, we need to not be afraid to be involved in becoming a part of the solution. He knows that there is a personal cost to this work.

    He describes the parable of the Good Story of Good Samaritan in Luke 12 [It’s actually Luke 10:25-37]:

    The priest was unwilling to engage because it would make him “unclean” and therefore unable to participate in worship at the temple. To help the man he would have also put his own life in jeopardy to help this man because it was a dangerous part of the road. It was going to cost him also time, money and energy to get involved. When the two religious men “counted the cost” to help the man and decided to keep walking by.... 

    It was the Samaritan to was willing– he saw the man, cared for him right where he was at, then traveled with him the man, providing for him for the long haul. 

    Mike said these are the kind of people we need to be; people who are willing to see the hurt and the harm that is happening and even though it will cost us we need to be willing to share in the hurt and walk with them on this journey. 

    When the Samaritan got to the Inn he provided for the hurt man for a long time. The goal is full restoration. We must be willing to provide time, money and energy to walk the road WITH people to see them to a place of restoration.

    Jesus’ point was to “love neighbor” and he challenged the religious leaders with this parable by saying your neighbor is one you see being marginalized, oppressed, victimized, the hurting, wounded, weary and cast off. 

    Mike says as Christians we have to get back to this: caring for those on the margins.

    How can we make a difference? Start by asking questions because you care. Become aware. 

    Once you’re aware, "walk with your eyes open." SEE what’s happening, even though it’s not happening to us. Get involved when you see injustice happening. Talk about it. Become aware. And then offer care, even if there is a cost to you. 

    When you see injustice, you need to want more than just “Social Justice, ”we want reconciliation and restoration.

    The Pledge of Allegiance; When it was first written this did not include black Americans. We say this pledge but “God doesn’t want you make this pledge.”

    Mike retells the parable about the two sons- both were asked to go work in the field, one say he would but didn’t. The other said he wouldn’t do it, but then he did go and do it. The one who was considered “righteous” is the one who actually did the work. The message here, Mike believes, is that we are all going to be held accountable for every word we say. So if we say the pledge, then we need to walk it out. 

    We need to be doers of the words we speak.

    Danielle went back on the Luke parable: The confrontation of white evangelicals with it’s own image and their ability to engage racism and privilege because of access to power money and politics. Church leaders are still walking by, like the two religious leaders in the Good Samaritan parable. Churches aren’t engaging in the community around racism or diversifying their leadership. The church needs to lead the way and provide a safe space and leadership for the community. The church is taking care of dominant culture and asking POC to do the work for them. It’s not a place of healing and care. We are calling for real time assistance not just prayers.

    Maggie adds, “We’re called to be the hands and feet of Jesus. It’s actually physical doing. Hope with legs.”

    “God Bless America” – This is asking God to bless a country as a people group. 

    But when it comes to racist acts they say, “I didn’t do that,” keeping the focus on individualism.

    But it’s a double standard because some will call and say “my forefather fought for a free country.” Claiming the positive and not the negative. Mike says we have to claim it all.

    Mike mentions a story that he feels epitomizes us as a country--the story of the Levite and the concubine in Judges 19 – People did what they thought was right in their own eyes (individualism). 

    He says it's like "we're not learning from [injustice[."

    People weren't call out injustice and it lead to a civil war. 

    Sin of omission led to destruction.

    Prophet word – See the injustice, feel the outrage. We’re seeing division in our country 

    We have to hold that God is loving and just. 

    Our Moment In Church History

    Our Moment In Church History

    This week was our first week of live streaming our service due to COVID-19. We made changes to the service to better accomodate the live stream format by only including three songs. And those songs sounded so great on the recording that we've included them on the podcast. Skip forward to the 18:40 mark if you want to just listen to the sermon.

    Throughout history, the Church has stepped into the disasters and epidemics of the day to serve and minister to those who are suffering and their loved ones. By doing this, Christians demonstrated that they understood the teachings of Christ when He spoke of the the good Samaritan or of ministering to the "least of these." 

    And now here we are Church. Will we step into our moment of history to love and minister to those who are out of work, in fear of dying, suffering from the loss of a loved one? Will future generations look back on what we do now and take encouragement from it?