Suburban Poverty

Trying to understand the urban and suburban neighborhoods we live and work in is an ongoing task.  Interesting to learn that suburban poverty is growing...

As Americans flee the cities for the suburbs, many are failing to leave poverty behind.

Thesuburban poor outnumbered their inner-city counterparts for the first time last year, with more than 12 million suburban residents living in poverty, according to a study of the nation’s 100 largest metropolitan areas released Thursday.

“Economies are regional now,” said Alan Berube, who co-wrote the report for the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank. “Where you see increases in city poverty, in almost every metropolitan area, you also see increases in suburban poverty.”

Contributing factors...

—Suburbs are adding people much faster than cities, making it inevitable that the number of poor people living in suburbs would eventually surpass those living in cities.

—The poverty rate in large cities (18.8 percent) is still higher than it is in the suburbs (9.4 percent). But the overall number of people living in poverty is higher in the suburbs in part because of population growth.

—America’s suburbs are becoming more diverse, racially and economically. “There’s poverty really everywhere in metropolitan areas because there are low-wage jobs everywhere,” Berube said.

—Recent immigrants are increasingly bypassing cities and moving directly to suburbs, especially in the South and West. Those immigrants, on average, have lower incomes than people born in the United States.

Read more.

Keller: Leadership & Church Size

New article by Tim Keller in the new issue of The Movement (Redeemer's church planting newsletter): "Leadership and Church Size Dynamics."  This is Part 1 of 2.  Read the rest of the issue here

Also encourage you to read the interview with J.R. Vassar, "Calling and Seduction of the City."  He is the planter of Apostles Church in Manhattan, NYC.  I met him in my first year of ministry in Colorado when he spoke at a college retreat I organized.  Good guy.

In other Redeemer resource news, I noticed a few days ago that Redeemer has a Coaching Urban Church Planters book out from J. Allen Thompson.  Should be helpful.

Tim Keller Speaks

Tim Keller is speaking at Christian Life Conference January 19-21. The conference is in Memphis, TN and free for all to attend. From the website...

Cruciformity will be the twelfth annual Christian Life Conference (CLC) hosted by Second Presbyterian Church. Think of the CLC as “continuing ed” for your spiritual life. Whether you’re a brand-new or a life-long Christian, there’s always more to learn about how to put faith into practice.

The CLC is also a great way for anyone to learn more about how Christ can impact your life. The conference is free and open to the public.

Check out the conference schedule, bring a friend and take advantage of this opportunity to find out what a life shaped by the cross is like.

UPDATE: The conference audio will be up soon afterwards.  Old conference audio is there now from  Walt Kaiser and D.A. Carson,

Missionary Work in Suburbia

Hamo (Andrew Hamilton) over at Backyard Missionary has some good thoughts (not earth shattering, but good) in his three part series, "Some Thoughts on Missionary Work in Suburbia."  He discusses six building blocks.

Post 1...
    1. Proximity - being near people
    2. Regularity - spending significant time together
Post 2...
    3. Depth - going beyond the fluff in relationships
    4. Conflict - being prepared to disagree and realise that’s ok and necessary
Post 3...
    5. The Message - we need to speak about who we are, and why
    6. The Supernatural - ultimately it still comes down to a work of God
Post 4...
    Going a little deeper with the above six points

Music Monday 12.4.06

It's time to talk Christmas music.  Granted, I'm not the foremost expert on Christmas music.  Nor do I want to be or ever intend to be.  I'd rather get a CD I can listen to after the holidays are over and all year round.  But there are times to drop a few bucks on Christmas music.

Sufjan One of those times is when Sufjan Stevens puts out a Christmas album.  I don't own it yet, but I have many of the songs from a free download last year.  They are fantastic, and his boxed set, Songs for Christmas, is surely worth the $20 price tag. Grab it.  Or head to Sufjan's website to stream all the music! (Thanks macht)

If a Sufjan fix won't do it for you, then check out my post from last Christmas detailing the five most played Christmas CD's in my home.  All good stuff.

Music Monday 11.27.06

JosephAnother new CD to mention this Music Monday, Joseph Arthur's Nuclear Daydream (myspace). 

Joseph_arthur Man, I am enjoying this CD thoroughly.  Nuclear Daydream is my introduction to Arthur, and what a great introduction it is.  His sound reminds me a bit of Elliot Smith.  A lot of Mick Jagger.  But if Mick Jagger isn't a sound you are looking for, please just trust me and check it out anyway.  I think you will be very surprised.

KEXP in Seattle has a live concert of Joseph Arthur online (51 minutes), as well as a video interview.  Also, search for the KEXP Live Performances podcast on iTunes to discover great new music.

Reviews

Metacritic puts Nuclear Daydream at an 81, which means "universal acclaim."

Paste: "The multitalented Joseph Arthur...is a metaphysician who fashions his complex interior monologues into deceptively simple pop songs. Nuclear Daydream, his fifth album, is post-apocalyptic religious music, endlessly ponderable and disturbingly beautiful."

New York Magazine: "His latest album, Nuclear Daydream, is his fifth, and it is a tutorial in finely textured songwriting. The tunes are generally slow to mid-tempo, built from simple chord progressions and driven by a powerful, versatile voice that blends bits of Jagger, Dylan, Bowie, and Stipe. Arthur’s lyrics tend to be blunt vignettes about the struggles of love and faith, and they do occasionally veer into solipsistic clichés. But because his delivery is so full bore, you find yourself helplessly singing along even to lyrics that might otherwise make you wince, such as “Woman, you make me feel / Woman, are you for real?” And though the sentiments are often bleak, Arthur takes such cathartic pleasure in expressing them that even the darkest moments contain a glimmer of hopefulness."

Music Monday 11.20.06

JnewI have a few CD's I can't wait to talk about, but I'm going to wait to talk about all of them but one. 

Ys I recently picked up Joanna Newsom's (myspace) new one, Ys.  It is one of the strangest and most wonderful CD's I've heard. 

If you think all real music is 3-5 minutes a song and should be radio-ready, this isn't for you.  Please no hate mail if you buy the CD and don't like it.  Ys' five tracks run about 55 minutes or so.  This music is not about belting out pop hits, but about an experience, about poetry and meaning and depth of beauty.  It may not grab you at first listen (though it did me), and many of you will quickly dismiss it after hearing a clip or two.  But I'm telling you, the grandeur of this album is something to behold.

The music seems to put you in a world of knights and horses and castles and kingdoms, and it makes you wonder if there are dragons in the nearby caves.  It's magical if there ever was magical, with Newsom on the harp and her unique voice breathing out drama.  Newsom is a poet, and the CD's booklet is the thickest I've ever seen at just under 30 pages of lyric/poetry.  It's edges are gold like a Bible or a leather-bound edition of Tom Sawyer, fitting for such literary music.

From "Emily"...

Pa pointed out to me, for the hundredth time tonight,
the way the ladle leads to a dirt-red bullet of light.

Squint skyward and listen--
loving him, we move within his borders:
just asterisms in the stars' set order.
 
    We could stand for a century,
staring,
with our heads cocked,
in the broad daylight, at this thing:

    Joy,
landlocked in bodies that don't keep--
dumbstruck with the sweetness of being,
till we don't be.
Told: take this.
Eat this.
 
    Told: the meteorite is the source of the light,
And the meteor's just what we see;
And the meteoroid is a stone that's devoid of the fire that propelled it to thee.
 
    And the meteorite's just what causes the light,
And the meteor's how it's perceived;
And the meteoroid's a bone thrown from the void that lies quiet in offering to thee.

More on Ys: Metacritic, Pitchfork, Dusted, Observer Music Monthly.

Under the Radar: "The full orchestra doesn’t smack of overproduced grandiosity, which is a nice surprise. Less surprising, of course, is the album's incredible lyrical density."

Drowned in Sound:

It’s only very occasionally that I’ve come across an album that sounds so out of step with the times in which it’s created that it sounds startling, even shocking, like a smouldering asteroid that crashes through the ceiling of your house.

Often it’s something so odd, so next level that it seems like it can only have come from the future. But Ys, the second full-length album by prodigious folk musician Joanna Newsom, sounds like it has come from some dimly remembered past. Like old wives’ tales, these autobiographical myths are built from grains of truth and wisdom, a vivid, living, textured account of a memory glimpsed or forgotten, like a dream upon waking or a fable from a faraway place written a long time ago."

Here's a side note that's worthy of an entire post.  Please listen to the Espers' song "Voices."  I have their most recent CD, Espers II, which is tremendous.  "Voices" is from Espers, which is on my "must buy" list.

Jesus Christ: The Talking Doll

Jesus2For crying out loud...

A talking Jesus doll has been turned down by the Marine Reserves' Toys for Tots program.

A suburban Los Angeles company offered to donate 4,000 of the foot-tall dolls, which quote Bible verses, for distribution to needy children this holiday season. The battery-powered Jesus is one of several dolls manufactured by one2believe, a division of the Valencia- based Beverly Hills Teddy Bear Co., based on Biblical figures.

But the charity balked because of the dolls' religious nature.

Toys are donated to kids based on financial need and "we don't know anything about their background, their religious affiliations," said Bill Grein, vice president of Marine Toys for Tots Foundation, in Quantico, Va.

As a government entity, Marines "don't profess one religion over another," Grein said Tuesday. "We can't take a chance on sending a talking Jesus doll to a Jewish family or a Muslim family."

Michael La Roe, director of business development for both companies, said the charity's decision left him "surprised and disappointed."

"The idea was for them to be three-dimensional teaching tools for kids," La Roe said. "I believe as a churchgoing person, anyone can benefit from hearing the words of the Bible."

According to the company's Web site, the button-activated, bearded Jesus, dressed in hand-sewn cloth outfits and sandals, recites Scripture such as "I tell you the truth, no one can see the kingdom of God unless he is born again" and "Love your neighbor as yourself." It has a $20 retail value.

You can learn more about this amazing product here, including the fact that this Jesus has "realistic eyes."  I like my version better.

My observations...

1. Jesus is worth way more than $20.  Hence, this cheapens Jesus.

2. I don't see any reference to Jesus saying anything about "hypocrites" or "white-washed tombs" or many other Scriptures.  So this doll misrepresents Jesus.

3. Jesus welcomes all the little children.  So isn't it a bit odd that this doll was only going to be donated to "needy" ones?  Shouldn't every kid get their own free Jesus?

4. [sarcasm]At least the company got Jesus' skin color right.[/sarcasm]

5. Since when does Jesus look like Val Kilmer?Jesus3_cropVal_2_crop

Music Monday

From time to time I want to revisit some music I think is worth re-recommending. 

I have a number of CD's that I like and listen to now and again but aren't a regular part of my music diet.  I have some CD's I liked for a while and they lacked the depth that would make them last.  But there are a select number of CD's in my music rotation that never seem to grow old.  Here are 10 CD's (most are still fairly new) that I appreciate more with each listen, and so they often get played the most.  In alphabetical order (stars by my top three)...

Amos Lee: Amos Lee
The Avett Brothers (I refuse to choose, Thieves, Mignonette, Live Vol 2, all good)
Band of Horses: Everything All the Time
Cat Power: The Greatest
Page France: Hello, Dear Wind *
Shearwater: Palo Santo *
Sia: Color the Small One
Waterdeep: Sink or Swim
Wilco: Kicking Television: Live in Chicago
Winterpills: Winterpills *