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Coffee

There’s a new fortune cookie fortune taped to the register at the cafe: “The work will teach you how to do it.” I like that. The learning comes through the process of the work.

It’s been a roller coaster week for church-planting emotions. I’ve been able to spend quality time with several members of Upper Room. And there have been a number of other encouraging ministry moments this week. But in the center of the week was our annual meeting with the commission that approves our grants and oversees our work. It was challenging. . . . Suffice it to say, great things are happening at Upper Room, but we need to grow or adapt in order to become sustainable once we’re weaned off the grants. And that’s intimidating when you aren’t quite sure how to grow or adapt.

Personally, I often feel like I know what needs to happen in ministry, but not how to make it happen. I can picture the desired outcome, but there’s no instruction book to go with the picture on the box. But that’s part of living by faith: trusting that what God has promised will come about, even if the steps in the process are unclear. Or the process itself keeps changing. For those walking by faith, the Spirit teaches us how to do the work, through the process of doing the work. Right?

A lot of things have happened over the past two weeks that are worthy noting in a quick update on the church-plant.  First, we heard that our grant application was approved by the Presbytery’s NCD Commission.  Then we heard that the Committee on Ministry approved the commission’s recommendation to call Mike and myself as organizing co-pastors.  Mike’s planning his ordination for later this month, and I’m planning mine for early November, when I’ll be travelling back to Colorado for a Company of New Pastors retreat. 

Even with all that good news, it didn’t sink in to me that “this is really happening!” until later in the week.  On Thursday night we had our first gathering of the seed-group for the church-plant.  Munching on an assortment of snacks Eileen prepared, we spent the evening conversing, getting to know each other, and praying together.  Our next gathering is this Thursday, when we’re going to begin talking more about the vision for the church and start working our way through Luke-Acts together. 

Capping off a great week, I found out Saturday that I have a new job making coffee at one of the coolest coffee shops in Squirrel Hill: 61C Cafe.  My first shift is tomorrow and I can’t wait to get to know the staff and customers better.  While I will dearly miss the staff in the Dean’s Wing at PTS, I’m excited to be working a job in the community where we’ll be living and ministering, and am grateful to have been placed in such a fun position.

After not blogging in a while, several things are happening this week that are making me want to write more. The first has to do with coffee. Last night Eileen and I watched the movie Black Gold with our friends Ben and Megan. It’s a very well done documentary regarding fair-trade coffee and it gives faces and names to the farmers who produce the commodity which we so mindlessly consume billions of cups of every day. Perhaps the most moving scene in the film for me was seeing the Ethiopian farmers who produce the coffee we drink praying to God that they would be paid a fair wage for their work. To find out more, or learn how to get a copy of the movie, click the link above.

While I have known about fairly traded coffee and other products for a while, I have to confess that I am by no means consistent in buying them. I always buy fairly traded coffee to drink at home in the mornings – that I have done for a while. But when my middle-of-the-day caffeine craving hits, I find myself buying whatever I can get from whatever coffee shop happens to be most convenient. The most common of these places is the seminary’s cafeteria, where the coffee doesn’t even taste good!

So, I repent. Starting today I will no longer buy coffee at the seminary’s cafeteria or at places which I know do not pay fair prices for their coffee beans. At some point I hope to talk to Mike, the chef at our cafeteria to find out if it’s possible to get fair-trade coffee at the seminary – perhaps Pura Vida, or some other company which sees fair-trade as a Christian vocation. In the mean time, though, I’m cut off. Hello caffeine headaches.

My good friend Jimmy from Colorado posted a very thoughtful response to my last post, which leads to this revision/continuance of what I had talked about. To view his post, just scroll down and click on the comments to my last one. In summary, Jimmy made some great points about 1) how the parable of the talents in Matthew 25 suggests that what we do with our money matters more than what we have, 2) how Richard Foster wrote in “Celebration of Discipline” that God doesn’t want us to be either rich or poor (because the extremely poor can be just as preoccupied with money as the wealthy), 3) and the education of Paul is evidence that he came from a wealthy background. I’m sure that all of these ideas are true, but I still think we need to add a couple qualifications to them. While I think Jimmy is exactly right that God gives us economic blessings so that we may be blessings to others, I think there are subtle ways in which we often fail to use that money appropriately.

First think about it this way: in order to have wealth, you have to acquire it. Regardless of what one does with his/her money, doesn’t God also care about how that person got the money? Check out Deuteronomy 23:18: “You must not bring the earnings of a female prostitute or of a male prostitute into the house of the LORD your God to pay any vow, because the LORD your God detests them both.” (NIV). Obviously prostitution was then and is now considered to be immoral and offensive to God’s design of sexuality, hence profits made from that were not acceptable to God even if someone tried to present them as an offering to God. Now let’s apply this to today’s business world. Of course there are many perfectly honest companies and executives out there, but we know there are just as many who are not perfectly honest or faultless in their business ethics. If it is acceptable in God’s sight to possess wealth, does that hold true for people who made their money in the tobacco industry? Or the pornography industry? Or drugs? I have a feeling God detests those products like God detests prostitution. So what about companies that are economically immoral? Most people agree that sweatshops amount to cruel treatment of the workers. Would God approve of the wealth possessed by a person who made his/her money by marketing merchandise made in sweatshops? Furthermore, does God approve of us buying clothes that are made in sweatshops because we want to save the extra money to include in our tithe at church? The lines there are getting pretty blurry.

This leads to the second point: even if we received our wealth justly and honestly as a blessing from God, are there moral implications for how we go about preserving that wealth? Let’s use coffee as the example now. “Fair Trade” coffee hit the market after people read horror stories about the way workers on coffee plantations in Africa and South America were abused and not even paid enough to live on. (For more info, see http://www.globalexchange.org/campaigns/fairtrade/coffee/). If my need for caffeine forces me to buy cheap coffee and thus perpetuate the degradation of a worker in a third-world country, does God approve of that? I don’t think so. What if I need the coffee to stay awake to study for my seminary classes? I still don’t think God would approve. One of the core themes in the Old Testament Prophets is that economic exploitation is dishonoring to God. Therefore, while it may have been acceptable in God’s eyes then for people to possess some degree of wealth (the kings of Israel?), it wasn’t acceptable if that meant the oppression of others. Here is one final example that carries this idea one step further: God created the earth and said that it was good, and even though God gave us dominion over the earth, he probably didn’t intend for that dominion to lead destruction of his good Creation. When we buy food that was grown using pesticides that pollute the ground, we are polluting God’s Creation. When we buy other products that are made in a manner that demeans Creation, such as non-recycled/recyclable materials or gas-hogging vehicles, we are also polluting God’s good Creation. And why do we do these things? Because we love our money too much to pay the premium for a hybrid car or organic food. And of course this doesn’t even scratch the surface on the even larger issue of moral investment/divestment. If we put our savings in mutual funds or stocks that include companies that are unethical in their business practices, are we too not responsible for their sin? When Sharon Watkins, the Enron “whistle-blower”, gave a guest lecture here at Pittsburgh Seminary last Fall, she mentioned the fact that responsible investment is one of the only ways to hold unethical companies like Enron responsible. If we divest the savings we have in immoral companies and instead invest them in socially-responsible companies, we send the powerful message to business executives that we value people and morals more than just money and interest.

I write all these things realizing that I am far from perfect in living up to these standards. Most of the ideas I listed above are ones that I am only now beginning to explore in terms of actually making a difference in the way I live. But that is what it means to repent – when we realize we are in sin, we repent, turning the other direction and making a difference in our lives. In sharing these thoughts, I guess I am initiating the repentance process for myself, which for now may just be a heightened awareness of the impact my decisions make. The more people there are who have the awareness, though, the more people who will make a change in their lives, and that has the power to change our society.

Holy Lord God, please help us, though we fail to live up to Your perfection, to at least live in a way that pushes us ever closer to You. Forgive us our oppression of others, and grant us the ability to see the economic decisions we make through Your eyes. If You bless us with wealth, guide us by the power of the Holy Spirit to show us how to manage and use that wealth as You alone see fit. Amen.

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