The You Decide Dance Challenge was an event put on by Street Culture Zambia. It pitted participants against each other in 1-on-1 dance battles in the categories of men’s hip hop freestyle, men’s jerk, and women’s hip hop freestyle. At the end of each round all observers would vote for the winner by displaying either the red of blue side of their voting card. The dancer in the corner receiving the most votes won.
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Lessons From the World on Following Jesus
by Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove
Jim said to me when I first met him,
“Maybe the most faithful follower of Jesus
in the 20th century was a man who
did not call himself a Christian.”
Then he told the story
of Gandhi’s experiments in truth.
“Living Christ means a living cross;
without it life is a living death.”
We stood outside the hotel in Baghdad
saying goodbye, maybe forever.
Jim looked with laughter in his eyes and said,
“It’s going to be a wonderful day.”
At Rutba the Good Iraqi showed us
what God’s love looks like
in the middle of a war.
And we were changed.
My mama told me truth is a man
called Jesus, and life is knowing Him
a little more each day.
I’ve never doubted she was right,
but I’ve seen more of Jesus in
the life of a Hindu satyagrahi,
in the embrace of a Muslim doctor,
than in most Sunday morning meetings.
Maybe this troubles you, I don’t know.
(I’ll admit is has bothered me.)
But I think of the magi, following
their gods in the stars to the crib
of a child whose people did not know him
though their Scriptures had foretold his birth.
And I recall how I learned that story,
playing the part of a shepherd boy
in a Sunday morning program when I was six.
I remember my mama, smiling.
I remember Jim’s eyes, laughing.
I remember meeting Jesus in the desert,
being saved.
originally posted here.
I normally try and post videos I think are incredibly well made or have an intense message (ideally both-and rather than either-or), but this was just far too cute to pass up!
I always love a little bluegrass.
This video has made the social media rounds over the past few weeks so there is a good chance you may have already seen it. If you haven’t, it is well worth the watch. Physical injuries and death are not the only consequences of war.
This was originally posted over on Practicing Resurrection by Bill Guerrant.
My neighbor’s mother was having a difficult time delivering his older sister. His father had to got and get the doctor, although he would have preferred not to. With the doctor’s help the baby was successfully delivered. This was in the 1930s. The doctor charged them $10.
When his father sold his crop that year, after paying off the crop lien he had a little over $10 left over. That was his profit for the year.
He went to the doctor and told him that after selling the crop he had enough to pay his bill. “But,” he continued, “my mule died. If I buy another mule I can make a crop next year. If I don’t, I can’t. I mean to pay you what I owe you and I have it with me. But if I pay you now I won’t be able to buy a mule.”
“Buy a mule,” the doctor responded, “and pay me when you can.”
He paid the doctor the following year.
Blessed are the Landmines
by Brave Saint Saturn
Blessed are the land-mines
Stretched across the desert floor
God, bless the hands that formed them
Filled their shrapnel hearts with war
May You bless the companies
The goose that laid the golden egg
May they make a million more
Blowing off a million legs
Blessed are the black-tongued ravens
Substituting fear for reason
To hate war is to hate us
If you love peace, then you must love treason
Beat your plowshares into swords
Beat your pulpits, turn your tables
Blessed are the hand-grenades
Bless the church who rattles sabers
This house, is burning
This poison still is worming
This temple, will cave in
There’s nothing here worth saving
Nail the gold up to the altar
Like Ahab taunts his crew to war
Blessed are the shareholders
Lack of faith is for the poor
Hold your wallets to the sky
A temple built to sooth yourself
Blessed is the church who tries
To help you build blessed wealth
I hope to be just as feisty, determined, and dedicated when I get old.