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Introduction

 

How do we incarnate the body of Christ in this new frontier, this increasing wilderness? What do the roots of Christianity, of the apostles first forays into the world have to say for the church today? These are the questions that drive me. How are we to be the church in a culture that has forgotten the ways of Christ?

The call of the church today is to abandon its fortresses and to become nomads, following the breath of God as he fills the world with life; to pursue the shadow of an unrelenting and unceasing God that is passionately reclaiming what is his. I want to understand how he spoke through his first apostles as he called together and formed the body of believers in the upper room with his holy fire. I want to inhabit the words and minds of the ancient theologians and mystics that sought God above all else. Through all of this though I want to gain an understanding on how to inspire, lead, and bring others along on the narrow path, to one day see the new heavens and the new earth in all their glory, and to see the face of my savior and embrace his feet in awe.

This journey is both intimately personal, and at the same time impossible without being in community with other believers and unbelievers alike. For truly as the gospel states we all have sinned, and fallen short of God’s glory, but praise be the cross is sufficient for all who embrace it’s story.

-David

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Entries in Health (1)

Friday
Sep252009

An Underlying Reason for Our Fear of Exotic Flu's

I want to preface this article by stating that I know that swine flu and avian flu are indeed real and actual virus' that can and have caused the death of thousands.  So, from that standpoint they are indeed tragic.  However their mortality figures pale in comparrison to other pressing illnesses.

So, to my point.

I believe the hyper-attention that exotic flus, like the swine and bird, reveal a latent xenophobia and fear of foreigners among the western nations.  I say this, because in poorer foreign nations it is not uncommon for thousands of people to die daily from illnesses like dysentary, dengue fever, malaria, yellow fever, and typhoid fever.  These illnesses are severe and debilitating for the countries and peoples in which they occur, but from a western and modernized standpoint they are contained and rarely, if ever, show up in our countries.

This is not the case however with the swine flu and the avian flus.  They have the possibility and ability to move beyond the boundaries of the nations from which they originate.  In the case of the most recent strain of swine flu, in Mexico; or the avian flu found in south-east asia.

At a subconscious level these flus represent the possibility of unchecked infiltration/immigration of the global south and it's cultures into the global north and it's predominately white culture.  It is because of this latent xenophobic fear of the other, of the foreigner that we find ourselves largely spending billions of dollars in creating a vaccine for an illness that has killed under 4,000 people when we could have instead spent that same amount on clean water sources for resource limited peoples around the world and saved millions of lives over the course of time.

Now it could be that the swine flu mutates and comes around and kills many people in western nations, but the likelyhood of that occuring is small.  For instance, many Americans who are 50 and over have already been vaccinated against forms of the H1N1 virus already, as this strain of flu is not new; and flu vaccines given in past generations included this form.  There is no reason that development of this vaccine could not have taken place over a longer period of time, with less dollars, and better research and testing.  The rush to market with this vaccine is largely driven by a public demand that is fueled by a latent xenophobia.