cocoa chanel

what's fashionable in faith

Woman Thwarts Robber With Prayer

I’ve been so moved by this story of Angela Martez, the woman in Indiana who defended herself from an armed robber by praying. Her compassion and empathy for him, as well as her acknowledgment of his humanity despite her fear in the moment forced him to rethink his actions. The robber, Gregory Smith who is a former member of the military, said no one had ever spoken to him the way this woman had. Martez prayed over him and asked God to remind Smith that he didn’t need to stoop to this level.

On Friday, Gregory Smith appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show via satellite from jail to tell his side of the story and once again apologize to “Miss Angela.” The young man had this to say about the situation:

“I’ve always been a firm believer in God and Christ, but I’ve never walked that walk. And I felt like for the longest time I was in control of everything. Everything was supposed to go my way. And I feel like a lot of the things that I did have before I got into the situation I’m in now, I took for granted…and I lost it.”

What do you think of this story? Did you catch the news on Oprah?

October 23, 2009 Posted by | television | , , , , | 1 Comment

Steve Harvey Introduces Jesus Christ

This old video of popular comedian Steve Harvey has been making the rounds on the Internet lately. I can’t believe he gets an entire audience on their feet clapping for Jesus. Wow…it would have been cool if God just strolled out on stage after that and blew everyone’s minds.

October 3, 2009 Posted by | celebrities, religion | , | Leave a Comment

Donald Miller: ‘There’s No Social Commodity for Being Christian’

donald-miller560250Back in April, Blue Like Jazz author Donald Miller posed one question to an audience of young adults gathered for Sojourner magazine’s Mobilization to End Poverty event in Washington, D.C.: If you took the elements of a good story and integrated them into your real life, what would that look like?

For months that question has plagued me, quietly challenging me to live a more compelling story in my own life. This past week, Miller released his highly-anticipated new book A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life, which is full of the lessons he’s learned about how to turn an unstructured and random life into a meaningful existence.

This summer, I had the chance to speak with Miller about the new book and asked him what trends he’s noticed in the Church.

COCOA CHANEL: What’s fashionable in faith? What are some of the trends you’ve noticed in the Christian church at large?
DONALD MILLER: I don’t think about church very much. I think because I talk to Christians, people ask me about church a lot. But I’ve never been a pastor. I’ve never been on staff at a church. That’s for much smarter people than me. So I haven’t spent a whole lot of time thinking about that.

Part of it is because I’m way up here in Portland, and we’re largely an unchurched community. And I notice when I leave Portland and I go to church somewhere how foreign it feels—its literally like you’re going into a different country. It always strikes me as weird. There’s no social commodity for being a Christian here. There’s no benefit. Where you can go to the south or the southeast and one of the things your employer may want to know is, “Do you attend church?” So here, if your employer found out you attended church, it would almost assuredly cost you something. And not that they would be against you, they would just think that you’re weird. And so for us, we’re a small community of people who cling to each other and cling to Christ and live it out in a very real way. There’s no gain.

*****

To read more of my interview with Donald Miller, head over to UrbanFaith.com. Be sure to leave a comment by October 19th to enter to win a FREE copy of A Million Miles in a Thousand Years.

October 3, 2009 Posted by | books, church, faith, religion | | Leave a Comment

   

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