Ministering to the Poor

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  • Опубликовано: 10 апр 2019
  • San Francisco Quaker Meeting is located at the border of one of the city’s poorest neighborhoods and one of its richest. Member David Breitzmann discusses the meeting’s attempts to meet the needs presented by its location, and how it has grown and deepened in the process.
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    Transcript:
    To me, the inner prompting of what would lead us to treat someone the way that we would want to be treated is anchored in the word mercy, I would say. When we are at our worst, we would ask that someone else would be merciful to us.
    We sometimes construct these artificial categories of who is the poorest or the least among us or those sort of things, but really George Fox was quite prescient, I think, when he noted in that famous quote about the ocean of darkness and the ocean of light (great metaphors!), that you don’t get to that point until you recognize that all the propensities that you would point out in someone else-Pharaoh, a Cain, someone else that’s an arch-villain or is self-destructive-exist in you, primarily, first of all.
    And when you come to that understanding, you’re not ministering to someone who is categorically different than you. You are caring for yourself in a way that you either have been or at some point in time will be, because those same propensities are in you.
    Ministering to the Poor
    My name is David Brietzmann. I live in San Francisco and I’m a member of the San Francisco Monthly Meeting.
    I was reading early this morning the quote in Isaiah in which, of course, Christ reiterates that there is a message of good news which exists for the poor: a proclamation of good news to the poor. Insofar as in other ways we respond to the needs of people when they present themselves in any condition that is “in need,” we are responding to that of Christ in them, whether it’s in material poverty, or poverty of understanding, or poverty of self-care. To some degree, we are all poor in that way, because we are finite creatures.
    San Francisco Meeting
    The San Francisco Monthly Meetinghouse, of which I am a member, is located in an environment that is right at the precipice of where two very distinct socioeconomic populations meet. One of which is known as “The Tenderloin,” is one of the poorest in the city, and if you look at crime indices or other indices that are reported by the police, that is a hot red bed of activity and the rest of the city is a lush eco-green.
    Here, right across Market Street on 9th, we encounter what is the spillover from that otherwise very tightly clustered hotbed of activity, and that can take many forms whether it’s people that are sleeping outside of the meetinghouse, whether it’s the young homies that are outside engaged in colorful transactions because as undocumented persons there’s no other way to earn an income, or it can take the shape of people who are mumbling to themselves, clearly mentally distressed and in need of care but the city of San Francisco has to some degree eliminated all of the places that would care for them, so they’re just left to their own devices and wander out in public.
    Practicing Hospitality
    That can be difficult particularly on first days because the meeting house, as it should be, is open and so there’s some challenges with what you do depending on who presents itself. But I have found that even what seems to be the greatest calamity in our city affords Friends the opportunity to be obedient to how they are called to respond to the personal needs in persons, whether that means just letting someone sleep in the lobby during worship. As inconspicuous as that might seem, it can sometimes be the greatest form of hospitality that we can give.
    So in that way, I think that we’re both challenged in this particular area in San Francisco and we can show up to our neighbors and learn something from them in the best of all cases.
    More: fdsj.nl/poor
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    The views expressed in this video are of the speakers and do not necessarily reflect the views of Friends Journal or its collaborators.

Комментарии • 7

  • @Quakerspeak
    @Quakerspeak  4 года назад

    SUBSCRIBE for a new video every week! fdsj.nl/QS-Subscribe
    WATCH all our videos: fdsj.nl/qs-all-videos
    FILMED & EDITED by Jon Watts: jonwatts.com

  • @raymonddubois9242
    @raymonddubois9242 6 месяцев назад

    The opening statements are the most profound I have heard in a long long time.

  • @mooniebo2752
    @mooniebo2752 Год назад

    3 years later I remember this interview. it impacted me.

  • @lydiamansfield9002
    @lydiamansfield9002 5 лет назад +2

    Loved this video so much! Really put to words many of my sentiments. Thank you.

  • @olive3700
    @olive3700 2 года назад

    He speaks of the mentally ill, "The city of San Francisco has to some degree eliminated all the places that would care for them." That is something we can and should do something about.