Jim Wallis, the inspirational leader of The Sojourners Community, delivered the following inspiring words at Georgetown University on Sunday, May 20 under the title What's Acceptable? What's Possible?
"... what are you going to no longer accept in our world, what will you refuse to tolerate now that you will be making the decisions that matter?
Will it be acceptable to you that 3 billion people in our world today - half of God's children - live on less that $2 per day, that more than 1 billion live on less than $1 per day, that the gap between the life expectancy in the rich places and the poor places in the world is now 40 years, and that 30,000 children globally will die today ... from needless, senseless, and utterly preventable poverty and disease? It's what Bono calls "stupid poverty."
"...What we see now offends us, offends our understanding of the sanctity and dignity of life, offends our notions of fairness and justice, offends our most basic values; it violates our idea of the common good, and starts to tug at our deepest places. We cross the line of unacceptability. We become intolerant of the injustice.
But just changing our notion of what is unacceptable isn't enough, however. We must also change our perception of what is possible.
In that regard, I would encourage each of you to think about your vocation more than just your career. And there is a difference. From the outside, those two tracks may look very much alike, but asking the vocational question rather than just considering the career options will take you much deeper. The key is to ask why you might take one path instead of another - the real reasons you would do something, more than just because you can. The key is to ask who you really are and what you want to become. It is to ask what you believe you are supposed to do...
"Ask where your gifts intersect with the groaning needs of the world - there is your vocation."
You can track the whole speech by clicking the Sojourners link over on the left of this blogpage.
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