Blogs
Living
Submitted by dsimmer on Sat, 03/20/2010 - 10:00This incredible video encompasses so much truth. Take a few moments to watch this and think about the impact this story has, especially on those who struggle with self-worth and self-image.
"You can transcend. You can get to a place where you're sort of free to be able to dance... to be what you were meant to be."
BIRTHRIGHT from Sean Mullens on Vimeo.
Ancestry: the Project
Submitted by dsimmer on Thu, 03/18/2010 - 10:35Yesterday one of our English teachers asked me about genealogy and best practices in research. We had a nice conversation about the joys of the ancestral scavenger hunt, chasing down leads in different states or countries to figure who your ancestors were and how they impacted history. I made it home feeling inspired to pick up the genealogist's mantle that I have worn from time to time. Giles surprised me by telling me that she signed up for a free trial at Ancestry.com to research her own family lines, so we had a bit of an ancestry collaboration yesterday. It is incredible how quickly this type of work captivates and consumes all of our time.
Consider these facts:
On my paternal side, one line is traced back to a 1669 birth in the Rheinland-Pfalz region of Germany:
![]()
On my maternal side, one line is traced back to a 1681 town meeting record in Malden, Massachusetts Bay Colony. According to some genealogists, that line is believed to be of Irish origins and the man at the meeting is assumed to have immigrated to Malden from Ireland. He would have been 21 at the time of that meeting.
I love detective work!
A Renewed Passion for Justice and Friendship
Submitted by dsimmer on Tue, 03/16/2010 - 11:01This past weekend Giles and I had the chance to share in a dear friend's wedding, catch up with a old friend before she leaves the 48 states, and hassle some bronze statues (if I could make a career out of this, I would). On our way out of town, we made what I intended to be a quick stop through the Land of a Thousand Hills coffee shop in downtown Roswell.

Within minutes, Giles, Kristin and I fell in love with the atmosphere. How could we not? It's an old house (maybe 100 years old?) that has been converted to a comfortable and relaxing environment. Talk about a beautiful place to drink coffee and chat!

I decided to call my coffee ambassador for LoTH, who happens to work just across the street from the shop. He dropped in to hear more about New Way Corktown and what we're hoping to do in the future in Detroit. After that, he gave us a tour of the current roasting facilities and offices that will be giving way to a larger facility in the next couple of months.


Being able to experience Land of a Thousand Hills Coffee first hand left us feeling inspired (and smelling of freshly-roasted beans!). Realizing how important this company is to justice and reconciliation in Rwanda, combined with the quality of product they produce, makes me excited to share LoTH coffee with all of our friends and neighbors. This is an easy opportunity for a church or organization to support global work in a recovering country while drinking a fantastic cup of Rwandan coffee.
So here's an idea. Let's get a group of investors together, open a small franchised location in Detroit, and enjoy LoTH coffee together every day. Deal?
Photos courtesy of Kristin A. Karl.
With the Sun Springs Hope
Submitted by dsimmer on Thu, 03/11/2010 - 13:23As the winter weather has lifted over Southeast Michigan, hope and anticipation has begun to set in. My students are doing everything they can to avoid coming to school, teachers and staff are crushed with the realization that snow days are gone until next year, and my hopes and dreams for Detroit are continuing to grow.
With that comes louder doubters and naysayers, the types that want to remind you that your dreams "can't happen" or that you are not big enough to make it happen. It is frustrating to say the least, but at the same time inspiring. More than a few people said that I shouldn't work in Detroit, and I've now been at the school for over two years. Several people were vocal about our move, saying that we'd move back to the suburbs within months because Detroit is such a tough place to live.
Instead, we're pressing on, even more focused than before. The daylight in the morning makes me feel inspired, not tired. The sunshine and the rain give me the extra bounce in my step to see all of my 2010 goals become reality. Woodward Theological Society is already a reality and has a lot in store for this year and that will be the truth many times over as the winter gives way to spring and then summer.
So don't change the channel, you won't want to miss this. Love Wins.
Two Years
Submitted by dsimmer on Mon, 03/08/2010 - 07:00Hey Buddy.
It's been two years since you moved off of this place. Two years that, for many, have been been as raw as that very day at Hospice. A lot of tears have been shed and more than a few livers have ached, as we have all grieved a life on earth without your smile, your wit, your insane sense of humor.
Yet, in the strangest of ways, you have made us stronger. You have made us more caring, more loving, more filled with love and joy for the little things, and the bigs ones too. IN a way, the loss of you has been filled with so many Dylan-esque moments that it is hard to stay sad for very long.
I've said this before, and others have said it before me, but it bears repeating: my heart is heavy and light today. Heavy with the sadness that I can't call you, text you, laugh with you, and get into some sort of trouble with you. Light with the joy that your memory brings, your laughter when I hear it in the wind, the pictures, and the stories that will forever remain things of legend.
So live on, my friend. Carry that Party Princess stuffed animal around like it is the Queen of Sheba. Wander the Halls of Henry Ford, making the staff and patients alike laugh with no limits at our ridiculous antics. The Guinness Man and Harrison Ford will never be mere things, but triggers of happy, joyous thoughts.
You, Sir, make me smile.
With Hope and Love,
Dean
Book Review: Tending to Eden
Submitted by dsimmer on Wed, 03/03/2010 - 17:45

Thanks to Judson Press and Plant with Purpose, I had the opportunity to review Scott Sabin's new book, Tending to Eden. Sabin, the executive director of a Christian nonprofit evironmental organization, writes what has been billed a "practical and holistic resource for environmentally conscious congregations." With that in mind, my thoughts are reflected below.*
_________________________________
Summary
It is clear from the beginning that Sabin has a lot of experience working in Christian environmental renewal. Many of his stories come from his experiences leading Plant with Purpose (formerly Floresta USA), an organization that works in Christian relief and development around the country.
In his introduction, Sabin lays out five primarily relationships that he believes are the most important for Christians to keep in mind.
1. Relationship with God.
2. Relationship with Neighbors.
3. Relationship with Ourselves.
4. Relationship with Creation.
5. Relationship with the Creation and God.
These relationships lay the foundation for the entire book and Sabin's arguments within.
The years working hands on has given Sabin a healthy balance in his perspective. His organization works hard to reverse deforestation in third world countries, but they have also had to deal with cycles of consequences and have adjusted their methods to best reflect God and respect for Creation. Sabin seeks to knock down misperceptions about the work they do, saying, for example:
People often assume deforestation occurs because people don't know any better, but many poor frarmers have a profound understanding of how their land works. I have had Haitian and Dominican farmers give me detailed descriptions of how a watershed functions. But Haitina farmers also have a proverb that says, "Either this tree must die, or I must die in its place...The problem is not ignorance, but a lack of opportunity and options. (p. 15)
Sabin is critical of his own "Hezekiah attitude ("At least it won't happen in my lifetime")" as being "not only selfish [but] misplaced." (p. 83) He incorporates many directives and encouragements to taking postive action domestically and globally.
Dean's Thoughts
I like the easy with which Sabin presents his perspective. He includes a lot of background and forethought into his arguments and doesn't hesitate to include other voices when they lend to his narrative. Sabin is humble enough to admit the shortcomings that he and his organization have suffered, all while holding steady to his underlying Scriptural basis for the work that they and many others are doing.
Prior to reading the book, I was unaware of the depth of both the problem and the amount of work being done to dramatically change lives. Sabin's arguments are not new or revolutionary, but he tells them in a fresh, positive perspective. I would encourage you to read more about the organizatio and check out Scott Sabin's Tending to Eden when you get a chance. I think you'll find it enriching to your life and your own perspective on impacting Creation in a positive, Christ-reflecting way.
*I was not reimbursed for this review, nor did I receive a published copy of the book. I reviewed a pre-published galley copy to review that was shipped at the publishers expense.
Lots Done, Lots to Do
Submitted by dsimmer on Tue, 02/09/2010 - 11:05As I work to get back into the regular habit of blogging, I have a lot of things to say. In bullets:
- We are weeks into the semester at Cristo Rey already, and having more classes has been a great learning experience for me. More students, smaller classes, more lesson planning. It presents more challenges for me as I continue to learn the ropes of being a high school teacher.
- Mike and I officially pulled the wraps off of Woodward Theological Society. This is an exciting prospect for everyone involved and we're pleased with the response so far (check out the initial interview as well as the list of the steering committee members on the website).
- I'm wrestling, openly, with what to do next fall. There are many things in the works and many discussions in progress involving school, vocation, etc.
- I just got a bag of coffee from Land of A Thousand Hills that has an incredible story. Look for it later today.
- I want to get another tattoo.
Talking, Listening, Commitments.
Submitted by dsimmer on Wed, 01/20/2010 - 17:46Talking is a common thread in my life. Being the passionate person that I am, my thoughts and opinions have a tendency to carry emotion and purpose that may not be necessary. This is true, I am sure, for all of us, but proving the superiority of a collegiate sports rivalry or a coffee brand over another are not, exactly, in the world we live in.
Sure, many of my opinions come from my beliefs and the way that I read the Scriptures that found them.* Reading Matthew 25, for example, I find it hard to believe that someone would care more about "personal freedoms" and political "liberty" over, say, taking care of our neighbors. I'm strongly opposed to dispensationalism because I don't believe it is Scriptural (read, "it is heresy") and I think the whole Hagee/Lahaye reading of Revelation is bunk. Again, this has merit, specificaly because your way of reading Revelation directly affects your views of the future both personally and corporately.
Unfortunately, I have let many of the arguments and debates become the emotionally and time consuming factors in my life. Instead of acting on what I believe, I have been talking an awful lot about what to do, who to vote for, and all the other American distractions we have created for ourselves. Intentionally or not, some friends have managed to point out my significant failings here, and I would like to spend the next few moments making commitments and moving forward.
Commitment #1: Silence is not a bad thing.
Monastics have often reflected on the need for silence and how that gives us an aloneness with God that we often lack in our busy world. To take this one step further, I think that there are times that I have missed hearing God's voice, or God's nudge to "go and do," because I was talking to loudly myself. I have no doubt that there is a time for speaking, a time for debating (see "St. Paul" in the Encyclopaedia Britannica**) and a time for teaching, but that time is not always now. Perhaps we all have gotten so lost in the noise of cable news, talk radio, and the people we work with that we cannot hear God ourselves. He lays out some very clear expectations for our lives (see "Bible, the" and more specifically "the Gospels") yet I have fallen content with talking about them, rather than living them. I'm going to try to spend more time in silence***, listening for the still small voice.
Commitment #2: Less Clutter.
Physical clutter can be a huge distraction for any of us, especially for me. My ability to get distracted by just about anything**** can make a twenty minute task take all day. As a result, my life is less productive and I spend more time reorganizing over and over again rather than pushing forward on the projects and tasks I want to accomplish.
In addition, I am involved in many things, some of which are good ideas but lack the value that I hoped to see in them when I first pursued them. In other cases, they bore fruit for a season but that season is clearly over, and I am working to extract myself from what has become mundane and laborious work, not service.
Commitment #3: Fewer Places of Contention.
As I came to these realizations recently (thanks, again, to several friends who spoke with me about these things), it has become apparent how deeply we all struggle with this. Within the body of Christ, we have deep disagreements about many things, and a healthy discussion and respect for one another is key to our human experience. But at other times, the hostility and unwillingness to bear one anothers burdens is unbelievable and, frankly, sinful. I recognize that I have put myself into these situations and stirred up the bee's nest many times, and this is a wrong thing to do. As a result, I will be backing away from certain forums, outlets, and if need be, people, to create healthy boundaries.
We are all made in the image of God. The Mother Theresas. St. Francis and St. Benedict. The pregnant single teen. The dirty homeless guy, the drug addict, and the guy that always smells like booze. You. Me. Let's respect each other, respect ourselves, and listen for that still small voice that speaks to us in the Scriptures, through the church fathers, and in our times of prayer and solitude.
---------------------------------------------------------
*Lest my beliefs sound "personal" it should be noted that I read, and continue to read, many theologians and saints on the Scriptures. So the way I read the Scriptures is informed by two millenia of work and thought on the subject, not just me in 2010.
**Does anyone even use the Encyclopaedia anymore? What about World Book?
***And as much as it pains me, this silence will be music free. Ugh.
****You think "oh look, something shiny" is a joke, right? Woe is me, it isn't.
The Weekly Blabbermouth: 2010 Week One
Submitted by dsimmer on Mon, 01/04/2010 - 08:00
(eventually a picture of Kirstie Alley with her mouth hanging open will grace these posts, but I am having a problem with the technical side of things at the moment and have not worked out the kinks quite yet)
Looking Backward, Moving Forward:
I know you all come here for breaking news, so I announce this here first: 2009 is officially over.
I personally announced this moment in my own life by closing out my existing journal (one that lasted for several years of hit or miss writing) and opening a new one. I found myself quickly listing off many dreams for 2010, ones that deviate from the traditional "Make, then Break" resolutions that most of us fret over for a few weeks each year. These are dreams which are big and small, easy to achieve and extremely far out of reach, but Sharon has taught me that even the biggest dreams are worth pursuing.
A few choice snippets from the list (those that I am willing to share in this forum):
- Simplify in every sense of the term
- Buy Local
- Pull someone back from the edge
- Have a story to share every day
- Live Hope, Give Hope, Every day, Any way.
Books of the Completed and Started Varieties:
I closed 2009 by shelving anything that I sat semi-finished, a physical way to close out the old year. My target this year is to read 52 books (a book a week) and I did not want any lingering struggles in the way.
Barbara Rossing's The Rapture Exposed was first up this year. Thanks to a thoughtful gift from Patrick and Margaret, I was able to read Rossing's critique of prevailing dispensationalist readings (or misreadings?) of Revelation and the ethic of John that pervades it. It was a great read, one made a little bit more unique by the fact that Margaret was able to get the author to personalize it with a note for me. How cool!
Now up is Annie Dillard's The Maytrees, a recent Swaptree acquisition and a long-time resident of the to-read shelf. Dillard has been a big literary influence on my own writing and I also had the opportunity to take a seminar class on her works at Hillsdale: having new material from her is always a joy for me.
Those of the Tune-age Variety:
I picked up Lady Gaga on vinyl this week. Both albums. Enough said.
Rattling of the Proverbial Cage:
The man who asked for the hot dog at Starbucks the other night, then f-bombed me when I told him we didn't carry hot dogs. Next time?
Geocentric Reflections:
One week to get back into the routine, then we'll pick up with some Corktown opportunities the following week. Bible Study & Coffee Night, anyone?
Rejoicing with Others
Submitted by dsimmer on Sat, 01/02/2010 - 08:00For the second time this week (and first this year, of course), we had the blessing of celebrating at a dear friends' wedding. Earlier this week we celebrated with my childhood friend on our third anniversary; this first day of 2010 we rejoiced at the marriage of Marty and Sarah.
When they first announced their marriage intentions, Marty and Sarah saw a marriage blessing on the wall at our house, a blessing that was said over us at our wedding in 2006. It is one that the pastor uses often, and Sarah loved it and asked if we would share it at their wedding. Some internet searching discovered the origins as Dr. Louis H. Evans, a Presbyterian minister who wrote the words for his sons wedding in 1950. Enjoy these beautiful words:
O God of love, Thou hast established marriage for the welfare and happiness of mankind. Thine was the plan, and only with Thee can we work it out with joy. Thou hast said, "It is not good for man to be' alone.' I will make a help meet for him." Now our joys are doubled since the happiness of one is the happiness of the other. Our burdens now are halved, for when we share them, we divide the load.
Bless this man. Bless him as provider of nourishment and raiment, and sustain him in all the exactions and pressures of his battle for bread. May his strength be her protection, his character be her boast and her pride, and may he so live that she will find in him the' haven for which the' heart of a woman truly longs.
Bless this woman. Give her kindness that will make' her great. Give' her a deep sense of understanding and a great faith in Thee. Give her that inner beauty of soul that never fades that is found in holding fast the things that never age.
Teach them that marriage is not living merely for each other; it is two uniting and joining hands to serve Thee. Give them a great spiritual purpose' in life. May they seek the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and the other things shall be added unto them.
May they not expect that perfection of each other that belongs alone' to Thee. May they help each other in their weaknesses, be swift to praise each other's points of comeliness and strength, and see each other through a lover's kind and patient eyes.
Now, Gracious Lord, bless them and develop their characters as they walk together, Give them enough tears to keep them tender, enough hurts to keep them humane, enough failure to keep their hands clenched tightly in Thine, and enough success to make them sure they walk with Thee.
May they never take each other's love for granted, but always experience that breathless wonder that exclaims, "Out of all this world you have chosen me'!" When life' is done and the sun is setting, may they be found then, as now, hand in hand, still thanking God for each other. May they serve Thee happily, faithfully, together, until at last, one shall lay the other into the arms of God.
This we ask through Jesus Christ, great lover of our souls. Amen.



