Category Archives: News and current issues

Missions to the cities

Torre Mayor, Mexico City

Over the next few months, the world will reach a state that it likely hasn’t been in since the Tower of Babel.  According to a recent UN report, in 2008 (actually, starting this year) more than half of the world’s population will live in cities.  That’s about 3.3 billion people!

It’s safe to say that never before in history have so many people lived in cities.  From a Christian perspective, this highlights a challenge that we often forget about.  But we need to think about it.

In 1900, only 13% of the world lived in cities, which means there has been a huge leap in 107 years.  The UN estimates that the urban population will be 5 billion in 2030 (meaning that 3/5 people will live in cities).  In only 10 years the world may have nearly 500 cities of over a million, and in 2020 nine cities (including Mexico City) will have more than 20 million inhabitants.

That means a lot of contrast - take for example Mexico City, where the rich commute in helicopters (the rich here, by the way, are one of the groups least reached by the Gospel), and yet 40% of the population lives below the poverty line.  About a million people in the world live in slums - scheduled to double to 2 million by 2030.

People in cities include so-called unreached people groups, but these groups are sometimes more hidden than they would be deep in the jungle.  Cultural diversity is one challenge - these people may live close to a church, but that church may not speak their language, or may be so culturally different that it’s not relevant or understandable.

Mexico City stretching into the distance

Often Christian groups want to focus on "community outreach", but this doesn’t always work in today’s cities.  People are often more connected to cultural, family, or employment related groups and less to a local neighbourhood.  These networks may be more important than geography in the growing cities.  People in a church group may not be from the immediate area at all.

And we all know that there’s a different mentality in the cities.  People have come for different reasons, and they live at a different pace and do different things.  It’s easy for people to "disappear" in the cities, or simply keep to their own (narrow minded?) group (narrow minded at times, because you can cluster around your own "kind" very easily and avoid meaningful contact with others).

Cities are facing unique problems, and problems as big as the population.  Though Mexico City is still growing rapidly, it’s also facing big problems - homelessness, pollution, and crime are common issues.  About 1/3 of the people don’t even have basic sanitation service.  But the city is also running low on water, and every time water is used, the city sinks (it was built on a lake).  A report by Forbes suggested that Mexico City may be a ghost city by 2100.  Part of the challenge is that the city is in two states - an administration nightmare (and another reason why you see drastically different population estimates).

In Mexico’s cities (as in many countries, I’m sure), people are often moving around, disconnected from their roots, and looking for answers - a good and bad situation, as you may imagine.  There’s a window of opportunity in Mexico’s cities, and the Lord is working there.  But we need what we’ve always needed, only more so - prayer, love, partnerships, creativity, willingness, openness and courage - to reach people in the cities.

It’s a fast changing (and yet really not all that different), technological (though often not), diverse (and yet strangely conforming!) society.  And if we want to reach the unreached of the world, the cities can’t be ignored.

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Popularity: 8% [?]

Invisible Illness?

What’s an invisible illness, you ask?  Well, if you have a chronic illness, and someone has said to you,"But, you don’t look sick", then you may have an invisible illness!  You don’t carry crutches or wear a brace, but you still have to live with it every day.  This might include diabetes, migraine, chronic back pain, endometriosis, depression, or multiple sclerosis.

Why do I bring this up?  Not just because I have migraine, but because I know many of you are also living with an invisible illness.  This is a week to get together and talk about it - it’s Invisible Chronic Illness Awareness Week

National Invisible Chronic Illness Awareness Week, Sept 10-16, 2007, www.invisibleillness.com

This week (actually starting Monday) is hosted by Rest Ministries, an excellent Christian ministry run by volunteers that reaches out to the many people whose lives are impacted by chronic illness.  The week features online chats with speakers, doctors, and authors, covering topics like:

  • Parenting When You Have a Chronic illness
  • Invisible Disabilities: But You LOOK Good! / Statistics / What to Say / What Not to Say / How to Help?
  • Taking a Stand: How to Avoid Medical Mistakes
  • Touching Lives for God… in Sickness and in Health

You can read more about the online conferences here.  If you have or know anyone with a chronic illness, you may at least want to check out the transcripts of these chats after the fact if you can be there at the time.

Meanwhile, spread the word (scroll down the page)!  And if you can’t wait, you can check out other articles, like…

  • “But you look so good!”
  • What I wish you knew… (about migraine)
  • Popularity: 6% [?]

    Hurricane Dean in Mexico

    Hurrican Dean in the Yucatan
    Hurricane Dean hits the Yucatán
    Photo courtesy of NASA

    The day is unusually dark and cloudy, and during the night the barometric pressure was jumping all over the place.  The clouds seem to be a part of the weather system caused by Hurricane Dean, but there’s a dead calm here right now, and the storm isn’t technically supposed to hit Cuernavaca.

    Hurricanes aren’t usually much of an issue this far inland.  Dean was supposed to hit Cuernavaca as a storm, but over the past 24 hours it has tilted north, and is now heading through the state of Veracruz on the way to San Luis Potosí, Hidalgo and Querétero as a category 1 hurricane.

    That’s a far cry from what it was when it hit the Yucatán penninsula as a category 5 hurricane - the most powerful storm to hit land in 20 years, and one of the most powerful in recorded history.  There had already been 13 deaths in the Caribbean, and many people were left homeless.

    Many of the news stories you’ve seen have said that there were no deaths in Mexico, and that the country was spared what could have been a disaster.  One news story said,"Nature, good luck and good planning all combined Tuesday to deliver what the people of the Yucatan Peninsula called a miracle."

    Well, that’s not the whole story.  We are thankful that no deaths have been reported, and it certainly could have been a lot worse.  The Godzwa family in the Yucatán posted a bit about the hurricane, the most recent post here.

    However, the storms have hampered communication and made roads impassable.  It’s hard to know what’s really going on in many of the out lyingg areas.  Though the well-developed tourist resorts weathered the storms well, the Mexican people often did not.

    Many homes of the poor are cardboard, sticks and tin roofs (when those tin roofs go flying, they’re pretty dangerous!).  So far we know that about 1500 families in the state of Quintana Roo have serious damage to their homes, or lost their homes completely.

    President Calderón cut short his visit to Canada, saying "I am worried, very worried, that the hurricane passed over some of our poorest Mayan communities in the Yucatan."

    Dean is now a category 2 hurricane on the coast, where people are huddling in shelters praying they won’t lose their homes.  Good preparation has saved many lives, but some of Mexico’s poorest may still lose their homes and belongings in the storm.

    Popularity: 7% [?]

    Facebook (and the like)

    facebook

    Ok, this is a fad that I’ve actually found to be useful.  Of course, it will only be useful as long as the fad lasts.

    That’s right, I have a Facebook profile.  After getting a flood of emails from friends who had their own profiles, I decided to give it a go.

    For those who don’t know, Facebook is a networking site.  You set up a page with a little about yourself, and then you start linking to your friends.  Then you can also see their friends.  Sometimes you’re connected with friends that you have lost contact with.  There’s more to it than that, for example, you also connect yourself to networks like your old school, or your workplace, etc.

    It’s useful because our friends are putting up news about themselves, so it’s great to see where they’re at.  Of course, if your friends stop bothering, the site becomes useless.

    So, if you know me, go ahead and make me a Facebook friend!  My profile is at www.facebook.com/p/Jim_Cottrill/518391432

    Find out what this missionary says about Facebook and similar sites, and see a brief video that explains these kinds of applications.  Here’s another missionary’s love/hate relationship with Facebook.  And be sure to read this fascinating article about how teens are using sites like this - the article is called Kids say e-mail is, like, soooo dead (thanks to Lifehacker).  And here’s a useful site to find out if your friend is on any of a few networking sites.

    Shari doesn’t have a Facebook profile yet, but we don’t think it will be long.

    And by the way, I do have a MySpace profile as well (thanks to Perpetual Progress for giving me a way of hiding the horoscope junk).  It’s right here:  www.myspace.com/jcottrill

    I haven’t used the MySpace one much, but there it is.

    As with instant messaging, the trick is that everyone’s on a different network (for example MySpace, Facebook, LinkedIn, etc).  But the rush now is to perfect applications that can unite them all (as Trillian does with instant messaging).  If you have a lot of scattered friends you want to stay in touch with, this is worth keeping an eye on.

    Meanwhile, just today another 100,000 people became Facebook users.  Mark and Dustin (Facebook founders) must be pleased.

    Popularity: 20% [?]

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