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December 15, 2011

HOW A LITTLE CAN CHANGE A LOT by Jessica Dotta

Filed under: Blog,Faith,Issues — Tags: genocide, Inspire a Fire, orphans, Sudan, Uganda — Christa Allan @ 1:16 am

NOTE FROM CHRISTA: This post was originally written by Jessica Dotta for the Inspire a Fire blog, and I’m participating in Gina Holmes’ call to tithe my blog by copying here. If you could help the poorest of the poor just by running an article, would you be willing? If so, just copy and paste onto your blog.
“We have much to be judged on when he comes, slums and battlefields and insane asylums, but these are the symptoms of our illness and the result of our failures in love.” – Madeleine L’Engle

When my brother traveled to the Sudan he had an encounter that changed his life—and as it ends up, mine too.

He stood in Darfur at an orphanage filled with children leftover from the genocide. There were over 800 children, and during the night wild dogs were dragging them off and killing them.

My brother already felt shell-shocked from the travesties he’d witnessed in Uganda.

The day was hot. The sun beat down upon him. His camera had nearly been ruined from all the dust. He’d barely slept. His gear was heavy. Yet his conscience was seared by the numbness he felt, so he turned and confessed to a Sudanese pastor.

“We shall pray right now that your heart will be opened,” he was told.

Not long after that prayer three young children approached Joshua and started to follow him. After a bit, his father nature kicked in and he stopped and sang Father Abraham. It didn’t take long before the four of them were dancing and going through the motions.

When they finished, he asked the children to tell him how they came to be there.

The oldest, a girl, answered. “The soldiers came and shot my mother and father, so I came here.”

The two other children nodded in agreement. “Me, too.”

He was grief struck, but it was what transpired next that tore my heart. “Do you have a Mommy?” The little girl asked my brother.

“Yes,” he answered.

“And a Daddy?”

Again, his answer was yes.

“Oh,” she said, her voice hinting at a strange intermingling of numbness and grief.

Her question stirs me still. For I believe it came from her soul and revealed the thoughts of her heart. She didn’t want to know what his country was like, what kind of food he ate, or what he did for a living. She had her own bullet holes leftover from the genocide. Her world consisted of this single question: Who still had parents and who didn’t?

In her questions I heard her worry and fear. Imagine being trapped in a war-torn country, a land of famine, drought and disease. Imagine trying to survive it as an orphan with death threatening you every hour. No matter how much she’s endured, at the end of the day, she’s still  just a little girl. And all she really wants is her Mom and Dad.

I imagined my daughter living as an orphan in the Sudan. If I were shot and dying, it would be my hope that my brothers and sisters would care for her. But what if her aunts and uncles were killed too? What was it then, that her parents hoped?

As members of the body of Christ these children are not alone. They have aunts and uncles. Multitudes and multitudes and multitudes of them. Talk about staggering! These kids are our nieces and nephews! Mine. Yours.

So who, I wondered, within the church has the responsibility to step in?

I didn’t like the answer that came. Earlier that week I was shocked to learn that globally I was one of the richest people in the world—even though as an American, I’m pretty poor.

Like it or not  I was the rich aunt. I had knowledge of the situation. That made me accountable.

I wasn’t comfortable with the knowledge then, and I’m not comfortable with the knowledge now. But I am determined to do something. Anything.

That day Joshua had in his possession a picture book that someone had asked him to give to someone in the Sudan. It was a children’s book with a story about how we have a Heavenly Father who always loves and cares for us. Joshua read the book and gave it to them.

An American woman took it upon herself to raise the money to build shelter. Every person who donated, even a dollar, helped to create a place where the little girl now sleeps safe from wild dogs.

When Joshua told me he’s going to start a branch of Watermelon Ministries called Media Change, a non-profit encouraging Americans to give up a portion of the money spent on entertainment to serve those fighting world hunger and thirst, I wanted to support it.

For seven years he’s helped non-profits raise money that serves the “least of these.” He’s seen the impact a small investment can have. This is a brand new initiative. He’s not quite ready to launch, but you can sign up and be kept updated at www.mediachange.org. His first goal is garner the support of 10,000 people who are willing to give $10 a month. I’m number #3.

This is only a blog post, but who knows what one blog post can do.

What if the task of helping others isn’t as overwhelming as we make it?


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October 11, 2011

What closet are you coming out of?

Filed under: Blog,Blogroll,Faith,Issues,Limbs on the Family Tree,Relationships — Tags: Ally for GLBT Christians, Canyonwalker Connections, Christians, gay, GLBT, I:28 Mission, National Coming Out Day, The Edge of Grace, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, The Nate Berkus Show — Christa Allan @ 1:12 pm

 

Today is National Coming Out Day, and I intended to write a post about its significance because I am the sister of a gay brother, and because my second novel, The Edge of Grace, is partially based on our experiences.

In looking for a picture to use with the post, I tripped across the one you see above. It brought me to Canyonwalker Connections, an I-58 mission by Kathy, who states on her site her mission is: “Loosen the chains of injustice, untie the cords of the yoke, set the oppressed free and break every yoke. Then you will be called Repairer of the Breach.” Isaiah 58. To educate and create dialogue between the Christian Church and the glbt Christian community.” 

In thinking about the idea of “coming out,” it occurred to me that not only is the closet not limited to gender as in gays, lesbians, transsexuals and bisexuals; it’s crowded with straight people too. Only they’re closeted in their racism, discrimination, prejudice.

For example, the ones who look around and, not seeing faces of color, begin telling jokes about people of other races or religions. As the wife of a Jewish husband, whose daughter’s husband is black, you’d be amazed (or maybe, sadly, not) at what I hear from people who do not know my family. Pillars of the community on the outside, but their mortar is crumbling on the inside.

People with alcohol, drug, gambling and other addictions are smashed into the closet as well. Doing their best to maintain the facade of “Biff and Buffy” with all their friends and family, they hope the closet door doesn’t have a window.

And, smashed in the closet are straight Christians as well.  I’m not just talking about the ones who secretly watch The Ellen DeGeneres Show or The Nate Berkus Show.  There are Christians who struggle with all sorts of issues who fear revealing the dysfunction in their own families. And sharing that closet are Christians who tell me things like, “You know, my (insert name of family member) is gay, and I’m okay with it, but….”

Kathy is clearly a brilliant woman because she read my mind about the post I intended to write today, only she wrote it a year ago. In her post, “I’m Coming out as an Ally for GLBT Christians,” Karen writes:

“Yes, I run into closeted Christians all the time.  And no, they are not gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender. They are straight, like me. But, they love their GLBT friends and family and are coming to a realization that what they’ve been told or thought they understood may not be the heart of God.  They see honor, integrity and even Jesus and the Holy Spirit in their GLBT friends.  Evidenced in the very same group they have been told cannot possible be Christian because they are queer.    In some churches, it is not safe to even ask questions about homosexuality, about any thing. So, how can they dare openly dialogue about this issue, this hot button topic  in most Christian congregations?”

I’ve paid a price for writing The Edge of Grace, especially because it’s published under a Christian publisher’s imprint. There are those Christians who have not confronted me or my publisher directly, only in thinly veiled references to my novel, suggesting any critical acclaim for it came from sycophantic Christians. Some who would be content if my Christian baptism could be retroactive. I know my novel brings up questions, and I never claimed to be an authority on psychology or theology. I’m a storyteller, and I know my experiences and my characters’ experiences. I believe Jesus called us to love. Period.

As Karen so aptly stated: “Is there a cost to coming out as affirming?  Yes, there can be.  Most likely not as extreme as my upfront price. You may get labeled as ; heretic, unbeliever, unrepentant, tool of Satan, words I don’t say or write (and that is by Christians!), lesbian, “at minimal” bisexual or gay.  People will argue with you over non-related topics because surely you must now be misguided, stupid and have never studied the Scriptures. Others will unfriend you, unfollow you, unlike you.  All because you think Jesus was telling the truth when He said to love your neighbors unconditionally and that “whosoever” really does mean whosoever.”

I encourage you to read the rest of her post HERE.

Overwhelming though, I’ve also been blessed, even by those who may not agree with the message of the book, but who respect the relationship my brother and I share, and who acknowledge that it gave them cause to consider “the other side” as it were.

I hope in 2013, we can look at National Coming Out day as one that gives us pause and cause to consider what we’re holding on to that we fear may cause us to be judged by others.

What closet do you need to come out of?

 

 


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September 5, 2011

God has always used social networking

Filed under: Blog,Faith — Tags: Christianity, prayer — Christa Allan @ 1:27 am

TO: Christa

FROM: God

RE: Pay Attention

Photo of the Book of Isaiah page of the Bible

Image via Wikipedia

“No weapon forged against you will prevail.” Isaiah 54:17

Against all hope, Abraham in hope believed.” Romans 4:18

“We live shabbily because we pray meagerly.” E.M. Bounds, The Necessity of Prayer

The Lord is near to all who call out to Him.” Psalm 145:18

“…the forces that blocked your progress and threatened your life become at His command the very materials He uses to build your street of freedom.” F. B. Meyer

“The moment of your greatest sacrifice will also be the precise moment of your greatest and most miraculous blessing. ” F.B. Meyer

Give me the strength to wait for hope-to look through the window when there are no stars.” George Matheson

“Many are the plans in a man’s heart, but it is the Lord’s purposes that prevail.” Proverbs 19:21

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August 10, 2011

What’s my excuse?

Filed under: Blog,Faith — Tags: Girlfriends Book Club, Hank Phillippi Ryan, Sob Sisters, Starbucks — Christa Allan @ 12:41 am

So, let me explain why what I will share later seems not a coincidence:

I subscribe to Girlfriends Book Club, one of those blogs I’m glad to have stumbled upon because of the honesty and humor of the fifty or so women writers who contribute.

This morning, Hank Phillippi Ryan ‘s blog post was Sob Sisters, about crying, and that she cries at everything. I almost cried because I discovered someone who cried as much as I do. Theaters would probably post our headshots in their employee lounge and issue an alert if we tried to watch almost anything together.

Just to name a very few, here are my crybaby movies:   Up, batteries not included, Steel Magnolias, Terms of Endearment, 50 First Dates, Forest Gump, Wall-E, An Officer and A Gentleman, Cinema Paradiso, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Toy Story 3

Movies I refuse to see because, though they aren’t documentaries, I know real people died, and I can’t bear it: Schindler’s List, Titanic, The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, Sophie’s Choice (I can’t even walk by the book without shuddering), Band of Brothers

I’m not apologizing for the tears, and I no longer allow myself to be bullied into sitting through movies that serve me my own raw heart. And all of you, “it’s just a movie” people: if that is true, then the writer, producer, actors–somebody failed you–because it’s not supposed to be “just a.” It’s supposed to be you suspending reality for those 60, 90 or however many minutes you’re plopped in front of the screen.

Here’s a quote from Hank’s post about her and her friends defining “sad”  (as in “bring on the tears”) in movies/books:

“We decided “sad” was: unintended consequences. People just trying to do what was right, and then it goes wrong. War. Mistakes. Unfulfilled love. Missing someone, or departures. Saying goodbye. Bravery. Sacrifice.”

And that leads me to what you will read below. The husband dropped me off at Starbucks this morning, and he went Hi-Ho-Hi-Ho-ing. It’s a 90 minute drive, so I’m totally out of my facial recognition zone, which makes it an excellent place for me to write. What prompted me to tie all this together (quite assumptive on my part), play connect-the-dots, was the discussion on Girlfriends Book Club this morning about those things that tug at our hearts and flood our tear ducts.  And note the last two items in the definition above.

It’s after lunch, and the heat index is well over 100.

A young black man, earbuds hanging around his neck, backward baseball cap, white tee, dark shorts  swings into Starbucks, walks out with an iced tea, then hurries to cross two traffic-choked streets.

 He has an athletic build, a strong face. As I watch, I realize I’ve seen him all morning.

Since daylight, he has stood at the curb of a four-lane highway, wearing a “sandwich board” sign that says “We buy gold.”

And by stood, I mean stood. The entire time.

He came back to Starbucks about 5:00, another tea, another out-the-door. This time, like last, he didn’t linger, stop to read a headline,  check his phone. In, iced tea, out.

I don’t see him standing by the curb, so I’m thinking he’s finished for the day. And I’m relieved.

But, no. Back he goes to the curb, hoists the sign over his head, and stands.

And inside I’m screaming, “Go home. Go home.”

But I’m screaming it, not for him, but for me. Because watching him hurts my soul. Watching him reminds me of all those times I was unwilling, prideful, selfish.

I am humbled by what he is doing, and I admire this young man who is willing to do this.

I wonder what motivates him to endure this sweltering, suffocating, relentless sun to stand -alone-sipping his iced tea—  

I want to give him money, give him a job, inside, where there’s cold air

I want to take my students to Starbucks and while they sip their lattes-like I did today- and point to him and tell them—      

that is courage

that is humility

that is honorable

that is the living example of doing whatever it takes

 

 

 

 

 

photo: http://harrumpher.com/?m=201102


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August 1, 2011

It’s official: The Edge of Grace releases today

Filed under: Blog,Faith,Relationships,Writing — Tags: Abingdon Press, Christian fiction, Fresh Fiction, gay, Patricia Woodside, The Edge of Grace — Christa Allan @ 1:11 am

Over a decade ago, my brother-my only sibling-told me he was gay. The news fractured our relationship, but the truth of it is, I was the one with the hammer.

It took years, too many years, for me to realize that placing the word “gay” in front of the word “brother” did not change the substance of the person I’d known and loved all my life. He is my brother, and I don’t define him by his sexual orientation. In fact, he doesn’t define me by mine either.

My brother’s partner of over fifteen years  being attacked  in the French Quarter was my motivation for getting serious about the novel.

I’m sharing this because it’s important to me that my readers know this book is rooted in my own experiences, and my brother fully and enthusiastically supported this novel.

While still in the process of writing, I had the following conversation with a friend:

Friend:  ”What’s the premise of  your new novel?”

Me: “It’s about a sister who finds out that her brother is gay.”

Friend: “And?”

Me:”It’s being published by a Christian publishing house.”

Friend: “Oh!”

I am deeply grateful to Abingdon Press, as a Christian publishing house, for bring this novel to print. Their willingness to stand behind this project has been a gift.

Patricia Woodside, in her review of the novel for Fresh Fiction (where you can read the entire post) wrote:

“With the increasingly visible and vocal presence of homosexuals in American society, with Christians at odds over gay churches, gay marriages and gays, in general, this book might help readers to do what in-your-face protests, media broadcasts and legislative changes cannot, i.e. to consider the totality of God’s love and grace.”

Amen, sister, Amen.

 

 


 


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July 26, 2011

The Edge of Grace and paying it forward: Project Lazarus and The Trevor Project

Filed under: Blog,Faith,Issues — Tags: Abingdon Press, Jeanne Manford, LGBTQ youth, PFLAG, Project Lazarus, The Edge of Grace, The Trevor Project — Christa Allan @ 12:31 am

The Edge of Grace is five days away from its release, which considering the subject is like its coming out party. If you already have the novel (applause, applause) or you’re one of those waiting to attend my booksigning on August 13 (shameless self-promotion) or if you’re on the verge of purchasing (bless you), I wanted to make sure you notice pages 329 and 330.

Six resources are listed on page 329, all of which would be helpful for struggling families or individuals. One resource that I didn’t mention, clearly a brain cramp on my part,  is Parents, Familes and Friends of Lesbians and Gays. PFLAG is a national non-profit organization with over 200,000 members and supporters, and over 350 affiliates in the United States. What I find so remarkable and encouraging for those, including me, who are apt say, “I’m only one person, what can I do?” is how this organization began.

You can read more here about what happened when one mom, Jeanne Manford marched with her son in a New York Gay Pride parade almost forty years ago. She decided to start a support group when so many gay and lesbian people approached her during the parade begging her to talk to their own parents. Twenty people attended that first meeting held at a local church. Twenty. Multiply that by 10,000 to reach the membership today. One person, one parent, one mother who walked the walk with her son.

A portion of the royalties from the sales of my novel will be donated to the first two resources listed on page 329: Project Lazarus and The Trevor Project. This decision grew out of my wanting to not limit my investment in this novel to my butt strapped to my chair pounding out words and the emotional energy consumed.

Also, I could not be prouder of Abingdon Press for their trust and faith in publishing this novel. And because I believe that it truly was prayed into publication (I know that sounds Christianese…but, seriously, a Christian publisher and fiction about reaching out to the gay community in love…seriously), I want to do what I can to pay it forward.

I chose Project Lazarus because it is located in New Orleans, and from their website:

Project Lazarus was founded out of compassion and service to all people. Project Lazarus provides services to people with AIDS who can no longer live independently, or whose family can no longer take care of them. The primary purpose of Project Lazarus is to provide continuity of care in a homelike environment. The highest goal of Project Lazarus is to enhance the quality of life of those it serves. Project Lazarus does not discriminate on the basis of age, race, religion, gender, economic status, sexual orientation, or handicap.

They are celebrating their 25th year serving the Gulf Coast Region.

Next time I’ll give more information about Project Lazarus, but today I’ll introduce you to The Trevor Project.

I chose The Trevor Project because, and again from their website:

The Trevor Project is determined to end suicide among LGBTQ youth by providing life-saving and life-affirming resources including our nationwide, 24/7 crisis intervention lifeline, digital community and advocacy/educational programs that create a safe, supportive and positive environment for everyone.

As a high school teacher for over 23 years, I have witnessed the heartache of teens struggling with their sexuality, with exclusion and being labeled and mocked in the most offensive ways. I’ve taught straight students who have gay siblings, gay parents, or gay relatives, and they too find themselves in an emotional tug-of-war.

Last October 20 was designated Wear Purple Day in remembrance of the seven gay teens who committed suicide during that month. This YouTube video speaks to that, and I wanted to post here because it is entirely the heart of one student. It’s not slick, not flashy, not even scripted which makes it all the more special.

The Trevor Project established the Trevor Lifeline which provided the first and only nationwide,  24-hour suicide and crisis prevention for LGBTQ teens. I encourage you to browse their site because they offer free resources for parents and educators, workshops, internships, whatever it takes to keep teens alive.

I am grateful, so very grateful that my brother found a way to make it through those years.  I admire him for persevering, for having the strength to go forward when I’m certain there were days he wasn’t sure that’s what he wanted.  I respect him for raising his son, and I treasure him for never giving up on me.

When I talk to teens today, I see his face. Afraid, confused, lonely, harassed. Of course it’s  far too late for me to reach back and comfort that  young man of  all those years ago. But I can make a difference today. I can do my best to reach kids and maybe not prevent their pain, but at least provide a place to lay it down.


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July 20, 2011

We’re all retarded: it’s just a matter of degrees

Filed under: Faith,Issues,Limbs on the Family Tree — Tags: daughter, Down's Syndrome, retardation, twins — Christa Allan @ 10:35 am

NOTE: This isn’t a new post, but I was reminded of it when Sarah called me yesterday…to tell me about taking karate, her swimming, and-oh-by the way-she needs more money on her spending card.


The American College of Obs and Gyns is recommending that every pregnant woman be offered a test to screen for Down Syndrome and other chromosomal defects.

“About one in 800 babies has Down syndrome, a condition where having an extra chromosome causes mental retardation, a characteristic broad, flat face and small head and, often, serious heart defects.”

I’ll own that I’m hypersensitive to this issue; after all, I have a daughter, Sarah, who is 28-years-old who has DS. Sarah has a twin sister, Shannon, who does not have DS. Were we surprised when the girls were born? You betcha. Even the OB/GYN was surprised.

We knew we were having twins, but twenty-eight plus years ago, one ultrasound to prove it was the only protocol at the time. After all, I was 29 and already had two other children. No high-risk or hereditary concerns.

For those of you who read my blog, you already know that Sarah is more than mental retardation, a broad, flat face, and small head. She is so much more than an extra chromosome and a “condition.” She does not have any heart defects, except when her boyfriend tells her that he’s thinking about his old girlfriend. Sarah does not think she is cute or beautiful. No, my friend, ask her. She will tell you that she is GORGEOUS. And, as for her head, I assure you it’s certainly not microscopic and, for however small it’s rumored to be, it certainly can be stubborn.

She writes stories on her computer, her AlphaSmart, and any notebook she can find. She’s an avid Word Search puzzle fan, and she works the most complicated snake-around things I’ve ever seen. She folds clothes, she empties the dishwasher, she helps me cook, she sets the table, she cleans her bedroom and bathroom, she rakes and sweeps outside, she bowls, she is wild about going to LSU games with her father, she loves “Game Days” when LSU plays, she loves hanging out in book stores and picking out books to read, she has extensive movie and CD collections (some purchased with her own money from her own job), she has her own cell phone and knows how to use it to call anyone at anytime (ask her siblings), she orders her own food at restaurants, she adores her niece, she can spell better than many of the high school juniors I teach, she reads and studies her Bible almost every day.

And if you’ve never been to church to witness Sarah singing, you are truly missing an extraordinary worship experience. Sometimes she signs along with the songs. Her love for the Lord transforms her when she is celebrating. She tells me that some nights the moon looks like a banana, and on other nights it looks like a pizza. She listens to “I Can Only Imagine” by Mercy Me and talks to me about Bailey, my grandson/ her nephew who went to heaven when he was a month old, and how happy he is with her Meemaw and Papa in heaven.

For the record, she has the small ears and crooked little fingers also characteristic of DS. She has forearms that are not exactly proportional. She missed the simian crease in her palms. She has the misfortune of having a short mother (4’11″), so that combined with the tendency for DS adults to be below average height–we’re just glad she’s 4’5″. And, also for the record, her twin, Shannon, is vivacious, beautiful, equally stubborn, and also without heart defects.

So, if 1 of 800 babies have DS, that leaves 799 who do not. And what guarantees do those 799 have that nothing will ever happen to them for the rest of their lives that will, in one way or another, damage them mentally, physically or emotionally? Any one of my other four children could, by virtue of an auto accident or sporting accident or random mishap, be rendered as retarded or more so than their sister.

My children learned sympathy and empathy at early ages. Some kids at school would ask if they were retarded like their sister, and sometimes adults would make the dumbest statements, often in front of Sarah. We’d have to remind people that having DS did not mean she was deaf. Once someone asked me which of the kids were the twins. One lady looked at me, and I couldn’t make this up, said, “Are you sure?” Another genius, when I was having the girls’ pictures taken at a studio, pointed to Sarah and said to me, “What’s wrong with her?” (I think my reply was, “Nothing. But what’s wrong with you for asking?”).

If I had a choice, would I want Sarah to be “normal”? Well, of course. ( And I’ll save that definition of normal for another time.) For years I was terribly angry with God. God, who could raise Lazarus from the dead, wouldn’t take away a chromosome? Then a friend of mine pointed out to me that Lazarus died twice.

But God didn’t fix Sarah. God used Sarah to fix me.

I am a better person for having had the privilege of being Sarah’s mother. Her life is infinitely awash in goodness. At times, she’ll look at me and say, “I love my life.”

I dare us normal people to say that with the conviction she does.

 

 


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July 10, 2011

Sometimes, I just don’t want to be (a) Christian

Filed under: Faith,Issues,Latest News — Tags: Casey Anthony, Caylee Anthony, Christians, Forgiveness, Serenity Prayer — Christa Allan @ 11:16 pm

Warning: Longish post. You might need to refresh your coffee before reading.

Okay, I’m practicing my being honest approach, so I’m just going to get this out there: I want to duct tape Casey Anthony’s mouth and nose, then throw her in a swimming pool.

I’m not proud of thinking that, but I’ll own it.

I wasn’t going to write about this case because it has obsessed the collective consciousness of our nation, and I didn’t want to become part of the social feeding frenzy. But (there’s always a but…) I read a few items that propelled me to the head of the class for anger management therapy.

Ready? Here they are:

1. Casey was found not guilty of first-degree murder, child abuse, and manslaughter, much to the shock of prosecutors and the majority of the public.

2. Heading off for victory drinks mid-afternoon at a local restaurant across the street from the courthouse, the defense attorneys celebrated unabashedly, popping champagne and dancing, ironically after attorney Jose Baez had just stated there were no winners in the case because Caylee was dead.

3. But it is being reported that book publishers in New York are in a bidding war to land Anthony’s tell-all book. The price tag is up to $3 million, according to ABC News.Publishing agents also told ABC News that Anthony could make upwards of $750,000 with a book deal just a month after being released from jail. It’s likely that television and movie producers will also compete to score the rights to her life story.

4  Anthony wrote a letter to a friend not too long ago while in the Florida prison saying she dreamt of writing a book. She described it as a “partial memoir/comedy/relationship advice book for those not in the know.” She said that it would be a way to settle many rumors and to share insight about love, life, and God. Public records show Anthony has already purchased more than 20 pens in the jail commissary.

5. Analysts say a total figure on the cost to the state and to the taxpayers has not been totaled, but the figure could be topping out at some $4.5 million.

6. Before being declared indigent, Anthony’s private sources totaled:$275,000, including $200,000 paid by ABC News
Of that, $121,954.83 went to attorneys and a media consultant.

7. Defense lawyers had argued for a maximum of one year because the four lies were told on the same day, July 16, 2008.

8.Just one day after her not guilty verdict for murdering her young daughter Caylee Anthony reports have been highlighting Anthony’s expression of wanting to get pregnant again on her release.

(all from The Christian Post)

I’m not going to gnaw into these individually because I’m on deadline for another book (more about that happy news to come!), and I would wear my fingers to the knuckles.

In processing all of the above and the news that keeps assaulting us like rocks from 18-wheelers, I realized how much I wrestled with my faith. I didn’t want to be a Christian listening to the verdict and the everything else. I didn’t want to hear Jesus loves us all or that my sin of dishonesty is on the same level as Casey Anthony’s (well, only in the way I see her because she doesn’t think she killed her daughter). I didn’t care about mercy and forgiveness.

I wanted someone to take responsibility for the death of  that precious little girl. And when that person did, I wanted him or her to suffer. To suffer like she did. Or more. Until my hypocrisy slapped me in the face like a wet fish.

I’ve been chanting this mantra since The Edge of Grace, my second book, released: God calls us to love. Period. No comma. No question mark. Period.

Sometimes I really irk myself. Hoisted with my own petard. Once again, God reminded me that I am not the boss of Him.  I stopped looking for more to become angry about and started looking for more to pray about. And I found:

  • If Casey Anthony did murder her daughter, our hearts can rest because justice either already has been done (at the cross) or will be done in the future (hell). Christian forgiveness isn’t a cheap “Ahhh, that’s no big deal, buddy!” forgiveness.  It’s a deep and grave forgiveness based on a just God who forgives at the cost of his own Son’s life.  Because God is just, all wrongs will be recompensed.  If the murderer of Caylee Anthony trusts Christ, then God’s wrath for this murder was poured out on Jesus at The Cross and justice was done.  Or if the murderer of Caylee Anthony resists God in unbelief, God’s wrath for this murder will be poured out in the eternal, conscious torment of hell.  A deep faith in this God of Justice should give us hearts that can forgive others and rest. ———-Josh Howerton

And this:

The system in which we place our trust found her not guilty.
So then.
What to do now?
What to do after all the tweets and blogs about how she should pay. What do we do when she walks into your church this Sunday?
What do we do with someone who claims one thing yet the world believes another?
Who is seeking refuge from the world in the arms of our body?
How do you respond?
How should the church respond?
How do you think a church ACTUALLY would respond?——-from The Ragamuffin Soul

So, ultimately, I decided to: “Be the kind of woman that when your feet hit the floor in the morning, the devil says, ‘Oh, crap. She’s up.’”

 

 

 


Comments (7)

July 3, 2011

Dr. Marcus Bachmann can put the “un” in front of gay

Filed under: Blog,Faith,Issues,Latest News — Tags: Dr. Marcus Bachmann, gay, Michele Bachmann, politics — Christa Allan @ 1:13 am

I am not politically savvy, so I usually avoid diving into the pool of campaign and political rhetoric. “Rhetoric” being the politically-correct euphemism for back-stabbing, hair-pulling, and-perhaps-a sprinkling of potty-mouth language.

However, when the  topic is such a no-brainer for comments, I don’t have to dive in the pool, I can sit on the steps and splash. So, don your floaties if you must. Here goes:

Congresswoman Michele Bachmann (R-Minnesota) is a Republican candidate for the 2012 Presidential election. But this post isn’t about her, specifically. If you want info on Michele, just Google her and you’ll be busy until election day.

(BTW: They don’t “have” 23 foster children. Over a period of almost eight years ending in 2000, they took in teenage girls, and homes are limited to three at one time, for periods of just a few weeks or longer. I am not denigrating the Bachmanns. I admire their willingness and kindness to take in these struggling girls. It’s just a bit disingenuous to use “have” as if they’ll be in the photo op along with their five biological children.)

This post is about her husband, Dr. Marcus Bachmann.  Dr. Bachmann, is a clinical therapist with a doctorate in clinical psychology and is president of Bachmann and Associates.  In a Point of View Radio Talk Show spot in May of 2010, Dr. Bachmann said the following when asked a question about homosexuals:

“We have to understand: barbarians need to be educated. They need to be disciplined….

And let’s face it: what is our culture, what is our public education system doing today? They are giving full, wide-open doors to children, not only giving encouragement to think it but to encourage action steps.”

Seriously?

For starters, I know a number of gay people. None of them are from Barbary; therefore, it is impossible to label all gay people as such.

Any, anyway, barbarians? Are you ill-mannered and ethnocentric ? One might still find a number of Europeans who find Americans barbaric. Certainly, anyone who doesn’t support, cheer for and bleed LSU purple and gold, is a barbarian. Southern women think sweating (we glisten, thank you very much) and drinking out of a can border on the barbaric, and if you’re caught doing them simultaneously, well, you’re practically  inhuman.

Disciplined? Is he suggesting discipline equates with heterosexuality, so undisciplined equates with being gay? If so, he’d  be wise to buy stock in Armani because I teach, and buddy, there’s a mess of undisciplined kids ready to be unleashed on the world.

And as a public school educator, I’m encouraging my students to think about and take “action steps” toward being gay? Good grief, I can’t even get them to cover their books. Besides, defining and encouraging gay action steps aren’t on standardized tests, and aren’t measured in No Child Left Behind, so they wouldn’t get much attention anyway.

Here’s the conundrum:  if we’re going to educate the barbarians, and schools are educating children to take action steps toward being gay, well…how’s that going to work out?

You know, this really gives me an entirely new perspective on Conan the Barbarian.

(image from foleywrites)

 

 

 

 


Comments (7)

June 14, 2011

What I want to expose…

Filed under: Faith,Guest Post,Issues — Tags: Random Jottings, Richard Mabry — Christa Allan @ 8:33 am

…in my writing, of course, silly. I’m not related to Representative Weiner.

Please visit me at Richard Mabry’s Random Jottings.  Richard and I met years ago at an American Christian Fiction Writers conference as we were both going to be Abingdon authors.

He has dreadful taste in football teams (he lives in Texas-enough said), but he’s still delightful. And, he invited me to guest post and be brutally honest. So, you have to admire the man!

See you there..

 


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