Voices of Service

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December 06, 2010

As a Lasallian Volunteer…


by Garret Philbin, Jenn Tyndall, Joleen Wagner, and Alex Downes-Borowski

Discernment is like trying to put together a matching outfit when you’re colorblind. You know that you need a top and that you need a bottom but you have more than one option for each and trying to find a combination that works, without the ability to recognize color, could take some time. Physical and human resources become important as you identify the appropriate apparel that will work for you. When it comes to discernment, going it alone without the ability to identify the unknown may not provide you with the best outcome. Long-term service has the potential to offer the physical and human resources that can guide you to your call. As a Lasallian Volunteer (LV), you are given...

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Jim Ellison
Jim Ellison

Volunteers Exploring Vocation Coordinator

August 17, 2010

Dancing with the Saints


Dancing. The whole world seems crazy about dancing. All over the place people are talking about “Dancing with the Stars” or “So You Think You Can Dance”. It makes me quite uncomfortable.

I was never much for dancing. As an adolescent, I remember the feelings of betrayal, when my closest friends, those who at one time hung with me at the side of the room at the school dances and would run out of the room when there would be a “lady’s choice” announced, reached the point when they gave up their spot on the wall and started dancing!

Some of those feelings changed on Pentecost Day this past May.

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Dana Cassell
Dana Cassell

Brethren Volunteer Service Staff for Vocation and Community Living

June 23, 2010

Ruining Lives


There’s a quip that gets repeated a lot – that these long-term volunteer programs will “ruin your life.” Some might argue that the opposite is true – spending a year or more working for peace and justice, living in community, and working for little to nothing actually enrich and transform, opening us up to the beauty and possibility in the world like nothing else. Actually, I think most former volunteers would agree with that argument. But this recent conversation about decision-making reminded me why we talk about volunteer service ruining our lives.

Once you know what’s possible – how little money can sustain you, how life-giving community living can be, how a small individual effort can in fact make a difference in the world – it’s hard to go back to what you thought you knew, or what you thought life should be like. Old plans just don’t seem to fit, anymore. All of a sudden, you have to take into account this glimpse you’ve gotten of life lived another way, and it throws things into tangled messes that you’re left to unravel. 

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Glenn Balzer
Glenn Balzer

National Director of DOOR (Discovering Opportunities for Outreach and Reflection)

May 13, 2010

Ignoring Elephants: An Introduction to Mennonite Thinking


A couple of months ago I picked up Rhonda Janzen’s book, “Mennonite in a Little Black Dress.”  It is one of those reads that can cause you to laugh out loud.  I found it to be a good reminder of my Mennonite heritage.  I believe that more books need to be written that help explain Mennonite cultural idiosyncrasies.

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Jim Ellison
Jim Ellison

Volunteers Exploring Vocation Coordinator

May 06, 2010

Cornell West Live! A Night in Princeton


At the end of April, I witnessed Cornell West live in a presentation in Princeton, New Jersey along with my VEV colleague Wayne Meisel and hundreds others.  As you might imagine, it was brilliant intellectually as well having a feeling that was a bit like being in the Black church.  For one hour, West inspired those gathered with insights and observations about society, the church and service in the world.

 

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