Archives for category: communication

The stories and music of people like Paul Potts and Susan Boyle move us, and rightly so — there’s something so profound about they way their voices confound our preconceived notions about them, based primarily on their outward appearance.

But today, via Eugene Cho, I came across a story and a song that brought me to tears.

At PS22 in New York City, a school where over three quarters of the students are eligible for free lunch, the PS22 Chorus of fifth graders — led by their teacher Mr. B (Gregg Breinberg) — are making some incredible music. A brief description from one article:

As Breinberg plays, he makes eye contact with the kids, coaxing performances from them and letting them enjoy themselves. Later, Davoya, one of the chorus members, explains how he does it. “At first, when I sang, I had no emotion,” she says. “I didn’t move. But Mr. B taught me to sing with feeling. With feeling and heart.”

Feeling and heart (along with an unusual repertoire) is what has made the ps 22 Chorus famous. In the last two years, this small, elementary-school choir has piqued the interest of people all over the world: music lovers and parents but also a random, devoted cross-section of the World Wide Web…

It’s easy to forget, watching the chorus achieve such extraordinary success, that a lot of its members are from disadvantaged backgrounds. Breinberg says that several of the students in the chorus are from special education and English as a Second Language programs. “It’s one of the more rewarding aspects of my profession to see so many of our kids who have difficulties in other areas of academics thrive within the choral environment,” he says. “People often lose sight of how important music is to the education of these kids.”

There something true and beautiful about joy, freedom, expression and soul when they’re cultivated in the midst of adversity.  Music can be so much more than notes on a page, especially in the lives of kids.  As Eugene wrote:

Invest in kids.  Believe in kids.  Love on kids.  Build them up.  I was reminded of a quote from Frederick Douglass: “It is easier to build strong children than it is to repair broken men (grown-ups).”

Below, you can watch the PS22 Chorus perform Viva La Vida by Coldplay and You Raise Me Up by Josh Groban:

… you might still have to wait awhile.

Bringing together the worlds of street art and the Twitterverse [h/t: notcot]:

… today!

I’ve started doing some web/logo design with my friend Richard (a true renaissance man – M.Div from Princeton Seminary, graduate-level film studies, master’s in library science, web designer, husband, dad, street-baller).  I’ve always enjoyed graphic design, and Richard is a very patient tutor, so I’m looking forward to seeing where this little venture leads us!

This week, I launched a redesign of the Ecclesia Collective site… I’ve been reworking a great theme called Linoluna.  You can catch a glimpse below:

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Part four of my ongoing series of reflections on The Idea Camp (catch up on part one, part two, part three):

I loved seeing a wide range of speakers and facilitators presenting from the main stage.  It’s not just diversity for its own sake (which can so quickly devole into tokenism).  As David Gibbons shared with us at the Camp, creativity and life come from the margins, from intersections you might not otherwise cross. When we hear the same people making the same rounds from the same book tour on the same circuit…. well, you get the idea. That’s why I appreciated William Paul Young, author of The Shack, urging the National Pastors Convention to highlight women’s voices from the main stage there (this past year, the main stage was not the most diverse bunch).

The diversity at The Idea Camp was more than just cosmetic: we heard from pastors, non-profit innovators, business leaders, men, women, young, old, people from a variety of racial & ethnic backgrounds, the tech-savvy, the well-known and the not-as-well-known.  Kudos to Charles Lee for his vision of bringing together a remarkable group of people to lead & share.

For me, as an Asian American, every conference I attend is a cross-cultural experience.  Occasionally my wife and I talk about how difficult it is to find our place in life & ministry – not quite here or there most of the time.  It was encouraging to be reminded that diversity is an important part of creativity and listening for God’s voice.

Eugene Cho, at The Idea Camp, described the origin of his conviction to start One Day’s Wages. While the family was watching television, one of those ads with starving kids came on. One of Eugene’s children asked him if that was real and, after finding out that it was, asked him, “What are you going to do about it?”

Today our church community helped kick off the LiNK (Liberty in North Korea) Crossing movie tour.  Crossing is based on true stories of North Korean refugees and the horror they’ve endured.  We were extremely fortunate to hear from LiNK’s founder, Adrian Hong, about what motivated him to begin LiNK.  You can learn more about the ongoing human rights crisis in North Korea here, but as Adrian shared, statistics and facts don’t convey how bad things are there.  Human trafficking, concentration camps, forced prostitution, famine, torture, murder… and on and on.

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