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i have no idea how many hours she toiled in the community kitchen before i arrived, but she’d made a *** of tofu stew, a bowl of rice and beans, some spinach lasagna soaked in marinara, hummus and daiya cheese sandwiches. diligent and dutiful, without question, without expectation. an hour later, we stood in Lykes Gaslight Park, doling out food to the houseless folks who’d lined up for a vegan meal when, out of the blue, a well-dressed college student swaggered up to us, his smile shimmering, and asked what we were doing. she brushed a loose strand of hair behind one ear, smearing a bit of sauce across her cheek, and said, “we are here to live as if we are already free.” they were sharing food too, he explained, which was all well and good. but we couldn’t help but notice they’d never set foot here in the past, that they only came out when the season passed into the holidays. “you know,” he told us, “you might not realize, but the Lord Jesus Christ is using you for the gospel.” which seemed rather strange, given that he’d be back in his sanctuary before the year was out, raising his hands and praising his dead god instead of standing beside us every Tuesday and Saturday, sharing. but we remember the legacy of the radical Nazarene, the anarchic revolutionary who fed five thousand— a conquest of bread with nothing but a few loaves and some fish. if you listen closely, you can still hear him whispering, “take what you need, give what you can.” we carry a new world in our hearts and heads. we don’t feed the hungry to win a one-way trip to heaven. so when you forget about the poor you use as a prop, we godless few will remain in the streets until every belly’s full and capitalism collapses— risking arrest, fighting abuse, addiction and empty stomachs.
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Dec 6, 2017
Dec 6, 2017 at 7:25 AM UTC
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i have no idea how many hours she toiled in the community kitchen before i arrived, but she’d made a *** of tofu stew, a bowl of rice and beans, some spinach lasagna soaked in marinara, hummus and daiya cheese sandwiches. diligent and dutiful, without question, without expectation. an hour later, we stood in Lykes Gaslight Park, doling out food to the houseless folks who’d lined up for a vegan meal when, out of the blue, a well-dressed college student swaggered up to us, his smile shimmering, and asked what we were doing. she brushed a loose strand of hair behind one ear, smearing a bit of sauce across her cheek, and said, “we are here to live as if we are already free.” they were sharing food too, he explained, which was all well and good. but we couldn’t help but notice they’d never set foot here in the past, that they only came out when the season passed into the holidays. “you know,” he told us, “you might not realize, but the Lord Jesus Christ is using you for the gospel.” which seemed rather strange, given that he’d be back in his sanctuary before the year was out, raising his hands and praising his dead god instead of standing beside us every Tuesday and Saturday, sharing. but we remember the legacy of the radical Nazarene, the anarchic revolutionary who fed five thousand— a conquest of bread with nothing but a few loaves and some fish. if you listen closely, you can still hear him whispering, “take what you need, give what you can.” we carry a new world in our hearts and heads. we don’t feed the hungry to win a one-way trip to heaven. so when you forget about the poor you use as a prop, we godless few will remain in the streets until every belly’s full and capitalism collapses— risking arrest, fighting abuse, addiction and empty stomachs.
Food Not Bombs
pearsonbolt
Written by
American
Dec 6, 2017
Dec 6, 2017 at 7:25 AM UTC
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