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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> In this March 28, 2013 photo, Ginnette Powell, left, and her friend
Jonnelle Seigler, both of Boston, fist bump during a chance meeting in
front of the UP Academy Charter School in Boston's South Boston neighborhood.
Powell was bussed to the predominantly white neighborhood almost 40 years
ago to attend school at what was Patrick Gavin Middle School. She
said will never forget riding the school bus as protesters hurled bricks
at it. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)The Associated PressIn this March 28, 2013
photo, Ginnette Powell, of Boston, stands in front of the UP Academy
Charter School in Boston's South Boston neighborhood. Powell was bussed
to the predominantly white neighborhood almost 40 years ago to attend school
at what was Patrick Gavin Middle School. She said will never forget
riding the school bus as protesters hurled bricks at it. (AP Photo/Steven
Senne)The Associated PressIn this March 27, 2013 photo, Cassie Quinlan,
69, poses for a photo in her Concord, Mass., home. Almost 40
years ago, Quinlan drove one of the Boston public school buses that
took black students from the citys Roxbury neighborhood to a predominantly
white high school in Charlestown. She said that dozens of white protesters
would line the curb and police would have to make a wall
at the bus door so black students could get into school. Quinlan
said her experiences opened her own eyes to black culture, and she
became the first white member of a black gospel choir at
onal baggage.When
I meet someone new, I get to talk to him or her
like a regular person. We joke around, talk about our families, and
then the inevitable happens. What do you do for a living? When
I answer this question, I typically get one of two responses. I
either get an onslaught of Christianese phrases -- Oh, praise the Lord!
What a blessing, brother Craig! or I get stonewalled, and the conversation
dies as quickly as it started.One time when this happened, the person
I was talking with politely shared that he didnt like religious people.
I chimed in that I didnt like religious people either. His mouth
nearly dropped to the floor. I explained that religion is about rules,
but being a Christian is about relationship.Now Im not saying is that
religious organizations are useless. Obviously, Im a part of one. I am
the pastor of a church and truly believe what Bill Hybels asserts:
The local church is the hope of the world. But in order
to reach the current generation and generations to come, we must change
the way we do things. Thats why we like to say, To
reach people no one is reaching, we have to do things no
one is doing.As churches, we dont have the liberty to change the
message, but we must change the way the message is presented. We
have to discover our "altar ego"and become who God says we are
instead of who others say we are.Peeling off the labels that cling
to our reputation brings great freedom for us as individuals and a
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