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After a decade away, I recently had the opportunity to return to the city of my birth, and to the place where the foundation of my faith was formed. I...
show more
After a decade away, I recently had the opportunity to return to the city of my birth, and to the place where the foundation of my faith was formed.
I have been through a lot since I lived in Chicago. The city has been through a lot since I left.
I never left my faith, but I see it differently now. The communities of faith across the city's neighborhoods never left, but I look at them differently now.
I am a product of these faith communities. I am a product of the specific churches of my youth and early adulthood, and a product of the general Christian subculture formed by people of faith who live in this part of the country.
Having moved in and around communities of faith for over three decades, I am neither objective in my observations nor oblivious in my opinions about them.
I have intentionally chosen to share the stories about my year-long journey visiting 35 faith communities in Chicago in a manner that is stripped of the packaging and pageantry, labels and titles, and divisions and denominations that matter to fewer people now than they did when they were created.
Hopefully, this podcast will challenge the misperceptions about these spaces and celebrate the humanity of the people who gather in them.
This podcast was created in hopes that people who may be unfamiliar with these norms (and/or confused by the large swath of American society influenced by them) will find a bridge to walk with me as I consider the central questions of life, spirituality, and our beliefs about God.
I invite you to open yourself to whatever emotions and thoughts are inspired or provoked by this journey. If you like what you're hearing, please rate us, and leave a quick review! You won't believe how much that would help!
Thanks for listening!
An OverPond Media production.
show less
I have been through a lot since I lived in Chicago. The city has been through a lot since I left.
I never left my faith, but I see it differently now. The communities of faith across the city's neighborhoods never left, but I look at them differently now.
I am a product of these faith communities. I am a product of the specific churches of my youth and early adulthood, and a product of the general Christian subculture formed by people of faith who live in this part of the country.
Having moved in and around communities of faith for over three decades, I am neither objective in my observations nor oblivious in my opinions about them.
I have intentionally chosen to share the stories about my year-long journey visiting 35 faith communities in Chicago in a manner that is stripped of the packaging and pageantry, labels and titles, and divisions and denominations that matter to fewer people now than they did when they were created.
Hopefully, this podcast will challenge the misperceptions about these spaces and celebrate the humanity of the people who gather in them.
This podcast was created in hopes that people who may be unfamiliar with these norms (and/or confused by the large swath of American society influenced by them) will find a bridge to walk with me as I consider the central questions of life, spirituality, and our beliefs about God.
I invite you to open yourself to whatever emotions and thoughts are inspired or provoked by this journey. If you like what you're hearing, please rate us, and leave a quick review! You won't believe how much that would help!
Thanks for listening!
An OverPond Media production.
5 FEB 2017 · I began my journey here because this was one of two places that shaped my understanding of God during my teens and early 20s. This has always been a place where I could get my head right. So when my life’s road brought me back to the Chicago area a few months ago, it only made sense to start my search for God in this place.
This place is a cathedral to God. The way stadiums are cathedrals to sports. The way skyscrapers are cathedrals to capitalism. This places is designed to make a statement , about God and about the community that assembles here every week.
And statements matter. Especially for this neighborhood, which borders the campus of an Ivy League level university that trains people to run the world; but also borders a community that is fighting to protect its youth from running the streets.
I see the excellence of God in this building they’ve constructed. I see experience in their decoration of this space, and of themselves.
So I am ready. Surrounded by people who present themselves with excellence, and who care for this space with excellence, to hear something about an excellent God.
The journey begins in the Woodlawn neighborhood of the south side, at the corner 63rd Street and Dorchester.
Intro Theme Music: Victory Lap by QSTN ft. Mecca:83
Background Music: http://www.bensound.com/
Pick up your copy of the companion book at https://godinchicago.com/
Join the conversation! Follow us on Twitter: https://bit.ly/2Y94abI and on Instagram: https://bit.ly/2z6q5W4
5 FEB 2017 · I haven’t seen anything like this before. It’s like being on a mini-campus where all the buildings on the block leading up to the main building are owned and affiliated with this institution.
There’s a building called Hope House. One called Perkins Center. There’s a learning center, a health center, an agape chapel, a fitness center. Even the indie coffee shop on the corner might also be part of this impressive collection of buildings.
When I arrived, the building - an old-school gymnasium with wood beam rafters - has a comfortable and low-key vibe. This is a come-as-you-are kind of place. No one here is wearing a suit. There are no expensive cars parked in front of the entrance.
As I watch more people enter the building, it’s obvious that these people know each other. They are not simply co-located in this space, they are communing with one another. Fittingly, today the speaker had chosen to talk about the concept of love.
The journey continues in the Lawndale neighborhood on the west side, and the corner of Ogden & Avers.
Intro Theme Music: Victory Lap by QSTN ft. Mecca:83
Background Music: http://www.bensound.com/
Pick up your copy of the companion book at https://godinchicago.com/
Join the conversation! Follow us on Twitter: https://bit.ly/2Y94abI and on Instagram: https://bit.ly/2z6q5W4
11 FEB 2017 · As I drive up Princeton Street, I couldn’t help but think about the cruel irony of the street’s name. A name it shares with one of America’s oldest institutions of privilege, power, and wealth.
This street runs as a kind of middle track between the Dan Ryan Expressway and the Norfolk Southern freight train tracks. If you were doing one of those ESPN feature profiles of a young athlete from the “mean streets” of Chicago’s south side, the landscape of this street on this morning is the video footage you would see: gray skies, bordered up homes, vacant lots, few businesses.
As I waited for the event to begin, I watched the comfortable conversation between pairs and small groups of people as they made their way to their preferred rows.
Next to me, a 3-4 year old boy politely steps into a conversation between two women discussing pre-kindergarten registration:
“Can you please top talking to my mommy?”
Both women laugh. This child looks comfortable in this space. He has been here before many times. He recognizes faces, they recognize his. He seems cared for and cared about. I think about who he will be 10 years from now, 20 years from now, will this building still be a place where he is recognized, welcomed, loved, and cared for?
The journey continues in the Fuller Park neighborhood on the south side, at the corner of 45th and Princeton.
Intro Theme Music: Victory Lap by QSTN ft. Mecca:83
Background Music: http://www.bensound.com/
Pick up your copy of the companion book at https://godinchicago.com/
Join the conversation! Follow us on Twitter: https://bit.ly/2Y94abI and on Instagram: https://bit.ly/2z6q5W4
26 FEB 2017 · I did not have any preconceived ideas about what to expect as I pulled into the parking lot behind an elementary school and in the shadow of the Orange Line elevated tracks.
Yet, I would be lying if I said I wasn’t a little surprised when I walked into the well-lit, open lobby and saw an information kiosk in the center, a merchandise booth in the corner to my right, and a 4-5 table coffee shop on my left.
It was...professional. Like going to a hotel ballroom for a seminar or conference. But it was also familiar, and definitely had a come-as-you-are vibe. There was a signature book for first-time visitors placed at each aisle as you enter the auditorium.
As I waited for the event to begin, I flipped through the brochure I’d been given, and watched the scattered small groups of people chatting in the auditorium. In the upper right hand corner of the informational brochure, I noticed a small box of text titled Weekly Budget. Listed underneath was the organization’s budget for the week, and the amount of money they had raised from donations in the previous week.
This is the first place I’ve been, so far, that mentioned how much they spend. It seems to be an effort to build trust through transparency. I wonder what led to the decision to share this information with visiting guests and committed members alike.
I think, on some level, this small disclosure had an effect on me. I felt better about the projectors, sound stage, screens, speakers, and modern decor in this auditorium which were a contrast to the nondescript and understated exterior of this building and the buildings on the the surrounding blocks.
The journey continues in the Archer Heights neighborhood on the southwest side, at the corner of 51st and Keeler.
Intro Theme Music: Victory Lap by QSTN ft. Mecca:83
Background Music: http://www.bensound.com/
Pick up your copy of the companion book at https://godinchicago.com/
Join the conversation! Follow us on Twitter: https://bit.ly/2Y94abI and on Instagram: https://bit.ly/2z6q5W4
11 MAR 2017 · You can understand a lot about the history of Chicago over the past 50 years just by taking a ride down Lake Street from the gas stations and fast food restaurants in Maywood, through the tree canopied streets of River Forest, through the urbanized suburban bustle of Oak Park, and into the two-flats, corner stores, and 19th century mansions of the Austin neighborhood on the city’s west side.
To ride down Lake Street into the city is to see the clear boundary lines between struggle and success, poverty and profit, comfort and carnage. Even the viaducts and walls of the Green Line tracks that run alongside Lake Street reflect the stark shift in economic realities at the Austin Blvd. border.
As I enter the building, it has the feeling of a meeting hall. With the exception of the stained glass windows along the side walls, there are not any immediately visible decorations that indicate what the space is used for. There are around 150 people in this space, but it doesn’t feel like it. It feels cozier and more intimate.
This Sunday happens to be Youth Sunday, and a 20-person team of young mime actors and praise dancers from elementary to middle school age filled the front stage and main center aisle.
There is a specific kind of joy and freedom that is expressed when children dance. In some ways, this kind of joy can only be expressed by children. As I watched their performance, and the enthusiastic support of the adults in this building, I wondered what it means in the lives of these young people to have started their week in this way.
I thought about the drastically different Sunday mornings that their neighborhood friends and their peers at school must be having. What does it mean for these young people to have such a space to dance, sing, perform, play, and express?
The journey continues in the Austin neighborhood on the west side, at the corner of Austin Boulevard and Lake Street.
Intro Theme Music: Victory Lap by QSTN ft. Mecca:83
Background Music: http://www.bensound.com/
Pick up your copy of the companion book at https://godinchicago.com/
Join the conversation! Follow us on Twitter: https://bit.ly/2Y94abI and on Instagram: https://bit.ly/2z6q5W4
26 MAR 2017 · An uptempo jazz/afrobeat instrumental plays through the auditorium speakers as I enter. There’s a ship steering wheel with a face that appears etched on it in the middle of the stage.
As the event was about to get underway, a woman walked up to a podium at the side of the front stage:
“In keeping with our African tradition, may we have permission to proceed with our worship? To signify, wave your hankerchief.”
With that, a procession of choir singers entered the auditorium accompanied by the syncopated beats of the African drum players on the front stage. Nearly every choir member was wearing a West African-inspired dashiki, dress, head wrap, or kufi.
In the first 15 minutes, the people assembled in this space experienced a wider and more global expression of love for God than most people will see in a year. The opening song was performed with a reggae vibe. The opening meditation was offered in Spanish and English. The opening prayer was delivered in Jamaican Patois. The mime/dance performance that followed was set to a gospel ballad.
The time set aside for the audience to greet the people seated around them lasted for a good five minutes, and was one of the more joyful breaks of this kind that I’ve seen so far. The band played a jazz instrumental while people embraced, laughed, and smiled at each other.
The journey continues in the Washington Heights neighborhood on the south side, on the corner of 95th Street and Eggleston.
Intro Theme Music: Victory Lap by QSTN ft. Mecca:83
Background Music: http://www.bensound.com/
Pick up your copy of the companion book at https://godinchicago.com/
Join the conversation! Follow us on Twitter: https://bit.ly/2Y94abI and on Instagram: https://bit.ly/2z6q5W4
10 APR 2017 · This stretch of Washington Blvd. is lined with 3-story brick flats and large apartment buildings. As I crossed the street, I came upon a swooping, concave building with a wall of tinted glass windows. There are arrows chalked on to the sidewalk directing visitors to the double-door entrance.
As I walked through the hallways and to the auditorium, at least five people shook my hand and greeted me with a smile. Two of the greeters introduced themselves by name, and asked me for my name as well. Another one of the greeters explained to me that the events usually take place in their gym. However, due to a recent flood in the gym, they were temporarily relocating to the space I was entering.
And an impressive space it was. It the was the library which serves the high school that is run by this organization. This library had a loft layout: high ceilings, modern light fixtures, an exterior wall with floor-to-ceiling windows that opened to a sunny courtyard containing a small playground for children.
Later on in the event, a group of people visiting from Nebraska were recognized by a speaker at the front stage. He mentioned an initiative called The Compassion Experience, which was some sort of intercultural exchange program, with the goal of spending a day in the life of someone from a different culture.
In fact, there were multiple references to events that involved promoting reconciliation and understanding between people from different races. This is the first time so far in my journey when racial reconciliation was explicitly stated as an organization’s goal.
The journey continues in the Austin neighborhood on the west side, at the corner of Washington Blvd. and Parkside.
Intro Theme Music: Victory Lap by QSTN ft. Mecca:83
Background Music: http://www.bensound.com/
Pick up your copy of the companion book at https://godinchicago.com/
Join the conversation! Follow us on Twitter: https://bit.ly/2Y94abI and on Instagram: https://bit.ly/2z6q5W4
16 APR 2017 · After taking the 111th street exit off the southbound side of the Bishop Ford expressway, I notice the large Area 2 Chicago Police Department building - which takes up multiple blocks - on my left.
On my right, there’s an industrial-sized vacant lot with a sign in front. The sign features an architect’s rendering of a new Whole Foods grocery store distribution facility.
I turn onto Cottage Grove and drive past murals and street placards which commemorate the rich and proud history of the Pullman company for which this neighborhood is named. I pass by a mural of Harriet Tubman painted on the wall of a boarded-up corner store, which sat at the foot of the viaduct that carries the Metra South Shore train lines overhead.
As I turn onto to Corliss Ave. and approach my destination, it feels like I am entering the parking lot of a football stadium or an amusement park. Traffic cones form lanes that guide cars into sections of this massive parking lot, where all the vehicles seemed to be parked facing this impressive structure.
Inside, there were tables with Black History Month displays in the lobby. Three-digit seating section numbers were painted above the stadium-like entrances to the auditorium. A choir was on stage singing as I made my way to a seat a few rows into the lower mezzanine level.
This massive space is the size of a small college sports arena, but the people around me look comfortable. Many of them stood in their seats and joined the choir in song before the event began.
The journey continues in the Pullman neighborhood on the south side, at the corner of 114th St. and Corliss.
Intro Theme Music: Victory Lap by QSTN ft. Mecca:83
Background Music: www.bensound.com/
Pick up your copy of the companion book at https://godinchicago.com/
Join the conversation! Follow us on Twitter: https://bit.ly/2Y94abI and on Instagram: https://bit.ly/2z6q5W4
25 APR 2017 · On this morning in Logan Square, the main boulevard is busy with joggers, parents pushing strollers, and double-parked cars in front of two large Catholic churches.
An upbeat gospel song plays softly over the loudspeakers as people enter the auditorium in groups of 2-4. Everyone seems like they have known each other for a while. They are comfortable with each other, and are in the middle of extended conversations as the event begins.
A six-person band led the audience in a song with the chorus, “A mighty fortress is our God” as the main speaker came to the front stage and offered this commentary to the audience.
“Back then, 400 years ago, when the [song’s] author wrote these lyrics, a town or village without a mighty fortress was in big trouble. And today, without a strong fortress, you and I are in big trouble.”
The band then led the audience in another song, and about 10 people formed a line along the base of the stage and invited audience members to come forward if they wanted someone to pray with them.
As some people in the audience walked up to the front stage, one or two members of this 10-person team prayed with them. Some of these prayer sessions lasted for several minutes, yet the members of the 10-person team seemed okay with taking the time, no one seemed to be in a rush.
I watched as each person who walked up to the front concluded their prayer session by raising their head, smiling at their prayer partners, and embracing them in a heartfelt hug.
I was moved by watching similar scenes unfold at the front stage, for what seemed like 10 minutes I wonder what it must have meant to the audience members who participated to begin their week this way.
I was reminded of the times when I’ve seen people in parks, malls, and busy streets holding signs that say FREE HUGS. We know that so many people in our country suffer from a lack of love.
What could happen if more people found places and spaces where they could get a prayer and a hug?
What could happen if more people found places and spaces where they were free to unburden themselves and share their concerns with someone who was willing to listen...and not judge?
The journey continues on the northwest side, at the corner of Kedzie Blvd. and Albany.
Intro Theme Music: Victory Lap by QSTN ft. Mecca:83
Background Music: www.bensound.com/
Pick up your copy of the companion book at https://godinchicago.com/
Join the conversation! Follow us on Twitter: https://bit.ly/2Y94abI and on Instagram: https://bit.ly/2z6q5W4
6 MAY 2017 · I first noticed this building while by on the Dan Ryan Expressway a month earlier. Surrounded by the White Sox baseball stadium, a high school, housing projects, and an eight-lane super highway; it feels like this building is a monument to a south side that existed decades ago.
So when I walked into the building, having arrived early for the event, and took a seat in one of the padded benches toward the back of the auditorium; I was not surprised to see the crowd seated around me made up of mostly senior citizens who were concluding their early morning Bible study session.
They ended their session by singing a hymn a capella. They all seemed to know the hymn’s lyrics, and they sang those lyrics with the kind of soul that only comes from having lived for many decades.
As the seniors gathered their things and began their procession out of the auditorium, I felt like I was watching some sort of Benjamin Button-like time lapse video.
Leaving the auditorium were the steady, slow steps of the elders in two-piece suits and long dresses. Entering the auditorium were the confident and steady strides of the millennials, rocking manicured beards, shredded jeans, and pencil skirts.
The journey continues in the Wentworth Gardens neighborhood on the south side, at the corner of 37th Street and Wentworth.
Intro Theme Music: Victory Lap by QSTN ft. Mecca:83
Background Music: www.bensound.com/
Pick up your copy of the companion book at https://godinchicago.com/
Join the conversation! Follow us on Twitter: https://bit.ly/2Y94abI and on Instagram: https://bit.ly/2z6q5W4
After a decade away, I recently had the opportunity to return to the city of my birth, and to the place where the foundation of my faith was formed. I...
show more
After a decade away, I recently had the opportunity to return to the city of my birth, and to the place where the foundation of my faith was formed.
I have been through a lot since I lived in Chicago. The city has been through a lot since I left.
I never left my faith, but I see it differently now. The communities of faith across the city's neighborhoods never left, but I look at them differently now.
I am a product of these faith communities. I am a product of the specific churches of my youth and early adulthood, and a product of the general Christian subculture formed by people of faith who live in this part of the country.
Having moved in and around communities of faith for over three decades, I am neither objective in my observations nor oblivious in my opinions about them.
I have intentionally chosen to share the stories about my year-long journey visiting 35 faith communities in Chicago in a manner that is stripped of the packaging and pageantry, labels and titles, and divisions and denominations that matter to fewer people now than they did when they were created.
Hopefully, this podcast will challenge the misperceptions about these spaces and celebrate the humanity of the people who gather in them.
This podcast was created in hopes that people who may be unfamiliar with these norms (and/or confused by the large swath of American society influenced by them) will find a bridge to walk with me as I consider the central questions of life, spirituality, and our beliefs about God.
I invite you to open yourself to whatever emotions and thoughts are inspired or provoked by this journey. If you like what you're hearing, please rate us, and leave a quick review! You won't believe how much that would help!
Thanks for listening!
An OverPond Media production.
show less
I have been through a lot since I lived in Chicago. The city has been through a lot since I left.
I never left my faith, but I see it differently now. The communities of faith across the city's neighborhoods never left, but I look at them differently now.
I am a product of these faith communities. I am a product of the specific churches of my youth and early adulthood, and a product of the general Christian subculture formed by people of faith who live in this part of the country.
Having moved in and around communities of faith for over three decades, I am neither objective in my observations nor oblivious in my opinions about them.
I have intentionally chosen to share the stories about my year-long journey visiting 35 faith communities in Chicago in a manner that is stripped of the packaging and pageantry, labels and titles, and divisions and denominations that matter to fewer people now than they did when they were created.
Hopefully, this podcast will challenge the misperceptions about these spaces and celebrate the humanity of the people who gather in them.
This podcast was created in hopes that people who may be unfamiliar with these norms (and/or confused by the large swath of American society influenced by them) will find a bridge to walk with me as I consider the central questions of life, spirituality, and our beliefs about God.
I invite you to open yourself to whatever emotions and thoughts are inspired or provoked by this journey. If you like what you're hearing, please rate us, and leave a quick review! You won't believe how much that would help!
Thanks for listening!
An OverPond Media production.
Information
Author | Deji Komolafe |
Organization | Deji Komolafe |
Categories | Religion & Spirituality , Christianity , Personal Journals |
Website | www.spreaker.com |
godinchicago@gmail.com |
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