We came here to the Lower Ninth Ward to rebuild. And we're going to rebuild today and work today, and we will continue to come back. We will never forget the heartache and we'll always be here to bring them hope, so that someday, one day, the trumpets will sound in Musicians' Village, where we are today, play loud across Lake Ponchartrain, so that working people can come marching in and those steps once again can lead to a family living out the dream in America.We sat with poultry workers in Mississippi, janitors in Florida, nurses in California.
We listened as child after child told us about their worry about whether we would preserve the planet.We listened to worker after worker say "the economy is tearing my family apart."We walked the streets of Cleveland, where house after house was in foreclosure.And we said, "We're better than this. And economic justice in America is our cause."
And we spent a day, a summer day, in Wise, Virginia, with a man named James Lowe, who told us the story of having been born with a cleft palate. He had no health care coverage. His family couldn't afford to fix it. And finally some good Samaritan came along and paid for his cleft palate to be fixed, which allowed him to speak for the first time. But they did it when he was 50 years old. His amazing story, though, gave this campaign voice: universal health care for every man, woman and child in America. That is our cause.And we do this -- we do this for each other in America. We don't turn away from a neighbor in their time of need. Because every one of us knows that what -- but for the grace of God, there goes us. The American people have never stopped doing this, even when their government walked away, and walked away it has from hardworking people, and, yes, from the poor, those who live in poverty in this country...
For decades, we stopped focusing on those struggles. They didn't register in political polls, they didn't get us votes and so we stopped talking about it. I don't know how it started. I don't know when our party began to turn away from the cause of working people, from the fathers who were working three jobs literally just to pay the rent, mothers sending their kids to bed wrapped up in their clothes and in coats because they couldn't afford to pay for heat.We know that our brothers and sisters have been bullied into believing that they can't organize and can't put a union in the workplace. Well, in this campaign, we didn't turn our heads. We looked them square in the eye and we said, "We see you, we hear you, and we are with you. And we will never forget you."
And I want to say to everyone here, on the way here today, we passed under a bridge that carried the interstate where 100 to 200 homeless Americans sleep every night. And we stopped, we got out, we went in and spoke to them.There was a minister there who comes every morning and feeds the homeless out of her own pocket. She said she has no money left in her bank account, she struggles to be able to do it, but she knows it's the moral, just and right thing to do. And I spoke to some of the people who were there and as I was leaving, one woman said to me, "You won't forget us, will you? Promise me you won't forget us." Well, I say to her and I say to all of those who are struggling in this country, we will never forget you. We will fight for you. We will stand up for you.But I want to say this -- I want to say this because it's important. With all of the injustice that we've seen, I can say this, America's hour of transformation is upon us. It may be hard to believe when we have bullets flying in Baghdad and it may be hard to believe when it costs $58 to fill your car up with gas. It may be hard to believe when your school doesn't have the right books for your kids. It's hard to speak out for change when you feel like your voice is not being heard.
Howard's Sermons and Article Clippings.
Blog Archive
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2008
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January
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- John Edward's Prophetic Call for Justice
- Cross-racial shootings spark fear in Monrovia
- Winds of change sweep skid row
- Reformers ask council to back off
- Governor Schwarzenegger Approves Measures to Fight...
- People of Faith Rally for Darfur
- Witness to Hope
- Hopes rise as Kenyan rivals talk
- Rampaging gangs kill dozens and burn homes in Naku...
- Public Comment at the Sep 07 Meeting of the CA Com...
- Letter to the CA Fair Adminstration of Justice Com...
- The Prison-Industrial Complex
- Signs in Kenya That Killings Were Planned
- Episcopalians hold an Indian Rite Mass with Hindus...
- Intervention, Hailed as a Concept, Is Shunned in P...
- Bush Signs Bill Allowing Sudan Divestment
- Save Darfur Briefing Paper
- Talking Points on How to Stop Genocide in Darfur
- Legal experts weigh death penalty reform
- Cut down for crossing an invisible line
- War casualties not forgotten by L.A. parish
- Malawi's 'free trade' revolt
- Support the Minority AIDS Project
- Time Magazine, Death Penalty Walking
- Shooting a reminder of changing district's past
- Sad price of gang 'rent'
- Fighting to Stop a Strip Club from Opening at the ...
- Baby Luis Garcia LA Times Homicide Report
- LA City Beat: Too Many Vigils
- Hoping Each Vigil is His Last
- Welcome
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About Me
- Howard
- Im a Mainline protestant minister who loves serving in multicultural and urban contexts. I'm very interested in how liberation theology and existential-humanistic psychology are applied to the praxis of pastoral care and counseling. My most profound encounters with God come as we sojourn as brothers and sisters seeking the inbreaking of God's reign, here and now.
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