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Archive for February 2, 2016

Re-Constructing Philanthropy

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February 2, 2016

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Re-Constructing Philanthropy

You have not lived today until you have done something for someone who can never repay you.

– John Bunyan –

Re-Constructing Philanthropy

“The Empire State Building is a marvel, one of the seven modern wonders of the world. Yet when it was built, the most revolutionary change wasn’t the architecture or the height, there were two other buildings built nearby, almost as high. The less acclaimed, quantum leap was in the construction practices by which the building was framed. Never before had a building been constructed the way they did it, as fast as they did it.” Paul Shoemaker makes a case for a similar radical fundamental change in the underlying practices with which we construct our philanthropy. { read more }

Be The Change

For a day or a week, put aside your usual ways of gifting to others and try to find a radically different way to help those in need. For inspiration join a global conference call this Saturday with Paul Shoemaker. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Sufficiency is Not Abundance

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Sufficiency is Not Abundance
by Lynne Twist

[Listen to Audio!]

tow3.jpgWe can learn to invest the resources that flow through our lives in a new future for all of us. We can direct those resources, whether they are like a rushing torrent coming through our lives or a small trickle, to our highest commitments and ideals. We can move our money, or the money we are entrusted with, toward that which will serve us all from a sense of our own wholeness rather than a desperate longing to be complete.

I call this living in the context of sufficiency. This is not the same as abundance (abundance is more than we need—it is excess), and in the context in which I’m speaking, abundance is merely the flip side of scarcity. You strive to get more than you need because you believe or fear there is not enough.

Sufficiency is precise. It means that things are sufficient, exactly enough. There is a principle of sufficiency, and it is as follows: When you let go of trying to get more of what you don’t really need, which is what we’re all trying to get more of, it frees up immense energy to make a difference with what you have.

When you make a difference with what you have, it expands. This context opens the possibility of generating a new set of assumptions based in the principle of sufficiency for the 21st century. If we are willing to begin to commit to make a difference with what we have rather than putting all of our energy into getting more, then…what we have will naturally and organically expand.

This new set of assumptions or new context can create a whole new culture around money and around life. It can teach us how to be known for what we allocate rather than what we accumulate. It can teach us to be measured and measure others by our inner riches rather than our accumulation of outer riches. We can learn how to end charity as we know it and begin truly investing or being vested in a new future that will serve us all.

Although we think there are people with money and people without it, the real truth is, money is a part of everyone’s life from the poorest peasant to the wealthiest industrialist, the way we direct the money that comes through our lives defines us.

The American billionaire and the Guatemalan peasant farmer, the European industrialist and the Ethiopian grassroots leader can stand together in co-equal partnership and invest their time, energy and financial resources in a new future for all of us, in a future that will serve us all.

About the Author: Lynne Twist, in The Soul of Money.

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Sufficiency is Not Abundance
What does sufficiency mean to you? Can you share a personal experience of a time when you discovered, through sufficiency, an immense energy to make a difference? What helps you to remember to value your inner riches over your outer riches?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: I love this idea of sufficiency which creates and sustains a deep sense of contentment. If we focus our attention and our energy on sufficiency, life will be less complicated and less stressful…
david doane wrote: Sufficiency mans to have what is needed, no more or less, and to live with and use that amount, rather than hoarding more than what is needed or going without what is needed. Sufficiency is eco…
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