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Paynter challenges anti-hunger advocates to join, lead and love to “live your call”

 

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October 2, 2014

By Aaron Weaver

WACO, Texas — Cooperative Baptist Fellowship Executive Coordinator Suzii Paynter called on anti-hunger advocates meeting at a summit Wednesday night to “accept the unfinished business” of their lives as they work together to end hunger in the United States.

“The inspiration and arc of our lives is in God’s hands toward the kingdom of God,” Paynter said. “We’re not alone. We’re held in a great, fertile, hilarious imagination of God. …Join something, lead someone, be contagious, love with unimaginable love. Live your call without the credit because God isn’t finished with you yet.”

Paynter’s challenge came during the opening night of Together at the Table: Hunger & Poverty Summit, a three-day gathering of anti-hunger and anti-poverty leaders and practitioners from across the country at Baylor University. Attendees are focused on addressing food insecurity. Now in its sixth year, the summit, co-sponsored by the Texas Hunger Initiative, Texas Food Bank Network and USDA Southwest Region, offers an opportunity for the sharing of evidence-based research and best-practice models among organizations working to end hunger.

In 2009, while director of the Texas Baptist Christian Life Commission, Paynter partnered with the Baylor University School of Social Work to launch the Texas Hunger Initiative, a project to end hunger in the state of Texas through public policy, education, community organizing and community development. Texas Hunger Initiative now has almost 500 congregations serving as summer meal sites across Texas and has connected with more than 2,400 churches through its community partner program.

During her plenary address, Paynter shared how she awakened to the problem of hunger after, as a reading teacher, discovering that one of her students was collecting pencils to eat the erasers.

“That’s the day that I quit being blind to hunger,” she said.

CBF Executive Coordinator Suzii Paynter addresses a group of anti-hunger advocates at a hunger and poverty summit at Baylor University.

CBF Executive Coordinator Suzii Paynter addresses a group of anti-hunger advocates at a hunger and poverty summit at Baylor University.

Paynter said that she works to end hunger because “it’s the kind of redemptive act in the world that echoes the kingdom of God.” She emphasized the importance of collective impact as another primary reason for working to end hunger.

“We’re all born hungry in creation,” Paynter said. “Hunger, feeding, growing, living — this is the essence of life. In every city, in every age, we need to eat to live. Ending hunger is doable, and in the doing of it we become a better state, a better nation, a better world.”

Citing recent research from the Stanford Social Innovation Review, Paynter highlighted five conditions needed for successful collective impact to solve large-scale problems such as hunger — conditions she noted are present in the daily work of the Texas Hunger Initiative. These include the need for a common agenda, shared measurement and mutually-reinforcing activities.

“I know this community — the hunger and social service community,” Paynter said. “You are not competitors. You are collaborators. You hold a tremendous gift to this state and our country.”

She emphasized the importance of collaboration, noting that out of this commitment to collaboration, CBF launched a rural poverty initiative called Together for Hope in 2001 to work with people in 20 of the poorest counties in the U.S. to affect change and break the cycle of economic disparity.

Paynter said that continuous communication and a well-developed support system or “backbone” are necessary elements for collective impact.

“While everyone is doing their job, it’s very hard for you to do your job and think about the big issue of ending hunger,” Paynter said. “There has to be a backbone, an organization that is doing just that, is working in Washington, D.C., or in your state legislature.”

In achieving collective impact, structure is as important as strategy, she added.

“Just having a good idea and a list of things to do is a very great starting place,” Paynter said. “But, if you don’t have the structure behind it, it will have a hard time being as effective as it was dreamed to be.”

Collective impact requires anti-hunger advocates to learn from each other “rather than just following a linear plan,” she said.

Paynter reminded the group that there is no “silver bullet” to solve the problem of hunger, but that together, they are all “silver buckshot.”

“There is no silver bullet. There is no one thing that is going to make [hunger] disappear. But, you know, we are a pretty darn good collection of silver buckshot. In your job…being able to look across the town, across the county line and see another glimpse of silver right over there — that’s where we get our strength. That’s who we are together at the table — not trying to be somebody else’s silver bullet. …When I look out at this room, across our network, I see plenty of silver buckshot. There are remarkable miraculous gifts, an overabundance of gifts right in front of us every day.”

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CBF is a fellowship of Baptist Christians and churches who share a passion for the Great Commission and a commitment to Baptist principles of faith and practice. The Fellowship’s mission is to serve Christians and churches as they discover and fulfill their God-given mission.

 

2 thoughts on “Paynter challenges anti-hunger advocates to join, lead and love to “live your call”

  1. Yes for caling in God to living holy life in quard of the Holy Spirit withus and be used of him today are very well pleasing me and my love to God into be fruitful in blessing around us in Jesus name ,thanks and bless,keijo sweden

  2. Pingback: On eve of Pope’s visit, Paynter and faith leaders commit to ending hunger by 2030 | CBFblog

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