Tuesday, April 23, 2013

I have two pieces for your consideration today.  Neither is mine, but both are very worth the time to read.  The first is by Beth Albert and is a response to my earlier post: "Will it ever stop raining".  In these words Beth captures  something of the anxiety and fear that rules much of modern life and she says something important about the source of this anxiety.

The second item is a re-post of this week's entry in Dan Clendenin's blog, Journey with Jesus.  You'll find a link to his site in the "Worth Reading" column just to the right of this pageJourney with Jesus is a weekly essay on the Scripture texts in the Lectionary used by many churches in their Sunday worship.  I can't recommend his blog highly enough.  His writing is always clear, accessible and enlightening.  You would do well to make it a weekly habit to visit his site on Monday mornings.

I'm linking these two pieces because they each contribute to a discussion we ought to be having, namely, what can we do about the dysfunction and despair running rampant through our families, our schools, our churches and our government.  

Read them over and weigh in on the conversation.  Tell me what you think. 
  
By  Beth Albert...

My thoughts about the recent bombings…

There is a new Zeitgeist taking over the minds of our country…  One of polarization, fear, paranoia, judgment, mistrust…  also the proportion of struggling people in the US seem to be increasing which lead to anger, resentment, mistrust again…

I just think the bombing like these, though random and unpredictable, are inevitable in a society which does not nurture its citizens.   It is the result of an environment in which I (even me, who grew up in privilege) fear that my kids won’t be able to make a decent living, gain a good education, have adequate health care, be taken care of as they age….   It is easy for even me, a person of privilege to become angry, anxious, and fearful…   How much more must be the insecurity and anger of immigrant teens, from a war torn country, who are part of a demonized religious tradition.  They too are trying to find a place in this world and were probably having a tough time especially coming out of high school.  It’s easy then to blame others for your situation…   to become angry… Kids in that state of mind, I think are “ripe” for radicalization.   It’s their stage of life…. Chaotic, confusing, searching for meaning, idealistic, naïve, intense, energetic…  

I see it in my own son…  luckily he has healthy ways to channel these energies.  Most of the recent shootings in our country have been perpetrated by young men.   Who were their fathers?  Who were their role models?  Busy working?   Who listens to them?  What do they have to hope for?

I get sick of the rhetoric….  They were such nice kids… who would have thought… there were no signs… Then there’s the tough talk…  we will bring the perpetrators to justice, acts like this are unacceptable….

We are so blind!  Our society is like a dysfunctional family…  And we don’t even know how to relate well to other nations without posturing and threatening violence… this is what we are teaching our children….  On top of that, our kids are steeped in a violent and depressing teen culture full of post-apocalyptic video games, books, and movies about zombie take-overs, teens killing each other, psychopathic under-cover agents etc… they are exciting, edgy, and intoxicating, for sure but what effect are they having on our children’s minds?

I don’t think it is possible to “fight” terrorism.  Fighting just provides fuel for the fire.  We need to have compassion for even the perpetrators of such incredibly evil acts.  They must have incredibly tortured and hellish inner lives in order to be capable of inflicting such horrific suffering, pain, and terror on others.  

The only real way to lessen the likelihood of future atrocities like this, is to work hard to make our society more nurturing and supportive by providing things like health care for all, free college education, job coaching, and pensions.  Our young people need extra care and nurturing, especially those who don’t fit the mold…  immigrants, minorities and outcasts.  We need to pay attention to them, listen to them, and help them find a place in the world where they can channel all that anger and frustration into something good.   Maybe we adults also need to model the behaviors of compassion, compromise and respect for all people, especially those different from ourselves.  Our kids and the whole world are watching.



"To Carry the Candle Against the Wind"
The New Commandment of Jesus

For Sunday April 28, 2013

Lectionary Readings (Revised Common Lectionary, Year C)
Acts 11:1–18
Psalm 148
Revelation 21:1–6
John 13:31–35
           During Lent I watched a documentary film called A Place at the Table about hunger in America. We're the world's richest country and biggest food producer, and yet 14.5 percent of U.S. households — nearly 49 million Americans, including 16.2 million children — struggle to put food on the table. We have thousands of "food deserts" where it's virtually impossible to buy fresh produce. The number of food banks and soup kitchens has skyrocketed in the last few decades, which is just what many legislators want — let private charity solve this public problem while they shovel millions of tax dollars to corporate agribusiness.
           After watching the film, my mind wandered across our country's cultural landscape.
Apostle John from Greek minuscle 482, c. 1285.
Apostle John from Greek minuscle 482, c. 1285.
         
           We have an epidemic of gun violence. Our broken health care system neglects the poor and enriches doctors, insurance companies, lobbyists, and Big Pharma.
           Our government is dysfunctional. A proxy military made up of the poor supports a permanent war economy — America has 700 bases in 60 countries, and in any one year will conduct operations of some sort in 170 countries.
           The mass incarceration rates of our penal system dwarf those of other developing countries, including Russia, China, and Iran. Over 20% of our children don't graduate from high school. The "entertainment" industry churns out a toxic combination of the vulgar and the vapid. And the economic collapse of 2008 showed just how much corporate capitalism privatizes its massive profits and socializes its risks.
           These are signs of what Garry Wills calls a "deeply degraded culture." They're the stuff of dystopian movies like The Hunger Games, novels like The Road by Cormac McCarthy, and historical scholarship like Collapse by Jared Diamond. In his book called Vanished Kingdoms (2011), a history of "state death," Norman Davies argues that all political power is transient: "All states and nations, however great, bloom for a season and are replaced." To imagine that America is an exception is "whistling in the dark."
           So, it's easy to be a pessimist. But here's the paradox — Christians are the ultimate optimists.
           The epistle for this week explains why: "I am making all things new! These words are trustworthy and true." Christians are optimists because we believe that the God who created the world will redeem the world.
John the Evangelist from Greek minuscle 1425, c. 12th-century.
John the Evangelist from Greek minuscle 1425, c. 12th-century.
        
           The gospel for this week shows how: "A new commandment I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another. All people will know that you are my disciples if you love one another." God's redemption of the world is mediated through the love of his people.
           When we love one another, the church becomes an exemplar of life out of death, a model of how the old can be renewed. We become a present-day sign of the future new heaven and earth, when God "will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away."
           It's not obvious in what sense Jesus's commandment is "new." It's an ancient commandment that goes back 3000 years to the founding of the Hebrew community: "Love your neighbor as yourself," says Leviticus 19:18. But that interesting technical question shouldn't distract us from the call of Jesus to love the world into a present reality of the future.
           The reading from Acts about Peter and Cornelius is one example of how God makes the old new. Peter was a conscientious Jew who maintained his ritual purity: "I have never eaten anything impure or unclean." But in a vision he learned that even the Gentiles are accepted by God, and therefore he "should not call any man impure or unclean. If God gave them the same gift as he gave us when we believed in the Lord Jesus Christ, who was I to think that I could oppose God?"
           In his commentary on Galatians 6:10, the church father Jerome describes how John the evangelist, author of the gospel and book of Revelation, preached at Ephesus into his nineties. Christian tradition holds that he died in about the year 100 CE.
John and his scribe Prokhorus, Russian icon, c. 1580.
John and his scribe Prokhorus, Russian icon, c. 1580.
         
           At that age, John was so feeble that he had to be carried into the church at Ephesus on a stretcher. Then, when he could no longer preach a normal sermon, he would lean up on one elbow. The only thing he said was, “Little children, love one another.” People would then carry him back out of the church.
           This continued for weeks, says Jerome. And every week he repeated his one-sentence sermon: “Little children, love one another.”
           Weary of the repetition, the congregation finally asked, "Master, why do you always say this?"
           "Because," John replied, "it is the Lord's command, and if this only is done, it is enough."
           The necessary connection between claiming to love God and demonstrating that we love our neighbor was so embedded in the early Christian traditions that we find this teaching repeated almost verbatim by Paul (Romans 13:8–9, Galatians 5:14), by James (James 2:8), and most memorably by John: "If anyone says, 'I love God,' yet hates his brother, he is a liar. For anyone who does not love his brother, whom he has seen, cannot love God, whom he has not seen. And he has given us this command: Whoever loves God must also love his brother" (1 John 4:20–21).
           In his book of poetry called Leavings (2012), Wendell Berry's poem-prayer gives us a way to start:
           "I know that I have life
only insofar as I have love.
           I have no love
except it come from Thee.
           Help me, please, to carry
this candle against the wind."

3 comments:

  1. To Beth Albert: Well said. You have a great gift of writing. You should use it more. Your thoughts are so true but for some of us, it is hard to be able to convey or even understand what we are feeling. Thanks for expressing your ideas and ways we can all learn from. I believe there is hope if we could all start realizing what is the root of all this violence and evil. Well said Beth. I am proud to know you. You are a gift.

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  2. Beth, thanks for your well thought out post. You articulated what I was thinking but hadn't put into words. I hope you will keep writing and sharing.

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  3. Thanks for this, this bit about John talking about love was mentioned in our series on Justice recently.

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