Categories
Politics

Yes Virginia, there is institutional racism

Some of us have heard the story of the article in the New York Sun newspaper by Francis P. Church, one of its editors, in 1897 entitled “Is There is a Santa Claus?”

The article was a response to a letter from a young girl, Virginia O’Hanlon, who asked her father if Santa Claus existed.  He told her to write to the Sun and trust that “if you see it in the Sun, its so.” 

Church wrote a column that telling her that Santa Claus was real and that her friends who denied the existence of Santa were “affected by the skepticism of a skeptical age. They do not believe except they see.”

Church then wrote these famous words: “Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as certainly as love and generosity and devotion exist, and you know that they abound and give to your life its highest joy.”

Categories
Politics Religion/Spirituality

Was Jesus a Republican or a Democrat?

(This column originally appeared in the Murray Ledger and Times on December 4, 2019. As our 2020 election campaign ramps up, it seems worth repeating)

This is an odd title for a column.  But it got your attention, right?  The short answer is, of course, that Jesus was would not have supported either party.

However, the point here is a broader one, suggested by a book written by evangelical preacher Jim Wallace during the Bush administration in 2005: “God’s Politics: Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn’t Get It.”  

Wallis noted that the conservative, liberal and libertarian political options are not what American Christians — liberal or conservative – really should want.

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General Personal

Aging Thoughts: Control and Death

As an aging American male, I long ago learned that, although not necessarily a clinical “control freak,” I certainly do like to control people and situations in my life. This applies to family members, those with whom I work and direct when in leadership positions, and even the driver in front of me who is going much too slowly.

One of the consequences of aging is that we are forced to accept the fact that we are no longer as “in control” as we once were.  This applies to our bodies, which no longer respond to our commands as they once did, and to our minds, which, as early as age 50, challenge us with something known as “delayed recall.”  That is a nice way of saying that we can’t remember names, places, words, or sometimes even why we just entered a particular room in our house.

And that can be scary. I am thankful that I can still draw the numbers and the hands on the clock face that my insurance company nurse asks me to do once a year during her home visit. That test has a name, but I can’t remember what it is.

Categories
Politics

The Irony of Antiracism

As a high school student, I learned that racism or, as we called it then, racial discrimination, was a bad thing, in the eyes of God, our church, and all fair-minded people.  It was described as considering ourselves superior to Negroes or black people and denying them equality with us. 

As I grew older, I also learned that the list of people we were not to discriminate against included women (if we were men), those of other faiths, and foreign emigrants. Today’s list is longer, including LGBTQ, “people of color,” those in poverty, the disabled, and others deemed “different” from normal, healthy, white-skinned Americans, especially males. But in 1961 when I entered high school, racism was a term used to describe white people’s attitudes toward American Negroes. We were told to ignore skin color when judging people.

Categories
General Politics

Aging Thoughts: Seeking Truth

Growing up, I felt caught between two political forces. My parents, although working class people, were staunch Republicans. As a child, I remember my mother snarling when President Truman came on the radio.  I also remember her saying, when I was older, that FDR didn’t really die of a stroke in Warm Springs, Georgia.

“He killed himself because he knew what a mess he had made of things,” she proclaimed!

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General

Aging Thoughts: Richard Rohr-2

In my last post Richard Rohr was telling us that we need to embrace contradictions to enter the second half of life and grow psychologically and spiritually.  We must, in his words, “fall down” in order to “move up.”

To do this, we must find our “true self,” a term used by twentieth-century Trappist monk Thomas Merton to describe the person God created us to be.  We must leave our “false self,” that (psychologically younger) person dominated by ego and false values, most notably selfishness, greed and judgmentalism of the sort modeled by the elder brother in the prodigal son story in the New Testament.  We must be “soul drawn” instead of “ego-driven.”

Most of what Rohr is saying fits quite nicely with what society tells us about aging.  We should expect to be mellower in old age, give up our striving and need to control others, and accept the role and demeanor of the “wise” elder. 

Unfortunately, neither our modern society nor our religious institutions do a very good job of helping us do these things. Our unregulated capitalist society continues to promote increased consumption of material goods and wealth so we can retire comfortably for several decades, a concept unheard of in human history before the twentieth century. Even as we age, we are urged to put money and things ahead of people.

Many of our Christian churches, especially those known in America as “evangelical,” continue to promote an either-or theology of doctrinal authoritarianism and preach a God of exclusion and punishment, of Heaven OR Hell, instead of the message of love of God, self, and neighbor lived and preached by Jesus.

But here is where spiritual awareness can begin to help us.  Those of us seeking to grow in our “second half” of life, however old we are when that happens, can learn, perhaps with the aid of prayer, spiritual reading or meditation, to “learn how to live in the big picture, as a part of deep time and history.” Rohr calls this “living in the kingdom of God” which exists now, and not just after death. We can be both a part of a and a contributor to that kingdom way of life now. Heaven can wait, to steal the title of a recent book.

Rohr talks about this in a compelling passage: “We no longer need to change or adjust other people to be happy ourselves. Ironically, we are more than ever before in a position to change people—but we do not need to –and that makes all the difference. We have moved from doing to being to an utterly new kind of doing that flows almost organically, quietly, and by osmosis.  Our actions are less compulsive. We do what we are called to do, and then try to let go of the consequences. We usually cannot do that when we are young.”

I admit that this is more aspiration than fact for me and for many of us.  But does that make it any less admirable or true?  My vision is clearer now, even though my feet are still moving pretty slowly.

Our attempts to achieve a measure of peace and tranquility as we age—especially given the problems that face us, our families and our world today—probably will be determined by our ability to avoid what Rohr calls “the seven C’s of delusion, and the source of most violence” in our lives.  These are the products of the dualistic mind which, he tells us (in a fit of alliteration) “compares, competes, conflicts, condemns, cancels out any contrary evidence, and then crucifies with impunity.”

And the saddest thing about this is that so many religious people do all these things in the mistaken notion that they are “saving souls for Heaven.” Aging gives us an opportunity to change, and the divinity within us urges us to do so.  But only grace and persuasion, and never damnation, will help us truly change.

Categories
General

Aging Thoughts: Richard Rohr-1

We cannot talk seriously about the link between aging and spirituality without considering the theology of my favorite Catholic author, the Franciscan priest Richard Rohr. He is the founder of the intriguingly titled Center for Action and Contemplation in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Rohr has written several dozen books, made hundreds of speeches and podcasts, and now publishes daily meditations on his website. As the title of his center might indicate, he is a practical mystic who has remained a Catholic, but one who (like Francis of Assisi himself) has been successful in criticizing his church from within, “by [using] its own Scriptures, saints and resources,” which he says “is probably the only way you can fruitfully criticize anything.”

In 2012, Deanna and I had the honor of hearing him in person at a weekend seminar, the “January Adventure in Emerging Christianity” at St. Simon’s Island, Georgia.