Sean Taylor was an all star football player. He was murdered this week and died at the age of 24. Shot by an intruder, he was protecting his 18 month old child and the child's mother.
Wednesday I was on the treadmill at Gold's Gym. ESPN flashed words that Sean had spoken some time ago. "It is important not to fear death. when your time comes, it comes. I've been blessed by God.I'm happy."
His life had taken some rough turns and he had been involved in some dicey activities,even before his tragic death. Certainly,family and friends and those of us who only know him through the media, can find a sad contentment that he was happy in himself, before he died.At least that is what he said.
Is it true though that `When your time comes, it comes.' Does God, Fate,Nature allow each person only so many days of breath and life? If that is true, then why do we bother intervening in situations where we are confronting disease? IF God has already decided the number of our days, why bother with doctors or medicine or nutrition or exercise. I think the philosophers characterize this attitude as Fatalism--and yes, in some ways it may help us overcome our fear of death. But as I have argued in earlier posts, I certainly don't believe it.
We can overcome some of our fear of death by faith in some kind of afterlife. Of course, it may just be wishful thinking. But for some of us, we have confidence that something of our essence continues on into the next reality and that confidence is based on our personal experiences as well as the testimony of others.
I choose FAITH over FATALISM. What do you think? How do you choose?
Friday, November 30, 2007
Monday, November 26, 2007
Icons and Spirit
My host in Moscow was a professor of linguistics and a devout member of the Russian Orthodox Church. In the bedroom where I stayed, she had faithfully arranged a dozen icons on a wall. On the facing wall, at the same height, she had placed maybe 20 family photos. I found the juxtaposition inspiring.
I have come to believe that God is revealed to us more through the spiritual struggles and stories of family and friends than through the stories and legends of the saints. I believe that God works in our lives, giving us dreams and visions, guiding us and chiding us and blessing us along the way. Certainly, too, the world has been enriched, especially by the spiritual autobiographies of people from Augustine to Annie Lamott. But God calls us especially to look into our own story, our own memories, there to find the spirit.
God is revealed to us sometimes in icons--but especially in those photos of our family and friends and all that lives behind their pictures. My host's grandfather was murdered by Stalin--her father jailed--released to fight for 4 years in the tank corps during WWII--her mother at 84 is still energized and heroic. Our special photos speak to us of the long journey of family and friends to find meaning and happiness,love and hope.
Those photos too remind us of how people betray the image of God within them. Family and friends and we ourselves, sometimes, distort love and abuse one another.Sin and evil abide in us all.
But some days,some moments, sometimes the light of eternity shines through us. And some days, some moments, sometimes, the light of eternity has shone through others. That light has been light to us in times of terror and darkness on our journey.
As the light of God shines through other souls, we receive light for the path and then we sometimes become light for others. The light we receive and the light that guides us and the light we share is not constant like the sun. Nor is it fleeting like a shooting star. This light is intermittent, irregular, sometimes unavailable when we feel in desperate need, sometimes a surprising interruption when we feel complacent.
So yes, for some folks icons open their hearts and minds to the mystery of God. But is it not true that God comes to us, intermittently, through our family and friends, through our life's journey and so through those precious photos that tell something of who we are?
I have come to believe that God is revealed to us more through the spiritual struggles and stories of family and friends than through the stories and legends of the saints. I believe that God works in our lives, giving us dreams and visions, guiding us and chiding us and blessing us along the way. Certainly, too, the world has been enriched, especially by the spiritual autobiographies of people from Augustine to Annie Lamott. But God calls us especially to look into our own story, our own memories, there to find the spirit.
God is revealed to us sometimes in icons--but especially in those photos of our family and friends and all that lives behind their pictures. My host's grandfather was murdered by Stalin--her father jailed--released to fight for 4 years in the tank corps during WWII--her mother at 84 is still energized and heroic. Our special photos speak to us of the long journey of family and friends to find meaning and happiness,love and hope.
Those photos too remind us of how people betray the image of God within them. Family and friends and we ourselves, sometimes, distort love and abuse one another.Sin and evil abide in us all.
But some days,some moments, sometimes the light of eternity shines through us. And some days, some moments, sometimes, the light of eternity has shone through others. That light has been light to us in times of terror and darkness on our journey.
As the light of God shines through other souls, we receive light for the path and then we sometimes become light for others. The light we receive and the light that guides us and the light we share is not constant like the sun. Nor is it fleeting like a shooting star. This light is intermittent, irregular, sometimes unavailable when we feel in desperate need, sometimes a surprising interruption when we feel complacent.
So yes, for some folks icons open their hearts and minds to the mystery of God. But is it not true that God comes to us, intermittently, through our family and friends, through our life's journey and so through those precious photos that tell something of who we are?
Sunday, November 25, 2007
Chaos and the Bridge of San Luis Rey
My host in Moscow gave me an icon of St.Grigory slaying the dragon of chaos. St. Grigory is the patron saint of Moscow. I became intrigued by the contrasting images of Grigory slaying the dragon and Peter controlling, the writhing, but still living serpent/dragon in Falconet's statue of the Bronze Horseman.
The dragon is an ancient symbol of chaos with the nuance that chaos itself is often thought of as evil. Does chaos sometimes come into our lives bringing disruption, destruction and sometimes even death? Does that chaos come from God or does it just happen?
Recently we rented a movie version of The Bridge of San Luis Rey, with Robert de Niro and Kathy Bates and a great cast. Published in 1927, the novel tells the story of a monk who investigates the lives of 5 people killed where a bridge collapses in Peru.
The movie was disappointing but led me to reread Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer Prize winning novel, The Bridge of San Luis Rey. The book is only 117 pages--so please go for reading the book, because such a deep compassion for the human reality flows through it. Somehow, the movie just doesn't evoke that same deep emapthy for our struggle for life and love and meaning and happiness. The Thornton Wilder Society's website says that Wilder wrote the book partly in tension with his father's Puritan sense that God controls life, rewarding the good and punishing the wicked.
Wilder is quoted a saying "Strict puritans imagine God all too easily as a petty schoolmaster who minutely weighs guilt against merit.They overlook God's caritas which is more all encompassing and powerful. God's love has to transcend his just retribution. But in my novel I have left this question unanswered. As I said earlier, we can only pose the questions correctly and clearly and have faith one will ask the question in the right way."
One thing the movie does extremely well is to help us understand the political implications of this question about God's control of life. The viceroy and the archbishop burn at the stake the Franciscan monk who dares suggest that maybe God does not control and ordain all natural events and bless all power arrangements. God and chaos--is it a war to the death or is it a dance that embraces life and death.
At the end of the story, the Abbess who runs homes for the sick and orphans as well as for the sisters reflects on the lives of those who died. 'Now learn', she commanded herself,'learn at last, that anywhere you may expect grace.'
Chaos and unexpected grace!
The dragon is an ancient symbol of chaos with the nuance that chaos itself is often thought of as evil. Does chaos sometimes come into our lives bringing disruption, destruction and sometimes even death? Does that chaos come from God or does it just happen?
Recently we rented a movie version of The Bridge of San Luis Rey, with Robert de Niro and Kathy Bates and a great cast. Published in 1927, the novel tells the story of a monk who investigates the lives of 5 people killed where a bridge collapses in Peru.
The movie was disappointing but led me to reread Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer Prize winning novel, The Bridge of San Luis Rey. The book is only 117 pages--so please go for reading the book, because such a deep compassion for the human reality flows through it. Somehow, the movie just doesn't evoke that same deep emapthy for our struggle for life and love and meaning and happiness. The Thornton Wilder Society's website says that Wilder wrote the book partly in tension with his father's Puritan sense that God controls life, rewarding the good and punishing the wicked.
Wilder is quoted a saying "Strict puritans imagine God all too easily as a petty schoolmaster who minutely weighs guilt against merit.They overlook God's caritas which is more all encompassing and powerful. God's love has to transcend his just retribution. But in my novel I have left this question unanswered. As I said earlier, we can only pose the questions correctly and clearly and have faith one will ask the question in the right way."
One thing the movie does extremely well is to help us understand the political implications of this question about God's control of life. The viceroy and the archbishop burn at the stake the Franciscan monk who dares suggest that maybe God does not control and ordain all natural events and bless all power arrangements. God and chaos--is it a war to the death or is it a dance that embraces life and death.
At the end of the story, the Abbess who runs homes for the sick and orphans as well as for the sisters reflects on the lives of those who died. 'Now learn', she commanded herself,'learn at last, that anywhere you may expect grace.'
Chaos and unexpected grace!
Saturday, November 24, 2007
Moscow
Even more than most cities that I have been in, Moscow bursts with contrasts and contradictions. Under Stalin, the Russian government destroyed thousands of churches. Some were converted to swimming pools or warehouses or stables. Now the government is building Russian Orthodox Churches, including a new Cathedral downtown. I believe that this was the church originally built to celebrate the Russian victory over the Turks in 1877. A powerful statue of Tsar Nicholas II dominates the courtyard outside the church. Nicholas appears regal and in control of his mighty empire. Didn't quite turn out that way.
Riding the wonderful metro system, the traveler gets off at the Kropotkinshaya Station, named to honor Prince Kropotkin. Kropotin died in 1921 at the age of 78. He was an explorer and geographer and author--and also an anarchist socialist, who was jailed for his revolutionary activities in Russia and France. He supported the February Revolution and was dismayed by the Bolsheviks.
Kropotkin is buried at the Novedichny Monartyer. Visiting the monastery with a friend, we listened reverently to the sisters chanting the liturgy of the Russian Orthodox Church in Chruch Slavonic, a language which most worhsippers do not understand. The music is glorious, the mood solemn and mysterious. From the icons, intense eyes watch the faithful.
One particular painting on the ceiling suprises me. Jesus and God are jointly crowning Mary, Queen of Heaven while the Holy Spirit in the form of the dove hovers nearby. Since the Greek word for spirit is feminine, the painting proclaims a dramatic balance between the masculine and feminine in the mystery and reality of God. I think Carl Jung would have approved.
An Orthodox priest spoke with us. He had become a priest after perestroika, when he was married and middle aged and established in his career. Then and now, with the church's resurgence, there was a high demand for priests. At his ordination, he removed his wedding ring symbolizing that he was now married to the church. I sensed parishioner's deep veneration for their priests.
Since I had seen icons in 5 art museums and a dozen churches,I asked him about their role in religious life. Without hesitation, he said that there are many miracle working icons in Russia today. Respectfully, I listened.
I had determined to come to Russia to observe and learn and especially to be reverent before other people's religious experiences. Feeling privileged, I had observed parts of 4 Orthodox services, including ones at Novedichny and the Nevsky Monastery in Petersburg. Now though I thought to myself, this focus on icons doesn't make sense to me. Yes, icons have a deep beauty. But those elongated faces, piercing eyes and lips that never smile don't carry spiritual power for me.
I remember the scene from Tolstoy's War and Peace. In 1812, before the battle of Bordodino,as Napoleon threatens to capture Moscow and destroy the Russian army, the holy icons are brought out of the churches to the battlefield. Officers and soldiers kneel and pray in reverence,yearning to be blessed and strengthened for battle. The battle is indecisive, but Napoleon's aura of invincibility is dispelled. The icons had been brought by the priests to the battlefield for the soldiers, for the army, for Holy Mother Russia.
The Tsars, of course, wanted people to believe that God blessed them and their cause in battle. God would lead them to victory. After victory, after the destruction of our enemies, we will say prayers and build churches.
Visiting the Russian Empire, I struggled as always to think about the dynamics of the American Empire. This crusader, holy war mentality in 1812 or 1877 or 2007 is just archaic barbarism,isn't it, and condemned by the revelation of Christ.
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
The Bronze Horseman
While traveling in Russia, I had the privilege of speaking with a group of university students in Moscow who were majoring in computer programming and languages. Wonderful, bright, hope-filled young people. I told them that I had been blessed and challenged by the experience of thinking about the American Empire while I was traveling and reflecting on the Russian Empire. They seemed to understand.
Our topic was America in the sixties and the civil rights movement and the antiwar movement. They remembered hearing about the hippies. I assured them that yes there were some hippies, but really few in comparison to the total student population.
We were thinking together about empires. The week before I had been in St.Petersburg. In the evening, I walked from my small hotel on the Moika Canal to the square behind the Hermitage/The Winter Palace. On this plaza, Father Gapon and others led tens of thousands of people in the winter of 1905. With icons and placards they implored the help of the tsar. They sought food and work and hope and recovery from the humilaition of the defeat by Japan. But Nicholas was not at home. The Cossacks guarding the palace fired into the demonstrators killing hundreds.
I walked on along the Neva River. The city is lite in spectacular fashion. Awe is a great word. Be prepared for awe as you walk the banks of the Neva and look out to the Fortress of St.Peter and St.Paul. (Why would anyone name a fortress, prison, torture center after Peter and Paul?)
A long walk it is to the incredible statue of Peter the Great, called the Bronze Horseman. But coming up on it a nigth, having passed through the square where hundreds died in 1905, seeing the beauty and brilliance of the buildings along the Neva, I was stirred to see the statue of Peter. Only a few other people were there. My camera couldn't take a good picture and I didn't find one of the statue at night on Flickr. So maybe a friend will send us one; or I or one of you will have to go back with a better camera.
Peter sits forcefully astride a beautiful and powerful horse. A snake, still very much alive and so a threat, writhes under one of the horse's hoofs. Beneath the snake, carved in granite, are the powerful waves of the Neva and through them of all oceans, all watery chaos.
The symbolism of Falconet's sculpture,paid for by Catherine the Great is clear. A powerful ruler, a great autocrat, like Peter, and by the way like me,Catherine,masters the forces of man and nature, builds whatever the cost,in order to hold back the waters of chaos. Catherine's name on the statue is in the same size letters as Peter's. God bless Peter, God bless Catherine, as they lead us at whatever cost to victory over chaos, over the waters, over our enemies.
But the snake is not dead, only under the horse's hoof, for the time being.
Monday, November 19, 2007
The funeral director
This morning I led a funeral for a very troubled man who died from a ruptured spleen in Hawaii. I had known him and his family for 30 and been in a variety of painful and difficult situations with him.
Riding to the graveside, the funeral director and I were talking. He said that the typical cost of nursing home care in our area ranged from $7000 to $10000 per month. When people have less than $2000 in assets, the government picks up most of the costs.
I said without hesitation that I had thought about the end of my life and costs for many years. Dr.Kevorkian is absolutely right, say I. People who are ready to die or choose to die now rather than drift into dementia or whatever should of course have the right to die. They should have both the means and the courage to move on to the next reality.
Jesus says I have come that you might have life and life abundant. When life abundant is no longer a possibility and given the faith in eternity that Christians supposedly carry in their hearts,of course, they are ready to let go.
Surely, people who believe that Jesus loves all the little children of the world, red and yellow, black and white, would not want to waste $10000 per month on health care from themselves when their quality of life is gone. Surely, Christians hearing the call of Jesus would say that they know that that money could mean life for maybe hundreds of children in Namibia or Bangladesh or maybe dozens in America. What we do with our money says more about what we really believe than a thousand prayers!
Love one another not in word alone, but in deed and in truth. Even when it is costly and scares the daylights out of you.
Tomorrow, we go back to Russia and religion and politics and icons.
Riding to the graveside, the funeral director and I were talking. He said that the typical cost of nursing home care in our area ranged from $7000 to $10000 per month. When people have less than $2000 in assets, the government picks up most of the costs.
I said without hesitation that I had thought about the end of my life and costs for many years. Dr.Kevorkian is absolutely right, say I. People who are ready to die or choose to die now rather than drift into dementia or whatever should of course have the right to die. They should have both the means and the courage to move on to the next reality.
Jesus says I have come that you might have life and life abundant. When life abundant is no longer a possibility and given the faith in eternity that Christians supposedly carry in their hearts,of course, they are ready to let go.
Surely, people who believe that Jesus loves all the little children of the world, red and yellow, black and white, would not want to waste $10000 per month on health care from themselves when their quality of life is gone. Surely, Christians hearing the call of Jesus would say that they know that that money could mean life for maybe hundreds of children in Namibia or Bangladesh or maybe dozens in America. What we do with our money says more about what we really believe than a thousand prayers!
Love one another not in word alone, but in deed and in truth. Even when it is costly and scares the daylights out of you.
Tomorrow, we go back to Russia and religion and politics and icons.
Thursday, November 15, 2007
Ibby's Cancer
Steve Caputo is a long time friend. He is an attorney and we have worked together through a housing corporation and a refugee center. In August, his vivacious, well educated, compassionate daughter, Ibby, was diagnosed with Acute Leukemia. On September 25, she sent out the email that follows from her hospital in Boston. I share it with their permission and with the firm conviction that her struggle and compassion will touch your soul.
"Hi,
I wanted to share two experiences I've had recently. The first was a few days ago.
A doctor around my age came in during morning rounds. Brigham and Women's is a teaching hospital, so many of the doctors rotate, and I am one of their learning tools. Once I figured this out, I started to resent it and have not had much patience for the young, inexperienced docs. When I first got admitted and diagnosed and my carefree life suddenly snapped into something else, I was obsessed with the age of my doctors, especially the one who told me at 1:27 AM on August 27th that I had Acute Leukemia. She looked like me. Long brown hair, dressed well, young smiley, she even had on a turquoise ring. It was like the mirror was telling me I was sick.
Anyway,the other day a young doctor comes into my room an asks me how I'm doing. I respond by asking, "Mentally, physically or emotionally?" because I am never sure what they're asking after. She said all three so I told her: I woke up depressed,I had crazy dreams and my stomach is cramping.
Then she came around the other side of the bed to listen to my lungs, etc. and she asked me how long I've been here and how I was diagnosed. I told her the story you already know: I came in a month ago because of an infection and fever; I haven't left since.
Then the most amazing thing happened. She started to cry. The doctor. She put her hands on mine and then hugged me. She said she had a Buddhist prayer wheel she would try to find to give me. She hugged me again, still crying. I told her she was a good doctor. She kept apologizing for crying and after she had washed her hands and face at the sink, she stood in front of me and said,"It's just, I'm 28, and it could be me in that bed or one of my friends".
When she left I experienced an incredible stillness. I'm her and she's me. I suspect other doctors have had this thought and I suspect other have denied it--I can tell by the way they treat me--but this doctor had this thought and let me know it. She calmed something in me.
Now I have to tell about another experience.
I woke up yesterday morning tormented by such horrible anxiety, I couldn't lift my head off the pillow and yet I couldn't keep it still.
I felt like I was suffocating. Like I wanted to crawl out of my skin and escape. Be someone else. Be on a ferry to Marhat's Vineyard. Be working at the radio station or coffee shop. Be having a completely inane conversation. Anything else. It lasted almost all day long, until around 2 pm I curled into a crying ball with my head in the lap of my brother. I'm a strong fucking independent woman. I've never experienced vulnerable like this.
Steve stroked what is left of my hair. When the moment passed, he said, "See, you got through that moment."
I've been on a steady stream of Valium since then and I finally feel on top of the panic, at least for right now.
During that panic, though, for a moment while in the fetal position, my higher self kicked in and I realized how lucky I am: I'm suffering in a hospital, where people are nurturing me, where they are fighting for my survival, where I can get drugs like Valium, where I'm consistently being loved and supported by family and friends. I thought about all the other people in this world who are also suffering--experiencing intense claustrophobia in their pain. Most don't get the perks I get.
I shared this thought with a nurse much later on in the day and she advised me not to think about other people's suffering. I did not say this to her, but I think ignoring other peole's suffering is like ignoring the inevitability of death. Blink. It's still there.
These experiences are some of what being sick is like for me.
Love,
Ibby
Her website is ibbycaputo.com
"Hi,
I wanted to share two experiences I've had recently. The first was a few days ago.
A doctor around my age came in during morning rounds. Brigham and Women's is a teaching hospital, so many of the doctors rotate, and I am one of their learning tools. Once I figured this out, I started to resent it and have not had much patience for the young, inexperienced docs. When I first got admitted and diagnosed and my carefree life suddenly snapped into something else, I was obsessed with the age of my doctors, especially the one who told me at 1:27 AM on August 27th that I had Acute Leukemia. She looked like me. Long brown hair, dressed well, young smiley, she even had on a turquoise ring. It was like the mirror was telling me I was sick.
Anyway,the other day a young doctor comes into my room an asks me how I'm doing. I respond by asking, "Mentally, physically or emotionally?" because I am never sure what they're asking after. She said all three so I told her: I woke up depressed,I had crazy dreams and my stomach is cramping.
Then she came around the other side of the bed to listen to my lungs, etc. and she asked me how long I've been here and how I was diagnosed. I told her the story you already know: I came in a month ago because of an infection and fever; I haven't left since.
Then the most amazing thing happened. She started to cry. The doctor. She put her hands on mine and then hugged me. She said she had a Buddhist prayer wheel she would try to find to give me. She hugged me again, still crying. I told her she was a good doctor. She kept apologizing for crying and after she had washed her hands and face at the sink, she stood in front of me and said,"It's just, I'm 28, and it could be me in that bed or one of my friends".
When she left I experienced an incredible stillness. I'm her and she's me. I suspect other doctors have had this thought and I suspect other have denied it--I can tell by the way they treat me--but this doctor had this thought and let me know it. She calmed something in me.
Now I have to tell about another experience.
I woke up yesterday morning tormented by such horrible anxiety, I couldn't lift my head off the pillow and yet I couldn't keep it still.
I felt like I was suffocating. Like I wanted to crawl out of my skin and escape. Be someone else. Be on a ferry to Marhat's Vineyard. Be working at the radio station or coffee shop. Be having a completely inane conversation. Anything else. It lasted almost all day long, until around 2 pm I curled into a crying ball with my head in the lap of my brother. I'm a strong fucking independent woman. I've never experienced vulnerable like this.
Steve stroked what is left of my hair. When the moment passed, he said, "See, you got through that moment."
I've been on a steady stream of Valium since then and I finally feel on top of the panic, at least for right now.
During that panic, though, for a moment while in the fetal position, my higher self kicked in and I realized how lucky I am: I'm suffering in a hospital, where people are nurturing me, where they are fighting for my survival, where I can get drugs like Valium, where I'm consistently being loved and supported by family and friends. I thought about all the other people in this world who are also suffering--experiencing intense claustrophobia in their pain. Most don't get the perks I get.
I shared this thought with a nurse much later on in the day and she advised me not to think about other people's suffering. I did not say this to her, but I think ignoring other peole's suffering is like ignoring the inevitability of death. Blink. It's still there.
These experiences are some of what being sick is like for me.
Love,
Ibby
Her website is ibbycaputo.com
Wednesday, November 14, 2007
Pete Seeger:the power of struggle
For Pete Seeger to say the 'we' in 'we shall overcome' is everybody makes sense only after a lifetime of struggle. By his life and witness, by his sacrifices and scars, by his glorious successes, he has somehow earned the right to offer an image of all of us overcoming together.
But first of all, we must hold on to We shall Overcome as a source of energy and courage for people marching on picket lines and trying to register to vote and going to jail and joing hearts and hand in mass meetings. People sang it in Gdansk,in Tianimen Square, in Pretoria. Are they singing it today in Pakistan. People need to sing their souls into their various struggles for justice.
I do believe that somehow God is present in the world through Christ(and others) reconciling the world to God. I believe in ultimate reconciliation--ultimately, we shall overcome together.
In the meantime, find the songs or write the songs that give power to the people, that lift up the downtrodden, that give courage and comfort to the afflicted.
Hannah's song. Mary's song. Your song. My song.
Thank God and Pete Seeger for the power of struggle, and of song.
But first of all, we must hold on to We shall Overcome as a source of energy and courage for people marching on picket lines and trying to register to vote and going to jail and joing hearts and hand in mass meetings. People sang it in Gdansk,in Tianimen Square, in Pretoria. Are they singing it today in Pakistan. People need to sing their souls into their various struggles for justice.
I do believe that somehow God is present in the world through Christ(and others) reconciling the world to God. I believe in ultimate reconciliation--ultimately, we shall overcome together.
In the meantime, find the songs or write the songs that give power to the people, that lift up the downtrodden, that give courage and comfort to the afflicted.
Hannah's song. Mary's song. Your song. My song.
Thank God and Pete Seeger for the power of struggle, and of song.
Monday, November 12, 2007
Pete Seeger:The Power of Song
Pete Seeger stirs my soul. Listening to his songs and thinking about his life just challenges and blesses my heart. I am grateful to God and the spirit of life and love and justice that Pete Seeger walks the earth, breathing the air and making music.
Blessedly,I saw the documentary in New York City last week about Pete's life and love and song and struggle. The movie,"Pete Seeger:The Power of Song" gives energy and joy to our struggle--because it reveals so much of the life of a humble and happy and courageous and gifted human being.
Pete Seeger and the power of his songs and singing has lifted up the hearts of millions. Let us sing and take courage. Let us sing and in singing believe that we shall overcome. Let us sing the refrain about the troops in Vietnam--bring 'em home, bring 'em home. Pete wrote a song about the Vietnam War, called "Waste Deep in the Big Muddy." The song tells of an officer who leads his soldiers into the big muddy river and as it deepens, the officer, the big fool, can only say march on, march on. The officer marches on to his death and then the troops turn and seek to escape the morass of the big muddy. Seems like we better start singing those songs again. Sounds like a reality we know today all too well.
While Pete Seeger was being blacklisted for his prewar membership in the Communist Part and his associations with people like Paul Robeson, his musical group the Weavers recorded the hit song "Goodnight Irene". Later,desperate for work, the group agreed to do a commercial for a cigarette company over Pete's strong objections on ethical grounds. He left the band. .
The movie includes rousing scenes of Pete leading groups in singing justice songs. I was on a retreat with Pete Seeger at Kirkridge Retreat Center in Pennsylvania several years ago. Maybe sixty of us sang "We shall overcome" with both nostalgia and renewed energy. Whatever kind of personal or political mess we were in, we had hope, because of one another, because of Pete and his witness, because of the power of song, because of our faith that the Lord will see us through.
Pete was asked about the song "We shall overcome", since he had written some of the verses and done so much to share the song and energize it. Who is the 'we' in the song. Who is going to overcome? "Well,the we is everybody--finally, we are going to overcome together." That's what he said.
O deep in my heart I do believe that we shall overcome someday.
The justice movement urgently calls us to start singing together again--to lift up our hearts, to mellow our souls, to give joy and clarity to our minds and courage to our lives.
Blessedly,I saw the documentary in New York City last week about Pete's life and love and song and struggle. The movie,"Pete Seeger:The Power of Song" gives energy and joy to our struggle--because it reveals so much of the life of a humble and happy and courageous and gifted human being.
Pete Seeger and the power of his songs and singing has lifted up the hearts of millions. Let us sing and take courage. Let us sing and in singing believe that we shall overcome. Let us sing the refrain about the troops in Vietnam--bring 'em home, bring 'em home. Pete wrote a song about the Vietnam War, called "Waste Deep in the Big Muddy." The song tells of an officer who leads his soldiers into the big muddy river and as it deepens, the officer, the big fool, can only say march on, march on. The officer marches on to his death and then the troops turn and seek to escape the morass of the big muddy. Seems like we better start singing those songs again. Sounds like a reality we know today all too well.
While Pete Seeger was being blacklisted for his prewar membership in the Communist Part and his associations with people like Paul Robeson, his musical group the Weavers recorded the hit song "Goodnight Irene". Later,desperate for work, the group agreed to do a commercial for a cigarette company over Pete's strong objections on ethical grounds. He left the band. .
The movie includes rousing scenes of Pete leading groups in singing justice songs. I was on a retreat with Pete Seeger at Kirkridge Retreat Center in Pennsylvania several years ago. Maybe sixty of us sang "We shall overcome" with both nostalgia and renewed energy. Whatever kind of personal or political mess we were in, we had hope, because of one another, because of Pete and his witness, because of the power of song, because of our faith that the Lord will see us through.
Pete was asked about the song "We shall overcome", since he had written some of the verses and done so much to share the song and energize it. Who is the 'we' in the song. Who is going to overcome? "Well,the we is everybody--finally, we are going to overcome together." That's what he said.
O deep in my heart I do believe that we shall overcome someday.
The justice movement urgently calls us to start singing together again--to lift up our hearts, to mellow our souls, to give joy and clarity to our minds and courage to our lives.
Sunday, November 11, 2007
Journey
Someone wrote,`Every journey has a purpose that the traveler is not aware of.' When I was anticipating traveling to St.Petersburg, I planned especially to visit the art museums and historical sites like the Cruiser Aurora and the Peter and Paul Fortress. The Aurora was part of the Baltic fleet that sailed around Africa to do battle with the Japanese Navy in 1905. The Russian fleet was destroyed and the mighty Russian Empire humiliated. As one of the few ships to survive, the Aurora returned to be anchored in the Neva River, which flows through Petersburg. The Bolsheviks won control of the soviet, the sailor's committee, on the Aurora in 1917; that control hastened the downfall of the Provisional Government. Walking the deck of the Aurora and looking across the river to the Winter Palace is to live among ghosts of war and revolution.
I think about religion and God and spiritual experience alot. I planned to visit some churches certainly. My hotel window opened onto a vista that included the cupolas of the Church of the Spilt Blood. I discovered that in Petersburg fairly recently a museum called the Museum of the History of Religion had opened. That museum featured incredible, life sized modern icons. I was so fascinated that I stepped forward for a closer look and set off the security alarm, which was designed to keep visitors at least a foot away from the icons. Musuem was sparsely visited--very quiet.I am sure that was more excitement than the staff had experienced in weeks.
In retrospect, what surprises me about my whole journey is how many worship services I ended up wandering into. I visited the Kazan Cathedral on my first evening in Russia and stood for a while with maybe 40 people as the priest chanted the service. The Nevsky Monastery complex includes Dostoevsky's grave. I went on pilgrimage to the grave site and visited the monastery chapel. I found myself in worhsip. When I arrived in Moscow, with a friend we visited and then worshiped at the Novedichny Monastery.
My heart has always been stirred by the questions of who are we, before God, and how does God dwell among us and how has religion blessed us and cursed us.
My Russian is limited. But the liturgy's carried me back to high school days, when our Russian teacher invited us to attend the Russian Orthodox Church where he was the music director. The Monastery reminded me that in those same high school years, we had visited an Orthodox monastery somewhere in upstate New York. Of course too, my thoughts turned to Father Zossima and Alyosha and the monastery of Brothers Karamazov.
Amused at myself, I thought well I have retired as a full-time minister, but I am and always will be a person on spiritual journey, pondering some and praying some.
One of the few parts of the Orhtodox liturgy that I could understand was Godpodie Pomelie. Periodically, the people would chant this phrase meaning God have mercy.I wondered how this phrase chanted over the centuries has shaped the souls of believers. Is God some kind of absolute monarch,like the tsar, and we God's humble people can only approach with an attitude of servility, pleading for mercy?
I'm sure me understanding is too simplistic. But the question of how is God really in our lives torments and blesses me and i hope it does the same for you.
Nikos Kazantzakis tells a story of an old Greek soldier coming to the gates of heaven,slinging his musket off his should and firring a shot. An angel says `Do you think God is going to open the gate, just because you fired a shot." No, says the old man,but I want God to know that I have returned from fighting the wars.
Where is god when we fight the wars? When we are on journey? When we are lonely? When we are ecstatic?
Friday, November 9, 2007
Geschichte
As we think about God and history, I remember a conference at the University of Chicago Divinity School, which I had the privilege of attending from 1967-1969.
Scholars were addressing an audience made up largely of pastors. German theologians were very much in vogue in those days. Moltmann and Bultmann and Barth and Brunner. Their ideas and categories structured many academic debates. Did anybody finally care in the congregations? No one was ever really sure. Maybe, they did,maybe they didn't; but this was seminary and our task was to think deeply about religion and worry about the application later. A good task it was and is.
Anyway, the scholars were debating and discussing the issues of history and holy history. The German words were `geschichte' and `heilgeschichte'. Back and forth the debate sometimes raged, but more often just limped along.
At the end of the day, one seasoned, gravely voiced pastor stood and spoke briefly and to the point. He said,"We've heard today a lot about geschichte and heilgeschichte, but as far as I'm concerned, it's mostly horsegeschichte."
Scholars were addressing an audience made up largely of pastors. German theologians were very much in vogue in those days. Moltmann and Bultmann and Barth and Brunner. Their ideas and categories structured many academic debates. Did anybody finally care in the congregations? No one was ever really sure. Maybe, they did,maybe they didn't; but this was seminary and our task was to think deeply about religion and worry about the application later. A good task it was and is.
Anyway, the scholars were debating and discussing the issues of history and holy history. The German words were `geschichte' and `heilgeschichte'. Back and forth the debate sometimes raged, but more often just limped along.
At the end of the day, one seasoned, gravely voiced pastor stood and spoke briefly and to the point. He said,"We've heard today a lot about geschichte and heilgeschichte, but as far as I'm concerned, it's mostly horsegeschichte."
Wednesday, November 7, 2007
Symbols of Conquest
The inscription on the small church monument in Moscow indicates that it was erected to thank God for the Russian victory over the Turks in 1877. With the cross ascending in triumph, the crescent is subjugated beneath.
While in Moscow,I spoke to a group of English speaking students about America in the sixties and the various movements that I had participated in.I shared with them how fascinated I was by the opportunity to reflect on the nature of the American Empire through the lens of my being in the Russian Empire. We worked our way into the issue of how nation's tell their story. One student said that as a young person he had believed that the Russian army never lost a war. Indeed, I saw no monuments to the Crimean War or the war with Japan in 1905. Yes, those Russians really just want to focus on their armies' victories.
Have you ever noticed that the History Channel offers maybe 8 or 10 times more programs about WWII than about Vietnam. When George Bush wants to drag and deceive the nation into war, he describes the enemy as part of the axis of evil. Remember the Axis, especially the Nazis--well, this is the new axis, but they are just as evil and we are as good as ever. So let's march. Onward Christian Soldiers. Wrap the consciousness of the nation as much as possible in memories of the good wars or at least the relatively good wars. Tell them the enemy is of the devil. God is on our side, because we are good Russian Orthodox Christians or good American Christians or whatever. Our cause is just and we will win. After victory, we will build some kind of monument to thank God for blessing us.
In the US, we sometimes sing,"God Bless America". I especially love the phrase where we urge God to stand beside us and guide us. But I am finally appalled at any implication that God's preoccupation is mainly to bless us Americans and to ignore or even curse those others.
At the end of Dickens' Christmas Carol, Tiny Tim cries out in joy and thanksgiving 'God Bless Us Everyone'. That's our prayer. That's our true song.
How can we come to tell the stories of all the nations, of all the people in such a way that honors everyone for are we not all children of the Creator? How do we tell our own personal story with truth and integrity? How do we tell the story of 'our people'? Who are 'our people'?
Tuesday, November 6, 2007
Conscience and History
I believe we are called urgently to free ourselves from the idea that God controls history and chooses some people to prosper, to win the wars and chooses other people to die.
I share a quote from the beginning of Karl Lowith's book Meaning in History.
"History no more proves or disproves the incomparable value of a singe man's righteousness and heroism in the face of the powers of the world than it proves or disproves the existence of God. Of course, individuals as well as whole nations can be hypnotized in to the belief that God or some world-process intends them to achieve this or that and to survive while others are going under, but there is always something pathetic, if not ludicrous in beliefs of this kind. To the critical mind, neither a providential design nor a natural law of progressive development is discernible in the tragic comedy of all times. Nietzsche was right when he said that to look upon nature as if it were a proof of the goodness and care of God and to interpret history as a constant testimony to a moral order and purpose--that all this is now past because it has conscience against it. But he was wrong in assuming that the pseudo-religious makeup of nature and history is of any real consequence to a genuine Christian faith in God, as revealed in Christ and hidden in nature and history."
Lowith tells us the truth, but doesn't calculate the true cost of the belief that God intends people or nations or kings or dictators to achieve this or that. Millions have been brutalized and killed, controlled partly by fear and partly by that belief. I still feel the beauty and mystery of the St.Petersburg. Yet, I hear the anguish cries of dying peasants and soldiers and women and children. When our conscience sings yes to Lowith's perspective, then we are called to battle against the deep evil of the idea that God has chosen or blessed one particular group or nation to achieve this or that, to conquer this land or that land.
NO EXCEPTIONS. GOD IS NOT ON OUR SIDE.
I share a quote from the beginning of Karl Lowith's book Meaning in History.
"History no more proves or disproves the incomparable value of a singe man's righteousness and heroism in the face of the powers of the world than it proves or disproves the existence of God. Of course, individuals as well as whole nations can be hypnotized in to the belief that God or some world-process intends them to achieve this or that and to survive while others are going under, but there is always something pathetic, if not ludicrous in beliefs of this kind. To the critical mind, neither a providential design nor a natural law of progressive development is discernible in the tragic comedy of all times. Nietzsche was right when he said that to look upon nature as if it were a proof of the goodness and care of God and to interpret history as a constant testimony to a moral order and purpose--that all this is now past because it has conscience against it. But he was wrong in assuming that the pseudo-religious makeup of nature and history is of any real consequence to a genuine Christian faith in God, as revealed in Christ and hidden in nature and history."
Lowith tells us the truth, but doesn't calculate the true cost of the belief that God intends people or nations or kings or dictators to achieve this or that. Millions have been brutalized and killed, controlled partly by fear and partly by that belief. I still feel the beauty and mystery of the St.Petersburg. Yet, I hear the anguish cries of dying peasants and soldiers and women and children. When our conscience sings yes to Lowith's perspective, then we are called to battle against the deep evil of the idea that God has chosen or blessed one particular group or nation to achieve this or that, to conquer this land or that land.
NO EXCEPTIONS. GOD IS NOT ON OUR SIDE.
Monday, November 5, 2007
No Exceptions
Last Monday, I participated in a dialogue with Muslims, Jews and Christians. God knows, we need to work and think and pray our way into mutual understanding and respect.
In the mid nineties, I realized that the only mosque I had ever been in was the El Asqa Mosque in Jerusalem. Since then I have accompanied youth and adults 3 times to the Islamic Canter. I still feel very ignorant, even though I have studied Islam some and read much of the Koran. At this conference, about 50 religiously diverse folks gathered around the theme of THE LOVE OF GOD.
For decades, I have been preoccupied with the question of whether God loves one particular group of people more than other groups. Did God love Abraham and his descendants and promise the land to them? Did God love the Jews and say you are my special people and the others are second rate and second class? Did the Christian Church then receive that mantle from God and with it a mandate to evangelize with water and with the sword, when necessary. Does God have favorites? Are there exceptional peoples? Are there nations or groups who are so favored of God, that the rules of life and history don't finally apply to them?
When I was in seminary in the late sixties, we read a classic theological text by G.Ernest Wright called THE MIGHTY ACTS OF GOD. Wright claimed that God acted in history, freeing the Hebrew slaves from Egypt, creating the kingdom of Israel, rewarding and punishing the people and the kings. Having sent the prophets for guidance and judgement, God came to dwell amongst God's people in the person of Jesue. Out of the life and death and resurrection of Jesus arises the church. God intervenes in history. God can be known in the rise and fall of the nations. God ultimately chooses who wins the wars. Oh, the wheels of justice grind slow, but they grand very fine.
I believe the truth lies elsewhere. There are no exceptions. The love of God flows to all peoples(as does the judgement and discipline of God). If the love of God flows to all people then the claim that God chooses one group over another or blesses one group and really doesn't care much about the other is exposed as an effort to capture the mantle of God's blessing for a group's selfish purposes.
'God wills it' proclaimed the crusaders a millennium ago. God wills it proclaim all crusaders. In the interviews that Richard Nixon gave to David Frost, Nixon finally says with wearied frustration but with deep conviction, 'If the president does it, it can't be illegal.' This notion that I as a person am above the law or that Russia or Israel or America or South Africa is above the law has birthed great evil.
When Christians and Jews and Muslims talk together, we must address these issues or we are just being nice and wasting time.
Years ago, with a group of wonderful 5th and 6th graders, we were studying the story of the Exodus. So what to you think I asked about what the Bible says here. It says that God killed the first born children of the Egyptians in order to force Pharaoh to let the peope of Israel go free. Do you think that God would have killed children?
Their answer brought joy to my heart.
In the mid nineties, I realized that the only mosque I had ever been in was the El Asqa Mosque in Jerusalem. Since then I have accompanied youth and adults 3 times to the Islamic Canter. I still feel very ignorant, even though I have studied Islam some and read much of the Koran. At this conference, about 50 religiously diverse folks gathered around the theme of THE LOVE OF GOD.
For decades, I have been preoccupied with the question of whether God loves one particular group of people more than other groups. Did God love Abraham and his descendants and promise the land to them? Did God love the Jews and say you are my special people and the others are second rate and second class? Did the Christian Church then receive that mantle from God and with it a mandate to evangelize with water and with the sword, when necessary. Does God have favorites? Are there exceptional peoples? Are there nations or groups who are so favored of God, that the rules of life and history don't finally apply to them?
When I was in seminary in the late sixties, we read a classic theological text by G.Ernest Wright called THE MIGHTY ACTS OF GOD. Wright claimed that God acted in history, freeing the Hebrew slaves from Egypt, creating the kingdom of Israel, rewarding and punishing the people and the kings. Having sent the prophets for guidance and judgement, God came to dwell amongst God's people in the person of Jesue. Out of the life and death and resurrection of Jesus arises the church. God intervenes in history. God can be known in the rise and fall of the nations. God ultimately chooses who wins the wars. Oh, the wheels of justice grind slow, but they grand very fine.
I believe the truth lies elsewhere. There are no exceptions. The love of God flows to all peoples(as does the judgement and discipline of God). If the love of God flows to all people then the claim that God chooses one group over another or blesses one group and really doesn't care much about the other is exposed as an effort to capture the mantle of God's blessing for a group's selfish purposes.
'God wills it' proclaimed the crusaders a millennium ago. God wills it proclaim all crusaders. In the interviews that Richard Nixon gave to David Frost, Nixon finally says with wearied frustration but with deep conviction, 'If the president does it, it can't be illegal.' This notion that I as a person am above the law or that Russia or Israel or America or South Africa is above the law has birthed great evil.
When Christians and Jews and Muslims talk together, we must address these issues or we are just being nice and wasting time.
Years ago, with a group of wonderful 5th and 6th graders, we were studying the story of the Exodus. So what to you think I asked about what the Bible says here. It says that God killed the first born children of the Egyptians in order to force Pharaoh to let the peope of Israel go free. Do you think that God would have killed children?
Their answer brought joy to my heart.
Sunday, November 4, 2007
Depression
At the end of Brothers Karamazov, Alyosha seeks to rally a group of boys whose cruelty has led to a child's death. He speaks to them and he speaks to us about cherishing those precious childhood memories of joy, love and happiness. The word is true. Alyosha has left the monastery at his spiritual father's urging to find his way and his soul in the world. He is in his early twenties at the end of the novel. So maybe it is particularly true for us in our early twenties as we launch off from the shores of our biological and spiritual parents that happy memories will sustain us.
But when we are in our forties or sixties or eighties, we need new and varied sources of sustenance. In midlife, I faced a time of significant depression. I didn't seek professional therapy and wasn't on medication. My wife helped me where she could. But sometimes I shut her out. I drank more than was good for me. Several friends provided some buoyancy as I felt my psyche tossed around by violent waves.
One morning, I was journaling in response to the question--what helps me fight off the depression and find happiness. Happy childhood memories were not enough.
Then and now, I believe that four primary areas of life bless me and strengthen me and lift up my heart.
I.Sexual love brings joy and gratitude and connection with the creation of life.
II.Sports,especially basketball,for me cleanses my body and soothes my soul.
III.Spirit and the soul's journey into God challenges me and you--there is a way home.
IV.Success. The demon of depression wanted to obliterate those places in my life where good things were happening and where blessings were flowing and the fight for justice was occasionally being won.
To do battle with the enemy both outside us and within us, we need more than happy memories from childhood.
Links for Dostoyevksy
http//www.dartmouth.edu/~karamazov
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fyodor_Dostoevsky
But when we are in our forties or sixties or eighties, we need new and varied sources of sustenance. In midlife, I faced a time of significant depression. I didn't seek professional therapy and wasn't on medication. My wife helped me where she could. But sometimes I shut her out. I drank more than was good for me. Several friends provided some buoyancy as I felt my psyche tossed around by violent waves.
One morning, I was journaling in response to the question--what helps me fight off the depression and find happiness. Happy childhood memories were not enough.
Then and now, I believe that four primary areas of life bless me and strengthen me and lift up my heart.
I.Sexual love brings joy and gratitude and connection with the creation of life.
II.Sports,especially basketball,for me cleanses my body and soothes my soul.
III.Spirit and the soul's journey into God challenges me and you--there is a way home.
IV.Success. The demon of depression wanted to obliterate those places in my life where good things were happening and where blessings were flowing and the fight for justice was occasionally being won.
To do battle with the enemy both outside us and within us, we need more than happy memories from childhood.
Links for Dostoyevksy
http//www.dartmouth.edu/~karamazov
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fyodor_Dostoevsky
Saturday, November 3, 2007
The Gift of Loneliness
Of course, loneliness can feel like a horrible curse that threatens to crush our soul. I think especially of the loneliness that sometimes comes in the midst of a loving relationship. This man or woman sitting across the table from you or lying in bed next to you, whom you love deeply, has become almost a stranger. Something huge and ugly has come between you. There is no levity, no joy, probably no sex, maybe few if any words. Some pain filled crisis in the relationship has frozen body and soul. Causes vary dramatically. But into the midst of long term loving relationships, the curse of this kind of horrible loneliness enters on some occasions. And it is as if a black hole exists between two people sucking all light and love and happiness into it. So, yes, loneliness can be a curse.
Yes, but loneliness is a gift. While traveling in Russia, I met relatively few people who spoke English. In my wonderful, small hotel in St.Petersburg, most visitors where European or Russian and we never seemed to be able to coordinate dinner plans. So for a week, I found my way to restaurants that had been recommended by a friend and ate alone. The first 3 nights I felt very uncomfortable. Self consciously, I would drink my beer slowly and hope that the service was prompt. I would look around at happy laughing couples and families and groups of students. Not many other folks dining alone. It is not an experience I have had very often.
Loneliness or being alone though leads me to think alot about my life and story and journey. I missed my wife and yearned to be able to share the days and nights with her. But then I decided to bring my journal to dinner. At a restaurant called Faces, I observed a young woman who also happened to have brought a journal and I realized it isn't such a weird thing to do. I journaled about the day but also about old memories. In the spirit I found myself carried back into my stories and the beautiful and painful soul adventures that I had shared with others. I came to love going to the restaurant alone, with my journal. I felt surrounded by a mighty cloud of witnesses from my life and I was engaged in holy dialogue with those witnesses. There is a great gift in this kind of loneliness.
Yes, but loneliness is a gift. While traveling in Russia, I met relatively few people who spoke English. In my wonderful, small hotel in St.Petersburg, most visitors where European or Russian and we never seemed to be able to coordinate dinner plans. So for a week, I found my way to restaurants that had been recommended by a friend and ate alone. The first 3 nights I felt very uncomfortable. Self consciously, I would drink my beer slowly and hope that the service was prompt. I would look around at happy laughing couples and families and groups of students. Not many other folks dining alone. It is not an experience I have had very often.
Loneliness or being alone though leads me to think alot about my life and story and journey. I missed my wife and yearned to be able to share the days and nights with her. But then I decided to bring my journal to dinner. At a restaurant called Faces, I observed a young woman who also happened to have brought a journal and I realized it isn't such a weird thing to do. I journaled about the day but also about old memories. In the spirit I found myself carried back into my stories and the beautiful and painful soul adventures that I had shared with others. I came to love going to the restaurant alone, with my journal. I felt surrounded by a mighty cloud of witnesses from my life and I was engaged in holy dialogue with those witnesses. There is a great gift in this kind of loneliness.
Thursday, November 1, 2007
Evil
Winston Churchill said of Neville Chamberlain that he had a `limited imagination for evil.' I am angry and nauseated by niceanity--that religion that turns the power of Jesus into a call to be nice. Smile--God loves you. Yes,ok--but what about the love of God and people we have loved dying excruciating deaths. What about the love of God and those faces of the starving and dying children besieged in Leningrad in 1943?
Christianity and any other religion/world view that is worth anything must have some power/some word to say/some reality to point to that will enable us to confront radical evil. Yes, we will be scared, we will be terrified, but from deep places within us and within the universe we will find courage that has had a strong imagination for evil. This courage will have been forged in the pain and suffering of our own life. This courage will have been tempered by the waters of the tears and sufferings of others. We will remember loved ones and friends and ancestors back generations. WE will honor them by telling the truth of their life and by searching out something of the truth of their times. Memory will heal us and make us strong for the battle.
In spirit, our souls connect strangely over the centuries to particular people. Oftentimes, we identify with and rejoice in the stories and struggles of people that we know though their creations and through stories others tell about them. It is as if they give some of their soul's blood to us. We can live more vibrantly, because they lived so gloriusly even with their sins and sufferings.
Back to Brothers Karamazov. One of the brothers, Ivan, torments his brother Alyosha with stories of evil done to children. According to his notebooks, Dostoevsky gathered the stories from newspaper accounts laying bare much of the evil of the human soul The chapter is called Rebellion. I will write more of Ivan in postings to come.
To be in the beautiful and fascinating city of St. Petersbuyr and to walk the streets and visit museums was a great joy. And I felt the evil present in the memories, in the stories of Petersburg,in its history, in the deaths of millions. I saw the hollow eyes of the dying children of the siege.
I want to have a strong imagination for evil. And you?
Winston Churchill said of Neville Chamberlain that he had a `limited imagination for evil.' I am angry and nauseated by niceanity--that religion that turns the power of Jesus into a call to be nice. Smile--God loves you. Yes,ok--but what about the love of God and people we have loved dying excruciating deaths. What about the love of God and those faces of the starving and dying children besieged in Leningrad in 1943?
Christianity and any other religion/world view that is worth anything must have some power/some word to say/some reality to point to that will enable us to confront radical evil. Yes, we will be scared, we will be terrified, but from deep places within us and within the universe we will find courage that has had a strong imagination for evil. This courage will have been forged in the pain and suffering of our own life. This courage will have been tempered by the waters of the tears and sufferings of others. We will remember loved ones and friends and ancestors back generations. WE will honor them by telling the truth of their life and by searching out something of the truth of their times. Memory will heal us and make us strong for the battle.
In spirit, our souls connect strangely over the centuries to particular people. Oftentimes, we identify with and rejoice in the stories and struggles of people that we know though their creations and through stories others tell about them. It is as if they give some of their soul's blood to us. We can live more vibrantly, because they lived so gloriusly even with their sins and sufferings.
Back to Brothers Karamazov. One of the brothers, Ivan, torments his brother Alyosha with stories of evil done to children. According to his notebooks, Dostoevsky gathered the stories from newspaper accounts laying bare much of the evil of the human soul The chapter is called Rebellion. I will write more of Ivan in postings to come.
To be in the beautiful and fascinating city of St. Petersbuyr and to walk the streets and visit museums was a great joy. And I felt the evil present in the memories, in the stories of Petersburg,in its history, in the deaths of millions. I saw the hollow eyes of the dying children of the siege.
I want to have a strong imagination for evil. And you?
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