Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Standing Up By Sitting Down

June 23, 2016

I felt the sting of tears springing up in my eyes suddenly when I heard him say it, “Sometimes you have to do something out of the ordinary. Sometimes you have to make a way out of no way. We’ve been quiet too long. Now is the time to get in the way. We will be silent no more. The time for silence is over.”

The speaker was Democratic Congressman John Lewis of Georgia, a civil rights icon, as he led a “sit in” on the floor of the United States House of Representatives, asking only for an up and down vote on some fairly modest gun control legislation. The tears came because this is hardly the first time that John Lewis has had to “sit down to stand up.”

He was chairman of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee in the 1960s. He organized sit-ins at segregated lunch counters in Nashville. He became one of the thirteen original Freedom Riders. He was arrested twenty four times in the non-violent struggle for equal justice. He was beaten many times, once having his skull fractured when state troopers charged demonstrators with night sticks.

Yesterday, he said that he could never imagine, in those days, that he would one day have to lead similar sit-ins in the well of the United States House of Representatives out of frustration that the Republican leadership of that House would not even allow a vote on a bill which would simply render those persons on a No Fly List ineligible to buy firearms. “No fly, no buy.” Can you believe that anyone would oppose such a measure?

Well, they did. And Paul Ryan called this protest action a publicity stunt. The irony was no doubt lost on him that this was exactly what the racist politicians of my youth called the civil rights demonstrations which John Lewis and his colleagues so courageously led. After hours of speeches and singing by the protesters, Ryan convened the House, called for a vote on an unrelated bill and adjourned the House of Representatives until after the July 4 holiday. July 4 — Independence Day. Independence for what? Apparently Independence to carry assault weapons of mass destruction and slaughter children at will.

“Sometimes you have to sit down to stand up,” Congressman Lewis said.

“What will happen eventually,” broadcaster Luke Russert asked him yesterday. “Will you not be moved?”

Lewis looked at him through narrowed eyes, “Like a tree…planted by the waterside…We shall not be moved!”

And the tears came again.

Friends

June 22, 2016

Susanne and I just returned from a delightful trip to Canada to visit some very dear college friends. First of all, we love Canada and — even if Donald Trump were not running for President — we have thought about how great it would be to live there. Great people, beautiful country.

But this post is about friends. I have known these two couples for well over forty years. The guys were fraternity brothers (Beta Theta Pi, Gamma Xi Chapter at the University of Florida) and they were in love with their wonderful wives even then. I was dating my first wife, Pam, in those days as well and we were pretty much constant companions with the other two couples.

When Pam died unexpectedly in 2000, one of these dear friends made a special trip to check up on me and see how I was doing. Then, he and his wife came to our wedding when Susanne and I married later. They have always accepted her and the friendship has continued fun and easy and I think she enjoys these reunions almost as much as Pam would have.

The second couple I literally have not seen for most of those forty years! We visited once early on and recently have been in touch by email. But I had no idea how things would go after so many intervening years. The answer? It was pretty much like we had just seen each other! Isn’t that the way it is with real friendship? The bonds are so deep, the shared experiences so lasting that it’s really easy to pick up where you left off.

We had a beer on Centre Island overlooking the beautiful Toronto skyline, visited some Ontario wineries, laughed our way through an evening at Second City, ridiculed Donald Trump, and even broke out the guitar to harmonize on “The Sound of Silence” as we did years ago. All great fun.

Of course, Fraternities, and the entire Greek system, have certainly come under a lot of criticism in recent years and, in fact, have always had their share of detractors. Like most institutions, it is far from a perfect system but much work has gone on (some of which my friend was involved in as a national chapter executive for a number of years). Most fraternities have “cleaned up their act” (including my own at Florida) although I’m sure there is still much that can be done.

Nonetheless, I will always be grateful for the friendships I made through Beta Theta Pi and how the experience allowed me to grow up a bit and test some leadership skills which would come into use later in life.  It was an experience of “community” that I had yet to find in the church, but later would.

Whether discovered and nurtured in something like a fraternity or not, friendship is one of life’s richest blessings. The Greeks (the real ones, not frat boys!) had a word for it — “Phileo,” fondness, friendship. Along with three others (Eros – romantic love, Storge – family loyalty, and Agape – unconditional love, like God’s) it defines a quality I hope everyone experiences at some point in their lives.

Proverbs says it best: “There are friends who pretend to be friends, but there is a friend who sticks closer than a brother.” (18:24)

 

Hate, Religion, and Guns

June 13, 2016

Hate, religion, and guns. Those are the three words you see most often mentioned as causes, or contributing factors, to the massacre at the Pulse night club in my hometown Orlando, Florida yesterday when at least fifty were killed and more than that wounded.

It goes without saying that hate was the primary motivator. You don’t murder someone unless you hate them. I don’t really understand hate. I don’t know that I have ever hated anyone. I did not hate Richard Nixon. I did not even hate Osama Bin Laden. I can comprehend how oppressed people can hate — the Jews Hitler, African Americans white racists, women their abusers.

But otherwise, I think hate is caused by a combination of ignorance and fear. Omar Mateen did not understand gay people. He did not understand that a certain small percentage of the population is affectively oriented toward the persons of the same gender. And that there are other complex orientations and affections which are quite beyond anyone’s choice. LGBT and others. Mateen therefore feared what he did not understand. And that ignorance and fear was no doubt fueled by the second contributing factor to Orlando. Religion.

Oh, we will all proclaim that Islam was not the cause of this and that, while Omar Mateen has been described as an observant Muslim, extremists like members of ISIS pervert an otherwise peaceful religion. Yes, but. But let us be honest in noting that there are violent and imprecatory passages in the Qur’an. As there are in the Bible — Old Testament and New — and in the sacred texts of many (but not all) of the world’s religions. People have been, are, and will always be motivated by violence by a selective reading and understanding of religious texts.

And, finally, guns. Of course the NRA will trumpet the fact that apparently Mateen purchased his guns legally (although with his record of abuse and terrorist associations, it hard to understand how). Some gun enthusiasts will even postulate that had those LGBT victims been packing on Saturday night, there would have been far fewer casualties. Yeah, right.

So, what is to be done? Well, if hate is largely generated by ignorance and fear, we must continue our efforts to educate the population about the “normality” of homosexuality. We have made enormous strides in a very short time but, in this as in so many things, we have a “long way to go.” Enlightening the ignorance of so many about the realities of gender and human sexuality will do a lot to dispel the fear and therefore to mitigate against hatred of people who happen to be gay.

What about religion? Given my profession and lifelong commitment as a person of faith, you will not be surprised that I do not recommend giving it all up. What I do recommend is “growing it all up.” Our religious texts are ancient documents written by flawed people influenced, as we all are, by the cultural conditions of their times. However we may wish to understand our scriptures as being “inspired” by God, we have these treasures “in earthen vessels.”

Pastors, teachers, and parents must embrace critical and scholarly study of the various scriptures in order to understand, and teach those they mentor how the texts came to be written, what the authors’ original intentions likely were, and how they might be appropriately applied (or not) in our own day. God does not condone violence. “Holy” Scriptures often do.

And what about guns? I would ban them all. There is absolutely no reason why the average person needs to own a firearm in the 21st century. Hunting is barbaric. I wish the Second Amendment could be repealed and all firearms confiscated.

Of course, this will not happen. Especially in the still Wild West America where we — alone among the nations of the world — think it is our right to own instruments that are fashioned primarily to kill. So, failing this radical solution what might we do? Require extensive background checks, work on the technology of so-called smart guns which have mechanisms that only allow them to be fired by the owner, and absolutely ban assault weapons like the AR-15 rifle used by Mateen and any “conversion kits” that allow the transformation of any less-rapid-fire rifles or handguns into ones that have such increased firepower.

If we actually banned, and even confiscated, assault weapons, eventually it might not be necessary for even the police to be armed with such merciless machinery. They certainly did not used to be. Perhaps only the military should retain the right to use them in the extreme conditions of war. It goes without saying, though say it again and again we must, no deer hunter needs an assault rifle.

So, education and common sense gun control. These seem to me the only means to begin to come against the terror and hatred which so infects our land today. Join me, as you can, in advancing those ends.

There is no time to lose.

 

One Who Loves Gold Will Not Be Justified

June 11, 2016

From the first lesson from scripture in the daily lectionary for this, the Feast of St. Barnabas: “The rich person toils to amass a fortune, and when he rests he fills himself with his dainties. The poor person toils to make a meager living, and if ever he rests he becomes needy.”

“One who loves gold will not be justified; one who pursues money will be led astray by it. Many have come to ruin because of gold, and their destruction has met them face to face. It is a stumbling block to those who are avid for it, and every fool will be taken captive by it.”(Ecclesiasticus 31:3-11)

I wrote yesterday that there is an interaction between “Politics and the Kingdom of God” and that people of faith should really look very carefully at the positions and policies of candidates and parties before casting their votes. The verses above from the Apocrypha are just one more example of God”s “preferential option for the poor” which one can find throughout the entire Bible — Old Testament, New, and (for those Christians who read it) the Apocrypha.

St. Barnabas, whom we remember today, is known by two things primarily. First, he was a wealthy man but apparently also quite generous since the book of Acts tells us that, shortly after he was called into the ministry of apostleship, he sold a piece of property and “laid the money at the apostles’ feet.” In other words, he was generous in sharing what he had for the good of all. Secondly, Barnabas was called a “son of encouragement” because of his bridge building efforts between the apostles and his ability to bring people together.

Very few of our politicians today are — or ever have been — poor. Unfortunately, it takes a certain amount of money and privilege to afford the kind of education necessary to be qualified for political leadership and certainly it takes way too much money to mount political campaigns. Candidates have often made a good deal of money before they every hit the campaign trail and others make money by writing books and going on speaking tours for which they are remunerated handsomely.

For example, both Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton are, by any standards, wealthy people. The question is, how did they obtain that wealth and how did they use it once possessing it. No doubt, there will be scrutiny of all this during the next five months of the political process. To get us started, one measure of how one’s wealth has been accumulated and how is has been distributed, in our day, is the information contained on a federal tax return. One presidential candidate in this year’s race has released volumes of tax returns and information. The other has not.

Guess which is which.

I wonder why?

Politics and the Kingdom of God

June 10, 2016

A beautiful picture of Barack Obama and his elder daughter, Malia, appeared on Facebook yesterday with a caption something like, “The daughter of the first black President will cast her first vote for the first woman President.” I commented “Just in case you think we are not moving ‘in the right direction’.”

Jews and Christians look forward to a mysterious time in the future when God will establish, once and for all, something the tradition calls “The Kingdom of God.” In our more inclusive day, many are likely to refer to it as “The Realm of God” or even the “Commonwealth of God.” Let us understand these to mean the same thing.

And that “thing” is a future in which the world will finally be put to rights. When there will indeed be complete justice and everlasting peace, when the hungry will be fed and the naked clothed, when no one will take advantage of another and when sickness, pain, and even death will be no more. Jews often associate this coming blessed age with the arrival of the Messiah, Christians with what has been called “the Second Coming” of our Messiah, Jesus the Christ.

As New Testament scholar N. T. Wright reminds us often, we are not going to build the kingdom of God on our own. God will, in God’s good time, establish it. But, Wright asserts, we are to build for the kingdom of God. Get the distinction? We are not going to build the kingdom of God, but we are to build for the kingdom of God. And that means, at the very least, every effort we make here to move the world a little closer to a world which resembles that blessed future will not be lost.

When we work for justice, peace, equality, an end to poverty  and disease, we foreshadow that which God will one day establish. And we give people in the here and now a glimpse of what that final Divine Commonwealth will look like.

That is where the intersection of politics and religion takes place. When Jews, Christians, Muslims, Buddhists, Hindus, Sikhs, and others cast their votes in a political season, what they should be thinking about is how closely the positions, policies, and proposals of the various candidates and parties resemble those “kingdom values” already enumerated — justice, peace, equality,  healing, human flourishing and abundant life for all.

No one political candidate or political party can be identified as having a monopoly on those values. But, as people of faith, it is our responsibility to compare their positions and platforms with the qualities of God’s Reign.

And, to vote accordingly.

 

Grassley Defends Trump

June 9, 2016

So read the unbelievable headline in the Nation/World section of the Quad City Times today citing an Associated Press story! While tons of Republican leaders have disassociated themselves from, and even called racist, Donald Trump’s remarks about District Court Judge Gonzalo Curiel’s inability to be impartial in the law suit against Trump “University” because of his Mexican heritage, our very senior senator from Iowa, Chuck Grassley, has defended him.

How? Well, of course, by pointing out that current Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor once said that it was her belief that “a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn’t lived that life.” Now, in his defense of Donald Trump, Grassley has observed, “I didn’t hear any criticism of that sort of comment by a justice of the Supreme Court.” No, I guess not.

Lost on Grassley was the context in which Sotomayor made that claim and the world of difference between someone of a particular ethnic heritage saying something about its significance and a rich, white male making assumptions about an Indiana-born American “with Mexican heritage.” This is not only apples and oranges; it is apricots and orangutans!

So, while Iowans have likely lost the opportunity to oust this pitiful old man from the United States Senate by defeating the young, progressive Cedar Rapids legislator Rob Hogg and choosing instead former state Sec. of Agriculture, former Lieutenant Governor and yesterday’s news Patty Judge, I will support her enthusiastically in her fall campaign against Grassley.

Perhaps other Iowans will wish to join me. If for no other reason than today’s headline: Grassley defends Trump!

 

“No Good Thing Will The Lord Withhold From Those Who Walk With Integrity”

June 8, 2016

Integrity: “the quality of being honest and having strong moral principles.” Sadly, not many politicians of either political party in the United States these days are often described by this particular word. But on this Wednesday after the last Super Tuesday of the primary season, I can point to at least three. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Mark Kirk of Illinois, and David Johnson of Iowa.

Lindsey Graham, the US Senator who failed in his bid for the Republican nomination this year, quickly denounced Donald Trump’s clearly racist criticism of the “Judge of Mexican heritage” who is presiding over the law suit concerning Trump “University.” Not only did this conservative, southern lawmaker call the comments what they are — racist — but declared his unwillingness to vote for Donald Trump in November. “I understand why others will still support the presumptive nominee,” he said, “But I just can’t.” Integrity.

A similar declaration was made by Republican Senator Mark Kirk of Illinois. Even though he is in the fight of his life for his Senate seat, Kirk said this, “Donald Trump’s latest statements, in context with past attacks on Hispanics, women and the disabled like me, make it certain that I cannot and will not support my party’s nominee for President regardless of the political impact on my candidacy or the Republican Party.” Integrity.

Iowa State GOP Senator David Johnson has actually suspended his membership in the Republican Party to protest “the racist remarks and judicial jihad” of Donald Trump. “I will not stand silent if the party of Lincoln and the end of slavery buckles under the racial bias of a bigot,” Johnson said on Tuesday. Integrity.

If these three men, elected legislators of a political party for which I have lost nearly all respect, are not examples of the noble quality of integrity, I don’t know who is these days. I hope none of them will have to pay the ultimate political price for their courage. Even more, I hope that they may hold out some hope that the leadership of a once-great Party can come to their senses before it is too late.

Perhaps uniting to change the rules and stop Trump, even now, from receiving the formal nomination of the Republican Party is too risky and likely to bring even more chaos into the system from Trump’s mindless supporters. But at the very  least, these leaders should call Trump on his outrageous statements at every turn and seek to “hedge him in” with advisers who can try to steer him on to a saner and less dangerous course.

Even if this fails, these three men have shown that it is possible to speak and act with integrity in the midst of a political season which has shown far too little of it.

 

 

The Future of Theological Education

June 7, 2016

Andover Newton to move, partner with Yale. So read the headline of the lead news article in the June 8 edition of The Christian Century magazine. Perusal of the article revealed that “the nation’s oldest graduate school of theology plans to relocate from Newton Centre, Massachusetts to New Haven, Connecticut…” where it will function as a kind of “school within a school” becoming the latest of seminary mergings, relocations, and reconfigurations.

This trend is happening, obviously, because of the high cost of seminary education these days due to high priced, tenured faculty; declining enrollments; and the cost of maintaining aging buildings. Of the nine (or so) accredited Episcopal seminaries, only one or two are financially solvent over the long term — Virginia Theological Seminary in Alexandria and St. Luke’s School of Theology at the University of the South (the latter because of committed support from the owning Southern dioceses and being part of the small, but wealthy college of Sewanee).

Our oldest seminary, General in New York City, is surviving just barely because of having sold off all but a postage stamp sized piece of their property in Manhattan and turning some of the housing over to developers for outrageously priced condos in the rapidly gentrifying area of Chelsea Square. My own seminary of Seabury-Western formerly in Evanston, Illinois sold the whole block to Northwestern University in order to retire their debt and move into a partnership with another struggling seminary, Bexley Hall.

After an abortive attempt to run two small campuses in conjunction with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, one in Chicago and another in Columbus, Ohio, Bexley-Seabury has now made a similar move as Andover Newton, nesting within the University of Chicago Divinity School complex in Hyde Park. Shared faculty and cross registration with other seminaries in the consortium will open up ecumenical and interfaith possibilities.

Rather than bemoaning these developments, I actually rejoice in them. We have known for forty years that we have too many denomination-specific seminaries for the number of students who attend. Unfortunately, in the Episcopal Church at least, each of the seminaries was a “stand alone,” private institution with its own uniqueness and loyalties. The usual refrain was, “Yes, we need to close some of these seminaries — any one but mine!” Hence, the situation we find ourselves in today.

I believe that the future of seminaries and theological education will likely be “divinity schools” with denominational distinctives nesting within the Religion/Philosophy departments of major universities and colleges. Cross registration will broaden the academic opportunities for seminarians, expose them to world-class faculties, and make ecumenical/interreligious formation the norm. This, while preserving the need for formation in a particular denominational heritage possible through the smaller divinity school and (as already happens) through extensive field work in local congregations.

It is also my hope that ways may be found for these fewer (but I would argue, finer) theological schools to partner with the many effective diocesan and regional schools to form more effectively lay leaders, deacons, and locally trained presbyters to serve the varying needs of a changing church and world. It will not be the first time that economic realities and financial exigencies have forced the church to do what she should have been doing all along.

God works in mysterious ways…wonders to perform!

Or, “let’s make lemonade out of these sour lemons!”

Vote On June 7

June 6, 2016

Tomorrow is election day. Well, it’s one more of those many “election days” stretching seemingly endlessly across the primary season. Much attention will be placed on California and whether Hillary Clinton wins big enough to clinch the Democratic nomination for President or whether Bernie Sanders will win big enough to continue his relentless march toward what he calls a ‘contested Convention.’

But there are importance races to decide up and down the ballot in many places. Here in Iowa we have to choose the best Democrat to run against the perennial Republican Senator Charles “Chuck” Grassley. The two front runners are Rob Hogg, a youngish Cedar Rapids attorney and state legislator who as the endorsement of the Des Moines Register and Patty Judge, a former Iowa Secretary of Agriculture and Lieutenant Governor in the last Democratic Administration in the state.

I have supported Hogg in a letter to our Quad City Times published on the same day that same paper endorsed Judge. Hogg is the more progressive of the two candidates, extremely strong on the environment and with a proven record of bringing together farmers and environmental activists to find common ground and get things done.

Judge is, in my opinion, much too much in the pocket of “agribusiness” and is also (I know, this is ageism!) is in her 70s and wants to be elected at least to a six year term as senator and presumably would have to serve much longer than that to work her way up to any position of influence in the Senate.

But I encourage any and all to turn out to vote on June 7, and every time we have a chance to make our voices heard at the ballot box. Many have died to give us that privilege. Thousands stand in line in developing countries just for the joy of being able to cast their first actual vote. There is even a theological principle behind the system known as democracy:

That is: the dignity and worth of each individual. Paul says in First Corinthians, chapter twelve  that “there are a variety of gifts but the same spirit.” And that those gifts are given for the common good. Elsewhere, he describes the church as a body with many members and those members, when working properly and working together, helps build the body up in love.

It is not all that different in any community. Power, concentrated in the hands of a few, will inevitably become destructive. But leaders elected with consent of the governed, and presumably, held to account by those same folks, will most likely reflect the values of the community and work for that same common good.

But the system only works if we do.

Our political system is only as effective as we participate in it.

So, vote on June 7.

And every time you are given the privilege.

“The Greatest” Is Gone

June 4, 2016

I can no longer watch boxing. I used to love it and have happy memories of sitting in a South Carolina living room with my grandparents and their friends, eating popcorn and watching the Friday Night Fights. My grandfather always rooted for the white boxer. Appropriate, since he was a virulent racist whom I nonetheless loved deeply in a conflicted way I am probably still sorting out.

I don’t think I’ll ever forget the first time I saw Cassius Clay fight. “Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee” does not begin to describe the grace with which he danced about the ring and the striking-snake-like power of his jabs. It is not an exaggeration to claim that he was the greatest boxer who ever lived. Of course, the reason I can no longer watch boxing is, at least in part, because I have watched the slow deterioration of this magnificent athlete from “pugilistic Parkinson’s disease” over many years, leading to his death yesterday. This is not sport; it is society-sanctioned murder.

Cassius Clay changed his name to Muhaammad Ali partially because he became a member of the “Nation of Islam,” like Malcom X under the guidance of Elijah Muhammad, a Black separatist who was later disgraced by allegations of his many love affairs. But it was his other reason for changing his name which captured our attention. “Cassius Clay was my slave name,” he said, enlightening many of us in those days, for the first time, that slave owners had indeed assigned Western names to their chattel human beings further stripping them of any identity or pride.

Ali became a loud and proud spokesman for the Black Pride movement of the 1960s and 70s, but he was an icon for other reasons as well. Convicted as a draft dodger for his principled opposition to the Viet Nam War, this 25 year old fighter was stripped of his World Heavyweight title and denied what would have arguably been his most productive and successful years as a boxer.

But he re-took the title and his bouts with Sonny Liston and George Foreman have become legends. “Rumbles in the Jungle” some were called, fought in Zaire, further advancing the visibility of what it means to be of “African descent” long before other Black leaders were willing to make that claim. The fact that Ali was seen as so often shockingly brash and arrogant speaks volumes to the fact that most of us white Americans in those days expected our “Negro” citizens to show proper respect to the dominant culture and not to “make waves.”

Waves Ali made — in sport and in society. The reason I can no longer watch boxing is that his long, slow decline has been inexorably linked to the nearly 30,000 blows he took to his head. They never marred his handsome face (“Joe Frazier is so ugly,” he often said, “and I am so beautiful!”) but they certainly marred his brain. And led to his death.

Muhammad Ali once said, “If my mind can conceive it, and my heart can believe it — then I can achieve it.” Thank God Ali’s mind really never lost the ability to conceive things even though the brain itself was so damaged. Certainly his heart never lost the ability to believe in himself and in the equality of all people. And his achievements will likely never again be matched.

Maybe not “the Greatest” as he loved to boast. But certainly one of them. And I will miss him.