"... homosexuality affects far fewer of us than gluttony, materialism, or divorce. And as Jesus pointed out so often in his ministry, we like to focus on the biblical violations (real or perceived) of the minority rather than our own.
In short, we like to gang up."
... "And when we make separate categories for the “real sinners,” when we reduce our fellow human beings to theological issues up for constant debate who cannot even be told they are loved without qualifiers, when our (thinking) conveniently renders others the problem and us the heroes, maybe it’s time to sit across a table and get to know one another a little better, to break up some categories and make some new friends. Maybe it’s time to drop our stones for a while and pass the bread.
…healthy, whole grain, organic bread, of course."
The above are snippets from Rachel Held Evans' blog.
She's right. Today's furious condemnation of same-sex marriage often comes from folks who have little to say about the deadly effects of things like materialism ...
... or selfishness
... or anger
... or greed
... or ...
So these uppity church leaders came to Jesus bringing a woman who had been unfaithful. They wanted to stone her, and they tried to get Jesus to agree with them. "What do you say?" After drawing on the ground, he finally answered, but what he said wasn't about her adultry. It was about their hearts, and one by one they left, deeply convicted by what he'd helped them see.
It's so easy to think we're the good ones and others are bad when the truth is that there are none righteous. Not one. So now what do we do?
Feel free to critique the content here. Many posts have been revised based on information provided by readers.
Saturday, December 28, 2013
Friday, December 27, 2013
Golden Years
Got fun plans? A little travel perhaps; a warm place where you can enjoy some days off? Of course.
80% of the world never thinks about the things that occupy our days.
- They don't make a list for when they go to the grocery store.
- They don't wonder when the car insurance is due.
- They don't wonder where their kids will go to college.
- They don't worry about their IRA or 401k.
- They couldn't care less about a Coach purse or a Gucci blouse.
- Traffic doesn't make them crabby on the way home from shopping.
- They don't look forward to vacations.
No stores, no cars, no college, no vacations, ... and no golden years.
Being rich or poor isn't a statement of motivation or willingness to work. We're not well off because we worked and succeeded while they loafed. It isn't because we have more natural resources or smarter people. We don't and we're not, but the difference persists. Curious isn't it?
Poverty isn't something you choose. It's something that's done to you and to your family or clan or race or class. True?
I met one young man in eastern Africa; bright, well-mannered and quite well spoken. We've worked for a few years on his education and helping his family get healthy. His biggest obstacle? Wrong tribe. He's Mijikenda. There's not a lot of opportunity for him. If he was Kikuyu however, doors would open automatically.
When we look forward to our vacation or our new home or our ... golden years, that's not the real world, is it. So, what do we do with what we know? Change makers and help bringers, they have more fun and they live in the real world.
Feel like sharing a bit of the opportunity and resources you have? :)
Thursday, December 26, 2013
Cities Without Citadels
Vertically! That's the way life distributes us. Civilizations past were pretty much the same. Power, prestige, wealth placed you up the ladder. The poor always occupied the bottom rung of history's record. Inconsequential, peasants, working class.
Centuries past tell us of the ruling class and the innumerable thousands of poor. The few lived at the expense of all the rest. It was as though they somehow deserved the best of everything even if it meant deprivation for others. Inevitable in every culture?
Not
true! It's neither inevitable nor needed; and not every civilization was vertically arranged. There have been interesting times and cultures where the play for dominance wasn't a part. Curious?
Centuries ago along Africa's Niger River, rainfall varied greatly from year to year. One year in six was near the region's average; other years were at the extremes for rainfall on the plains and in the upper regions where the river's source was fed. So to a greater or lesser extent, the plains flooded a little or a lot and crops did or didn't do well. There wasn't any way to predict how a year's growing season would turn out, so the residents adapted. It's instructive for us to see their approach.
The river's inland delta, as it's called, is almost level and the Niger river descends just a few millimeters per kilometer over much of its 4000 km length. When the rains come, the flood moves broadly across the region. The amount of rain determines how far from the river the floods will carry, and it's rarely the same two years in a row. Folks learned that they couldn't master all the skills and manage all the resources needed for every opportunity. Fishing was varied from year to year and tremendously labor intensive. Farming was even more so with a requirement to understand which crops would do well in which water depths. The pastoralists managed their flocks by moving significant distances regularly. Out beyond the edge of the floodplain that was waist deep for six months of the year, then rapidly inward as the land and vegetation dried up.
Communities specialized and cooperated, and they did so without one specialization or community being at the top. Some years the farmers did better than the fishermen and vice versa. Some years, the herds survived well; others, not so well. They needed each other in order to survive, so they shared more or less graciously. Ancient stories persist of conflicts being resolved generously.
Communities grew into cities around the specializations, and they persisted successfully for more than a thousand years. It was hard, of course, but they did it without an upper class and without a central government and without Wall Street leeches. Interesting. More than a thousand years without war or sequestration or ... well, you get the idea.
Our present competition and consumption model is unsustainable, we've discovered, and it brings suffering and death to others. We're all at risk, but there are many alternatives.
The river's inland delta, as it's called, is almost level and the Niger river descends just a few millimeters per kilometer over much of its 4000 km length. When the rains come, the flood moves broadly across the region. The amount of rain determines how far from the river the floods will carry, and it's rarely the same two years in a row. Folks learned that they couldn't master all the skills and manage all the resources needed for every opportunity. Fishing was varied from year to year and tremendously labor intensive. Farming was even more so with a requirement to understand which crops would do well in which water depths. The pastoralists managed their flocks by moving significant distances regularly. Out beyond the edge of the floodplain that was waist deep for six months of the year, then rapidly inward as the land and vegetation dried up.
Communities specialized and cooperated, and they did so without one specialization or community being at the top. Some years the farmers did better than the fishermen and vice versa. Some years, the herds survived well; others, not so well. They needed each other in order to survive, so they shared more or less graciously. Ancient stories persist of conflicts being resolved generously.
Communities grew into cities around the specializations, and they persisted successfully for more than a thousand years. It was hard, of course, but they did it without an upper class and without a central government and without Wall Street leeches. Interesting. More than a thousand years without war or sequestration or ... well, you get the idea.
Our present competition and consumption model is unsustainable, we've discovered, and it brings suffering and death to others. We're all at risk, but there are many alternatives.
Consider ... the complex society of the inland Niger River Delta. Bambara millet farmers, the Fulani and Tuareg herders, and the Bozo and Somono fishermen lived together there for 1600 years – on the basis of peaceful and reciprocal relations. These were acephalous societies, based on complexification of settlement, rather than centralization.
See: John READER (1999): Africa, A biography of the Continent. Vintage. London; Chpt. 23 – Cities without citadels.
Wednesday, December 25, 2013
Snowden
Edward Snowden knew things that he couldn't leave unaddressed. He weighed the consequences and made his choice. Like him, we each make decisions about our culture, our country, our acceptance of the norms.
It appears that he wasn't after fame and fortune. If fact, he sacrificed everything because he couldn't live with what he knew unless he did something about it. He forfeited career and perhaps much more.
With no wife or kids, he could risk it all. He carefully unveiled what he knew, not risking lives, but he clearly laid out his protest against government actions.
Those of us who remember the upheaval of Vietnam and the anti-war era understand all too well. There were so many lies and misrepresentations to justify that war. Those who saw it tried to tell us, to warn us while hundreds of thousands were sent off as cannon fodder in the government's power play.
58,000 U.S. servicemen died.
50,000-65,000 North Vietnamese civilians died in the war.
155,000 refugees were killed or abducted on the Tuy Hoa road, fleeing the NVA Spring Offensive in 1975.
165,000 South Vietnamese died in the re-education camps out of 1-2.5 million sent.
195,000-430,000 South Vietnamese civilians died in the war.
153,000 U.S. servicemen were sent home wounded.
Here at home, we did our best to understand, and we tried to be OK about what was happening. Those who couldn't ... joined the protest. Or not.
For decades, we've lived with having sent our servicemen off to do what cannot be justified. It shouldn't have happened that way. It was done to us without our informed consent. It warps your thinking until you face it. Neither our country nor our government can be proud of those years. While most of our servicemen who served did so with honor and noble purpose, all came home wounded.
One cannot be part of that which leads to the slaughter of innocents without being scarred, even those who stayed at home and trusted their government to do the right thing.
This year, Snowden faced what only a few knew about. It was well past the limits of law and the rights of citizens. He struggled until conscience and clarity of thought prevailed. He launched his own protest.
He could have let it pass. As we often do with actions by government, by financial institutions, by influencers and decision makers; he could have said, "Somebody else's problem."
He might have thought of all the people in authority above him and just let it go, but he didn't. For the rest of his life, he'll live with the consequences of his choice, but at least he won't have to live with the wounds of having turned a blind eye to what was just wrong.
To some degree, such things hammer us all in an imperfect world. The hope we have is in a good conscience and clear thinking. And the choices we make.
Snowden's Christmas message this morning, “Together we can find a better balance. End mass surveillance. Remind the government that if it really wants to know how we feel asking is always cheaper than spying.”... for the people.
Merry Christmas
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Politics is Puppet Theater
We're all persuaded or at least influenced by those voices that speak powerfully. Well financed, well polished voices.
Unfortunately there are fully valid arguments on both sides of most issues, but the powerful voice is often the winner in the battle for agreement and cooperation. It's a rare person who is wise enough to withhold concurrence until all sides are considered.
I hate it when I listen and agree only to discover soon afterward that the presentation had been one-sided and, as it turned out, just wrong. Motivated by the 'win' mentality, the presenter had offered all the good they could muster and deliberately ignored all the bad.
Welcome to the lobbyist's world. Polished, primed, and well paid, the powerful voices of industry.
There are less than 150 corporations that control more than 40% of the world's economy. They're tightly interconnected and interrelated; each owns a significant portion of many of the others. They breathe in sync. And they campaign (lobby) in the world's governments for regulatory favor.
It's not a conspiracy, at least not formally. They don't collectively intend to rule the world; perhaps just the world's economy.
What they've persuaded our legislators to do in the last couple of decades has given us a degree of 'globalization' that was unforeseen. The U.S. economy and others are intimately interconnected. A hiccup in the the U.S. or the EU can affect the developing world catastrophically. It did, and it will again.
Wandering the edge of Belize city, I see that Rotary International has put up the 4-way test questions on signs along the way. These have been the Rotary's endorsed and adopted standard for business ethics for almost a century.
Curious how many of the worlds financial behemoths are led by Rotarians? Or better yet, how many would pass the four way test? Zero and zero, of course. Since the 80's, we've raised a breed of business folks whose only goal is winning, regardless of the cost to others. Millions have suffered as a result. The market crash of 07/08 killed more than a half million in eastern Africa alone, we're told. AIG and JP Morgan did that along with a few others.
Zip, zero, not a one would pass the Rotary's four way test or any other reasonable test of ethics.
Curious what comes next? Yup, me too.
Unfortunately there are fully valid arguments on both sides of most issues, but the powerful voice is often the winner in the battle for agreement and cooperation. It's a rare person who is wise enough to withhold concurrence until all sides are considered.
I hate it when I listen and agree only to discover soon afterward that the presentation had been one-sided and, as it turned out, just wrong. Motivated by the 'win' mentality, the presenter had offered all the good they could muster and deliberately ignored all the bad.
Welcome to the lobbyist's world. Polished, primed, and well paid, the powerful voices of industry.
There are less than 150 corporations that control more than 40% of the world's economy. They're tightly interconnected and interrelated; each owns a significant portion of many of the others. They breathe in sync. And they campaign (lobby) in the world's governments for regulatory favor.
It's not a conspiracy, at least not formally. They don't collectively intend to rule the world; perhaps just the world's economy.
What they've persuaded our legislators to do in the last couple of decades has given us a degree of 'globalization' that was unforeseen. The U.S. economy and others are intimately interconnected. A hiccup in the the U.S. or the EU can affect the developing world catastrophically. It did, and it will again.
|
Is it the truth? Is it fair to all concerned? Will it build goodwill and better friendships? Will it be beneficial to all concerned?
Curious how many of the worlds financial behemoths are led by Rotarians? Or better yet, how many would pass the four way test? Zero and zero, of course. Since the 80's, we've raised a breed of business folks whose only goal is winning, regardless of the cost to others. Millions have suffered as a result. The market crash of 07/08 killed more than a half million in eastern Africa alone, we're told. AIG and JP Morgan did that along with a few others.
Zip, zero, not a one would pass the Rotary's four way test or any other reasonable test of ethics.
Despite being within the boundaries of the law, these banking barons have passed from the realm of 'participant' in the human saga to 'predator'. Relatively new on the historical scene, they are considered invasive and detrimental to all the world and to all the people.
Curious what comes next? Yup, me too.
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
Tunnel Vision!
If you looked through a soda straw 8 foot long, this is the tiny part of the sky you could see, and these are galaxies there; about 10,000 of them.
Tunnel vision, like looking through a soda straw ... looking at such a tiny part of what is. You could spend a lifetime focused on this 1/1000000000000th of the available view.
We do that. It's a semi-survival mechanism. We can't keep it all in view all the time.
In a small town where we lived, folk's lives were often filled with local concerns. Some perhaps had a larger view, but the time spent talking about the traffic accident involving a garbage truck and a college employee wasn't as profitably spent as it might have been. There are more important things than that about which one might be concerned.
Mayan tunnel window at
Altun Ha ruins. |
Our humanity gives us opportunity to see more than just our own wants, of course. Do we? Do we care about those outside of our own circle? Would we sacrifice a bit for someone we didn't know? Would we take action for the disenfranchised, the castoffs, the poor?
Mayan window is a t-shaped tunnel ... not much of a view; perhaps a bit like ours as we focus on just ourselves? |
Religion can focus us narrowly on small issues, just one small aspect of something which is immeasurably larger and grander than the greatest expanse of space. Walking the ridge above the Grand Canyon or standing beside Victoria Falls can be breath-taking, but just skirting the presence of the God Who Is can be ... reconstructive! All good. I want to see it all.
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