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Articles filed under tag “forgiveness”

Tags: , , , , , , , , , Becoming an instrument of peace (worthy of, and taking, a lifetime)

The prayer attributed to St. Francis — Lord, make me an instrument of Thy peace — has hovered at the edge of my awareness since childhood, when I first saw it on a plaque in my small-town Methodist church fellowship hall.


I’m still working on forgiveness, whose longstanding shortfall in me toward those who support(ed) BushCo threatens my undoing. I want to applaud daylight dawning on anyone. Really.

On the one hand, Hunter masterfully, justifiably, and with much truth today puts words to the phenomenon of people insisting they’re right even when they’re demonstrably wrong. I like being right, too, but “right” needs to mean “the assessment nearly all people of good will, clear thinking, and command of facts inevitably converge to,” as is now happening about BushCo [as evidenced by its plummeting poll numbers]. When discernment [finally] trumps deception, of course that’s a good thing, a wise thing. The earlier on, the better.

OTOH, spiritual health and community are more important than [kudos for] “being right.” And forgiving, yea, even forgiving willful dumbassery, past and present, is a prerequisite for both. Vengeance, I finally remember, is not mine.

In the process of working on forgiveness, still becoming — on the inside, and maybe soon, on the outside — a Quaker (which may or may not entail giving up use of the word “dumbassery”). You know that eerie, wonderful homecoming feeling you sometimes get as you learn more about something? Like, “Dear God, have I been a Quaker all my life, but didn’t know it?”


What’s being impressed upon me today, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, the Russian Nobel laureate, says well, speaking to the perennial assumption that has undergirded support for this war, that “if only we can get rid of those people, then we will all be safe and happy” (as reported by Anne in Friends Journal, Becoming an Instrument of Peace):

If only it were so simple. If only there were evil people somewhere insidiously committing evil deeds, and it were simply necessary to separate them from the rest of us and destroy them. But the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being, and who among us are willing to destroy a piece of their own heart?

Anne’s experiential vignettes concerning becoming an instrument of peace in the midst of war are speaking to my condition today:

To walk a path of peace in a country that is deeply involved in war brings us to our growing edge.

Yes. As in, for example, growing a commitment to forgiveness where there was none. Then Anne pinpoints where I’m mostly still at in her observation —

My self-righteousness has the poisonous high of an addiction: I like it and I know that I have to root it out of my life. Over and over and over.

[I’m] busted.

Building bridges instead of burning them is such a better plan.


Walking a path of peace sometimes brings us not just to our growing edge, as Anne says, but to our dying edge, too. Rest in peace, Tom Fox. Thank you for your work, your life, and your example.


2006-03-13 update after more thinking:

So where does justice fit in? In all my “foolish talk” about forgiveness, am I whitewashing over BushCo immorality and crimes against God and humanity (e.g., fiscal irresponsibility, destroying creation, screwing the poor, spying illegally, bearing false witness, war, torture)? Are they not accountable?

Here’s where I’m at today: I think if “justice roll[s] down like waters,” then BushCo and enablers will be repaid. Here’s the kicker: But not by me. According to scripture, God says, “I will repay.” Who do I think I am? My job is to lift up, care for, forgive.

(Sometimes I daydream, wondering if it’s as hard for God “to avenge” as it is for me to forgive. In each case, the action seems to run counter to our natures. Mystery indeed.)

As to whether we should be confronting others in their complicity, I observe that all evidence needed to see is already in front of us. Are not those with eyes to see, seeing? Can anyone be forced to see? I think not: we have to be wooed to see. (Still thinking. Insight welcome.)


2006-09-27 update (months later during a Quaker Spirituality class):

I’m clued in enough to recognize in my class reading today that Quaker author Parker Palmer is most definitely speaking to me:

When I give something I do not possess, I give a false and dangerous gift, a gift that looks like love but is, in reality, loveless — a gift given more from my need to prove myself than from the other’s need to be cared for. That kind of giving is not only loveless but faithless, based on the arrogant and mistaken notion that God has no way of channeling love to the other except through me. Yes, we are created in and for community, to be there, in love, for one another. But community cuts both ways: when we reach the limits of our own capacity to love, community means trusting that someone else will be available to the person in need. …

When the gift I give to the other is integral to my own nature, when it comes from a place of organic reality within me, it will renew itself — and me — even as I give it away. Only when I give something that does not grow within me do I deplete myself and harm the other as well, for only harm can come from a gift that is forced, inorganic, unreal.

Let Your Life Speak, Parker J. Palmer (1999), pp. 48–50

What I’m not sure of is whether this applies in the case of forgiving, especially forgiving those who advocate torture, etc.

Months after I wrote the article above, my hellbent determination to forgive when no forgiveness is forthcoming does indeed appear to me “forced, inorganic, unreal.” Is my forced determination coming more from “my need to prove myself” than from “the other’s need to be [forgiven]”? I think it is.

For if I’m truthful, I must acknowledge I have reached the limit of my own capacity to forgive. What has been done in my name — making war based on false witness, torturing, maiming, killing — is for me, for now, unforgiveable. I hadn’t considered I may be causing harm by pretending otherwise.

Tags: , , , , , , , What we’ve lost

I’ve been silent lately: I’m doing overdue work inside and out toward letting go of poisonous anger and unforgiveness. I can’t very well counsel others to do this if I’m not willing to. I can’t very well fight injustice if I’m consumed by the belief that unrepented support of BushCo can never be forgiven.

Then today I read Cindy’s account of her forcible arrest at last night’s SOTU address — for quietly wearing a T-shirt that read, “2245 Dead. How many more?”

And again rage rises, and tears well up, at what we’ve lost. I feel with Cindy when she writes —

After I had my personal items inventoried and my fingers printed, a nice Sgt. came in and looked at my shirt and said, “2245, huh? I just got back from there.”

I told him that my son died there. That’s when the enormity of my loss hit me. I have lost my son. I have lost my First Amendment rights. I have lost the country that I love. Where did America go? I started crying in pain.

What did Casey die for? What did the 2244 other brave young Americans die for? What are tens of thousands of them over there in harm’s way for still? For this?

The enormity of the loss hits me, too. Then when I imagine myself in the shoes of a U.S. or Iraqi parent whose child is now dead, like Cindy, I nearly fall down in grief.

Beyond the presenting problem of a nation enthralled, huge as that is, there’s a deeper, more enmeshed problem that threatens despair: How have we as a people become so dissolute as to not only allow this dismantling of America, but also that a substantial percentage of us still support it?

I have much more work to do.


Lincoln’s words have been haunting me lately — thanks to Al Gore for reminding me — words that speak powerfully to the present as well as to the time into which Lincoln spoke them (State of the Union, 1862, during the U.S. Civil War):

The dogmas of the quiet past are inadequate to the stormy present. The occasion is piled high with difficulty, and we must rise with the occasion. As our case is new, so we must think anew and act anew. We must disenthrall ourselves, and then we shall save our country.

Fellow-citizens, we can not escape history. We of this Congress and this Administration will be remembered in spite of ourselves. … The fiery trial through which we pass will light us down in honor or dishonor to the latest generation. … We, even we here, hold the power and bear the responsibility. … The way is plain, peaceful, generous, just — a way which if followed the world will forever applaud and God must forever bless.

Supporting the present powers, endorsing today’s systemic injustice that is fueled by fear and sustained by deception and violence, casts a shadow over one’s whole life. I’ve already experienced friends and acquaintances die while still praising these powers, and my memory of them is ever shadowed by their choice.

I think this is what “we can not escape history” means. I don’t want to be remembered as complicit. I don’t want my friends and family to be, either.

What if here in the last days of the Republican Party, its players returned to the values of its beginning? Honor, responsibility, peace, generosity, justice?

What if we all do? What if we “think anew and act anew” to solve our problems? [instead of lashing out in age-old ignorance and vengeance]

I cannot yet forgive, but I can at last pray for conversions on the way to Damascus — whacked-out-of-the-saddle transforming flashes of insight — for all of us.

Tags: , , , , , , , , Voters’ remorse on Bush

“What Americans are finally catching onto is the utter incompetence of this crowd. And if we didn’t know before, we’re learning now, in the harshest possible ways, that incompetence has bitter consequences.”

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Tags: , , , , , , We have made enemies for life

“This [Iraq] war is a strategic mistake. We have made enemies for life. There will be revenge against us for life.”

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Tags: , , They say they are Christ’s disciples, but they don’t look like Jesus to me

Body and Soul: Jeanne: ‘What happens when you spit on everything a gentle young woman values? On Our Town? On Sweet Forgiveness?’

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Tags: , , , , , Bush’s two albatrosses

WaPo: David Broder: ‘Bush is dragging two huge weights — and he has no one to blame but himself.’

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