Every time I think the president can't do anything that surprises me, he does.
He retweeted (I don't know what Twitter is or how a 're-tweet' works, and if I did, I wouldn't do it) a conspiracy theory from a right-wing group that the 75 year old man who police shoved down, Martin Gigino, was a member of 'antifia', not ever sure exactly what that is besides the invention of the right, and 'fell harder than he was pushed' to make a point. Martin, who is a well known peace activist in Buffalo, NY, is still in the hospital from the injuries the police caused.
The two policemen (and they were 'men') have been suspended without pay though numbers of the police and fire department in Buffalo have resigned in support of them!
We all saw it on tape.
Martin was shoved down, not tended to until the medical folks arrived, bleeding from the ear and still in hospital, though, thankfully, no longer 'critical' or in ICU.
A couple of Republicans condemned the tweet, but most didn't, trying to turn a blind eye to an outrageous and totally without proof accusation by their president.
It's probably too late to hope that Republican lawmakers will join the Generals and other military in condemning the president for his outrageous behavior.
They are 'fellow travelers' with him.
Only November will change that.
The demonstrators don't want to eliminate the police, they want to change who handles certain situations.
Mental health workers, no police, in incidents of mental problems; social workers for domestic violence and child abuse; drug specialists in drug abuse, and more money for housing and food for those in need who so often are confronted by police.
Police will not be eliminated, just reduced in their role and the enormous police budgets spent in different ways.
Many police would support that--they don't want to deal with issues that aren't crimes against society.
This is a moment in our history where we might become 'great'--responding to profound needs in a positive way.
God help us that we will.
Tuesday, June 9, 2020
Monday, June 8, 2020
Sarah Cooper
If you don't know the name, you need to learn it.
Sarah Cooper is a black, stand-up comedian who, during lock-down, has posted videos on tic-tock of her lip syncing the president.
They are hilarious.
Go to YouTube and find her.
You won't be disappointed.
Her facial expressions and gestures perfectly accompany her lip-syncing.
She even plays other characters watching her.
Well worth the time--and hey, what do we have these days but lots of time?
She's also an immigrant, from Britain or somewhere where English is spoken with an accent.
Perfect--black and an immigrant lip-syncing the president!!!
Watch her and laugh...or cry...either will do.
Sarah Cooper is a black, stand-up comedian who, during lock-down, has posted videos on tic-tock of her lip syncing the president.
They are hilarious.
Go to YouTube and find her.
You won't be disappointed.
Her facial expressions and gestures perfectly accompany her lip-syncing.
She even plays other characters watching her.
Well worth the time--and hey, what do we have these days but lots of time?
She's also an immigrant, from Britain or somewhere where English is spoken with an accent.
Perfect--black and an immigrant lip-syncing the president!!!
Watch her and laugh...or cry...either will do.
Sunday, June 7, 2020
A West Virginia Spring
This Spring and Early Summer in Cheshire has been like a West Virginia Spring.
The altitude of Cheshire is 177 feet.
Anawalt, WV, where I grew up was almost 1300 feet and surrounded by mountains that rose another thousand feet.
So, though Cheshire is hundreds of miles from Anawalt, the altitude made Spring and Early Summer full of cool days and chilly nights. That's what we've had this year in Cheshire.
Even so, the Rhododendron blossoms are falling from our trees after two warmer days.
Rhododendron is the state flower of West Virginia and in the higher altitude the blossoms lasted past mid-June, at least.
It is sad to see them go, but they were glorious because of the cool Spring.
I love to see them. We have four trees. They were glorious and abundant until the last few days.
Ah, well, Spring will come again.
The altitude of Cheshire is 177 feet.
Anawalt, WV, where I grew up was almost 1300 feet and surrounded by mountains that rose another thousand feet.
So, though Cheshire is hundreds of miles from Anawalt, the altitude made Spring and Early Summer full of cool days and chilly nights. That's what we've had this year in Cheshire.
Even so, the Rhododendron blossoms are falling from our trees after two warmer days.
Rhododendron is the state flower of West Virginia and in the higher altitude the blossoms lasted past mid-June, at least.
It is sad to see them go, but they were glorious because of the cool Spring.
I love to see them. We have four trees. They were glorious and abundant until the last few days.
Ah, well, Spring will come again.
They're Here! (This time good ones...)
I wrote a week or so ago about the 'Open CT' demonstrators.
For the last few days a small number of folks have been on Main Street with "Black Lives Matter" signs. Just a few--and all white.
Cheshire is the whitest place I've ever lived, but today a large crowd was out to protest the racism in our country.
It gladdens my heart.
They rallied on the Green and than walked, with police closing side streets for them, to the park across from the high school.
Again, almost all white.
That's the thing about this world wide demonstration--it is truly 'integrated'.
There have been demonstrations on every continent--the ones from Japan are very moving and very peaceful.
Almost all peaceful.
Please cable news, stop showing violence! Peaceful is truly soothing and interesting.
A 'Black Lives Matter' demonstration in oh-so-white Cheshire....
It gives me hope. It gives me hope.
For the last few days a small number of folks have been on Main Street with "Black Lives Matter" signs. Just a few--and all white.
Cheshire is the whitest place I've ever lived, but today a large crowd was out to protest the racism in our country.
It gladdens my heart.
They rallied on the Green and than walked, with police closing side streets for them, to the park across from the high school.
Again, almost all white.
That's the thing about this world wide demonstration--it is truly 'integrated'.
There have been demonstrations on every continent--the ones from Japan are very moving and very peaceful.
Almost all peaceful.
Please cable news, stop showing violence! Peaceful is truly soothing and interesting.
A 'Black Lives Matter' demonstration in oh-so-white Cheshire....
It gives me hope. It gives me hope.
Saturday, June 6, 2020
Trinity Sunday
Tomorrow is Trinity Sunday. Luckily for me, Bryan is preaching on 'virtual church' tomorrow. I greatly dislike preaching on the trinity. But I'm sending you a sermon I did preach 16 years ago when my assistant and seminarian were both away on Trinity Sunday. I hope it explains my discomfort with the Trinity.
TRINITY SUNDAY 2004
Today
is my greatest nightmare as a preacher: the dreaded and despised Trinity
Sunday.
It
is little wonder that both Malinda Johnson and Michael Spencer both found
compelling reasons to be out of town this Sunday! They knew, given any option,
I wouldn’t preach today….
People
sometimes ask me why I always complain about preaching on Trinity Sunday. Three
reasons:
*First
of all it’s a doctrine. This is the only Christian Holy Day that celebrates a
“doctrine”—not much of a story there….and it’s hard to tell a story about.
Since I think preaching is about 90% story telling, the Trinity presents a
problem.
*Secondly,
just about everything that “can be said” about the Trinity “has been said”. Not
much new ground to cover about 3 in One and One in 3. Not a lot of room to
maneuver. Better to just sing “Holy, Holy, Holy” and let it go at that.
*But
finally, I think what we’ve done, as Christians, with the doctrine of the
Trinity, is that we have limited and constricted our opportunity to “know and
be known by God”. The Church has used the Trinity to narrow the possibilities
to discover God and be discovered by God.
I’m
really quite exhausted at tilting with the Trinity. I don’t make any friends,
usually, by criticizing such a basic Christian doctrine. In fact, by taking on
the Trinity and trying to open it up so it “includes” rather than “excludes”
our experiences of God, by doing that I tend to alienate and confuse rather
than enlighten. And there’s always the danger that someone who hears me whine
and complain about how limiting and narrow the Trinity has made the church will
call the Doctrine Police or the Bishop and turn me in for trashing the Trinity.
And
I really don’t need to deal with the inquisition of bishops about my doctrinal
purity….
So,
how about this: I’ll stop now if you’ll tell everyone that I really did preach
about the Trinity today and it wasn’t half bad….How about that?
Ah,
a good idea, but in the end it won’t work. After all, I get paid to talk about this stuff and you—well, actually, you pay to listen to me talk about this
stuff.
Boy,
that’s a weird way to think about preaching, isn’t it?
Ok,
I’m going to take one swipe at it. Here goes….
Things Happen and then we talk about what happened. The
confusion arises because “what we SAY about WHAT HAPPENED” becomes all
entangled with WHAT HAPPENED so that we can’t distinguish between what WE SAID
and WHAT HAPPENED any more.
Here’s
the only example I’m going to give you: two people have a disagreement (that’s
What Happens) and then they both go off and “say things” about the
disagreement.
Two
people: parent/child; husband/wife; brother/sister; two friends; two enemies;
two strangers—pick which works for you or make up another one that works
better—so two people have a disagreement. (What they disagree about
doesn’t matter: politics, abortion, the war in Iraq, religion, what color to paint
the living room, what to have for dinner, where to go on vacation, whose turn
it is to take out the garbage, Red Sox/Yankees…pick a disagreement that is
alive in your life.)
All
that “happens” is that two people disagree. That’s all that happens.
But
one of them says, “if you don’t respect my opinion, you don’t respect me.”
The
other one says, “if you don’t agree with me, you don’t love me.”
So,
suddenly, whether to have chicken or fish has become an issue of “respect” and
“love” and a disagreement about what to have for dinner has become a struggle
about the meaning of life. It’s like the War about the Position of the Toilet
Seat. It’s the reason public bathrooms are gender specific. Otherwise men and
women would be murdering each other in airports and restaurants over the toilet
seat. Whether you leave the toilet seat up or down becomes an issue about
respect or love.
Listen:
it’s just a toilet seat….
Hold
the “chicken or fish” disagreement and the Toilet Seat War in your mind for a
moment.
SOMETHING
HAPPENED. People experienced God. People knew and were known by God. People
encountered the Holy and discovered the Eternal.
Then,
some of those people, known as Christians, started talking about WHAT HAPPENED
and where the conversation led was that they “named” WHAT HAPPENED when they
experienced God. The names they came up with were FATHER, SON and HOLY SPIRIT.
Do
you see that the Trinity, as a Doctrine, is something Christians have “said”
about experiencing God?
God
didn’t make the Trinity up—the Church did. God just shows up to be known and to
know us. God just shows up to be discovered and experienced and encountered and
unconcealed. God just shows up. And then we SAY THINGS about what we discovered
and experienced and encountered and unconcealed and took a vote and said:
“Let’s call What Happened there Father, son and holy spirit.”
Now,
the problem becomes that how we “named” experiencing
God—what we “said about” the experience of God for Christians—limits and
narrows how we “experience God” in the future.
If
your “experience of God” doesn’t neatly fit into FATHER/SON/HOLY SPIRIT…well,
well then, that must not be God you’re experiencing, fellow.
The
church has a habit of “getting in the way of God”.
Some
of the most holy and spiritual people I know never darken the door of a church.
And when I can engage them in conversation, they tell me that the church keeps getting
in the way of their experience of God.
The
Church is all about control and order and crowd management and drawing lines
and boundaries to decide “who’s in” and “who’s out”. God is all about freedom
and chaos and messiness and drawing circles so eternally large that everyone is
included.
I
believe the church has to get out of the “Being In The Way of God” business and
get into the “Opening The Path to God” business.
If
the doctrine of the Trinity works for you, that’s Great. Really, I mean it. I’m
not messing with what “works” for you in knowing and being known by God.
What
I want to do is open the doors and windows and knocking down the walls so that
we—as the church—can welcome home Dangerous Mystics and Spiritual Rebels.
That’s
the business the church should be in: creating Dangerous Mystics and Spiritual
Rebels.
The
business the church should be in is the business of “letting God be God” and
not limiting how God can show up and be discovered and experienced and
encountered.
GOD
HELP US—and I mean that quite literally—if we don’t commit ourselves to
“getting out of God’s way”. That’s the Church’s real job—and our only
job—getting out of God’s way. So call the bishop if you must. Tell him he’ll
find me somewhere trying to stay out of God’s way….
Friday, June 5, 2020
After Life
I just watched the 4th episode of After Life, a comedy (of sorts) written, directed by and staring Rickie Gervais.
His wife has died and he is considering suicide (not funny so far--but it is). He works for a small newspaper in England and has, as he tells a co-worker in this episode, never tried to 'move up' because all he wanted to do was get home and be with his wife.
It's on Netflix, if you have that, and is really warm and tender and, in it's own way, funny.
Rickie Gervais is one of the wonders of our time. You can find him all over you tube too.
Well worth finding and watching.
(See, I got through a whole post without being political!!! But it was hard.)
His wife has died and he is considering suicide (not funny so far--but it is). He works for a small newspaper in England and has, as he tells a co-worker in this episode, never tried to 'move up' because all he wanted to do was get home and be with his wife.
It's on Netflix, if you have that, and is really warm and tender and, in it's own way, funny.
Rickie Gervais is one of the wonders of our time. You can find him all over you tube too.
Well worth finding and watching.
(See, I got through a whole post without being political!!! But it was hard.)
Thursday, June 4, 2020
Birds, birds everywhere
I heard part of an NPR story about Black bird watchers today. They all said there were more birds and more different birds than they remember.
While we stay 'at home', Nature flourishes.
Maybe the planet would be better off without us--or, at least, with much fewer of us.
The pandemic and our reactions to it has been good for birds, for all nature, really.
We have more birds in our back yard than ever before. Cardinals, Robins, Wrens, Crows, Sparrows, even a few Hawks, and birds I don't recognize.
It is a symphony of birdsong.
I love it.
I sit on our deck and listen and watch.
Birds, the last of the dinosaurs, are wondrous, beautiful, much welcomed in the so-strange time we are in.
Go outside, enjoy them.
Give thanks for them.
Sing with them.
Welcome them to make our lives more lovely, more calm, more wondrous.
While we stay 'at home', Nature flourishes.
Maybe the planet would be better off without us--or, at least, with much fewer of us.
The pandemic and our reactions to it has been good for birds, for all nature, really.
We have more birds in our back yard than ever before. Cardinals, Robins, Wrens, Crows, Sparrows, even a few Hawks, and birds I don't recognize.
It is a symphony of birdsong.
I love it.
I sit on our deck and listen and watch.
Birds, the last of the dinosaurs, are wondrous, beautiful, much welcomed in the so-strange time we are in.
Go outside, enjoy them.
Give thanks for them.
Sing with them.
Welcome them to make our lives more lovely, more calm, more wondrous.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Blog Archive
About Me
- Under The Castor Oil Tree
- some ponderings by an aging white man who is an Episcopal priest in Connecticut. Now retired but still working and still wondering what it all means...all of it.