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Primitive religion is not believed, it is danced!

Arthur Darby Nock

Earth's crammed with heaven,
And every common bush afire with God;
And only he who sees takes off his shoes;
The rest sit round it and pluck blackberries.

Elizabeth Browning



Thursday, June 19, 2025

Grace is not transactional

Our success-driven culture scorns failure, powerlessness, and any form of poverty. Yet Jesus begins his Sermon on the Mount by praising “the poor in spirit” (Matthew 5:3)! Just that should tell us how thoroughly we have missed the point of the gospel. Nonviolence, weakness, and simplicity are also part of the Western shadow self. We avoid the very things that Jesus praises, and we try to project a strong, secure, successful image to ourselves and the world. We reject vulnerability and seek dominance instead, and we elect leaders who falsely promise us the same.

 

I can see why my spiritual father, St. Francis of Assisi, made a revolutionary and pre-emptive move into the shadow self from which everyone else ran. In effect, Francis said through his lifestyle, “I will delight in powerlessness, humility, poverty, simplicity, and failure.” He lived so close to the bottom of things that there was no place to fall. Even when insulted, he did not take offence. Now that is freedom, or what he called “perfect joy”!  

          Richard Rohr – Daily Meditations

______________________

 

How can I profit you?

Let me count the ways.

 

Any leader who has any savvy at all

Knows that the way to recruit followers

Is to make it all about them

 

Their wants, needs, fears, and yes

Hope

 

In 1860 Abraham Lincoln’s slogan was “Vote Yourself a Farm”

1920   Warren G. Harding promised a “Return to Normalcy.”

In 1928, Herbert Hoover promised “A Chicken in Every Pot and a Car in Every Garage.”

In 1956, Dwight Eisenhower offered “Peace and Prosperity.”

In 1980, Ronald Reagan asked, “Are you better off than you were four years ago?”

 

And Trump?

Trump offered people power and wealth, too.

 

Dominance seems to be woven into the fabric of our being

The need to win (so much winning we get tired of it)

The need to dominate and control

To succeed and accumulate

 

There are anomalies

St Francis of Assisi, who said

“I will delight in powerlessness, humility, poverty, simplicity, and failure.”

 

Quite a mission statement

 

And people such as Gandhi, Mandela, Martin Luther King Jr.,

Mother Theresa and Pope Francis

 

Who, though imperfect and flawed

Had servant hearts

 

But we live in a top-down, power-over world

Where the goals are to be in a position of power

And to “have” as much of everything as one possibly can

 

So we value those people with power

And actively devalue those who do not

Indeed, our very goal is to put as many people

“Beneath us” as we possibly can

 

We assume those with wealth must inherently be

richer, wiser, harder working, better

than those who happen to be poor

 

We know this is true, whether we want to admit it

Or not

 

We tend to avoid and ignore looking at our dysfunctional relationship

With power and wealth

With winning and domination

 

So we don’t admit to ourselves.

Or confession to God, our addiction to domination

 

Which is why very pious (in the legitimate sense) people

Can embrace an ideology that is fundamentally

“Not Jesus’

 

Which is why we now have in power a movement whose core values are

Reclaiming White Privilege (aka Racism)

Using power ON others (not FOR others)

Retribution (rather than reconciliation)

Exclusivity rather than inclusion

Radical safety rather than vulnerability

The accumulation of resources by a few,

Rather than the use of resources for the common good

 

We have become fearful hoarders.

People who must win at any cost

People who make others less so we might be more

 

We have become people willing to

Demonize, neglect, deport, suppress, oppress others

For our own benefit

 

I don’t think Jesus would be very popular today

Not in America

Can you imagine a candidate who said

Love your enemies":

Turn the other cheek

Sell everything you have and give to the poor

 

The way of Jesus is hard.

 

O God of love

Forgive us when we become addicted to strength and success

Forgive us when we reject vulnerability and seek dominance instead,

Help us to be people who like Francis

delight in powerlessness, humility, poverty, simplicity, and failure

 

Who do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit.

But in humility value others above ourselves,

And look not to our own interests but to the interests of others.

 

Give us the mindset of Jesus.

Make us servants

 

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