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"Pacific Currents" Five years ago, just before Annual Meeting, I received a letter. It was probably a difficult letter to write. I know it was a painful letter to read. It came from a life-long member of the United Church of Christ, someone whose views on social issues and political realities would most assuredly be at odds with mine, someone whose faith is indisputably rooted in the same gracious Love as mine. It was a difficult letter because it slashed at the connections between Christian faith and social justice which, to me, are inseparable and inescapable. It was a painful letter because it captured so well the frustration of a person who feels her views demeaned, her faith unheeded. From her perspective the United Church of Christ has dismissed her and reduced Christian practice to the band-wagon support of trendy causes.
Seemingly, in the eyes of my correspondent, the UCC’s reach for hopes No. 1 and 3 had fallen short of our grasp.
In the current election year it is probably wise to remind ourselves as a church that there will be times — and there have been times — when our beliefs, our faith, our understanding of discipleship, impel us to actions in the sphere of politics. And to remind ourselves that as a church we know that we could count up the number of times when we’ve ever all agreed on anything and come up with a number that wasn’t much bigger than the number of candles on a toddler’s birthday cake. So it shouldn’t surprise us a whole lot when we disagree. On faith, on politics, or on the intersection, the “coincide-ence” of the two. What can we make of it when we find that fundamentalists and near-Buddhists, farm owners and farm workers, McCain and Clinton and Obama supporters are all clustering around the same communion table? What can we make of it, except that Jesus has called each one of us to be here — in the church and in the world? That the Creator loved the universe into being with lavish and tender attention to all manner of diversity? How can we live with our differences, not merely tolerating them but cherishing them, except by reminding ourselves that The Almighty has created each of us in the divine image? That’s life beyond the bandwagon. It’s Gospel
For previous editions of "Pacific Currents", click here. |
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