April 24, 2008

A Shameful Silence

The sad reality of suicide is a decision, once made and successful, that becomes irreversible. Once final, there is no second guessing, no second chances and no last saves. It is a terrible, heart-wrenching experience for the survivors compounding the already painful experience of loss, separation and grief. Even worse, suicide seems to be growing in the United States.

While suicide rates had fallen from 1990-2003, the next year experienced a spike of 76 percent for preteen and young teen girls, a 32 percent increase for older teen girls, ages 15-19 with a 9 percent rise for young men in that same age category. This increase accounted for suicide as the third leading cause of death among youths and young adults aged 10–24 years in the United States, in 2004 accounting for 4,599 deaths.

This desperate phenomenon is not limited to young persons. The recent issue of Newsweek believes the profession with the highest rate of suicide is none other than doctors, accounting for 300-400 deaths a year, prompting a documentary airing next month on PBS entitled, “Suffering in Silence.” Jim Evans, a Baptist minister in Alabama has written convincingly how the stigma of mental illness casts a shameful shadow over the necessity of seeking help, especially for those in the “healing profession.”

Yet, even more disturbing and alarming, are the reports of suicide from returning veterans after combat service in Iraq or Afghanistan. Sen. Patty Murray (D-Washington State) is questioning the Veterans Administration’s official assessment and possible cover-up of the wide-spread pervasiveness of this problem, citing internal e-mails that put the number at 12,000 a year while the department was publicly saying it was fewer than 800. If this job was not dangerous enough, it seems those suffering with physical or mental illnesses from post-combat trauma are the most at risk.

It’s hard to imagine the utter sense of surrender that would prompt someone to take their own life. While the mental illness component is staggering and significant, all suicides are not limited to a classic case of “being depressed.” Coping with tremendous loss, enduring chronic pain, dealing with substance abuse and suffering with emotionally unstable personality disorders are other factors. The remedy is not just helping others “feel better,” but addressing the conditions of desperation, hopelessness and resignation that are larger than any one single person.

The church should be a safe place for addressing these ills. We affirm our weaknesses in the light of God’s greater love and grace. We teach about the frailty of our existence and the necessary dependence we all have upon God. We are called to be compassionate in word and in deed. We are to pray for one another and to bear one another’s burdens.

But I fear too many, far too many are suffering in silence. May our awareness be heightened, our hearts be enlarged and our ears be ready to listen – to the cries of our neighbors, our families, our youth, our returning soldiers and yes, even our own physicians.

April 16, 2008

Tracking My Faithfulness

The numbers are astounding.

  • In a typical lifetime, each American will contribute 64 tons of waste to a landfill, 13 tons will be plastic.

  • As a nation, 60 million plastic bottles are thrown away everyday, that’s 694 bottles every second.
  • Our nation also throws away 11 million tons of glass bottles every year, equivalent to 440 Titanics or 30 Empire State Buildings
  • 100 million aluminum and steel cans are disposed of every day in American enough to build a roof over New York City – accumulating to 36 billion cans tossed out every year.

These figures were all part of a special documentary called The Human Footprint from National Geographic that recently aired this past Sunday evening for the first time and portions can still be watched here.

It reminds me of a reoccurring dream. Like Scrooge in The Christmas Carol, I am transported to a ledge surrounding a large pit. “Look!” says my host. I first resist, fearing what is below until curiosity spurred by another command forces my attention to an immense pile of rotting and rusty junk. The remnants of hollowed-out old cars, refrigerators, washing machines, televisions and computers can be seen amongst the rancid heaps of trash.

I anticipate what will be said next before it is actually spoken. It is too painfully obvious. “These are the possessions that have passed through your care,” begins my host. “In part this is the influence of you life upon the planet. This is the trail you have left behind.”

I have a hard time understanding why the stewardship of the earth has not been a stronger moral concern for the spiritual community. Somehow the debate on “climate change” and the trappings of affluence have clouded an issue of explicit and clear responsibility. After all, if the stakes are the survival of the planet, shouldn’t prudence and wisdom encourage us at the very least, to err on the side of caution?

Therefore, I support “America’s Climate Security Act” (S. 2191) a bi-partisan global warming bill co-sponsored by Senators John Warner and Joe Lieberman. It will be considered for approval early this summer.

Yes, adding my signature of support is more ink on a page or at least some tiny binary string out there, somewhere in cyberspace. But it helps me remember the tracks I leave behind will matter. Practicing conservation, re-cycling, cultivating a simplicity and freedom toward greater generosity, deepening a sacred appreciation for things currently in our care and working together for sensible environmental protections are all spiritual practices. We pray the good that can be gained will out-weight the byproducts of what is left behind.

The result will surely influence that hopeful declaration, “Well done, good and faithful servant.”

April 10, 2008

Undecided…?

Are we really that easy to manipulate?

Leave the Herd.

READ,

THINK,

VOTE !

April 2, 2008

Beatitudes of a Prophet

Blessed are the poor in spirit, who also are rich in wisdom.
Blessed are those who mourn, who also are not afraid of death.
Blessed are the meek, who also are not timid.
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, who also are not spiritually smug.
Blessed are the merciful, who also are not weak.
Blessed are the pure in heart, who also are wise of mind.
Blessed are the peacemakers, who also are not afraid of conflict.
Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, who also are not self-righteousness.
Blessed are you when people revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you because you decided to stand up and speak out for those who were poor, oppressed and forgotten.

Rejoice for your eye is not on earthly praise but upon heaven’s prophetic power.

 

March 30, 2008

I can say nothing of God, except…

I can say nothing of God, except
that I saw the red flames of a
cardinal against the snow this
morning as I drank tea.

I can say nothing of God, except
that the warm smell of potato soup
and the sharp tang of cheddar cheese
shimmied up my nose when a friend
made lunch for me.

I can say nothing of God, except
that in the afternoon I washed my
face in a cold mountain stream,
and it stung my skin and left me feeling
fresh and clean.

I can say nothing of God, except
that two nights ago a cricket
sang a funny song in my closet
amidst the socks and silence.

I can say nothing of God, except
that stones can speak,
and deer fly in my dreams,
that a strange child smiled at me
in the supermarket,
and that each blade of green grass
wears a locket with God’s face inside,
and that on every hair on my cat’s face
is written Alleluia!

I can say nothing of God, except
that the rough texture of
grainy bread on my tongue
and the sweet, liquid acid of grape
in my throat
are a bittersweet memory of
compassion
and a taste of heaven.

-Diane Gibbons, Rune Hill Newsletter, 20 (Spring/Summer 93), 1
.

March 29, 2008

The Wright Context

I am a pastor who has had things I’ve said taken out of context.  It’s a professional hazard as old as the practice of using Bible verses out of context to support a different viewpoint.   For those of us in the field of religion, it is not very surprising when it happens.   But, in a sound bite world, the dangers and misconceptions it now provides can be astounding.

I don’t agree with everything Rev. Dr. Wright has said.  But I will defend his right to say it and applaud his prophetic challenge to our mistaken superiority.   We are not right because of our might.   Being right begins with our commitment to a free exchange of ideas.  Free speech, free assembly and free expression are the rights of a free people.

Examine the context of Dr. Wright’s address, then decide, “Does he have a right to his opinion?” 

March 11, 2008

BCG on PTI

University of Kentucky basketball coach Billy Gillispie is interviewed on ESPN’s Pardon the Interruption.

March 11, 2008

Torture

While reading the mystery Dissolution by C. J. Sansom set in 1537 about a series of murders in an English monastery, this thought:

“Torture is not done by sensible men seeking truth,
but by cowardly men promoting fear.”

Sign the petition and support the Anti-Torture Act (H.R. 4114) for action by the U.S. Congress.

Disclaimer: All opinions, political or otherwise are my own and do not represent the views of any other affiliated organization or group.

March 9, 2008

Brother, can you spare a square mile?

I’m looking at a chart on world populations.

world.gif

Here’s what surprises me:

The United States is the third most populated country in the world.

Triple our population – relative to our land mass, that’s a picture of China.

Keep this population and reduce our land mass by 1/3 — Welcome to India!

March 9, 2008

A Simple Theology

The older I become, the simpler I’m finding my theology becoming as well.

I could say “God is Love” is sufficient or maybe, just “love.”  But I’m not that far yet, though I am just that simple. But for now, I believe these things:

  1. Jesus’ life and teachings are the clearest lens available to know God.
  2. Jesus invites us to this picture of God to inform how we relate to all things.
  3. Following this image is the way to new, eternal, and abundant life.
  4. We are not alone, but the gift of the Spirit guides and empowers this journey.

Four points.  Like I said, maybe three points too many.