Category: Theological Rant


Lyrics for Lent

As Lent begins I am listening to some of my favorite lyrics again.   During lent I will post the lyrics to the song that I am listening too all week as part of my journey as a Disciple of Jesus.

“Still”
by Alanis Morissette
Dogma Soundtrack, 1999

I am the harm which you inflict
I am your brilliance and frustration
I’m the nuclear bombs if they’re to hit
I’m your immaturaty and your indignance

I am your misfits and your praised
I am your doubt and your conviction

I am your charity and your rape
I am your grasping and expectation

I see you averting your glances
I see you cheering on the war
I see you ignoring your children
And I love you still
And I love you still

I am your joy and your regret
I am your fury and your elation
I am your yearning and your sweat
I am your faithless and your religion

I see you altering history
I see you abusing the land
I see you and your selective amnesia
And I love you still
And I love you still

I am your tragedy and your fortune
I am your crisis and delight
I am your profits and your prophets
I am your art, I am your bytes
I am your death and your decisions
I am your passion and your plights
I am your sickness and convalescence
I am your weapons and your light

I see you holding your grudges
I see you gunning them down
I see you silencing your sisters
And I love you still
And I love you (still)
I see you lie to your country
I see you forcing them out
I see you blaming each other
And I love you still
I love you still

Can God Save Health Care?

Note from Michael D
My father is a Freemason. As a child I remember hearing him talk about a mason’s responsibility for helping the widow, the orphan, the less fortunate.  Today, when I ask about or he sees some misrepresentation of Masons in the media, he talks of the mason’s life as finding ‘light’ and that one cannot do that by simply tending to themselves or their clan.  Pop, if you see this post and my brief characterization of the mason’s journey is wrong, please respond and I will post.   And though you never pressured me about joining the lodge,  I’m sorry for not accepting your invitation all those years ago to follow the family legacy in the practice of mason principles.  I don’t think guilt is helpful to living, but that decision is something I continue to regret.

When I read this article by James Carroll I remembered hearing Pop talk about why he was a mason and what the journey to finding more light in your life is all about.  Mainline Christianity, in the name of unity, has been passive for 30 years as the rise of Christian fundamentalism has permeated our culture so much that the strategy enabled persons like Rep. Bachmann can get elected to service in our republic.  The late Jerry Falwell, and the others like him wanting a theocratic nation equal to that of biblical Israel, must be smarter than I gave them credit.  Maybe mainlines thought that an educated public would not be that naive.  Christian fundamentalism has taken over corners of some states and the airwaves.   I digress.  Mr. Carroll’s article points to the need for ‘why’ and ‘how’ conversations based on the ethics of living faith which is the moral authority that mainline Christianity has all but lost in the public forum.  President Obama and his handlers would be well advised to give his argument some thought and conversation in the coming week.

My thanks to Lisa, my companion, for asking some questions and her help with editing my note.

Can God Save Health Care?
by James Carroll, The Daily Beast

“President Obama got biblical the other day—or tried to, when he joined Moses at Mount Sinai to rebuke his opponents not merely for lying but for “bearing false witness.” In a telephone “call in” with leaders of liberal faith groups, Obama evoked the Ten Commandments to energize a left-wing version of the Religious Right, which has been wreaking such havoc in the health-care reform debate. If Obama wins, his holier-than-him opponents say, the government will fund abortions, Washington bureaucrats will run euthanasia agencies, and disabled people will be disappeared. Economic issues, which are complex, have taken second place to apocalyptic moralizing—the more simplistic the better.”

Click here to read the entire article.

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