A homily preached on Sunday May 28, 2006 at New Spirit Community Church, in Berkeley, California.
Good morning! My name is Jim Weller. I’m your student intern pastor, and this is the last day of my official internship. I’ll bet you thought you were going to get away without having to hear me preach to you!
Perhaps I should explain the schema for our chapel arrangements this morning. White and red are the prescribed liturgical colors for the six Sundays after Easter, of which today is the last. I thought we would hang our United Church of Christ “God Is Still Speaking” identity banner, since we are now a full-fledged UCC church, and it matches the color scheme. And I just got back last Sunday from the UCC Northern California Nevada Conference Annual Meeting weekend at Asilomar, full of denominational identity!
I am, after all, a theological student, as I will continue to be until I become august and venerable, so I thought it good today to give you a brief survey of the key meanings of Christian theology, as I understand them. The core message is that love is what redeems us, but a few other theology words will make appearances, too. Don’t let them distract you!
Anyhow, I have my white and red on; my head is polished, so let’s go!
Let those with ears to hear listen:
“How big is God, Daddy? Is he bigger than a house?” asked Anna, the firstborn and the more pensive of my two preschool-aged daughters, one afternoon while they sat together, talking with me on the front porch.
“God is not a person, or a thing you can see, or touch, or hear,” I answered her, quite as thoughtfully. “God is . . . a feeling inside you. God is how you feel when you know you are alive. God is what you feel when you love someone. When you say, ‘I love you,’ you feel God in you.”
Anna sat quietly for half a minute, enjoying her ice cream cone. “I love you, Daddy”, she said.
“I know, sweetie. I love you, too. Listen. Do you remember the day we were at the beach, when you were kneeling in the wet sand, with your back to the waves, and you’d laugh as each wave surprised you, splashing over your shoulders? Maggie was playing by herself, near us on the big rocks, and you and I were there in the surf, and I’d laugh when you laughed, and you looked up at me then and yelled, ‘I’m happy!’ Do you remember how good you felt then? That was God, laughing inside you.”
Now, friends, I can speak to you in more sophisticated terms than one can with a child. To you I can affirm that yes, God is not only not a person and not a thing, God is utterly other – absolutely unlike any object of understanding. Nothing that can be said of anything in being can be said of God, as Godself.
And yet, God is nearer to us than we are to ourselves. God is not one and the same as everything in being, but God is real and present in every time and place, with every thing and every person, for God is being itself, ground of being, first and final cause of being. Creator and creation completely interpenetrated.
Our lives are God’s gifts of being, in relatedness with all other beings and being itself. We are given the gift of awareness of our relationship with God in each other, and our accepting response is love. There is no way by works of penitence to attain to the love of God. Love is the way.
Let me tell another story here. A Unitarian Universalist minister I know was preaching the good news of God’s love one day, and afterward an older man approached her with a question. Now this man, Bill, like most Unitarians, had an advanced education, and he was a perfectly rational thinker. He really was a rocket scientist. He and his colleagues knew how to put a man on the moon, and bring him back to tell about it – and they actually had.
So Bill asked, “Pastor, I know you believe in your experience of God’s presence, but how do you know that’s what you’re experiencing? How do you know it’s not just your imagination? Rachel could have launched into an intricate philosophical proof of the existence of God, and Bill could have followed it.
But instead, she asked him another question. “Bill,” she asked, “Have you ever been in love? I mean, really in love, so that everything was brighter, and more beautiful than before?” Bill smiled, remembering. “Oh yes,” he replied. “Well, how do you know?” she rejoined. “How do you know you didn’t just imagine it?
There you go.
Though any meaning we may attribute to God is but a metaphor, a symbol, or a sign pointing to the incomprehensible reality of God, one glorious affirmation is indubitably ours to make – God is! Ancient Hebrew Scripture tells us that that is how God, in the burning bush, told Moses God’s name – “I am!”
Centuries later, because he knew he was of God too, that is the way Jesus answered his accusers – “Before Abraham was, I am!”
“The glory of God is a human being fully alive,” wrote an early Christian, Irenaeus.
As it is said, we are children of God, beings made in God’s image. And by God’s holy grace, the same affirmation is ours to make in every season of our lives, in sorrow and in gladness, with our first breaths and our last, “Yes God – I am! I am of you and I am yours, God. Your will be done, not mine!”
Sh'ma Yisrael Adonai Elohenu Adonai Echod! "Hear, O Israel, Adonai your God is One!"
"You shall love Adonai your God with all your heart, all your mind, and all your strength, as you are beloved of God. You shall love your neighbor as you love yourself."
We are here to love one another, for that is the way to love God as we are beloved. These are the greatest commandments.
The relationship between God and human persons really is one of unending, unconditional love and acceptance. You are a beloved child of God in whom God delights. You are accepted in the kingdom of God, now and forever. God’s acceptance does not end.
That is the good news of God. Your part of the relationship is very simple: Accept your acceptance!
The way Jesus put the saving message was this: "The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent, and believe in the good news."
What this meant was that God's time is always fulfilled. The love and acceptance of God are immediately available for you, right here, right now.
To re-pent is to turn the soul round right. It means, "Think again!" It is to respond rightly to the good news of God. We take our turned-inward spirits and turn them inside out, turning the light of love toward God and other people.
Jesus taught us to believe that in this way only, we will be redeemed from sin.
Sin is not a popular topic in churches like ours, where the gospel of love is emphasized. We all know that mistaken ideas about sin have been used, or misused, in church as weapons to shame us in our expressions of love and the joy of living, and to separate us from the love of God.
No one is untouched by sin. William Sloane Coffin said that sin is the abuse of our God-given free will. I say that it almost always involves pridefulness and abuses of power. In any case, it erects barricades that keep love out.
Sin forms in the shadow of the isolated self that stands between the human soul and the light of God’s love.
To sin is to do the opposite of the Great Commandment to love God, and love others as oneself. It is to be alienated by self will from God's will to love unconditionally. It is to will harm, and to act harmfully, instead of for good. It is to abide in diffidence, ignoring and disguising the harm others and we do in our alienation. And, it builds up permanency in our social structures and inherited cultural traditions.
Sin and salvation could be explored at length in many other sermons. Understanding them is at the core of understanding the meaning of the gospel. But today’s topic is simply about love and acceptance.
The glad tiding of God is the good news that you are accepted! Sinners and saints alike. You have been beloved of God and accepted into God’s realm since the day you were born, and before then, and nothing you can do or believe, or not do or not believe, will cause God’s love and acceptance of you to be withdrawn.
All that is required of you for salvation is to accept your acceptance. Repentance of sin demands no more of you than this: "Do justice, love mercy, walk humbly in the presence of God."
Remission of sin is a process engaged in on the part of the human person who has accepted God’s unconditional acceptance – one who has been redeemed by simple surrender to divine love. It is a movement of the human spirit in love toward God, the divinity of being itself that is reflected in the human spirit.
One morning last weekend during the UCC Conference Annual Meeting, I took a walk by myself among the flowering dunes, back of Pebble Beach on Monterey Bay. The sky was full of sailing clouds and sunlight, and the wind tore wildly at my shirt. It would have whipped the hat off my head if it hadn’t been tied on. For weeks, I had been full of self-doubt, and despaired of the authenticity of my vocation, feeling alone and ill equipped to accept God’s calling – if it even was that, and not just my wishful imagination.
Then I rounded a bend in the path, coming into the lee of a sand dune under a sheltering growth of cypresses. And the wind ceased its howling. The hollow where I stood was bright and quiet. I reflected that this walk was a metaphor for these days of my arrival in the company of saints, so to speak. For I was a part of a gathering of members of the body of Christ, young and old, clergy and laity, ordinary human persons who were accepting their acceptance – and I was accepted among them, imperfect as I am.
[solo singing accompanied by choir, humming the melody] “Sometimes I feel discouraged, and think my work’s in vain, but then the Holy Spirit revives my soul again. There is a balm in Gilead, to make the wounded whole; there is a balm in Gilead, to heal the sin-sick soul.”
Salvation is never done once and for all. We need periodic renewal treatments, makeovers, or tune-ups. We salve each other. That’s why we pray and worship together. Salvation is the balm of God’s grace given freely and received by faith, and it is the way of life for God’s people. All people are chosen to be redeemed by God’s grace, if only we will accept God’s choice.
The Deuteronomist of ancient Israel discerned God’s message of salvation this way: “I have put before you life and death, blessing and curse. Choose life – so that you and your children may live" – by loving your God, heeding God’s commands, and holding fast to God.
Love made us, and it is what we are here for. Love is the way.
Let us choose accordingly, and love one another as God loves us.
May it be so. Amen.
Monday, May 29, 2006
Saturday, March 25, 2006
Anselm said it way back
More than a thousand years ago, way back in the early eleventh century, the Christian philosopher and logician Anselm of Canterbury used words to the following effect to express the meaning of the word, God:
“God is that reality than which nothing greater can be imagined.” This has stood as the generally accepted meaning of God among people of discernment and wisdom ever since. Than which nothing greater can be imagined.
Apparently alone among earthly beings, we humans are creatures of awesome imaginative powers. We are, beyond doubt, perfectly real ourselves, and we can imagine, as though real, things and configurations far beyond our personal realities, some of them so fantastic they could never be made real – but some can be, and sometimes actually are.
You are real. Your personal reality is indubitable. It is deeply rooted in the ground of being itself. But you are a finite reality. Your physical being is contained within the boundaries of a relatively small envelope of space and time. You were born a few years ago, and before then, you were not. You will die some time hence, and again you will be not.
While you live, you have mental capacities that enable you to perceive, in limited ways, areas of reality beyond your personal envelope. And you have high-order mental capacities by virtue of which you may imagine incomprehensibly vast, but still finite, extensions of space-time. Of the unknowably great, but not infinite, number of intelligible realities that can, in principle, be imagined, you can even imagine the totality of reality – sort of.
But there, you reach your personal limit. You cannot imagine that ultimate reality than which nothing greater can be imagined. That would be God. In contemporary theology, God is ultimate reality, being itself, the ground of being. Or, in ancient Greek thought, the unmoved mover, first cause and final cause, the uncreated creator.
Any word-concepts that may be attributed to God as God are ones that may not be said of anything in being, or even all of everything ever in being. God is infinite. God is eternal. God is absolute, unchanging, indivisible, and ever present. To some minds, God is omniscient, omnipotent, and all good.
None of these terms can be truthfully said of a person, any person. Therefore, obviously, God as God is not a person. God as God is not even a being, the popular term Supreme Being notwithstanding. Because God as a Supreme Being, exalted above and all-powerful over all other beings, can be imagined, just barely.
That cannot be a description of God. God is that than which nothing greater can be imagined. The only reality, the only being greater than which nothing can be imagined is ultimate reality, reality itself, being itself.
And, since you are a temporal, finite but fully real being, embedded, as it were, in the infinite eternal reality of being itself, and since you are (by now) conscious of your curious position (this should blow your mind), you are a personal being in conscious relationship with being itself, that ultimate reality in which you exist, out of which you came, and into which you will return. You are in direct and intimate relationship with God. You are of God. Your very being is a manifestation of God. God is closer to you than you are to yourself.
And since you are a being who, finite and temporal creature though you are, is capable of reflecting consciously on all the multifarious aspects of reality of which you are a part, and even on reality itself, it can be well said that you are the consciousness of being itself.
Now if you speak of God using the language proper to persons, which God is not, but most people routinely do anyway, you could say that yours are the eyes through which God looks upon God’s Creation. Yours is the mind by which God perceives, and feels, and knows, and apprehends those proximate aspects of reality that are accessible to you, including the reality and presence of Godself.
This amazing way of understanding the basics of theology is not new, as I have mentioned. I believe it was the core insight of ancient Israelite monotheism, and hence, of all religious traditions which followed after it. Only the most elite priests, monks, and scholars understood it, of course. Listen to what Teresa of Avila, a sixteenth century Spanish saint, said about all this:
“Christ has no body on earth but ours, no hands but ours, no feet but ours. Ours are the eyes through which the compassion of Christ looks out upon the world, ours are the feet with which he goes about doing good, ours are the hands with which he blesses his people.”
Now, by the time Teresa wrote that, the Christian church had developed an elaborate Christology, a subdivision of theology, in which Jesus Christ was understood to have been fully human – meaning finite, temporal, and historically contingent, in his lifetime, and that he was nonetheless fully God, and merged with God, especially after his crucifixion and resurrection, being or becoming one of three divine persons, or substances, which together comprise God. Christ was the aspect of God with whom human persons could most easily and directly relate.
Because of the way most people think – other than erudite theologians and philosophers –people’s ways of relating to God, and having discourse about God, are personalized. This is to be expected, since we are persons, and those other beings with whom we are most significantly related are persons. (In my person-ology, higher vertebrates are kinds of persons, too, since human persons have psychologically significant affective and cognitive relationships with them, and we have the same lower brain architecture.)
Each one of us, whether we recognize it or not, is in profound relationship with God, a relationship more ultimate, and ultimately more meaningful, than any other human relationship can be. God is not a person, but, given the ultimate concern (to use Paul Tillich’s term) of human persons in their relationship with God, and their need to express themselves about that relation to others, God is necessarily spoken of, depicted, and thought of as a personified being.
Thus, God is given names, and prayers are directed to God as though God were a person capable of receiving them and answering. All of this kind of God-talk is metaphoric, because it has to be. Nothing pertinent to persons, or beings of any sort whatsoever can be said of, or thought of, or attributed to God as God.
However, I am a man of charity and mercy, and I understand that, even though metaphoric, we tend to relate to God by names and social identities which are proper to the most significant other persons with whom we are related. Thus we have LORD God the Father, God the Son, Lord Jesus Christ, Mary Virgin Mother of God, and so forth.
If this is the way that most folks put their spirituality into words, who am I to disabuse them? It takes little or no effort for me to convert such metaphoric terms to simple signs pointing, for me, to the reality they signify, as I understand it. Anyway, I sort of enjoy the sweet quaintness of these artifacts of folk religion.
When I am in the company of cognoscenti who insist on political correctness achieved through use of inclusive language for talking about God, I usually go along with their shortcomings of tolerance, and avoid pronouncing any God names or pronouns smacking of patriarchy, racism, or androcentrism. Even though the Bible is, in fact, shot through with all of those unwelcome characters, there are always ways the text can be revised to clean it up.
The most important thing to remember about God and your relationship with God is that God is love; you are a beloved child of God, created by God in God’s own image. Metaphorically speaking, of course. God’s love – a metaphoric construction signifying an ineffable reality – is not the same as human persons’ love, though it is fair to say that our love for each other and God is inspired by and responds to God’s love for us.
The nature and meaning of the relationship between God and human persons really is unending, unconditional love and acceptance. Though it is a metaphor, it is an accessible one. You are a beloved child of God in whom God delights. You are accepted in the kingdom of God. No matter who you are, what you have done, or intended, or said, or thought, or believed.
That is the good news of God. Your part of the relationship is very simple: Accept your acceptance. The way Jesus put it was this:
“The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent, and believe in the good news.”
What this meant was that God’s time is always fulfilled; the power, love, and acceptance of God is always immediately available – here and now, for you; take your gnarly turned-inward spirit-mind and turn it inside out, toward God and other people; and believe that in this way, you will be redeemed from sin.
When you have made that spiritual conversion, that repentance, that metanoia, you will be able to live in the way recommended by Jesus and stated in the Torah centuries earlier:
“You shall love the LORD your God with all your heart, and all your mind, and all your spirit; and you shall love your neighbors as you love yourself.”
And the prophet Micah, also long before Jesus’ time, summed up the Torah this way:
“What does the LORD your God require of you, but to do justly, love mercy, and walk humbly with your God?”
So there you have it. It’s not rocket science, is it? All you have to do to get right with God is to love with all your heart, all your soul, and your entire mind. Love God, as you are beloved of God. Love your neighbors as yourself. Love your enemies. (That pretty much covers everyone.)
Do justly. (That means avoid doing harm, and do good whenever possible.) Love mercy. (That implies loving kindness, care for the sick and suffering, nonviolence in action and intention.) Walk humbly with God. (God is always with you; stay in right relationship with God.)
Of course, there is no guarantee you won’t get into trouble in the world, especially if you go around doing evil – but then you might get away with it after all, particularly if you’re very powerful. In the end, of course, you will die and be not, just as all creatures do.
Remember that you are just one finite, temporal human soul in exquisitely interconnected interdependence with all other people, and all life on Earth. Take from the abundance of the world only what you need to live simply, that others may simply live. (If you wind up with a little more than you need, don’t worry – you can give some away!)
“God is that reality than which nothing greater can be imagined.” This has stood as the generally accepted meaning of God among people of discernment and wisdom ever since. Than which nothing greater can be imagined.
Apparently alone among earthly beings, we humans are creatures of awesome imaginative powers. We are, beyond doubt, perfectly real ourselves, and we can imagine, as though real, things and configurations far beyond our personal realities, some of them so fantastic they could never be made real – but some can be, and sometimes actually are.
You are real. Your personal reality is indubitable. It is deeply rooted in the ground of being itself. But you are a finite reality. Your physical being is contained within the boundaries of a relatively small envelope of space and time. You were born a few years ago, and before then, you were not. You will die some time hence, and again you will be not.
While you live, you have mental capacities that enable you to perceive, in limited ways, areas of reality beyond your personal envelope. And you have high-order mental capacities by virtue of which you may imagine incomprehensibly vast, but still finite, extensions of space-time. Of the unknowably great, but not infinite, number of intelligible realities that can, in principle, be imagined, you can even imagine the totality of reality – sort of.
But there, you reach your personal limit. You cannot imagine that ultimate reality than which nothing greater can be imagined. That would be God. In contemporary theology, God is ultimate reality, being itself, the ground of being. Or, in ancient Greek thought, the unmoved mover, first cause and final cause, the uncreated creator.
Any word-concepts that may be attributed to God as God are ones that may not be said of anything in being, or even all of everything ever in being. God is infinite. God is eternal. God is absolute, unchanging, indivisible, and ever present. To some minds, God is omniscient, omnipotent, and all good.
None of these terms can be truthfully said of a person, any person. Therefore, obviously, God as God is not a person. God as God is not even a being, the popular term Supreme Being notwithstanding. Because God as a Supreme Being, exalted above and all-powerful over all other beings, can be imagined, just barely.
That cannot be a description of God. God is that than which nothing greater can be imagined. The only reality, the only being greater than which nothing can be imagined is ultimate reality, reality itself, being itself.
And, since you are a temporal, finite but fully real being, embedded, as it were, in the infinite eternal reality of being itself, and since you are (by now) conscious of your curious position (this should blow your mind), you are a personal being in conscious relationship with being itself, that ultimate reality in which you exist, out of which you came, and into which you will return. You are in direct and intimate relationship with God. You are of God. Your very being is a manifestation of God. God is closer to you than you are to yourself.
And since you are a being who, finite and temporal creature though you are, is capable of reflecting consciously on all the multifarious aspects of reality of which you are a part, and even on reality itself, it can be well said that you are the consciousness of being itself.
Now if you speak of God using the language proper to persons, which God is not, but most people routinely do anyway, you could say that yours are the eyes through which God looks upon God’s Creation. Yours is the mind by which God perceives, and feels, and knows, and apprehends those proximate aspects of reality that are accessible to you, including the reality and presence of Godself.
This amazing way of understanding the basics of theology is not new, as I have mentioned. I believe it was the core insight of ancient Israelite monotheism, and hence, of all religious traditions which followed after it. Only the most elite priests, monks, and scholars understood it, of course. Listen to what Teresa of Avila, a sixteenth century Spanish saint, said about all this:
“Christ has no body on earth but ours, no hands but ours, no feet but ours. Ours are the eyes through which the compassion of Christ looks out upon the world, ours are the feet with which he goes about doing good, ours are the hands with which he blesses his people.”
Now, by the time Teresa wrote that, the Christian church had developed an elaborate Christology, a subdivision of theology, in which Jesus Christ was understood to have been fully human – meaning finite, temporal, and historically contingent, in his lifetime, and that he was nonetheless fully God, and merged with God, especially after his crucifixion and resurrection, being or becoming one of three divine persons, or substances, which together comprise God. Christ was the aspect of God with whom human persons could most easily and directly relate.
Because of the way most people think – other than erudite theologians and philosophers –people’s ways of relating to God, and having discourse about God, are personalized. This is to be expected, since we are persons, and those other beings with whom we are most significantly related are persons. (In my person-ology, higher vertebrates are kinds of persons, too, since human persons have psychologically significant affective and cognitive relationships with them, and we have the same lower brain architecture.)
Each one of us, whether we recognize it or not, is in profound relationship with God, a relationship more ultimate, and ultimately more meaningful, than any other human relationship can be. God is not a person, but, given the ultimate concern (to use Paul Tillich’s term) of human persons in their relationship with God, and their need to express themselves about that relation to others, God is necessarily spoken of, depicted, and thought of as a personified being.
Thus, God is given names, and prayers are directed to God as though God were a person capable of receiving them and answering. All of this kind of God-talk is metaphoric, because it has to be. Nothing pertinent to persons, or beings of any sort whatsoever can be said of, or thought of, or attributed to God as God.
However, I am a man of charity and mercy, and I understand that, even though metaphoric, we tend to relate to God by names and social identities which are proper to the most significant other persons with whom we are related. Thus we have LORD God the Father, God the Son, Lord Jesus Christ, Mary Virgin Mother of God, and so forth.
If this is the way that most folks put their spirituality into words, who am I to disabuse them? It takes little or no effort for me to convert such metaphoric terms to simple signs pointing, for me, to the reality they signify, as I understand it. Anyway, I sort of enjoy the sweet quaintness of these artifacts of folk religion.
When I am in the company of cognoscenti who insist on political correctness achieved through use of inclusive language for talking about God, I usually go along with their shortcomings of tolerance, and avoid pronouncing any God names or pronouns smacking of patriarchy, racism, or androcentrism. Even though the Bible is, in fact, shot through with all of those unwelcome characters, there are always ways the text can be revised to clean it up.
The most important thing to remember about God and your relationship with God is that God is love; you are a beloved child of God, created by God in God’s own image. Metaphorically speaking, of course. God’s love – a metaphoric construction signifying an ineffable reality – is not the same as human persons’ love, though it is fair to say that our love for each other and God is inspired by and responds to God’s love for us.
The nature and meaning of the relationship between God and human persons really is unending, unconditional love and acceptance. Though it is a metaphor, it is an accessible one. You are a beloved child of God in whom God delights. You are accepted in the kingdom of God. No matter who you are, what you have done, or intended, or said, or thought, or believed.
That is the good news of God. Your part of the relationship is very simple: Accept your acceptance. The way Jesus put it was this:
“The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent, and believe in the good news.”
What this meant was that God’s time is always fulfilled; the power, love, and acceptance of God is always immediately available – here and now, for you; take your gnarly turned-inward spirit-mind and turn it inside out, toward God and other people; and believe that in this way, you will be redeemed from sin.
When you have made that spiritual conversion, that repentance, that metanoia, you will be able to live in the way recommended by Jesus and stated in the Torah centuries earlier:
“You shall love the LORD your God with all your heart, and all your mind, and all your spirit; and you shall love your neighbors as you love yourself.”
And the prophet Micah, also long before Jesus’ time, summed up the Torah this way:
“What does the LORD your God require of you, but to do justly, love mercy, and walk humbly with your God?”
So there you have it. It’s not rocket science, is it? All you have to do to get right with God is to love with all your heart, all your soul, and your entire mind. Love God, as you are beloved of God. Love your neighbors as yourself. Love your enemies. (That pretty much covers everyone.)
Do justly. (That means avoid doing harm, and do good whenever possible.) Love mercy. (That implies loving kindness, care for the sick and suffering, nonviolence in action and intention.) Walk humbly with God. (God is always with you; stay in right relationship with God.)
Of course, there is no guarantee you won’t get into trouble in the world, especially if you go around doing evil – but then you might get away with it after all, particularly if you’re very powerful. In the end, of course, you will die and be not, just as all creatures do.
Remember that you are just one finite, temporal human soul in exquisitely interconnected interdependence with all other people, and all life on Earth. Take from the abundance of the world only what you need to live simply, that others may simply live. (If you wind up with a little more than you need, don’t worry – you can give some away!)
Holy Trinity?
God Almighty, Christ, and Holy Spirit – these are different aspects of the One God. Though understood metaphorically as distinctive divine persons, the differences among these aspects are occasioned only by human sensibility. God is triune only in traditional Christian understanding, not in essential reality. While it may be useful to conceptually differentiate the aspects of God’s ultimate unity, and it certainly is traditional in Christian orthodoxy, it is not religiously necessary.
Early Christian theological doctrine distinguished between the three divine “persons” who are, ineluctably, one “substance” - but not the same - by extrapolating from clues found in their study of the Greek wording of the sacred Biblical texts available to them. The venerable Jewish tradition, from which the Christian church fathers diverged, of course, affirmed simply, “Adonai, your God, is One.” The more ancient religion was, of course, the religious tradition of Jesus of Nazareth, who was not a Christian, but an observant Jew.
In individual religious worship, what I call the “God relation,” there is only one person involved, that is, the human person. God in Godself is not a person. God-consciousness is a uniquely human personal capacity. In my terminology, it is the conscious relation of personal being with being itself.
“Being itself,” drawn from the theological lexicon of Paul Tillich, is for me an equivalent of the Hebrew vocalization, Adonai, a name signifying the ineffable reality of God. “God” is a word; like all words, it is a sign, standing for and pointing toward the reality it signifies.
Every human being, that is, every person, is an instance of what I call “personal being.” Every human person is an “image” of God, Imago Dei. For me, to aver that we are “created in the image of God” is to see that we are personal manifestations of being itself, that is, of God.
As I’ve said before, if there were no minds to know God, there would be no God to be known. We, creatures of God, are given minds in order for God to know Godself. So, in a sense, we are the minds of God. We are the creaturely lenses through which God regards Godself. Without minds, God would be as God in Godself is – unknown and unknowing oneness of being itself. What I describe in these terms is, of course, the same core meaning described metaphorically in the Biblical words of Genesis.
God, Adonai, is One, but we creatures, or manifestations of God, are many. A more philosophical way of saying this is that we, finite, temporal, relative, and conditional instances of the infinite, absolute, eternal, unconditional, ultimate reality, necessarily regard ourselves, and everything in being (most often including God), as multiple separate realities. That’s just the way our minds are made.
This is because every aspect of being upon which we focus our attention appears to us, necessarily, as a discrete object at the moment we are attending. This is the nature of conscious attention. (I am not sure there is such a thing as unconscious attention – if there were I imagine it would not discern multiplicity in the oneness of being.)
Thus, it is the nature of our consciousness to experience ourselves as unitary subjects in relation with a multiplicity of objects of our attention. This ordinary mode of awareness is what I call personal self-consciousness, or “personal being.” (The altered mode of awareness, in which the person in being realizes the oneness of being, I call “transpersonal consciousness.” This is the center of God-consciousness. It happens in centering prayer and meditation.)
To return to the subject of the Trinitarian Doctrine, then, I see that the church fathers, in their sincere human penchant for diffraction of the one light of God’s truth, gave names or identities (picked and later translated from their Greek Septuagint texts) to the diverse ways in which the reality of God was apprehended.
The ontologically prismatic element here was the Pauline divinization of the Jewish Meshiach (Messiah) - the Christos, or Christ. This vision of Jesus as the Christ, uniquely God incarnate, was developed by the authors of the several gospels, culminating in the extremely exalted “high” Christology of the Gospel According to John. These first-century and early second-century scriptures contained the sources of the singular “Father-Son” conceptualization of God in Christ. (The term “Son of God” existed much earlier in Jewish religious lore, referring to any particularly holy person, not to be confused with God as Godself.)
The figurative Holy Spirit was an ancient Hebrew concept signifying what I understand as the acute awareness of God-consciousness, the transformative “power” of God that “touches” the human spirit and brings about a profound sense of holiness and “repentance” (a “turning” or re-orientation of the mind toward God.) The figure of the Holy Spirit was evoked in the Christian narratives deriving from the Jewish tradition, and, no doubt, from the oral testimonies of the Jewish followers of Jesus, who understood their experiences in those terms.
Thus, the doctrine of the Holy Trinity consisted in a theological synthesis of certain elements of the Greek interpretation of the ancient Hebrew Scriptures, with the newer Greek texts of the early Christian scriptures.
For me then, the concept, “Christ” (signifying both the human person of Jesus Christ and the “Godness” of Christ) is a symbol of the reality of God-consciousness, a mode of awareness and of personal being available to all people, at all times. This state of being is a saving grace in that it “saves” us or “delivers” us from sin, which is a state of alienation from God – the opposite or converse of God-relation. I believe this is what Jesus was calling for when he proclaimed, “Repent, for the kingdom of God is at hand.” (Of course, the trick of salvation is only temporary, because we are only temporal entities, and thus it needs to be rehearsed frequently, which is what we do in prayer and worship.)
In this understanding, Christ is an eternal dispensation, a gift or grace of God present and available to humanity from time immemorial, consistent with the Christology expressed in the Johannine gospel.
I identify myself religiously as a Unitarian Universalist Christian (or, meaning the same, as Christian, Unitarian Universalist.) I affirm that God is One in All, in Christ.
Unlike me theologically, most members of contemporary Unitarian Universalist congregations are not particularly interested in Christology, and have little use for Christian tradition, or any Biblical tradition for that matter, although most would agree with the humanistic ethics attributed to Jesus. Thus, I am something of a throwback to an earlier form of Unitarianism-Universalism, and accordingly, I believe I belong in today’s United Church of Christ more properly than I do in the Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations.
Early Christian theological doctrine distinguished between the three divine “persons” who are, ineluctably, one “substance” - but not the same - by extrapolating from clues found in their study of the Greek wording of the sacred Biblical texts available to them. The venerable Jewish tradition, from which the Christian church fathers diverged, of course, affirmed simply, “Adonai, your God, is One.” The more ancient religion was, of course, the religious tradition of Jesus of Nazareth, who was not a Christian, but an observant Jew.
In individual religious worship, what I call the “God relation,” there is only one person involved, that is, the human person. God in Godself is not a person. God-consciousness is a uniquely human personal capacity. In my terminology, it is the conscious relation of personal being with being itself.
“Being itself,” drawn from the theological lexicon of Paul Tillich, is for me an equivalent of the Hebrew vocalization, Adonai, a name signifying the ineffable reality of God. “God” is a word; like all words, it is a sign, standing for and pointing toward the reality it signifies.
Every human being, that is, every person, is an instance of what I call “personal being.” Every human person is an “image” of God, Imago Dei. For me, to aver that we are “created in the image of God” is to see that we are personal manifestations of being itself, that is, of God.
As I’ve said before, if there were no minds to know God, there would be no God to be known. We, creatures of God, are given minds in order for God to know Godself. So, in a sense, we are the minds of God. We are the creaturely lenses through which God regards Godself. Without minds, God would be as God in Godself is – unknown and unknowing oneness of being itself. What I describe in these terms is, of course, the same core meaning described metaphorically in the Biblical words of Genesis.
God, Adonai, is One, but we creatures, or manifestations of God, are many. A more philosophical way of saying this is that we, finite, temporal, relative, and conditional instances of the infinite, absolute, eternal, unconditional, ultimate reality, necessarily regard ourselves, and everything in being (most often including God), as multiple separate realities. That’s just the way our minds are made.
This is because every aspect of being upon which we focus our attention appears to us, necessarily, as a discrete object at the moment we are attending. This is the nature of conscious attention. (I am not sure there is such a thing as unconscious attention – if there were I imagine it would not discern multiplicity in the oneness of being.)
Thus, it is the nature of our consciousness to experience ourselves as unitary subjects in relation with a multiplicity of objects of our attention. This ordinary mode of awareness is what I call personal self-consciousness, or “personal being.” (The altered mode of awareness, in which the person in being realizes the oneness of being, I call “transpersonal consciousness.” This is the center of God-consciousness. It happens in centering prayer and meditation.)
To return to the subject of the Trinitarian Doctrine, then, I see that the church fathers, in their sincere human penchant for diffraction of the one light of God’s truth, gave names or identities (picked and later translated from their Greek Septuagint texts) to the diverse ways in which the reality of God was apprehended.
The ontologically prismatic element here was the Pauline divinization of the Jewish Meshiach (Messiah) - the Christos, or Christ. This vision of Jesus as the Christ, uniquely God incarnate, was developed by the authors of the several gospels, culminating in the extremely exalted “high” Christology of the Gospel According to John. These first-century and early second-century scriptures contained the sources of the singular “Father-Son” conceptualization of God in Christ. (The term “Son of God” existed much earlier in Jewish religious lore, referring to any particularly holy person, not to be confused with God as Godself.)
The figurative Holy Spirit was an ancient Hebrew concept signifying what I understand as the acute awareness of God-consciousness, the transformative “power” of God that “touches” the human spirit and brings about a profound sense of holiness and “repentance” (a “turning” or re-orientation of the mind toward God.) The figure of the Holy Spirit was evoked in the Christian narratives deriving from the Jewish tradition, and, no doubt, from the oral testimonies of the Jewish followers of Jesus, who understood their experiences in those terms.
Thus, the doctrine of the Holy Trinity consisted in a theological synthesis of certain elements of the Greek interpretation of the ancient Hebrew Scriptures, with the newer Greek texts of the early Christian scriptures.
For me then, the concept, “Christ” (signifying both the human person of Jesus Christ and the “Godness” of Christ) is a symbol of the reality of God-consciousness, a mode of awareness and of personal being available to all people, at all times. This state of being is a saving grace in that it “saves” us or “delivers” us from sin, which is a state of alienation from God – the opposite or converse of God-relation. I believe this is what Jesus was calling for when he proclaimed, “Repent, for the kingdom of God is at hand.” (Of course, the trick of salvation is only temporary, because we are only temporal entities, and thus it needs to be rehearsed frequently, which is what we do in prayer and worship.)
In this understanding, Christ is an eternal dispensation, a gift or grace of God present and available to humanity from time immemorial, consistent with the Christology expressed in the Johannine gospel.
I identify myself religiously as a Unitarian Universalist Christian (or, meaning the same, as Christian, Unitarian Universalist.) I affirm that God is One in All, in Christ.
Unlike me theologically, most members of contemporary Unitarian Universalist congregations are not particularly interested in Christology, and have little use for Christian tradition, or any Biblical tradition for that matter, although most would agree with the humanistic ethics attributed to Jesus. Thus, I am something of a throwback to an earlier form of Unitarianism-Universalism, and accordingly, I believe I belong in today’s United Church of Christ more properly than I do in the Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations.
Word of God?
Yes, my friends, the Bible has great social, cultural, and religious importance. It is an incomparable, paradigmatic artifact of the human spirit. It is best understood religiously as a metaphoric record of the deeds of God and the piety of the people of God. But it is not literally the Word of God. It is a collection of the words of many ancient authors about God, among other things.
The Bible should not always be interpreted literally. In fact, it is most often not to be. It consists of the religious expressions of ancient people who spoke languages now long forgotten, and who were not of our world time, our culture, or our society. It is foolish to believe that their holy scriptures must apply directly to us in our contemporary context.
God gave us minds, and hearts, and consciences in order for us to work things out ethically and theologically for ourselves, not for us to rely, near-sighted, wearing shades and blinders, on literal readings in translation of archaic and unchangeable textual artifacts.
For liturgical purposes, sincere believers may name The Bible, metaphorically, as the Word of God. But God does not actually speak in words. God does not speak at all, actually. God needs people for that, and people have done their job to the best of their abilities. God needs people, reading the signs of their times, to create new symbols, metaphors, parables, psalms, and sermons, informed by the Biblical tradition, but reinterpreted and recontextualized, so as to bring the kerygma of the early Christian Jesus movement, and the good news of God home to our diverse, sectarian, secularized twenty-first century people.
If the Bible, then, is a merely human testament to an ancient era of religious experience, why do I continue to read, study, interpret, quote, and preach it? A one word answer is sufficient – Tradition! Tradition is the way that human societies accumulate, appreciate, and assimilate the wisdom and experience of their forebears. I place high value in the venerable religious traditions, and persistent philosophies of humankind.
Like all persons who have lived before us, we do not apply our human faculties to contemporary realities in isolation from our cultural precursors. We are swimmers in a great and ever-flowing stream of tradition that has largely formed us, to which we belong, and which belongs to us. The Bible’s recollections are the primary sources of our religious traditions.
Along with more than one-third of the world’s people, I stand in the vast and interflowing delta of the broad river of Judeo-Christian religious tradition. Truly indeed we are, historically and culturally, people of the Book. But that is not all we are. We are children of the living God, and, as my confreres in the United Church of Christ love to say, in rich metaphor, God is still speaking.
The Bible should not always be interpreted literally. In fact, it is most often not to be. It consists of the religious expressions of ancient people who spoke languages now long forgotten, and who were not of our world time, our culture, or our society. It is foolish to believe that their holy scriptures must apply directly to us in our contemporary context.
God gave us minds, and hearts, and consciences in order for us to work things out ethically and theologically for ourselves, not for us to rely, near-sighted, wearing shades and blinders, on literal readings in translation of archaic and unchangeable textual artifacts.
For liturgical purposes, sincere believers may name The Bible, metaphorically, as the Word of God. But God does not actually speak in words. God does not speak at all, actually. God needs people for that, and people have done their job to the best of their abilities. God needs people, reading the signs of their times, to create new symbols, metaphors, parables, psalms, and sermons, informed by the Biblical tradition, but reinterpreted and recontextualized, so as to bring the kerygma of the early Christian Jesus movement, and the good news of God home to our diverse, sectarian, secularized twenty-first century people.
If the Bible, then, is a merely human testament to an ancient era of religious experience, why do I continue to read, study, interpret, quote, and preach it? A one word answer is sufficient – Tradition! Tradition is the way that human societies accumulate, appreciate, and assimilate the wisdom and experience of their forebears. I place high value in the venerable religious traditions, and persistent philosophies of humankind.
Like all persons who have lived before us, we do not apply our human faculties to contemporary realities in isolation from our cultural precursors. We are swimmers in a great and ever-flowing stream of tradition that has largely formed us, to which we belong, and which belongs to us. The Bible’s recollections are the primary sources of our religious traditions.
Along with more than one-third of the world’s people, I stand in the vast and interflowing delta of the broad river of Judeo-Christian religious tradition. Truly indeed we are, historically and culturally, people of the Book. But that is not all we are. We are children of the living God, and, as my confreres in the United Church of Christ love to say, in rich metaphor, God is still speaking.
Saturday, February 25, 2006
My Calling
My calling, to use Judaic terms beyond a Judaic context, is toward a prophetic and rabbinic ministry. I am called to pedagogy, to teaching the meanings, interpretations, implications, and applications of religious wisdom and truth, in the manner of a rabbi. I am called to proclaim the glad tidings of God, as Jesus did, and to a saving or healing ministry, as Jesus’ own ministry was, salving the wounds of sin and pointing the way to salvation in the embrace of eternal life.
My vocation is to reinterpret the Hebrew and Christian scriptures for the hermeneutical edification of my Christian and non-Christian contemporaries. I feel I am in an apt position to do this, as a member of a post-Christian religious movement, descended from Jewish and Christian traditions. If we have largely outlived the usefulness of the old modes of meaning making, we have not transcended them. We still live in the world our forebears have made. In our own lives, following in the living tradition we have received, we are making a world of meaning our progeny will inherit.
My vocation is to serve the people of God, that is, all people, and to serve God’s purpose, which is the well-being of all people, because we are all children of God made in God’s image, and God’s will is for justice and mercy.
The glad tidings of God are that you are accepted! You have been beloved of God and accepted into God’s realm since the day you were born, and before then, and nothing you can do or believe, or not do or not believe, will cause God’s love and acceptance of you to be withdrawn.
All that is required of you for salvation is to accept your acceptance. Repentance of sin demands no more of you than this: Do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly in the presence of God. This is easier said than done, though, because sin abounds. It is as perennial as grass. Sin, as well as hope, springs eternal. Where there is life, there is sin –and hope.
Remission of sin is a process engaged in on the part of the human person who has accepted God’s unconditional acceptance – one who has been redeemed by simple surrender to divine love. This is the ultimate meaning of forgiveness. It is a movement of the human spirit in love toward God, the divinity of being itself that is reflected in the human spirit.
“There is a balm in Gilead, to make the wounded whole,
there is a balm in Gilead, to heal the sin-sick soul.” (Trad.)
Salvation is never done once and for all. It is the balm of God’s grace given freely and received by faith, and it is the way of life for God’s chosen people, that is, ones who live in faith. All are chosen to be redeemed by God’s grace, but not all will ultimately accept God’s choice.
“I have put before you life and death, blessing and curse. Choose life – if you and your offspring would live – by loving your God, heeding God’s commands, and holding fast to God.” (Dt 30:19-20)
How shall we learn what God requires of us? By the insights of Holy Scripture and through prayer.
My vocation is to reinterpret the Hebrew and Christian scriptures for the hermeneutical edification of my Christian and non-Christian contemporaries. I feel I am in an apt position to do this, as a member of a post-Christian religious movement, descended from Jewish and Christian traditions. If we have largely outlived the usefulness of the old modes of meaning making, we have not transcended them. We still live in the world our forebears have made. In our own lives, following in the living tradition we have received, we are making a world of meaning our progeny will inherit.
My vocation is to serve the people of God, that is, all people, and to serve God’s purpose, which is the well-being of all people, because we are all children of God made in God’s image, and God’s will is for justice and mercy.
The glad tidings of God are that you are accepted! You have been beloved of God and accepted into God’s realm since the day you were born, and before then, and nothing you can do or believe, or not do or not believe, will cause God’s love and acceptance of you to be withdrawn.
All that is required of you for salvation is to accept your acceptance. Repentance of sin demands no more of you than this: Do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly in the presence of God. This is easier said than done, though, because sin abounds. It is as perennial as grass. Sin, as well as hope, springs eternal. Where there is life, there is sin –and hope.
Remission of sin is a process engaged in on the part of the human person who has accepted God’s unconditional acceptance – one who has been redeemed by simple surrender to divine love. This is the ultimate meaning of forgiveness. It is a movement of the human spirit in love toward God, the divinity of being itself that is reflected in the human spirit.
“There is a balm in Gilead, to make the wounded whole,
there is a balm in Gilead, to heal the sin-sick soul.” (Trad.)
Salvation is never done once and for all. It is the balm of God’s grace given freely and received by faith, and it is the way of life for God’s chosen people, that is, ones who live in faith. All are chosen to be redeemed by God’s grace, but not all will ultimately accept God’s choice.
“I have put before you life and death, blessing and curse. Choose life – if you and your offspring would live – by loving your God, heeding God’s commands, and holding fast to God.” (Dt 30:19-20)
How shall we learn what God requires of us? By the insights of Holy Scripture and through prayer.
Friday, February 24, 2006
Homily on the Theology of Love
Let those with ears to hear listen:
“How big is God, Daddy? Is he bigger than a house?” asked Anna, firstborn and the more pensive of two sisters, one afternoon while they sat together, talking with their father on the front porch railing, after their preschool day.
“God is not a person, or a thing you can see, or touch, or hear,” he answered her, quite as thoughtfully. “God is . . . a feeling inside you. God is how you feel when you know you are alive. God is what you feel when you love someone. When you say, ‘I love you,’ you feel God in you.”
Anna sat quietly for half a minute, enjoying her ice cream cone. “I love you, Daddy”, she said.
“I know, sweetie. I love you, too. Listen. Do you remember the day we were at the beach, when you were kneeling in the wet sand, with your back to the waves, and you’d laugh as each wave surprised you, splashing over your shoulders? Maggie was playing by herself, near us on the big rocks, and you and I were there in the surf, and I’d laugh when you laughed, and you looked up at me then and yelled, ‘I’m happy!’ Do you remember how good you felt then? That was God, laughing inside you.”
Now, friends, I can speak to you in more sophisticated terms than one can with a child. To you I can affirm that yes, God is not only not a person and not a thing, God is utterly other – absolutely unlike any object of understanding. Nothing that can be said of anything in being can be said of God, as Godself.
Truths of God, that God is eternal, absolute, infinite, unconditional, are true of no person or thing in being. God is ultimately beyond reason, unreachable to finite human understanding.
And yet, God is nearer to us than we are to ourselves. God is not one and the same as everything in being, but God is real and present in every time and place, with every thing and every person, for God is being itself, ground of being, ultimate reality, first and final cause of being.
Hear, O Israel, Adonai your God is One! You shall love Adonai your God with all your heart, all your soul, all your mind, and all your strength, as you are beloved of God. You shall love your neighbor as you love yourself. These are the greatest commandments. Love your enemies, and bless those who revile you. This is the Way of Christ.
We hear and we believe we are beloved of God, and God is love.
Though any meaning we may attribute to God is but a metaphor, a symbol, or a sign pointing to the incomprehensible awesome reality of God, one glorious affirmation is indubitably ours to make – God is! Ancient Hebrew Scripture tells that that is how God answered Moses, asking God’s name – “I am!”
Because he knew he was of God, that is the way Jesus answered his accusers – “Before Abraham was, I am!”
As it is said, we are children of God, beings made in God’s image. And by God’s holy grace, the same affirmation is ours to make in every season of our lives, in sorrow and in gladness, with our first breaths and our last, “Yes God – I am! I am of you and I am yours, God. Your will be done, not mine!”
“How big is God, Daddy? Is he bigger than a house?” asked Anna, firstborn and the more pensive of two sisters, one afternoon while they sat together, talking with their father on the front porch railing, after their preschool day.
“God is not a person, or a thing you can see, or touch, or hear,” he answered her, quite as thoughtfully. “God is . . . a feeling inside you. God is how you feel when you know you are alive. God is what you feel when you love someone. When you say, ‘I love you,’ you feel God in you.”
Anna sat quietly for half a minute, enjoying her ice cream cone. “I love you, Daddy”, she said.
“I know, sweetie. I love you, too. Listen. Do you remember the day we were at the beach, when you were kneeling in the wet sand, with your back to the waves, and you’d laugh as each wave surprised you, splashing over your shoulders? Maggie was playing by herself, near us on the big rocks, and you and I were there in the surf, and I’d laugh when you laughed, and you looked up at me then and yelled, ‘I’m happy!’ Do you remember how good you felt then? That was God, laughing inside you.”
Now, friends, I can speak to you in more sophisticated terms than one can with a child. To you I can affirm that yes, God is not only not a person and not a thing, God is utterly other – absolutely unlike any object of understanding. Nothing that can be said of anything in being can be said of God, as Godself.
Truths of God, that God is eternal, absolute, infinite, unconditional, are true of no person or thing in being. God is ultimately beyond reason, unreachable to finite human understanding.
And yet, God is nearer to us than we are to ourselves. God is not one and the same as everything in being, but God is real and present in every time and place, with every thing and every person, for God is being itself, ground of being, ultimate reality, first and final cause of being.
Hear, O Israel, Adonai your God is One! You shall love Adonai your God with all your heart, all your soul, all your mind, and all your strength, as you are beloved of God. You shall love your neighbor as you love yourself. These are the greatest commandments. Love your enemies, and bless those who revile you. This is the Way of Christ.
We hear and we believe we are beloved of God, and God is love.
Though any meaning we may attribute to God is but a metaphor, a symbol, or a sign pointing to the incomprehensible awesome reality of God, one glorious affirmation is indubitably ours to make – God is! Ancient Hebrew Scripture tells that that is how God answered Moses, asking God’s name – “I am!”
Because he knew he was of God, that is the way Jesus answered his accusers – “Before Abraham was, I am!”
As it is said, we are children of God, beings made in God’s image. And by God’s holy grace, the same affirmation is ours to make in every season of our lives, in sorrow and in gladness, with our first breaths and our last, “Yes God – I am! I am of you and I am yours, God. Your will be done, not mine!”
Tuesday, January 03, 2006
Response to "Nearer, My God, to the G.O.P."
Now, Joe, I’m all for free speech, and I practice the Christian charity I preach, but I do think it would be more seemly of you, as a public intellectual, to know your story before you publish your opinion. (“Nearer, My God, to the G.O.P.” by Joseph Loconte. The New York Times Op-Ed, January 2, 2006.)
You decry “attempts to draw a direct line from the Bible to a political agenda” by House Democrats and progressive religious leaders like Jim Wallis. Perhaps you ought to read The Book first. The Prophets of the Hebrew Scriptures and the Jewish Prophet of the New Covenant, Jesus himself, did little else but point toward a political agenda. That’s why they were assassinated by the ruling powers. The Roman prefects in Judea didn’t bother to crucify just anybody. Nailing prophets to the cross was a dramatic kind of political execution reserved for those who seriously threatened the imperial status quo.
Jesus, Jeremiah, Isaiah, et al were no friends of the imperial governments that usurped the just prerogatives of their nation, and oppressed the people of Israel. No more are today’s rising voices of the religious left willing to countenance moral outrages perpetrated by the right-wing cabal in our White House and Congress, and their collaborators, the false prophets of the religious right.
“Linking faith with public policy” is the soul of political discourse in a democratic society. Faith without works is dead. Contrary to your disingenuous statement, this is exactly what American politics does need. The political “misdeeds” of so-called Christian conservatives are not being “replicated” by spiritual progressives – indeed, they are being repudiated. You claim there is no difference between anti-homosexual bigots quoting Leviticus, and Jim Wallis proclaiming the prophetic witness of Jesus on behalf of the poor. Excuse me, but I beg to differ.
You say the ethics of Jesus and the Prophets are “no substitute for a coherent political philosophy.” I think most Americans would differ with you on this. In my opinion, Judeo-Christian ethics are the sine qua non of political justice in Western society. I suppose you’d prefer the moral relativism of Hume, or Machiavelli – or Kissinger or Wolfowitz.
In defense of what you call the “war against Islamic terrorism,” you ridicule the supposed “chorus of left-wing clerics and religious scholars who compare the United States to Imperial Rome and Nazi Germany.” Methinks you protest too much. I cannot help but note that it is you who frame the discourse in those terms – and there would be none of it, after all, if there were not meaningful comparisons to be made.
You mention with disdain an “event for liberal politicians and advocates at the University of California at Berkeley in July,” as though it were somehow linked with Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, and the Democratic Party leadership. I was there, and it was not. It was a convocation of some 1300 religious leaders of many faiths, and some “not religious, but spiritual” community leaders, most of whom are no more sympathetic with the Democratic party than with the G.O.P. – which is to say, not at all.
I was a participant in the Spiritual Activism Conference, organized mostly by energetic members of Rabbi Michael Lerner’s Tikkun Community, not by Rev. Jim Wallis, although we welcomed him, among many others, as a featured speaker. Our common concerns are grounded in spirituality and religion, and they are very much political, but certainly not partisan. As Rev. Wallis says, our religion is deeply personal, but it is not private. We must be very public about it. We deplore the hypocrisy and depravity with which the G.O.P. has co-opted Biblical religion in America, and the moral diffidence with which the Democratic Party has, until recently, abandoned it.
You decry “attempts to draw a direct line from the Bible to a political agenda” by House Democrats and progressive religious leaders like Jim Wallis. Perhaps you ought to read The Book first. The Prophets of the Hebrew Scriptures and the Jewish Prophet of the New Covenant, Jesus himself, did little else but point toward a political agenda. That’s why they were assassinated by the ruling powers. The Roman prefects in Judea didn’t bother to crucify just anybody. Nailing prophets to the cross was a dramatic kind of political execution reserved for those who seriously threatened the imperial status quo.
Jesus, Jeremiah, Isaiah, et al were no friends of the imperial governments that usurped the just prerogatives of their nation, and oppressed the people of Israel. No more are today’s rising voices of the religious left willing to countenance moral outrages perpetrated by the right-wing cabal in our White House and Congress, and their collaborators, the false prophets of the religious right.
“Linking faith with public policy” is the soul of political discourse in a democratic society. Faith without works is dead. Contrary to your disingenuous statement, this is exactly what American politics does need. The political “misdeeds” of so-called Christian conservatives are not being “replicated” by spiritual progressives – indeed, they are being repudiated. You claim there is no difference between anti-homosexual bigots quoting Leviticus, and Jim Wallis proclaiming the prophetic witness of Jesus on behalf of the poor. Excuse me, but I beg to differ.
You say the ethics of Jesus and the Prophets are “no substitute for a coherent political philosophy.” I think most Americans would differ with you on this. In my opinion, Judeo-Christian ethics are the sine qua non of political justice in Western society. I suppose you’d prefer the moral relativism of Hume, or Machiavelli – or Kissinger or Wolfowitz.
In defense of what you call the “war against Islamic terrorism,” you ridicule the supposed “chorus of left-wing clerics and religious scholars who compare the United States to Imperial Rome and Nazi Germany.” Methinks you protest too much. I cannot help but note that it is you who frame the discourse in those terms – and there would be none of it, after all, if there were not meaningful comparisons to be made.
You mention with disdain an “event for liberal politicians and advocates at the University of California at Berkeley in July,” as though it were somehow linked with Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, and the Democratic Party leadership. I was there, and it was not. It was a convocation of some 1300 religious leaders of many faiths, and some “not religious, but spiritual” community leaders, most of whom are no more sympathetic with the Democratic party than with the G.O.P. – which is to say, not at all.
I was a participant in the Spiritual Activism Conference, organized mostly by energetic members of Rabbi Michael Lerner’s Tikkun Community, not by Rev. Jim Wallis, although we welcomed him, among many others, as a featured speaker. Our common concerns are grounded in spirituality and religion, and they are very much political, but certainly not partisan. As Rev. Wallis says, our religion is deeply personal, but it is not private. We must be very public about it. We deplore the hypocrisy and depravity with which the G.O.P. has co-opted Biblical religion in America, and the moral diffidence with which the Democratic Party has, until recently, abandoned it.
Sunday, December 18, 2005
Jesus Who?
I tend to go along with Christian tradition in supposing that Jesus of Nazareth was a singular historical person. However, an intellectually honest critical analysis of the pertinent ancient texts calls for admission that there is virtually no direct evidence to support that view. It is entirely possible that the ultimate source of the Jesus traditions was not one singular person, but several, whose teachings and life circumstances may have been concatenated or conflated by re-tellers and later literary compositors, i.e. the Evangelists, the authors of the gospels.
My view, which serves as a framework for understanding and representing the religious-ethical teachings attributed to Jesus, is that the surviving scriptures are ultimately based on oral accounts of the sayings of a remarkable, prophetic Judaic teacher who engaged in a brief but very influential ministry, which was profoundly transformative for most of the people who received his teachings. I do not doubt that Jesus, like multitudes of prophets and religious teachers before and since his time, was divinely inspired, i.e. he was consciously and whole-mindedly in communion with God. His purpose was well described as proclaiming the gospel, or the good tidings, of God.
I have no reason to doubt that Jesus, or an historical personage very like him, was crucified in Jerusalem by Roman occupation authorities in about 30 C.E. It is also plausible that a few of his devotees promulgated a tale that Jesus had gone missing from his crypt on the third day following his death. What actually happened is unknown, but this story, and the fictive denouement of Jesus' bodily resurrection that was added to the first gospel narrative, have had incalculable consequences, affecting the history of religion more than any other dogma has ever done.
Whoever the original instigator of the first-century Jesus movement might have been (if but one), I believe he was no more God incarnate than any human being potentially is. Moreover, he was not Christian. He was, apparently, a Judaic Messianist. For all we know, 'he' may well have actually been 'they' - several 'Jesuses' as it were.
Early Christianity as we know it seems to have been invented almost single-handedly by the apostate, repentant Pharisaic letter-writer Saul of Tarsus, who was called Paul in Greek. The emergent Christian religious tradition was elaborated, following Paul, by a number of evangelistic authors working with textual sources based on oral transmission - and a few scraps of written "sayings" of Jesus. Nothing resembling an established, organized church developed in these traditions until some time in the second century, in circumstances far removed from the original Jerusalem assembly of “The Way,” observant Jews who heralded the coming of the Lord, that is, the advent of the Jewish Messiah, the Son of Man who they believed would inaugurate the reign of God in Israel.
The Greek translation of the Aramaic term, “Meshiach” - Messiah - was "Christos," i.e., Christ. The theological meaning I make of the term, “Christ” is that it signifies that condition of the soul in which the human person is in conscious communion with God. Another way I have put this is “the consciousness of personal being in relationship with being itself.” To be “in Christ” is to be awakened to the reality of one’s sacred identity with God, as Jesus is said to have been. Thus, as I would interpret the evangelistic narrative, upon baptism by John, Jesus became consciously Jesus Christ, Son of God, standing for the potential of sanctification inherent in every person.
I understand the term, “grace” as signifying that spiritually transforming self-realization in which one recognizes the identity of one’s personal being with the ultimate reality of being itself. Grace is the gift of God-consciousness, and it brings about the state of being in Christ. The gift of grace is received through faith, which is precisely that orientation of the whole person prescribed in the Biblical commandment to “love God with all your heart, and all your soul, and all your mind.”
My view, which serves as a framework for understanding and representing the religious-ethical teachings attributed to Jesus, is that the surviving scriptures are ultimately based on oral accounts of the sayings of a remarkable, prophetic Judaic teacher who engaged in a brief but very influential ministry, which was profoundly transformative for most of the people who received his teachings. I do not doubt that Jesus, like multitudes of prophets and religious teachers before and since his time, was divinely inspired, i.e. he was consciously and whole-mindedly in communion with God. His purpose was well described as proclaiming the gospel, or the good tidings, of God.
I have no reason to doubt that Jesus, or an historical personage very like him, was crucified in Jerusalem by Roman occupation authorities in about 30 C.E. It is also plausible that a few of his devotees promulgated a tale that Jesus had gone missing from his crypt on the third day following his death. What actually happened is unknown, but this story, and the fictive denouement of Jesus' bodily resurrection that was added to the first gospel narrative, have had incalculable consequences, affecting the history of religion more than any other dogma has ever done.
Whoever the original instigator of the first-century Jesus movement might have been (if but one), I believe he was no more God incarnate than any human being potentially is. Moreover, he was not Christian. He was, apparently, a Judaic Messianist. For all we know, 'he' may well have actually been 'they' - several 'Jesuses' as it were.
Early Christianity as we know it seems to have been invented almost single-handedly by the apostate, repentant Pharisaic letter-writer Saul of Tarsus, who was called Paul in Greek. The emergent Christian religious tradition was elaborated, following Paul, by a number of evangelistic authors working with textual sources based on oral transmission - and a few scraps of written "sayings" of Jesus. Nothing resembling an established, organized church developed in these traditions until some time in the second century, in circumstances far removed from the original Jerusalem assembly of “The Way,” observant Jews who heralded the coming of the Lord, that is, the advent of the Jewish Messiah, the Son of Man who they believed would inaugurate the reign of God in Israel.
The Greek translation of the Aramaic term, “Meshiach” - Messiah - was "Christos," i.e., Christ. The theological meaning I make of the term, “Christ” is that it signifies that condition of the soul in which the human person is in conscious communion with God. Another way I have put this is “the consciousness of personal being in relationship with being itself.” To be “in Christ” is to be awakened to the reality of one’s sacred identity with God, as Jesus is said to have been. Thus, as I would interpret the evangelistic narrative, upon baptism by John, Jesus became consciously Jesus Christ, Son of God, standing for the potential of sanctification inherent in every person.
I understand the term, “grace” as signifying that spiritually transforming self-realization in which one recognizes the identity of one’s personal being with the ultimate reality of being itself. Grace is the gift of God-consciousness, and it brings about the state of being in Christ. The gift of grace is received through faith, which is precisely that orientation of the whole person prescribed in the Biblical commandment to “love God with all your heart, and all your soul, and all your mind.”
Sunday, December 11, 2005
The Parable of True Wealth
A certain wealthy young man owned a mill, which was the most important source of income for the people of his village. This he had inherited from his father, who had taken over the business from his own father, and so on, for several generations. The wealthy man inhabited his estate for all the years of his life, and throughout the years, as he walked proudly through his village, which eventually became a town, and then a small city, he often passed by a man in ragged clothes, the same man year in and year out, who meekly begged for alms each time they met.
The wealthy man was disdainful of the poor, thinking them lazy and idle. He was chiefly concerned with increasing his profit and his property. Yet he was a church-going Christian, and he was not mean or cruel. He remembered the parson quoting Deuteronomy, saying, “There will always be poor people in the land. Give freely to those who are poor and needy in your land. Open your hands to them.” So whenever he could not pass by unnoticed, he would give the poor man a few coins from his purse. Thus it went for many years.
The wealthy man strove industriously all his life, and multiplied his inheritance. Many sought to gain at his expense. People flattered, and wheedled, and cheated, and sued for his advantages. But the beggar just humbly thanked him for his little gifts and blessed him contentedly. The wealthy man and the beggar both grew old, keeping their different ways and means. The wealthy man at last became ill and weary, and was sorely burdened with his worldly concerns. One evening when again they encountered each other in the street, while handing him a coin, he asked the beggar in exasperation, “How can you have endured so long in your wretched alley, yet you seem so thankful and at peace?” The beggar bowed gratefully, and replied, “My friend, true wealth is knowing what is enough.” And so it was.
The wealthy man was disdainful of the poor, thinking them lazy and idle. He was chiefly concerned with increasing his profit and his property. Yet he was a church-going Christian, and he was not mean or cruel. He remembered the parson quoting Deuteronomy, saying, “There will always be poor people in the land. Give freely to those who are poor and needy in your land. Open your hands to them.” So whenever he could not pass by unnoticed, he would give the poor man a few coins from his purse. Thus it went for many years.
The wealthy man strove industriously all his life, and multiplied his inheritance. Many sought to gain at his expense. People flattered, and wheedled, and cheated, and sued for his advantages. But the beggar just humbly thanked him for his little gifts and blessed him contentedly. The wealthy man and the beggar both grew old, keeping their different ways and means. The wealthy man at last became ill and weary, and was sorely burdened with his worldly concerns. One evening when again they encountered each other in the street, while handing him a coin, he asked the beggar in exasperation, “How can you have endured so long in your wretched alley, yet you seem so thankful and at peace?” The beggar bowed gratefully, and replied, “My friend, true wealth is knowing what is enough.” And so it was.
The Parable of the Seekers
Once upon a time, in a strange and faraway place, there lived a species of people who were small, but their numbers were very great, and they populated a land that, to them at least, was vast. Their species was ancient, having occupied the land for uncounted generations. The clans, and communities, and countries of them were numerous, and there were many different languages and traditions among them. They had no writing though, because their fingers were short, and so were their legs, so they rarely ventured very far from their birthplaces.
The landscape where these people lived was ridged and wrinkled, full of hills and dales, and rills and rivulets, and in the middle of it was an enormous rise of peaks, that they called the Mountain of God. Most of the people never knew what lay beyond their own particular crease in the earth, for their lives were as short as their limbs, and they had to work hard every day for a living. They all could see the towering tops of the Mountain of God though, from the higher vantage places, on certain days and moonlit nights, when fog and clouds didn’t hide them.
These people had just one food, which they prepared in many different ways, for variety. This was a sweet, aromatic, seed-like, whitish substance that appeared overnight as if materializing out of thin air, like hoarfrost. It was called “manna.” Some said it resembled a gummy resin exuded by certain trees, and some said it was like a grainy residue left on leaves by aphid-like insects. Legend had it that once, in a wilderness encampment, a great flock of quails had arrived, and then the people had feasted on roast squab, but as long as anyone living remembered, their food was just manna, manna, and manna, nothing but manna.
The people gathered their manna every morning and ate it up that day, because it would not keep overnight. It would spoil and be found crawling with maggots by next morning - except, oddly, on the sixth night. Every seventh day, no manna would be found, but the leftovers from the day before would still, inexplicably, be edible. So on that day, which was called “Shabbat,” no one had to labor gathering food. Everyone said the manna was a gift from God for God’s beloved people.
Another strange fact about this land was that the force of gravity was not the same everywhere. Everything weighed less at higher elevations, and weighed more at lower elevations. For this reason, though it was difficult for people to climb very far uphill on their short little legs and tiny feet, their work was easier, and they felt lighter and more restful, when they had made the effort to reach higher ground. Naturally, hilltop real estate was the most valuable. The big problem, though, for most people, was that the food always collected in the low hollows, and thus only the very rich could afford to pay servants to carry it up the hillsides to them. Consequently, no one lived permanently on the highest ridges, though people sometimes came there on day-trips, and felt their yokes most joyously lightened.
Now, most of these people didn’t think about God very much. They all believed that God could, in principle, be found way up on the tops of the Mountain of God, but almost no one claimed to have ever seen God. They would get together in small or large groups, on Shabbat, to praise and thank God for not having to work that day, and they cherished and enjoyed that tradition, but few were really very concerned about God, as Godself.
There were always a few, though, who were ultimately concerned with God. They loved God with all their hearts, and all their souls, and all their minds, and all their might. They were called “Seekers.” They sought to approach nearer to God by journeying arduously, step by tiny step, over the land, up hill and down, toward the Mountain of God. As they reached the ridge tops, they felt weightless and light-hearted, and they knew in which direction to travel because they could see the peaks of the Mountain of God gleaming beautifully in the light of the sun and the moon, when the air was clear. They were often hungry on their pilgrimages, since their manna did not last overnight during their crossings of the high country, where they could find none. On Shabbat days, the Seekers rested and worshipped God with the people gathered in little brown churches in the dells, who shared their manna with them.
For as long as anyone knew, Seekers had told the gathered people about their visions of the Mountain of God, about their hopeful journeys, their enlightenment in the high places, how they expected one day to see God, and to be in God’s presence. From time immemorial, multitudes of Seekers had come from every direction in the land, and many had reached the Mountain of God. Not only had they done that, but also many had returned to tell of it. They told of many paths worn and cleared by halting, little steps up the mountain, and of age-old signs and monuments left by those who had gone before, showing Seekers the way up, higher and higher.
Some paths ended in sheer stone outcrops, or had been blocked by rockslides. Those ways were hidden with overgrowth, or covered with rubble. But other paths, though steep and impossible to discern from below, had been kept open and free from stumbling blocks. Seekers knew, they said, that some pathways could still be ascended all the way up. Of these, there were known to be quite a few, approaching the peaks of the Mountain of God from every side.
To reach the summits took Seekers many years, even lifetimes. It required of them prudence, justice, temperance, and fortitude. The climbing was easy, even though their short-limbed locomotion was very slow, because they were light as lizards at that high altitude. But how did the Seekers survive on the rocky mountaintops without fresh manna? God provided them with freeze-dried, extended-release, high-protein, carbohydrate-balanced manna substitute with organic preservatives, because God wanted to see the amazement on their sun-burnt faces when they finally arrived. God had a liberating truth to reveal to them, which came in a blinding flash of the obvious - this, of course, you already know.
The Seekers who had made their way to the top, and returned with the good news of God, advised others to do this: Find a well-worn path with well-kept signs; study the signs and understand them, set out on the path you’ve chosen, paying close attention to the ground ahead, and stay on that path. That will be your Way. Do not turn aside from it, looking for a better route. There are many ways to reach the heights, they said, but scrambling across the mountainside, scrabbling and sliding on this path, then that, from one blind curve to another, without learning the meanings of the signs, is definitely not the way.
But did the neophyte Seekers heed the advice their venerable mentors so generously gave them? Actually, most of them did, because they had never seen pulp fiction or television shows, and their undergraduate professors were Dominicans and Jesuits. And what of the unfortunate, sophomoric, heedless ones in a hurry, who couldn’t tell a blunderbuss from a bowling pin? Some of them eventually wandered back down into the valleys, all knot-headed, shin-scraped, and bruised, saying that, as far as they were concerned, there was no God up there after all.
So, ages came and ages passed, and most of the people never did see God’s face. God never spoke, and they couldn’t have read God’s handwriting anyway, but they mostly believed in God nonetheless, and they kept getting their daily manna. Wise and weary Seekers kept coming back from the Mountain of God, radiating God’s glory, and people fed them and listened to their stories, but most people really were content just to scrape up breakfast, lunch, and dinner, and admire the daffodils blooming in the meadows.
God, being just and merciful, and having other worlds to create, continued to love them as long as their short little lives lasted, because they were God’s people, with all their short little fingers and short little legs, and God had promised to deliver them from evil into the land. And so it was, because even though God is invisible and speechless, and no one can decipher God’s handwiting, God is nothing if not one who keeps promises.
The landscape where these people lived was ridged and wrinkled, full of hills and dales, and rills and rivulets, and in the middle of it was an enormous rise of peaks, that they called the Mountain of God. Most of the people never knew what lay beyond their own particular crease in the earth, for their lives were as short as their limbs, and they had to work hard every day for a living. They all could see the towering tops of the Mountain of God though, from the higher vantage places, on certain days and moonlit nights, when fog and clouds didn’t hide them.
These people had just one food, which they prepared in many different ways, for variety. This was a sweet, aromatic, seed-like, whitish substance that appeared overnight as if materializing out of thin air, like hoarfrost. It was called “manna.” Some said it resembled a gummy resin exuded by certain trees, and some said it was like a grainy residue left on leaves by aphid-like insects. Legend had it that once, in a wilderness encampment, a great flock of quails had arrived, and then the people had feasted on roast squab, but as long as anyone living remembered, their food was just manna, manna, and manna, nothing but manna.
The people gathered their manna every morning and ate it up that day, because it would not keep overnight. It would spoil and be found crawling with maggots by next morning - except, oddly, on the sixth night. Every seventh day, no manna would be found, but the leftovers from the day before would still, inexplicably, be edible. So on that day, which was called “Shabbat,” no one had to labor gathering food. Everyone said the manna was a gift from God for God’s beloved people.
Another strange fact about this land was that the force of gravity was not the same everywhere. Everything weighed less at higher elevations, and weighed more at lower elevations. For this reason, though it was difficult for people to climb very far uphill on their short little legs and tiny feet, their work was easier, and they felt lighter and more restful, when they had made the effort to reach higher ground. Naturally, hilltop real estate was the most valuable. The big problem, though, for most people, was that the food always collected in the low hollows, and thus only the very rich could afford to pay servants to carry it up the hillsides to them. Consequently, no one lived permanently on the highest ridges, though people sometimes came there on day-trips, and felt their yokes most joyously lightened.
Now, most of these people didn’t think about God very much. They all believed that God could, in principle, be found way up on the tops of the Mountain of God, but almost no one claimed to have ever seen God. They would get together in small or large groups, on Shabbat, to praise and thank God for not having to work that day, and they cherished and enjoyed that tradition, but few were really very concerned about God, as Godself.
There were always a few, though, who were ultimately concerned with God. They loved God with all their hearts, and all their souls, and all their minds, and all their might. They were called “Seekers.” They sought to approach nearer to God by journeying arduously, step by tiny step, over the land, up hill and down, toward the Mountain of God. As they reached the ridge tops, they felt weightless and light-hearted, and they knew in which direction to travel because they could see the peaks of the Mountain of God gleaming beautifully in the light of the sun and the moon, when the air was clear. They were often hungry on their pilgrimages, since their manna did not last overnight during their crossings of the high country, where they could find none. On Shabbat days, the Seekers rested and worshipped God with the people gathered in little brown churches in the dells, who shared their manna with them.
For as long as anyone knew, Seekers had told the gathered people about their visions of the Mountain of God, about their hopeful journeys, their enlightenment in the high places, how they expected one day to see God, and to be in God’s presence. From time immemorial, multitudes of Seekers had come from every direction in the land, and many had reached the Mountain of God. Not only had they done that, but also many had returned to tell of it. They told of many paths worn and cleared by halting, little steps up the mountain, and of age-old signs and monuments left by those who had gone before, showing Seekers the way up, higher and higher.
Some paths ended in sheer stone outcrops, or had been blocked by rockslides. Those ways were hidden with overgrowth, or covered with rubble. But other paths, though steep and impossible to discern from below, had been kept open and free from stumbling blocks. Seekers knew, they said, that some pathways could still be ascended all the way up. Of these, there were known to be quite a few, approaching the peaks of the Mountain of God from every side.
To reach the summits took Seekers many years, even lifetimes. It required of them prudence, justice, temperance, and fortitude. The climbing was easy, even though their short-limbed locomotion was very slow, because they were light as lizards at that high altitude. But how did the Seekers survive on the rocky mountaintops without fresh manna? God provided them with freeze-dried, extended-release, high-protein, carbohydrate-balanced manna substitute with organic preservatives, because God wanted to see the amazement on their sun-burnt faces when they finally arrived. God had a liberating truth to reveal to them, which came in a blinding flash of the obvious - this, of course, you already know.
The Seekers who had made their way to the top, and returned with the good news of God, advised others to do this: Find a well-worn path with well-kept signs; study the signs and understand them, set out on the path you’ve chosen, paying close attention to the ground ahead, and stay on that path. That will be your Way. Do not turn aside from it, looking for a better route. There are many ways to reach the heights, they said, but scrambling across the mountainside, scrabbling and sliding on this path, then that, from one blind curve to another, without learning the meanings of the signs, is definitely not the way.
But did the neophyte Seekers heed the advice their venerable mentors so generously gave them? Actually, most of them did, because they had never seen pulp fiction or television shows, and their undergraduate professors were Dominicans and Jesuits. And what of the unfortunate, sophomoric, heedless ones in a hurry, who couldn’t tell a blunderbuss from a bowling pin? Some of them eventually wandered back down into the valleys, all knot-headed, shin-scraped, and bruised, saying that, as far as they were concerned, there was no God up there after all.
So, ages came and ages passed, and most of the people never did see God’s face. God never spoke, and they couldn’t have read God’s handwriting anyway, but they mostly believed in God nonetheless, and they kept getting their daily manna. Wise and weary Seekers kept coming back from the Mountain of God, radiating God’s glory, and people fed them and listened to their stories, but most people really were content just to scrape up breakfast, lunch, and dinner, and admire the daffodils blooming in the meadows.
God, being just and merciful, and having other worlds to create, continued to love them as long as their short little lives lasted, because they were God’s people, with all their short little fingers and short little legs, and God had promised to deliver them from evil into the land. And so it was, because even though God is invisible and speechless, and no one can decipher God’s handwiting, God is nothing if not one who keeps promises.
Thursday, September 29, 2005
Where is God?
God is not located somewhere up there, or out there; not beyond us, nor beside us. We may say that God is omnipresent, everywhere; and God is transcendent, entirely other; and God is immanent, acting in Creation. Or, maybe not.
The most salient truth is that God is to be found within us, at our hearts’ level. If we feel God’s presence, we feel it within. We may imagine God as a being present with us, but the divine presence is truly to be found within, where felt reality resides. If we feel God with us in corporate worship or prayer, it is truly God’s presence in other persons who are here beside us.
This is what early Christians meant when they referred to the church as the body of Christ. When the ancient people of the Jerusalem temple gathered around the Holy of Holies to be in God’s presence, it was God’s presence within them, and within each other, that they really felt. The ark was actually empty, just as the communion cup is really empty until we fill it with meaning, and the host is only a morsel of complex carbohydrates until we take it into our being where God truly is.
I think the prophets and priests of ancient Judah and Israel understood this, as they elaborated the uses of religious symbols and signs to represent the ineffable reality of God’s presence in the very being of the human person. Jesus certainly knew it, as his words pointed toward God within, although his disciples and some of their followers may have missed the point.
I believe the early proto-orthodox theologians of the Christian church understood that their Trinitarian formulations were symbolic representations of the inward reality of God. Thus, the prismatic diffraction of God into distinctive “persons” (which were originally conceived of as “substances”) were not to be taken by cognoscenti as objective descriptions of reality. They were systematic analogs of subjective religious experience, based in the received mythology of the resurrected Christ. I think the construction of the Christian mythology was conscious and intentional on the part of the apostles, the epistolary authors, and the evangelists of the synoptic gospels.
Each of us is a particular concrete manifestation of ultimate reality, and by the mysterious providence of God, we have been given the miraculous gift of apprehension of the divine presence of which we are images; and more than images, we are avatars. We are the creaturely lenses through which God recognizes Godself in Creation, and the mirrors in which God’s image is reflected.
The most salient truth is that God is to be found within us, at our hearts’ level. If we feel God’s presence, we feel it within. We may imagine God as a being present with us, but the divine presence is truly to be found within, where felt reality resides. If we feel God with us in corporate worship or prayer, it is truly God’s presence in other persons who are here beside us.
This is what early Christians meant when they referred to the church as the body of Christ. When the ancient people of the Jerusalem temple gathered around the Holy of Holies to be in God’s presence, it was God’s presence within them, and within each other, that they really felt. The ark was actually empty, just as the communion cup is really empty until we fill it with meaning, and the host is only a morsel of complex carbohydrates until we take it into our being where God truly is.
I think the prophets and priests of ancient Judah and Israel understood this, as they elaborated the uses of religious symbols and signs to represent the ineffable reality of God’s presence in the very being of the human person. Jesus certainly knew it, as his words pointed toward God within, although his disciples and some of their followers may have missed the point.
I believe the early proto-orthodox theologians of the Christian church understood that their Trinitarian formulations were symbolic representations of the inward reality of God. Thus, the prismatic diffraction of God into distinctive “persons” (which were originally conceived of as “substances”) were not to be taken by cognoscenti as objective descriptions of reality. They were systematic analogs of subjective religious experience, based in the received mythology of the resurrected Christ. I think the construction of the Christian mythology was conscious and intentional on the part of the apostles, the epistolary authors, and the evangelists of the synoptic gospels.
Each of us is a particular concrete manifestation of ultimate reality, and by the mysterious providence of God, we have been given the miraculous gift of apprehension of the divine presence of which we are images; and more than images, we are avatars. We are the creaturely lenses through which God recognizes Godself in Creation, and the mirrors in which God’s image is reflected.
Monday, July 25, 2005
God Is What Love Is
“God” is a word; it is a name for something - not the thing itself. As such, it is a sign, a signifier, and “an outward indication of the existence or presence of something not immediately evident.” Ordinarily, words refer to phenomena, that is, immediately perceived realities, as distinguished from noumena, or realities which are perceived by mediation but cannot be directly known or apprehended. “God,” “Allah,” “Yahweh,” “Jehovah,” and all holy names like these, are signs that point toward, or refer to, the limitless noumenon that underlies all phenomena, that is, “being itself.”
Love is the orientation of the soul that arises in the conscious relation of personal being with being itself. This (“the conscious relation of personal being with being itself”) is also how I have described “the presence of God.” Ergo, God is love, as the Johannine scriptures tell us. Now I affirm this as true myself, not because John said so, but because I have discovered it to be true according to my own experience and reflection. This sheds light as well on Paul’s scripture saying, “Faith, hope, love; these three abide.” In other words, faith and hope, too, are orientations of the soul inherent in this conscious relation. But, as the Apostle avers, “love is the greatest of these.” Without love, hope is faint and futile; without love, faith is brittle and desiccated.
It is notable that in these terms, “God” is a relation, not a thing. I used to speak of God as “being itself,” that is, the ultimate reality “behind” or “beneath” all things, until I realized that I have also come to understand that the human personal consciousness of God is necessary for the “presence” of God. As I once wrote, “If there were no minds to know God, there would be no God to be known.” Just as the human being - or “personal being” - is an aspect of the ultimate reality I describe as “being itself,” personal God-consciousness can be regarded as the “consciousness of being itself,” something I’ve also said repeatedly. Here, then, is the truth of the religious affirmation that humanity is created by the love of God, and in “God’s image.”
I refer here, as I have again and again through the years, to my first articulation of this, which I wrote twelve or thirteen years ago, when my daughters Anna and Maggie were very young:
“How big is God, Daddy? Is he bigger than a house?”, asked Anna, my firstborn and the more pensive of my two little girls, one afternoon while we sat together on the front porch railing after their preschool day.
“God is not a person, or a thing you can see, or touch, or hear,” I answered her, quite as thoughtfully. “God is . . . a feeling inside you. God is how you feel when you know you are alive. God is what you feel when you love someone. When you say, ‘I love you,’ you feel God in you.”
Anna sat quietly for half a minute, enjoying her ice cream cone. “I love you, Daddy”, she said.
“I know, sweetie. I love you, too. Listen. Do you remember the day we were at the beach, when you were kneeling in the wet sand, with your back to the waves, and you’d laugh as each wave surprised you, splashing over your shoulders? Maggie was playing by herself, near us on the big rocks, and you and I were there in the surf, and I’d laugh when you laughed, and you looked up at me then and yelled, ‘I’m haaaap-py!’ Do you remember how good you felt then? That was God, laughing inside you.”
Being itself recognizes itself in the aspect of personal being. As this relationship becomes conscious, love arises, the subjectivity of which is called “divine love.” It is all together the love of God for the world and humanity, the human person’s responsive love of God, and love of neighbor. Thus we recognize the “subjective self” in each other, each and every one a being created in the image of God. And thus, God is love, and is located in the conscious relation of God with God’s human image.
And for animal lovers, to the extent that other sentient beings are in conscious relationship with God, love is there too. What about atheists? Well, in my view, they’re no exception. They just don’t like to use the term, “God.”
And what about agnostics? Their difficulty is in the mistake of worrying about the existence of God. God does not exist – God is existence itself, the ground of being, or being itself. To use some fancy verbal footwork, theirs is the perplexity of existents questioning the reality of existence itself, in which they consist.
This is, pretty much, the setup for St. Anselm’s “ontological argument” for the existence of God. The agnostic knows explicitly that he or she exists, and implicitly that all things in existence also exist, but doesn’t know that God is not to be understood to exist in the same way, as an existent, but rather as existence itself in relation with its human aspects which consist in it, and by grace and providence become conscious of their relation with it. As soon as a relational description of God is accepted by them, all their worries will fall away, like scales from their eyes.
What is God? God is not a what. God is not an existing being. God is not an object; God is the ultimate subject. God is being itself. God is. Who is God? God only knows. If God is anyone, God is I and Thou; God is the ultimate subject in the subject-subject relation.
To impute attributes of beings to God, as God, is to speak of God as if God were in being, among other beings. You and I and the lamp post are beings. Attributes, or Names of God, are metaphoric when speaking of God as God: God is good; God is just; God is merciful. Or else they are hyperbolic: God is great; God is all-knowing; God is all-powerful. Any words that can be said of God as God can be said of no thing in being: God is infinite; God is eternal; God is unconditional; God is absolute.
God the Creator and God’s Creation are completely interpenetrated. All Creation is in being; God is being itself. Wherever you are, there you jolly well are, aren’t you? And there God is, too; God always was, is now, and ever shall be, forever and ever, Amen. God’s presence is in us and among us here and now; ours is the consciousness of being itself. In our awareness of being, being itself experiences being itself. With each new generation, God’s faith in humanity is renewed; in each regeneration, humanity’s response of faith is renewed.
Through our consciousness, God apprehends Creation, and we, the fully self-conscious parts of Creation, apprehend God the Creator. This state of God-consciousness is what is called “sanctification” or “redemption.” It is a state of reconciliation with God; it is what is meant by being “in Christ.” When we then act out our lives in congruence with the ethics of Christ, we are “saved.” Salvation means we are saved from the effects of our potentialities for doing evil.
What is Satan? Satan is said to be the anti-Christ; as such, it is the antithesis of the human potentiality for redemption. If the Christ is the human capacity for reconciliation with God, the Satan is its converse. Neither the Christ nor the Satan is a supernatural person, or divine being, or real entities of any sort. Their names are symbols of the universal human potentials for salvation and damnation, ultimate good and ultimate evil. In Hebrew, the words ha Satan ("the Satan") appear in the Book of Job. These are usually translated as “the Adversary,” understood allegorically to signify the “shadow” side of the human personality.
Between the Adversary and the moral righteousness of the "blameless and upright" human being, a constant dialectic was thought to be acted out in people’s daily lives. The effect of the embodied and unconstrained Satan is to tempt or traduce the human soul to sin, which denies the Christ potential and alienates the person from God’s grace. Deeply infected with sin, people do evil, causing various kinds of harm and damage to others, usually intentionally.
Remember well that the Christ and the Satan are symbols standing for human mental, ideational, and intentional configurations, or “states of mind,” that can become more or less permanently internalized, and consequently affect a person’s conscience, character formation, moral and ethical faculties, and the entire array of human personality factors, for good or ill.
To be “in Christ” is the converse of being “in sin.” In Christ (remember, this is a sanctified state of the psyche, a holy condition of the soul, not a mystical divine being), the “saved” or “redeemed” person is incapable of sin, that is, of doing willful harm to self or others, or to God’s Creation. The sanctified one is relieved of sinfulness by virtue of a capacity for self “disciple-ing” in which one walks in the way of the internalized Christ. The sanctified one “fears God,” that is, conscientiously avoids doing harm to God’s Creation.
To be in sin, in thrall to the Satan, means that the potential of being reconciled with God, of being “in Christ,” is denied or preempted. The human will to do evil, to not refrain from doing harm, is unleashed. In this state, the human person is free to act out diffidence or malice, and to carry out damage, destruction, aggression, and oppression by whatever means will suit his sinful ends or sinful attributes – Pride, Envy, Wrath, Sloth, Greed, Gluttony, and Lust, among them.
Who is Jesus? “Is” is the wrong tense. Jesus was an itinerant, indigent Jewish teacher and religious reformer, a Rabbi and a rabble-rouser, a prophet of profound religious and social transformation. He was brutally murdered by crucifixion at the orders of the Roman Provincial Authority, as an enemy of the state. He was not, by any means, the only person to have suffered this fate, for the same reasons.
Jesus was not a Christian. He was, however, “in Christ,” awakened, enlightened, exalted, and sanctified. He was truly a saint. He was also not, by any means, the only saint to have been sanctified “in Christ.” There have been multitudes, before and since Jesus, even now there are. Some of them are Christians; many are not. Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, for instance, was “in Christ.” Maybe Augustine of Hippo was, maybe Muhammad of Medina, John Wesley, George Fox, Mahatma Gandhi, and John Freeman, to name but a few.
How does Jesus redeem us from our sins? He doesn’t. He died two thousand years ago. “In Christ,” one day at a time, we are redeemed and sanctified by reconciliation with God through our own human conscientious faculties. We are to promote salvation, by proclaiming this gospel and acting out in beneficence toward others, “in Christ,” until we die and are eventually taken up, body, mind, and soul, into the earthly biosphere from whence we came.
Except in Biblical mythology, no one has ever seen or heard God, and no one ever will. This is because the "Supreme Being" is not a being, as human beings are, as every object of human intentionality or relationality is. We are persons; God is not a person. Yet God the Creator and God’s Creation are completely interpenetrated. All Creation is in being; God is being itself. God cannot be known objectively, because God is not an object. The human person can only know God subjectively, as we know our own experience and ourselves.
All I can say about God, qua God, is that God is. God’s essence is to be; in God alone, essence and existence are one. Of this, I can have the same perfect certainty as that I am. Objectively considered, my personal being is contingent, finite, temporal. I was once not in being, and the time will come when I am no longer, subjectively incomprehensible though that is. God’s being is absolute, infinite, eternal, and necessary to my being. That I am is indubitable, if not necessary.
The miracle that I am a conditional being, who can apprehend the ultimate, unconditional reality of being itself, is the gift and grace of God. In this transcendent apprehension, it may be said truly that I manifest the consciousness of being itself. What people call the presence of God is the self-conscious relation of personal being with being itself; and vice-versa, if you prefer - the relation of being itself with conscious, personal being. One key to this understanding is relatedness, but not just in the usual interpersonal sense. God is self-relatedness; God is relatedness itself. In God-consciousness, the dichotomy of subject and object is both necessary and it is self-transcendent.
The American Buddhist teacher Adyashanti says, “Because of an innocent misunderstanding, you think that you are a human being in the relative world seeking the experience of Oneness, but actually you are the One expressing itself as the experience of being a human being.”
As Alan Watts put it, “Every individual is an expression of the whole realm of nature, a unique action of the total universe.” (I have put it this way: “We are being itself experiencing itself being experienced.” Experienced by whom? By itself, of course.) Watts explained further, “God also likes to play hide-and-seek, but because there is nothing outside God, he has no one but himself to play with. But he gets over this difficulty by pretending that he is not himself. Now when God plays hide and pretends that he is you and I, he does it so well that it takes him a long time to remember where and how he hid himself. But that’s the whole fun of it – just what he wanted to do.”
In the ancient Hebrew myth, God’s presence is revealed to Moses, appearing symbolically, in a burning bush that is nevertheless not consumed. It is significant that this realization is made by a human being. It could not be otherwise. It is said we are made in God’s image, because it is in human reflection that God the Creator recognizes himself, or herself, and remembers that the Creation was no accident, after all.
Sometimes this realization occurs to us when we recognize ourselves in other beings, other people. It is in shared awe and in praise of this incomprehensible reality that we worship together. If you would see the face of God, look in the faces of women, men, and children. If you would see the hands with which God works in the world, the feet with which God walks in the world, look at your own hands and feet. If you would hear the voice of God, listen to your own silent voice in prayerful reflection.
As Jesus taught, all the Torah and the Prophets are summed up in this single greatest commandment, “you shall love the LORD your God with all your soul, and all your heart, and all your mind,” because God is ever present within us and among us. Jesus taught another commandment like it, “Love your neighbor as you love yourself,” because every person – the inner conscience in every person – reflects the image of God, whether we recognize it or not.
This is the good news. The presence of God is reflected, brightly or dimly, in six billion human souls’ mirrors, everywhere in the world. These are God’s images. These are our neighbors. Jesus’ ministry called us to love them, and ourselves, for our brightness and our dimness as well.
Love is the orientation of the soul that arises in the conscious relation of personal being with being itself. This (“the conscious relation of personal being with being itself”) is also how I have described “the presence of God.” Ergo, God is love, as the Johannine scriptures tell us. Now I affirm this as true myself, not because John said so, but because I have discovered it to be true according to my own experience and reflection. This sheds light as well on Paul’s scripture saying, “Faith, hope, love; these three abide.” In other words, faith and hope, too, are orientations of the soul inherent in this conscious relation. But, as the Apostle avers, “love is the greatest of these.” Without love, hope is faint and futile; without love, faith is brittle and desiccated.
It is notable that in these terms, “God” is a relation, not a thing. I used to speak of God as “being itself,” that is, the ultimate reality “behind” or “beneath” all things, until I realized that I have also come to understand that the human personal consciousness of God is necessary for the “presence” of God. As I once wrote, “If there were no minds to know God, there would be no God to be known.” Just as the human being - or “personal being” - is an aspect of the ultimate reality I describe as “being itself,” personal God-consciousness can be regarded as the “consciousness of being itself,” something I’ve also said repeatedly. Here, then, is the truth of the religious affirmation that humanity is created by the love of God, and in “God’s image.”
I refer here, as I have again and again through the years, to my first articulation of this, which I wrote twelve or thirteen years ago, when my daughters Anna and Maggie were very young:
“How big is God, Daddy? Is he bigger than a house?”, asked Anna, my firstborn and the more pensive of my two little girls, one afternoon while we sat together on the front porch railing after their preschool day.
“God is not a person, or a thing you can see, or touch, or hear,” I answered her, quite as thoughtfully. “God is . . . a feeling inside you. God is how you feel when you know you are alive. God is what you feel when you love someone. When you say, ‘I love you,’ you feel God in you.”
Anna sat quietly for half a minute, enjoying her ice cream cone. “I love you, Daddy”, she said.
“I know, sweetie. I love you, too. Listen. Do you remember the day we were at the beach, when you were kneeling in the wet sand, with your back to the waves, and you’d laugh as each wave surprised you, splashing over your shoulders? Maggie was playing by herself, near us on the big rocks, and you and I were there in the surf, and I’d laugh when you laughed, and you looked up at me then and yelled, ‘I’m haaaap-py!’ Do you remember how good you felt then? That was God, laughing inside you.”
Being itself recognizes itself in the aspect of personal being. As this relationship becomes conscious, love arises, the subjectivity of which is called “divine love.” It is all together the love of God for the world and humanity, the human person’s responsive love of God, and love of neighbor. Thus we recognize the “subjective self” in each other, each and every one a being created in the image of God. And thus, God is love, and is located in the conscious relation of God with God’s human image.
And for animal lovers, to the extent that other sentient beings are in conscious relationship with God, love is there too. What about atheists? Well, in my view, they’re no exception. They just don’t like to use the term, “God.”
And what about agnostics? Their difficulty is in the mistake of worrying about the existence of God. God does not exist – God is existence itself, the ground of being, or being itself. To use some fancy verbal footwork, theirs is the perplexity of existents questioning the reality of existence itself, in which they consist.
This is, pretty much, the setup for St. Anselm’s “ontological argument” for the existence of God. The agnostic knows explicitly that he or she exists, and implicitly that all things in existence also exist, but doesn’t know that God is not to be understood to exist in the same way, as an existent, but rather as existence itself in relation with its human aspects which consist in it, and by grace and providence become conscious of their relation with it. As soon as a relational description of God is accepted by them, all their worries will fall away, like scales from their eyes.
What is God? God is not a what. God is not an existing being. God is not an object; God is the ultimate subject. God is being itself. God is. Who is God? God only knows. If God is anyone, God is I and Thou; God is the ultimate subject in the subject-subject relation.
To impute attributes of beings to God, as God, is to speak of God as if God were in being, among other beings. You and I and the lamp post are beings. Attributes, or Names of God, are metaphoric when speaking of God as God: God is good; God is just; God is merciful. Or else they are hyperbolic: God is great; God is all-knowing; God is all-powerful. Any words that can be said of God as God can be said of no thing in being: God is infinite; God is eternal; God is unconditional; God is absolute.
God the Creator and God’s Creation are completely interpenetrated. All Creation is in being; God is being itself. Wherever you are, there you jolly well are, aren’t you? And there God is, too; God always was, is now, and ever shall be, forever and ever, Amen. God’s presence is in us and among us here and now; ours is the consciousness of being itself. In our awareness of being, being itself experiences being itself. With each new generation, God’s faith in humanity is renewed; in each regeneration, humanity’s response of faith is renewed.
Through our consciousness, God apprehends Creation, and we, the fully self-conscious parts of Creation, apprehend God the Creator. This state of God-consciousness is what is called “sanctification” or “redemption.” It is a state of reconciliation with God; it is what is meant by being “in Christ.” When we then act out our lives in congruence with the ethics of Christ, we are “saved.” Salvation means we are saved from the effects of our potentialities for doing evil.
What is Satan? Satan is said to be the anti-Christ; as such, it is the antithesis of the human potentiality for redemption. If the Christ is the human capacity for reconciliation with God, the Satan is its converse. Neither the Christ nor the Satan is a supernatural person, or divine being, or real entities of any sort. Their names are symbols of the universal human potentials for salvation and damnation, ultimate good and ultimate evil. In Hebrew, the words ha Satan ("the Satan") appear in the Book of Job. These are usually translated as “the Adversary,” understood allegorically to signify the “shadow” side of the human personality.
Between the Adversary and the moral righteousness of the "blameless and upright" human being, a constant dialectic was thought to be acted out in people’s daily lives. The effect of the embodied and unconstrained Satan is to tempt or traduce the human soul to sin, which denies the Christ potential and alienates the person from God’s grace. Deeply infected with sin, people do evil, causing various kinds of harm and damage to others, usually intentionally.
Remember well that the Christ and the Satan are symbols standing for human mental, ideational, and intentional configurations, or “states of mind,” that can become more or less permanently internalized, and consequently affect a person’s conscience, character formation, moral and ethical faculties, and the entire array of human personality factors, for good or ill.
To be “in Christ” is the converse of being “in sin.” In Christ (remember, this is a sanctified state of the psyche, a holy condition of the soul, not a mystical divine being), the “saved” or “redeemed” person is incapable of sin, that is, of doing willful harm to self or others, or to God’s Creation. The sanctified one is relieved of sinfulness by virtue of a capacity for self “disciple-ing” in which one walks in the way of the internalized Christ. The sanctified one “fears God,” that is, conscientiously avoids doing harm to God’s Creation.
To be in sin, in thrall to the Satan, means that the potential of being reconciled with God, of being “in Christ,” is denied or preempted. The human will to do evil, to not refrain from doing harm, is unleashed. In this state, the human person is free to act out diffidence or malice, and to carry out damage, destruction, aggression, and oppression by whatever means will suit his sinful ends or sinful attributes – Pride, Envy, Wrath, Sloth, Greed, Gluttony, and Lust, among them.
Who is Jesus? “Is” is the wrong tense. Jesus was an itinerant, indigent Jewish teacher and religious reformer, a Rabbi and a rabble-rouser, a prophet of profound religious and social transformation. He was brutally murdered by crucifixion at the orders of the Roman Provincial Authority, as an enemy of the state. He was not, by any means, the only person to have suffered this fate, for the same reasons.
Jesus was not a Christian. He was, however, “in Christ,” awakened, enlightened, exalted, and sanctified. He was truly a saint. He was also not, by any means, the only saint to have been sanctified “in Christ.” There have been multitudes, before and since Jesus, even now there are. Some of them are Christians; many are not. Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, for instance, was “in Christ.” Maybe Augustine of Hippo was, maybe Muhammad of Medina, John Wesley, George Fox, Mahatma Gandhi, and John Freeman, to name but a few.
How does Jesus redeem us from our sins? He doesn’t. He died two thousand years ago. “In Christ,” one day at a time, we are redeemed and sanctified by reconciliation with God through our own human conscientious faculties. We are to promote salvation, by proclaiming this gospel and acting out in beneficence toward others, “in Christ,” until we die and are eventually taken up, body, mind, and soul, into the earthly biosphere from whence we came.
Except in Biblical mythology, no one has ever seen or heard God, and no one ever will. This is because the "Supreme Being" is not a being, as human beings are, as every object of human intentionality or relationality is. We are persons; God is not a person. Yet God the Creator and God’s Creation are completely interpenetrated. All Creation is in being; God is being itself. God cannot be known objectively, because God is not an object. The human person can only know God subjectively, as we know our own experience and ourselves.
All I can say about God, qua God, is that God is. God’s essence is to be; in God alone, essence and existence are one. Of this, I can have the same perfect certainty as that I am. Objectively considered, my personal being is contingent, finite, temporal. I was once not in being, and the time will come when I am no longer, subjectively incomprehensible though that is. God’s being is absolute, infinite, eternal, and necessary to my being. That I am is indubitable, if not necessary.
The miracle that I am a conditional being, who can apprehend the ultimate, unconditional reality of being itself, is the gift and grace of God. In this transcendent apprehension, it may be said truly that I manifest the consciousness of being itself. What people call the presence of God is the self-conscious relation of personal being with being itself; and vice-versa, if you prefer - the relation of being itself with conscious, personal being. One key to this understanding is relatedness, but not just in the usual interpersonal sense. God is self-relatedness; God is relatedness itself. In God-consciousness, the dichotomy of subject and object is both necessary and it is self-transcendent.
The American Buddhist teacher Adyashanti says, “Because of an innocent misunderstanding, you think that you are a human being in the relative world seeking the experience of Oneness, but actually you are the One expressing itself as the experience of being a human being.”
As Alan Watts put it, “Every individual is an expression of the whole realm of nature, a unique action of the total universe.” (I have put it this way: “We are being itself experiencing itself being experienced.” Experienced by whom? By itself, of course.) Watts explained further, “God also likes to play hide-and-seek, but because there is nothing outside God, he has no one but himself to play with. But he gets over this difficulty by pretending that he is not himself. Now when God plays hide and pretends that he is you and I, he does it so well that it takes him a long time to remember where and how he hid himself. But that’s the whole fun of it – just what he wanted to do.”
In the ancient Hebrew myth, God’s presence is revealed to Moses, appearing symbolically, in a burning bush that is nevertheless not consumed. It is significant that this realization is made by a human being. It could not be otherwise. It is said we are made in God’s image, because it is in human reflection that God the Creator recognizes himself, or herself, and remembers that the Creation was no accident, after all.
Sometimes this realization occurs to us when we recognize ourselves in other beings, other people. It is in shared awe and in praise of this incomprehensible reality that we worship together. If you would see the face of God, look in the faces of women, men, and children. If you would see the hands with which God works in the world, the feet with which God walks in the world, look at your own hands and feet. If you would hear the voice of God, listen to your own silent voice in prayerful reflection.
As Jesus taught, all the Torah and the Prophets are summed up in this single greatest commandment, “you shall love the LORD your God with all your soul, and all your heart, and all your mind,” because God is ever present within us and among us. Jesus taught another commandment like it, “Love your neighbor as you love yourself,” because every person – the inner conscience in every person – reflects the image of God, whether we recognize it or not.
This is the good news. The presence of God is reflected, brightly or dimly, in six billion human souls’ mirrors, everywhere in the world. These are God’s images. These are our neighbors. Jesus’ ministry called us to love them, and ourselves, for our brightness and our dimness as well.
Saturday, July 23, 2005
Reflections on War and Poverty
I had been thinking that perhaps the two highest-order material evils of our time, and all times, are war and poverty - conventional enough thinking - when I realized how deceptively framed these ideas have become in ordinary public discourse.
Take, for instance, the huge and perennial evil of poverty. It occurs to me that poverty itself is not the primary problem. Poverty has a primary cause, and that is – wealth. Wealth, the obsessive accumulation of it, and the misdistribution of it, are the root causes of endemic poverty in our world.
Throughout the history of human civilization, wherever great excesses of wealth have been amassed, great poverty has existed not far away. This is no mere coincidence. Excessive wealth and extreme poverty are directly correlated by causality, not by accident. Neither social condition can exist without the other. In fact, the existence of one is the definition of the other. Wealth cannot be seen to be excessive except by contrast with a co-existing extreme of poverty. Poverty, by conventional definition, is the deprivation of sufficient wealth for human well-being. Excessive wealth, by my definition , is not only the condition of more than sufficient wealth, but that condition which also entails the objective insufficiency we call poverty.
I have sometimes put it as follows, and as no economist without an ideological axe to grind will ever dispute: At any point in the process of an economy, there is a finite quantity of created wealth in existence. There is a certain distribution of this wealth among its owners. Some have more than others. However “enough” is defined, when some have much more than enough, others will necessarily not have that excess. If there are many who, in fact, do not have enough, then those who have more, have what is needed by others who have less. The “have-mores” have their excesses at the expense of those who have less than they need.
Republicans, libertarians, and apostles of the “prosperity gospel” will take umbrage at this. But their protestations notwithstanding, I am here to tell you that theirs is bad philosophy and bad religion. The Hebrew prophets of the ages, straight on down to Jesus of Nazareth, had it right, distorted though their prophecies have become in popular parlance. You cannot serve God and Mammon. You may worship one or the other, but not both, unless you are a fool or a hypocrite. To parallel Albert Einstein’s famous saying, “You cannot simultaneously work for peace and prepare for war,” I say, “You cannot dispel poverty while accumulating excessive wealth.”
Furthermore, excessive wealth and concomitant poverty are the root causes of war. Let me explain myself: Poverty consists of deprivation. Excessive wealth entails deprivation. What constitutes war? Violence carried out by people against other people. People act violently against others when they have been objectively or subjectively deprived of something which is of worth to them.
A simple instance: An insecure person responds violently to an insult, because in a state of personal insecurity, the insult deprives that person of his or her sense of self-worth. Another instance: A person needing or wanting something takes it from another person to whom it belongs and to whom the thing taken has value. The person deprived of something of worth responds violently against the other. Yet another instance: A person acting violently causes bodily harm or injury to another person, or threatens to do so. Thus the other is deprived of well-being, or the sense of security, and responds violently.
These instances of interpersonal violence can serve as analogues for international violence. Such violent personal acts, acts of deprivation, greatly compounded, are the constituents of war. Every act of war directly or indirectly deprives people of some or all of their lives, liberties, happiness, health, and homes. Thus, the function of war is to impoverish those against whom it is directed. And acts of war are also the ultimate resort of national or subnational groups of people who have been likewise impoverished, or deprived of what they value, by those whom they will regard as their enemies.
Most significantly however, in the modern world, it must be recognized that war engaged in by powerful nation states has another important function. War always enriches those who declare it and direct it, and those who profit by the provision of the economic factors involved in the production of war. Thus, once again, the interests of amassing excessive wealth, in this case for purposes of waging war, are the efficient causes of abject poverty.
While the foregoing are universal economic verities in the modern world, there is one unique special case which ought to be considered. In all of history until September 11, 2001, only the United States among powerful nation states was able indefinitely to wage war and to cause widespread foreign impoverishment (along with its corresponding domestic enrichment) beyond its borders with impunity, except for military casualties. Other than in the case of the U.S.A., acts of war and political and economic exploitation against other peoples have always before long resulted in retaliatory warfare against the enemy population. So war and poverty continued to be reciprocally engendered, and the interests of wealth – Mammon – have been their progenitor. The terrorist attacks of 2001 on the World Trade Center signaled that the specially privileged people of the United States are no longer invulnerable.
Whoever the instigators of the terrorist crimes of 9-11 were (and, despite conventional public wisdom, this has not been established with certainty) their evil was not done because “they hate our values,” as the Bush regime insists. To the extent that the perpetrators were Islamic militants, it is more probably because they hate the desolation and deprivation we have wrought against their values, i.e. the impoverishment of Muslim peoples in the “third world” by the people of the “first world,” preeminently in the United States and the United Kingdom.
In a sign of our times, a 1985 pastoral statement circulated in churches of Johannesburg, South Africa, is as timely as tomorrow for us here and now:
"We now pray that God will replace the present unjust structures of oppression with ones that are just, and remove from power those who persist in defying his laws, installing in their place leaders who will govern with justice and mercy . . . The present regime, with its structures of domination, stands in contradiction to the Christian gospel to which the churches of the land seek to remain faithful . . . We pray that God in his grace may remove from his people the tyrannical structures of oppression and the present rulers in our country who persistently refuse to hear the cry for justice . . . We pledge ourselves to work for that day."
Gustavo Gutiérrez writes that, for the fulfillment of the prophetic imperative, “the support of the community [of saints, the religious community] is essential . . . community life [as in the basic ecclesial communities of Latin America] cultivates receptivity for God’s reign and also proclaims . . . the special call to overcome . . . oppression, injustice . . . and to struggle for the values of the kingdom that Jesus proclaimed.”
The life work of Gustavo Gutiérrez (and liberation theologians following him) consisted in a synthesis of ethics and theology, politics and religion. Politics and religion meet, if they meet at all, in the personal. If the personal is political, then for the religious person, religion is political. I believe that all persons are both – we are inherently religious and political. A society of persons in which the religious and the political do not meet is in deep trouble, for it is either in error or it is in denial. Recognizing that a society is nothing but a complex of inter-relationships among persons, I think it must be true that in a just society the realms of religious ethics and political ethics would be coterminous.
Even in a religiously pluralistic society, the golden rule necessarily applies as the supreme ethic: I will not do unto others as I would not have done unto me. Don’t pee in my pool, and I won’t pee in yours. What, you may ask, does this rule of social reciprocity have to do with religion? For one thing, it is the first ethic of all religions in all cultures known to have ever existed – that is, the ones which were sustainable for more than a few generations. As Paul Tillich said, “Religion is the substance of culture, and culture is the form of religion.” Religion informs culture. The key to understanding Tillich’s bon mot is that, in his terms, religion is not simply identical with theology and ecclesiology; it includes within its meaning secular religions, the profane as well as the sacred. For, as we know, one person’s sacrament is another’s profanity.
This is not to say, as some young people do, “It’s all good.” Certainly not all that is done is good. Some is absolutely evil, unpalatable though that term may be to moral relativists. What is evil? It is the antithesis of good, and good has consistent objective meaning when considered inter-relationally, as all ethical considerations ought to be. What is considered good for one, or some, ought to be not other than what is good for all. As I suggested with reference to the golden rule, this should be no big news. Among other things, it was the core ethic of Plato’s philosophy concerning the just society. (By the way, there is good reason to suppose a direct connection in the history of social thought between the golden rule of the Hebrew Bible and the ethics of Plato and Aristotle.)
As usual, the devil is in the details. I think this is because of the recurrent ethos of what Rabbi Michael Lerner calls selfish individualism, which is what you might call sin. (Or you might not – I do.) Is sin original, inescapable, and inherent in humankind? I don’t think so. Endemic, perhaps, but not incurable. Did Jesus want to redeem us from sin? It certainly appears so, but not by getting crucified. I imagine that was John the Baptist’s objective, too. Unfortunately, he got murdered for his efforts as well.
How could a holy teacher’s words redeem us from sin? You have one big clue already. That’s right – the golden rule. An informed and conscientious application of it in praxis throughout our society would save us. Aristotle’s Nichomachean Ethics would be helpful, too. And Plato before him had a similar take on the subject. Speaking in Socrates’ voice (and identically with the ethic of Jesus) he wrote, “It is better to suffer injustice than to do injustice unto others.”
Take, for instance, the huge and perennial evil of poverty. It occurs to me that poverty itself is not the primary problem. Poverty has a primary cause, and that is – wealth. Wealth, the obsessive accumulation of it, and the misdistribution of it, are the root causes of endemic poverty in our world.
Throughout the history of human civilization, wherever great excesses of wealth have been amassed, great poverty has existed not far away. This is no mere coincidence. Excessive wealth and extreme poverty are directly correlated by causality, not by accident. Neither social condition can exist without the other. In fact, the existence of one is the definition of the other. Wealth cannot be seen to be excessive except by contrast with a co-existing extreme of poverty. Poverty, by conventional definition, is the deprivation of sufficient wealth for human well-being. Excessive wealth, by my definition , is not only the condition of more than sufficient wealth, but that condition which also entails the objective insufficiency we call poverty.
I have sometimes put it as follows, and as no economist without an ideological axe to grind will ever dispute: At any point in the process of an economy, there is a finite quantity of created wealth in existence. There is a certain distribution of this wealth among its owners. Some have more than others. However “enough” is defined, when some have much more than enough, others will necessarily not have that excess. If there are many who, in fact, do not have enough, then those who have more, have what is needed by others who have less. The “have-mores” have their excesses at the expense of those who have less than they need.
Republicans, libertarians, and apostles of the “prosperity gospel” will take umbrage at this. But their protestations notwithstanding, I am here to tell you that theirs is bad philosophy and bad religion. The Hebrew prophets of the ages, straight on down to Jesus of Nazareth, had it right, distorted though their prophecies have become in popular parlance. You cannot serve God and Mammon. You may worship one or the other, but not both, unless you are a fool or a hypocrite. To parallel Albert Einstein’s famous saying, “You cannot simultaneously work for peace and prepare for war,” I say, “You cannot dispel poverty while accumulating excessive wealth.”
Furthermore, excessive wealth and concomitant poverty are the root causes of war. Let me explain myself: Poverty consists of deprivation. Excessive wealth entails deprivation. What constitutes war? Violence carried out by people against other people. People act violently against others when they have been objectively or subjectively deprived of something which is of worth to them.
A simple instance: An insecure person responds violently to an insult, because in a state of personal insecurity, the insult deprives that person of his or her sense of self-worth. Another instance: A person needing or wanting something takes it from another person to whom it belongs and to whom the thing taken has value. The person deprived of something of worth responds violently against the other. Yet another instance: A person acting violently causes bodily harm or injury to another person, or threatens to do so. Thus the other is deprived of well-being, or the sense of security, and responds violently.
These instances of interpersonal violence can serve as analogues for international violence. Such violent personal acts, acts of deprivation, greatly compounded, are the constituents of war. Every act of war directly or indirectly deprives people of some or all of their lives, liberties, happiness, health, and homes. Thus, the function of war is to impoverish those against whom it is directed. And acts of war are also the ultimate resort of national or subnational groups of people who have been likewise impoverished, or deprived of what they value, by those whom they will regard as their enemies.
Most significantly however, in the modern world, it must be recognized that war engaged in by powerful nation states has another important function. War always enriches those who declare it and direct it, and those who profit by the provision of the economic factors involved in the production of war. Thus, once again, the interests of amassing excessive wealth, in this case for purposes of waging war, are the efficient causes of abject poverty.
While the foregoing are universal economic verities in the modern world, there is one unique special case which ought to be considered. In all of history until September 11, 2001, only the United States among powerful nation states was able indefinitely to wage war and to cause widespread foreign impoverishment (along with its corresponding domestic enrichment) beyond its borders with impunity, except for military casualties. Other than in the case of the U.S.A., acts of war and political and economic exploitation against other peoples have always before long resulted in retaliatory warfare against the enemy population. So war and poverty continued to be reciprocally engendered, and the interests of wealth – Mammon – have been their progenitor. The terrorist attacks of 2001 on the World Trade Center signaled that the specially privileged people of the United States are no longer invulnerable.
Whoever the instigators of the terrorist crimes of 9-11 were (and, despite conventional public wisdom, this has not been established with certainty) their evil was not done because “they hate our values,” as the Bush regime insists. To the extent that the perpetrators were Islamic militants, it is more probably because they hate the desolation and deprivation we have wrought against their values, i.e. the impoverishment of Muslim peoples in the “third world” by the people of the “first world,” preeminently in the United States and the United Kingdom.
In a sign of our times, a 1985 pastoral statement circulated in churches of Johannesburg, South Africa, is as timely as tomorrow for us here and now:
"We now pray that God will replace the present unjust structures of oppression with ones that are just, and remove from power those who persist in defying his laws, installing in their place leaders who will govern with justice and mercy . . . The present regime, with its structures of domination, stands in contradiction to the Christian gospel to which the churches of the land seek to remain faithful . . . We pray that God in his grace may remove from his people the tyrannical structures of oppression and the present rulers in our country who persistently refuse to hear the cry for justice . . . We pledge ourselves to work for that day."
Gustavo Gutiérrez writes that, for the fulfillment of the prophetic imperative, “the support of the community [of saints, the religious community] is essential . . . community life [as in the basic ecclesial communities of Latin America] cultivates receptivity for God’s reign and also proclaims . . . the special call to overcome . . . oppression, injustice . . . and to struggle for the values of the kingdom that Jesus proclaimed.”
The life work of Gustavo Gutiérrez (and liberation theologians following him) consisted in a synthesis of ethics and theology, politics and religion. Politics and religion meet, if they meet at all, in the personal. If the personal is political, then for the religious person, religion is political. I believe that all persons are both – we are inherently religious and political. A society of persons in which the religious and the political do not meet is in deep trouble, for it is either in error or it is in denial. Recognizing that a society is nothing but a complex of inter-relationships among persons, I think it must be true that in a just society the realms of religious ethics and political ethics would be coterminous.
Even in a religiously pluralistic society, the golden rule necessarily applies as the supreme ethic: I will not do unto others as I would not have done unto me. Don’t pee in my pool, and I won’t pee in yours. What, you may ask, does this rule of social reciprocity have to do with religion? For one thing, it is the first ethic of all religions in all cultures known to have ever existed – that is, the ones which were sustainable for more than a few generations. As Paul Tillich said, “Religion is the substance of culture, and culture is the form of religion.” Religion informs culture. The key to understanding Tillich’s bon mot is that, in his terms, religion is not simply identical with theology and ecclesiology; it includes within its meaning secular religions, the profane as well as the sacred. For, as we know, one person’s sacrament is another’s profanity.
This is not to say, as some young people do, “It’s all good.” Certainly not all that is done is good. Some is absolutely evil, unpalatable though that term may be to moral relativists. What is evil? It is the antithesis of good, and good has consistent objective meaning when considered inter-relationally, as all ethical considerations ought to be. What is considered good for one, or some, ought to be not other than what is good for all. As I suggested with reference to the golden rule, this should be no big news. Among other things, it was the core ethic of Plato’s philosophy concerning the just society. (By the way, there is good reason to suppose a direct connection in the history of social thought between the golden rule of the Hebrew Bible and the ethics of Plato and Aristotle.)
As usual, the devil is in the details. I think this is because of the recurrent ethos of what Rabbi Michael Lerner calls selfish individualism, which is what you might call sin. (Or you might not – I do.) Is sin original, inescapable, and inherent in humankind? I don’t think so. Endemic, perhaps, but not incurable. Did Jesus want to redeem us from sin? It certainly appears so, but not by getting crucified. I imagine that was John the Baptist’s objective, too. Unfortunately, he got murdered for his efforts as well.
How could a holy teacher’s words redeem us from sin? You have one big clue already. That’s right – the golden rule. An informed and conscientious application of it in praxis throughout our society would save us. Aristotle’s Nichomachean Ethics would be helpful, too. And Plato before him had a similar take on the subject. Speaking in Socrates’ voice (and identically with the ethic of Jesus) he wrote, “It is better to suffer injustice than to do injustice unto others.”
Thursday, November 04, 2004
It’s Not Just The Economy, Stupid.
By Jim Weller
3 November 2004
Hello friends. Wake up and smell the gun smoke.
It is 9:37 a.m. in Berkeley, California, and John Kerry, the unfortunate leader of the too little, too late Democratic opposition, has conceded electoral defeat.
The blood-stained hands of George Bush and Richard Cheney are raised in exultation, and the crypto-fascist cadres of Republican demagogues standing balefully behind them are sharpening their battle-axes.
Gird your loins and say your prayers, for today, the People's Resistance begins. The Democratic Party, as we knew it, has had its last hurrah. If any hope is left for the formerly democratic Republic of the United States, it will be in a resolute and stone-cold serious National Resistance Party.
There can be no more equivocating political gamesmanship. The Republican strategists are playing for keeps, and believe me, their strategy from here on in is all-out war; scorched earth.
The re-elected Bush Dynasty will, in short order and irredeemably, make the United States Public Enemy Number One everywhere in the world. You think you’ve seen shock and awe in Baghdad? You ain’t seen nothing yet.
U.S. military forces will soon be engaged in catastrophic warfare far beyond Iraq. As wars of resistance against the U.S. imperium spread throughout the Middle East, expect policies of aggression from Washington that will make the present state of war in Iraq look like the shoot-out at the O.K. Corral.
Expect killing fields in Palestine such as have not been known since the medieval crusades; since the fabled ancient Israelites’ conquests in Canaan.
Bush has not committed himself to deploying new battle-field nuclear weapons for no particular reason. In Teheran, in Damascus, and in Pyongyang, there is every reason to worry.
Expect the economy to continue going to hell in a hand basket. That is part of the Grand Old Party’s plan. The Republican junta has learned well the political lessons of the Third Reich. While the military industrialists prosper, and the super-rich continue to appropriate for themselves the wealth of the nation, widespread economic disintegration will play into the hands of the warmongers and national security freaks.
Meanwhile, the class struggle in this country will continue unabated, as it has since the founding days, but with greater violence and intensity than ever before. The fault lines in this country’s socio-political topography have never been more apparent. The mythology of the middle class will now become obvious shadowplay to all but the stupidest and most selfish.
Listen up, people: The time has come to finally decide which side you are on.
Soon, Bush will appoint the next Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, and a replacement on the high court for William Rehnquist. No prizes for guessing correctly that these will be far-right extremists who will start up their chain saws immediately and have another go at the edifices of civil liberty and social justice that still remain standing.
As David S. Broder and Richard Morin write in the Washington Post today (Wednesday, November 3, 2004; Page A01),
The hard-fought 2004 fight for the presidency reflected both deep-seated social divisions in the country and the polarizing effects of Iraq, the economy and the war on terrorism.
The decision to invade Iraq split the electorate almost evenly, according to the polling, although more think it is going badly than going well. Those who opposed the war and those who think it is failing went 4 to 1 for Kerry. Supporters of the Iraq policy and optimists backed Bush by equally lopsided ratios.
The issue agenda varied by state. In Ohio, the economy and jobs topped the list, named by almost twice as many voters as those who singled out Iraq. But in New Hampshire, the reverse was true. And in Florida, terrorism topped both Iraq and the economy.
One voter in five said moral values were the most important issue driving the vote, and almost eight out of 10 of them backed Bush. Terrorism was almost as high in importance, and 85 percent of voters citing it also supported the president. Kerry found his strongest support -- more than 80 percent -- among those who named the economy, jobs and the war in Iraq as their most important concerns.
It is clear that not only must we patiently convince people with whom we’d rather not associate at all that war is not the answer; we must radically change their understanding of moral values.
We must unremittingly teach the truth that terrorism is the consequence of the violence and injustice we inflict upon the world, not just an evil inflicted on us by our enemies. They are our enemies for good reasons. Osama bin Laden is correct in telling us our security is in our own hands.
We must commit our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor to dismantling the structures of economic injustice that have brought us to the dire place where we are. No longer will privileged liberals and bourgeois conservatives be able to occupy the relatively high places while the teeming masses toil and glean disconsolately below.
We must convince Republicans and Democrats alike that it is not just the economy and jobs with which we all need to be ultimately concerned. There is a deep, implacable, xenophobic, religious fundamentalist, racist Weltanschauung abroad in this nation, which simply must be converted if we are not to descend into a new civil war.
As Broder and Morin report,
Overall, white voters were favoring Bush by about 54 percent to 44 percent -- similar to his 2000 share. The exit poll indicated that about 22 percent of yesterday's voters were white evangelical or born-again Christians. White House strategists had made a major effort to recruit more voters from that group, but no comparable figure for 2000 was available.
A reactionary inversion of universal human morality, which has overcome the imagination and the common sense of the people of the United States of America, now threatens this country and the world with devastation and desolation.
My friends, the time to rise up in a permanent national resistance movement has come at last. This will take us the rest of our lives, and we will surely be called on to sacrifice much.
God help us.
Yet there is hope. Today’s Washington Post story continues,
Another notable feature of the election was the Kerry edge among voters younger than 30. Their ranks grew as much as those of older voters, who usually are much more reliable in showing up at the polls. And those between 18 and 29 -- one-sixth of the electorate -- were going for Kerry by 13 points last night.
We, who were under 30 in “the movement” of the late 1960’s, must now pass on our socio-political legacy to the young of this era. We ought by now to have learned the lessons of the intervening decades, how the corrupt consumer capitalist system invidiously co-opts the moral aspirations of youth, and suffocates their incipient liberation movements.
We must not let this happen again to our children. We must join with them, and educate them in the ethics of resistance, and arm them with real humanitarian morality, for it is they who will carry the revolution forward after us.
These youth, whom we must support in their radicalization with us, under our tutelage, and in collaboration with us, will not be well served by the inept Democratic partisan forms that have failed us this day.
We must build with them a committed National Resistance Party that will not turn from the demand of the people for liberation, and will resolutely speak the truth to power, demanding reform, and committing to patiently convert the hearts and minds of our benighted neighbors.
Let us remember the immortal words of Frederick Douglass, away back in 1857:
This struggle may be a moral one, or it may be a physical one, and it may be both moral and physical, but it must be a struggle. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Find out just what any people will quietly submit to and you have found out the exact measure of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them, and these will continue till they are resisted with either words or blows, or with both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they oppress.
3 November 2004
Hello friends. Wake up and smell the gun smoke.
It is 9:37 a.m. in Berkeley, California, and John Kerry, the unfortunate leader of the too little, too late Democratic opposition, has conceded electoral defeat.
The blood-stained hands of George Bush and Richard Cheney are raised in exultation, and the crypto-fascist cadres of Republican demagogues standing balefully behind them are sharpening their battle-axes.
Gird your loins and say your prayers, for today, the People's Resistance begins. The Democratic Party, as we knew it, has had its last hurrah. If any hope is left for the formerly democratic Republic of the United States, it will be in a resolute and stone-cold serious National Resistance Party.
There can be no more equivocating political gamesmanship. The Republican strategists are playing for keeps, and believe me, their strategy from here on in is all-out war; scorched earth.
The re-elected Bush Dynasty will, in short order and irredeemably, make the United States Public Enemy Number One everywhere in the world. You think you’ve seen shock and awe in Baghdad? You ain’t seen nothing yet.
U.S. military forces will soon be engaged in catastrophic warfare far beyond Iraq. As wars of resistance against the U.S. imperium spread throughout the Middle East, expect policies of aggression from Washington that will make the present state of war in Iraq look like the shoot-out at the O.K. Corral.
Expect killing fields in Palestine such as have not been known since the medieval crusades; since the fabled ancient Israelites’ conquests in Canaan.
Bush has not committed himself to deploying new battle-field nuclear weapons for no particular reason. In Teheran, in Damascus, and in Pyongyang, there is every reason to worry.
Expect the economy to continue going to hell in a hand basket. That is part of the Grand Old Party’s plan. The Republican junta has learned well the political lessons of the Third Reich. While the military industrialists prosper, and the super-rich continue to appropriate for themselves the wealth of the nation, widespread economic disintegration will play into the hands of the warmongers and national security freaks.
Meanwhile, the class struggle in this country will continue unabated, as it has since the founding days, but with greater violence and intensity than ever before. The fault lines in this country’s socio-political topography have never been more apparent. The mythology of the middle class will now become obvious shadowplay to all but the stupidest and most selfish.
Listen up, people: The time has come to finally decide which side you are on.
Soon, Bush will appoint the next Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, and a replacement on the high court for William Rehnquist. No prizes for guessing correctly that these will be far-right extremists who will start up their chain saws immediately and have another go at the edifices of civil liberty and social justice that still remain standing.
As David S. Broder and Richard Morin write in the Washington Post today (Wednesday, November 3, 2004; Page A01),
The hard-fought 2004 fight for the presidency reflected both deep-seated social divisions in the country and the polarizing effects of Iraq, the economy and the war on terrorism.
The decision to invade Iraq split the electorate almost evenly, according to the polling, although more think it is going badly than going well. Those who opposed the war and those who think it is failing went 4 to 1 for Kerry. Supporters of the Iraq policy and optimists backed Bush by equally lopsided ratios.
The issue agenda varied by state. In Ohio, the economy and jobs topped the list, named by almost twice as many voters as those who singled out Iraq. But in New Hampshire, the reverse was true. And in Florida, terrorism topped both Iraq and the economy.
One voter in five said moral values were the most important issue driving the vote, and almost eight out of 10 of them backed Bush. Terrorism was almost as high in importance, and 85 percent of voters citing it also supported the president. Kerry found his strongest support -- more than 80 percent -- among those who named the economy, jobs and the war in Iraq as their most important concerns.
It is clear that not only must we patiently convince people with whom we’d rather not associate at all that war is not the answer; we must radically change their understanding of moral values.
We must unremittingly teach the truth that terrorism is the consequence of the violence and injustice we inflict upon the world, not just an evil inflicted on us by our enemies. They are our enemies for good reasons. Osama bin Laden is correct in telling us our security is in our own hands.
We must commit our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor to dismantling the structures of economic injustice that have brought us to the dire place where we are. No longer will privileged liberals and bourgeois conservatives be able to occupy the relatively high places while the teeming masses toil and glean disconsolately below.
We must convince Republicans and Democrats alike that it is not just the economy and jobs with which we all need to be ultimately concerned. There is a deep, implacable, xenophobic, religious fundamentalist, racist Weltanschauung abroad in this nation, which simply must be converted if we are not to descend into a new civil war.
As Broder and Morin report,
Overall, white voters were favoring Bush by about 54 percent to 44 percent -- similar to his 2000 share. The exit poll indicated that about 22 percent of yesterday's voters were white evangelical or born-again Christians. White House strategists had made a major effort to recruit more voters from that group, but no comparable figure for 2000 was available.
A reactionary inversion of universal human morality, which has overcome the imagination and the common sense of the people of the United States of America, now threatens this country and the world with devastation and desolation.
My friends, the time to rise up in a permanent national resistance movement has come at last. This will take us the rest of our lives, and we will surely be called on to sacrifice much.
God help us.
Yet there is hope. Today’s Washington Post story continues,
Another notable feature of the election was the Kerry edge among voters younger than 30. Their ranks grew as much as those of older voters, who usually are much more reliable in showing up at the polls. And those between 18 and 29 -- one-sixth of the electorate -- were going for Kerry by 13 points last night.
We, who were under 30 in “the movement” of the late 1960’s, must now pass on our socio-political legacy to the young of this era. We ought by now to have learned the lessons of the intervening decades, how the corrupt consumer capitalist system invidiously co-opts the moral aspirations of youth, and suffocates their incipient liberation movements.
We must not let this happen again to our children. We must join with them, and educate them in the ethics of resistance, and arm them with real humanitarian morality, for it is they who will carry the revolution forward after us.
These youth, whom we must support in their radicalization with us, under our tutelage, and in collaboration with us, will not be well served by the inept Democratic partisan forms that have failed us this day.
We must build with them a committed National Resistance Party that will not turn from the demand of the people for liberation, and will resolutely speak the truth to power, demanding reform, and committing to patiently convert the hearts and minds of our benighted neighbors.
Let us remember the immortal words of Frederick Douglass, away back in 1857:
This struggle may be a moral one, or it may be a physical one, and it may be both moral and physical, but it must be a struggle. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Find out just what any people will quietly submit to and you have found out the exact measure of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them, and these will continue till they are resisted with either words or blows, or with both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they oppress.
Wednesday, September 15, 2004
Facing the Republican Anschluss
15 September 2004
By Jim Weller
Let’s shut off the spin cycle in public discourse and talk some turkey about socio-political reality in contemporary America.
Some pundits and apologists will dissemble every which way, but the plain truth is that supporters of the Republican agenda today are people I must identify as white supremacists. They fear and loathe everyone different from themselves, whether ethnically, religiously, culturally, attitudinally, by socioeconomic class, nationality, sexual orientation, sexual identity or sub-cultural identity – in other words, they are dangerous xenophobes.
What does it mean to be a white supremacist?
First, it means being white by psycho-social identification – which is not equivalent to being a person of Anglo-Saxon ancestry. There are those of non-Anglo ancestry or appearance, who are yet definitively white. Some prominent examples are the Bush administration office holders Colin Powell, Condoleezza Rice, Rod Paige, Alphonso Jackson, Alberto Gonzales, and Elaine Chao. In my lexicon, being white is mainly a matter of social class and psychological disposition, not race identity.
Second, it means being supremacist – in other words, an aggressive control freak, one whose ultimate concern is to wield and maintain coercive power, and who is indiscriminately willing to harm or destroy others in doing so. There have been other sorts of so-called supremacists in the world – Black supremacists, Jewish supremacists, Islamic supremacists, and so on. More properly speaking, most of these are separatists, that is, variously oppressed peoples seeking to defend themselves in confrontation with or against domination by other groups. Acting in their own cause, they sometimes become oppressors. However, the greatest oppressors of all are those Americans who now indeed dominate the earth, the white supremacists – and the Republican Party is their political confederacy.
There are all kinds of white supremacists.
Some are Protestant, some Catholic, some Jewish, and some Non-Denominational. Some are Conservatives, some Liberals, and some Centrists. Some are Democrats, who might as well be Republicans. Some are Independents, some Libertarians, some Free-Marketers, and some Protectionists. Some are Isolationists, some Internationalists, and some are Regionalists. Some are Militarists, and some are Missionaries. Some are GLBT, in which case, they are deeply conflicted. Some are Cosmopolites, some Urbanites, some Suburbanites, and some are Ruralites. Some are Highbrows, some Lowbrows, and some Middlebrows. Some are Establishmentarians, some Disestablishmentarians, and some Know-Nothings.
In all their social and political diversity, they are a small minority of the peoples of the earth, and even of America. What should the rest of us, the great majority, do about the white supremacist Republicans who are presently in power? We should shut them down politically, decisively and soon.
As I’ve always said (well, I would have if I’d thought of it) – the only good Republican is a disempowered one. When they’ve been disarmed and removed from power, they can fume and fulminate until hell freezes over, if they must. Those who are demonstrably criminal, including the Presidential Pretender George W. Bush, his War Cabinet, and their co-conspirators, should be stripped of their property and privilege, and incarcerated permanently. Their supporters and accessories, who have merely aided and abetted in the Republican crimes of this century, can remain free and be rehabilitated as they will. We are a tolerant people, but we cede our power to the avaricious and the intemperate among us only at our extreme peril.
I am very serious about this. At this moment in history, I believe we are in immediate danger of a fascist takeover in this country that could make the Nazi Anschluss look quaint by comparison. The political offensive being led by the Bushites is a white supremacist movement to its core, and the Republican Party is its global assault vehicle.
I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: On the first Tuesday in November 2004, vote as if your life depended on it. It does, and you just might not have another chance.
By Jim Weller
Let’s shut off the spin cycle in public discourse and talk some turkey about socio-political reality in contemporary America.
Some pundits and apologists will dissemble every which way, but the plain truth is that supporters of the Republican agenda today are people I must identify as white supremacists. They fear and loathe everyone different from themselves, whether ethnically, religiously, culturally, attitudinally, by socioeconomic class, nationality, sexual orientation, sexual identity or sub-cultural identity – in other words, they are dangerous xenophobes.
What does it mean to be a white supremacist?
First, it means being white by psycho-social identification – which is not equivalent to being a person of Anglo-Saxon ancestry. There are those of non-Anglo ancestry or appearance, who are yet definitively white. Some prominent examples are the Bush administration office holders Colin Powell, Condoleezza Rice, Rod Paige, Alphonso Jackson, Alberto Gonzales, and Elaine Chao. In my lexicon, being white is mainly a matter of social class and psychological disposition, not race identity.
Second, it means being supremacist – in other words, an aggressive control freak, one whose ultimate concern is to wield and maintain coercive power, and who is indiscriminately willing to harm or destroy others in doing so. There have been other sorts of so-called supremacists in the world – Black supremacists, Jewish supremacists, Islamic supremacists, and so on. More properly speaking, most of these are separatists, that is, variously oppressed peoples seeking to defend themselves in confrontation with or against domination by other groups. Acting in their own cause, they sometimes become oppressors. However, the greatest oppressors of all are those Americans who now indeed dominate the earth, the white supremacists – and the Republican Party is their political confederacy.
There are all kinds of white supremacists.
Some are Protestant, some Catholic, some Jewish, and some Non-Denominational. Some are Conservatives, some Liberals, and some Centrists. Some are Democrats, who might as well be Republicans. Some are Independents, some Libertarians, some Free-Marketers, and some Protectionists. Some are Isolationists, some Internationalists, and some are Regionalists. Some are Militarists, and some are Missionaries. Some are GLBT, in which case, they are deeply conflicted. Some are Cosmopolites, some Urbanites, some Suburbanites, and some are Ruralites. Some are Highbrows, some Lowbrows, and some Middlebrows. Some are Establishmentarians, some Disestablishmentarians, and some Know-Nothings.
In all their social and political diversity, they are a small minority of the peoples of the earth, and even of America. What should the rest of us, the great majority, do about the white supremacist Republicans who are presently in power? We should shut them down politically, decisively and soon.
As I’ve always said (well, I would have if I’d thought of it) – the only good Republican is a disempowered one. When they’ve been disarmed and removed from power, they can fume and fulminate until hell freezes over, if they must. Those who are demonstrably criminal, including the Presidential Pretender George W. Bush, his War Cabinet, and their co-conspirators, should be stripped of their property and privilege, and incarcerated permanently. Their supporters and accessories, who have merely aided and abetted in the Republican crimes of this century, can remain free and be rehabilitated as they will. We are a tolerant people, but we cede our power to the avaricious and the intemperate among us only at our extreme peril.
I am very serious about this. At this moment in history, I believe we are in immediate danger of a fascist takeover in this country that could make the Nazi Anschluss look quaint by comparison. The political offensive being led by the Bushites is a white supremacist movement to its core, and the Republican Party is its global assault vehicle.
I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: On the first Tuesday in November 2004, vote as if your life depended on it. It does, and you just might not have another chance.
Wednesday, September 08, 2004
Bush By Numbers: Four Years of Double Standards
03 September 2004
By Graydon Carter.
1 Number of Bush administration public statements on National security issued between 20 January 2001 and 10 September 2001 that mentioned al-Qa'ida.
104 Number of Bush administration public statements on National security and defence in the same period that mentioned Iraq or Saddam Hussein.
101 Number of Bush administration public statements on National security and defence in the same period that mentioned missile defence.
65 Number of Bush administration public statements on National security and defence in the same period that mentioned weapons of mass destruction.
0 Number of times Bush mentioned Osama bin Laden in his three State of the Union addresses.
73 Number of times that Bush mentioned terrorism or terrorists in his three State of the Union addresses.
83 Number of times Bush mentioned Saddam, Iraq, or regime (as in change) in his three State of the Union addresses.
$1m Estimated value of a painting the Bush Presidential Library in College Station, Texas, received from Prince Bandar, Saudi Arabia's ambassador to the United States and Bush family friend.
0 Number of times Bush mentioned Saudi Arabia in his three State of the Union addresses.
1,700 Percentage increase between 2001 and 2002 of Saudi Arabian spending on public relations in the United States.
79 Percentage of the 11 September hijackers who came from Saudi Arabia.
3 Number of 11 September hijackers whose entry visas came through special US-Saudi "Visa Express" programme.
140 Number of Saudis, including members of the Bin Laden family, evacuated from United States almost immediately after 11 September.
14 Number of Immigration and Naturalisation Service (INS) agents assigned to track down 1,200 known illegal immigrants in the United States from countries where al-Qa'ida is active.
$3m Amount the White House was willing to grant the 9/11 Commission to investigate the 11 September attacks.
$0 Amount approved by George Bush to hire more INS special agents.
$10m Amount Bush cut from the INS's existing terrorism budget.
$50m Amount granted to the commission that looked into the Columbia space shuttle crash.
$5m Amount a 1996 federal commission was given to study legalised gambling.
7 Number of Arabic linguists fired by the US army between mid-August and mid-October 2002 for being gay.
George Bush: Military man
1972 Year that Bush walked away from his pilot duties in the Texas National Guard, Nearly two years before his six-year obligation was up.
$3,500 Reward a group of veterans offered in 2000 for anyone who could confirm Bush's Alabama guard service.
600-700 Number of guardsmen who were in Bush's unit during that period.
0 Number of guardsmen from that period who came forward with information about Bush's guard service.
0 Number of minutes that President Bush, Vice-President Dick Cheney, the Defence Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, the assistant Defence Secretary, Paul Wolfowitz, the former chairman of the Defence Policy Board, Richard Perle, and the White House Chief of Staff, Karl Rove the main proponents of the war in Iraq served in combat (combined).
0 Number of principal civilian or Pentagon staff members who planned the war who have immediate family members serving in uniform in Iraq.
8 Number of members of the US Senate and House of Representatives who have a child serving in the military.
10 Number of days that the Pentagon spent investigating a soldier who had called the President "a joke" in a letter to the editor of a Newspaper.
46 Percentage increase in sales between 2001 and 2002 of GI Joe figures (children's toys).
Ambitious warrior
2 Number of Nations that George Bush has attacked and taken over since coming into office.
130 Approximate Number of countries (out of a total of 191 recognised by the United Nations) with a US military presence.
43 Percentage of the entire world's military spending that the US spends on defence. (That was in 2002, the year before the invasion of Iraq.)
$401.3bn Proposed military budget for 2004.
Saviour of Iraq
1983 The year in which Donald Rumsfeld, Ronald Reagan's special envoy to the Middle East, gave Saddam Hussein a pair of golden spurs as a gift.
2.5 Number of hours after Rumsfeld learnt that Osama bin Laden was a suspect in the 11 September attacks that he brought up reasons to "hit" Iraq.
237 Minimum number of misleading statements on Iraq made by top Bush administration officials between 2002 and January 2004, according to the California Representative Henry Waxman.
10m Estimated number of people worldwide who took to the streets on 21 February 2003, in opposition to the invasion of Iraq, the largest simultaneous protest in world history.
$2bn Estimated monthly cost of US military presence in Iraq projected by the White House in April 2003.
$4bn Actual monthly cost of the US military presence in Iraq according to Secretary of Defence Rumsfeld in 2004.
$15m Amount of a contract awarded to an American firm to build a cement factory in Iraq.
$80,000 Amount an Iraqi firm spent (using Saddam's confiscated funds) to build the same factory, after delays prevented the American firm from starting it.
2000 Year that Cheney said his policy as CEO of Halliburton oil services company was "we wouldn't do anything in Iraq".
$4.7bn Total value of contracts awarded to Halliburton in Iraq and Afghanistan.
$680m Estimated value of Iraq reconstruction contracts awarded to Bechtel.
$2.8bnValue of Bechtel Corp contracts in Iraq.
$120bn Amount the war and its aftermath are projected to cost for the 2004 fiscal year.
35 Number of countries to which the United States suspended military assistance after they failed to sign agreements giving Americans immunity from prosecution before the International Criminal Court.
92 Percentage of Iraq's urban areas with access to potable water in late 2002.
60 Percentage of Iraq's urban areas with access to potable water in late 2003.
55 Percentage of the Iraqi workforce who were unemployed before the war.
80 Percentage of the Iraqi workforce who are unemployed a Year after the war.
0 Number of American combat deaths in Germany after the Nazi surrender in May 1945.
37 Death toll of US soldiers in Iraq in May 2003, the month combat operations "officially" ended.
0 Number of coffins of dead soldiers returning home that the Bush administration has permitted to be photographed.
0 Number of memorial services for the returned dead that Bush has attended since the beginning of the war.
A soldier's best friend
40,000 Number of soldiers in Iraq seven months after start of the war still without Interceptor vests, designed to stop a round from an AK-47.
$60m Estimated cost of outfitting those 40,000 soldiers with Interceptor vests.
62 Percentage of gas masks that army investigators discovered did Not work properly in autumn 2002.
90 Percentage of detectors which give early warning of a biological weapons attack found to be defective.
87 Percentage of Humvees in Iraq not equipped with armour capable of stopping AK-47 rounds and protecting against roadside bombs and landmines at the end of 2003.
Making the country safer
$3.29 Average amount allocated per person Nationwide in the first round of homeland security grants.
$94.40 Amount allocated per person for homeland security in American Samoa.
$36 Amount allocated per person for homeland security in Wyoming, Vice-President Cheney's home state.
$17 Amount allocated per person in New York state.
$5.87 Amount allocated per person in New York City.
$77.92 Amount allocated per person in New Haven, Connecticut, home of Yale University, Bush's alma mater.
76 Percentage of 215 cities surveyed by the US Conference of Mayors in early 2004 that had yet to receive a dime in federal homeland security assistance for their first-response units.
5 Number of major US airports at the beginning of 2004 that the Transportation Security Administration admitted were Not fully screening baggage electronically.
22,600 Number of planes carrying unscreened cargo that fly into New York each month.
5 Estimated Percentage of US air cargo that is screened, including cargo transported on passenger planes.
95 Percentage of foreign goods that arrive in the United States by sea.
2 Percentage of those goods subjected to thorough inspection.
$5.5bnEstimated cost to secure fully US ports over the Next decade.
$0 Amount Bush allocated for port security in 2003.
$46m Amount the Bush administration has budgeted for port security in 2005.
15,000 Number of major chemical facilities in the United States.
100 Number of US chemical plants where a terrorist act could endanger the lives of more than one million people.
0 Number of new drugs or vaccines against "priority pathogens" listed by the Centres for Disease Control that have been developed and introduced since 11 September 2001.
Giving a hand up to the advantaged
$10.9m Average wealth of the members of Bush's original 16-person cabinet.
75 Percentage of Americans unaffected by Bush's sweeping 2003 cuts in capital gains and dividends taxes.
$42,000 Average savings members of Bush's cabinet received in 2003 as a result of cuts in capital gains and dividends taxes.
10 Number of fellow members from the Yale secret society Skull and Bones that Bush has named to important positions (including the Associate Attorney General Robert McCallum Jr. and SEC chief Bill Donaldson).
79 Number of Bush's initial 189 appointees who also served in his father's administration.
A man with a lot of friends
$113m Amount of total hard money the Bush-Cheney 2000 campaign received, a record.
$11.5m Amount of hard money raised through the Pioneer programme, the controversial fund-raising process created for the Bush-Cheney 2000 campaign. (Participants pledged to raise at least $100,000 by bundling together cheques of up to $1,000 from friends and family. Pioneers were assigned numbers, which were included on all cheques, enabling the campaign to keep track of who raised how much.)
George Bush: Money manager
4.7m Number of bankruptcies that were declared during Bush's first three years in office.
2002 The worst year for major markets since the recession of the 1970s.
$489bn The US trade deficit in 2003, the worst in history for a single year.
$5.6tr Projected national surplus forecast by the end of the decade when Bush took office in 2001.
$7.22tr US national debt by mid-2004.
George Bush: Tax cutter
87 Percentage of American families in April 2004 who say they have felt no benefit from Bush's tax cuts.
39 Percentage of tax cuts that will go to the top 1 per cent of American families when fully phased in.
49 Percentage of Americans in April 2004 who found that their taxes had actually gone up since Bush took office.
88 Percentage of American families who will save less than $100 on their 2006 federal taxes as a result of 2003 cut in capital gains and dividends taxes.
$30,858 Amount Bush himself saved in taxes in 2003.
Employment tsar
9.3m Number of US unemployed in April 2004.
2.3m Number of Americans who lost their jobs during first three Years of the Bush administration.
22m Number of jobs gained during Clinton's eight years in office.
Friend of the poor
34.6m Number of Americans living below the poverty line (1 in 8 of the population).
6.8m Number of people in the workforce but still classified as poor.
35m Number of Americans that the government defines as "food insecure," in other words, hungry.
$300m Amount cut from the federal programme that provides subsidies to poor families so they can heat their homes.
40 Percentage of wealth in the United States held by the richest 1 per cent of the population.
18 Percentage of wealth in Britain held by the richest 1e per cent of the population.
George Bush And his special friend
$60bn Loss to Enron stockholders, following the largest bankruptcy in US history.
$205m Amount Enron CEO Kenneth Lay earned from stock option profits over a four-year period.
$101m Amount Lay made from selling his Enron shares just before the company went bankrupt.
$59,339 Amount the Bush campaign reimbursed Enron for 14 trips on its corporate jet during the 2000 campaign.
30 Length of time in months between Enron's collapse and Lay (whom the President called "Kenny Boy") still not being charged with a crime.
George Bush: Lawman
15 Average number of minutes Bush spent reviewing capital punishment cases while governor of Texas.
46 Percentage of Republican federal judges when Bush came to office.
57 Percentage of Republican federal judges after three years of the Bush administration.
33 Percentage of the $15bn Bush pledged to fight Aids in Africa that must go to abstinence-only programmes.
The Civil libertarian
680 Number of suspected al-Qa'ida members that the United States admits are detained at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.
42 Number of nationalities of those detainees at Guantanamo.
22 Number of hours prisoners were handcuffed, shackled, and made to wear surgical masks, earmuffs, and blindfolds during their flight to Guantanamo.
32 Number of confirmed suicide attempts by Guantanamo Bay prisoners.
24 Number of prisoners in mid-2003 being monitored by psychiatrists in Guantanamo's new mental ward.
A health-conscious president
43.6m Number of Americans without health insurance by the end of 2002 (more than 15 per cent of the population).
2.4m Number of Americans who lost their health insurance during Bush's first year in office.
Environmentalist
$44m Amount the Bush-Cheney 2000 campaign and the Republican National Committee received in contributions from the fossil fuel, chemical, timber, and mining industries.
200 Number of regulation rollbacks downgrading or weakening environmental laws in Bush's first three years in office.
31 Number of Bush administration appointees who are alumni of the energy industry (includes four cabinet secretaries, the six most powerful White House officials, and more than 20 other high-level appointees).
50 Approximate number of policy changes and regulation rollbacks injurious to the environment that have been announced by the Bush administration on Fridays after 5pm, a time that makes it all but impossible for news organisations to relay the information to the widest possible audience.
50 Percentage decline in Environmental Protection Agency enforcement actions against polluters under Bush's watch.
34 Percentage decline in criminal penalties for environmental crimes since Bush took office.
50 Percentage decline in civil penalties for environmental crimes since Bush took office.
$6.1m Amount the EPA historically valued each human life when conducting economic analyses of proposed regulations.
$3.7m Amount the EPA valued each human life when conducting analyses of proposed regulations during the Bush administration.
0 Number of times Bush mentioned global warming, clean air, clean water, pollution or environment in his 2004 State of the Union speech. His father was the last president to go through an entire State of the Union address without mentioning the environment.
1 Number of paragraphs devoted to global warming in the EPA's 600-page "Draft Report on the Environment" presented in 2003.
68 Number of days after taking office that Bush decided Not to ratify the Kyoto Protocol, the international treaty to reduce greenhouse gases by roughly 5.2 per cent below 1990 levels by 2012. The United States was to cut its level by 7 per cent.
1 The rank of the United States worldwide in terms of greenhouse gas emissions.
25 Percentage of overall worldwide carbon dioxide emissions the United States is responsible for.
53 Number of days after taking office that Bush reneged on his campaign promise to regulate carbon dioxide emissions from power plants.
14 Percentage carbon dioxide emissions will increase over the next 10 years under Bush's own global-warming plan (an increase of 30 per cent above their 1990 levels).
408 Number of species that could be extinct by 2050 if the global-warming trend continues.
5 Number of years the Bush administration said in 2003 that global warming must be further studied before substantive action could be taken.
62 Number of members of Cheney's 63-person Energy Task Force with ties to corporate energy interests.
0 Number of environmentalists asked to attend Cheney's Energy Task Force meetings.
6 Number of months before 11 September that Cheney's Energy Task Force investigated Iraq's oil reserves.
2 Percentage of the world's population that is British.
2 Percentage of the world's oil used by Britain.
5 Percentage of the world's population that is American.
25 Percentage of the world's oil used by America.
63 Percentage of oil the United States imported in 2003, a record high.
24,000 Estimated number of premature deaths that will occur under Bush's Clear Skies initiative.
300 Number of Clean Water Act violations by the mountaintop-mining industry in 2003.
750,000 Tons of toxic waste the US military, the world's biggest polluter, generates around the world each Year.
$3.8bn Amount in the Superfund trust fund for toxic site clean-ups in 1995, the Year "polluter pays" fees expired.
$0m Amount of uncommitted dollars in the Superfund trust fund for toxic site clean-ups in 2003.
270 Estimated number of court decisions citing federal Negligence in endangered-species protection that remained unheeded during the first year of the Bush administration.
100 Percentage of those decisions that Bush then decided to allow the government to ignore indefinitely.
68.4 Average Number of species added to the Endangered and Threatened Species list each year between 1991 and 2000.
0 Number of endangered species voluntarily added by the Bush administration since taking office.
50 Percentage of screened workers at Ground Zero who now suffer from long-term health problems, almost half of whom don't have health insurance.
78 Percentage of workers at Ground Zero who now suffer from lung ailments.
88 Percentage of workers at Ground Zero who Now suffer from ear, nose, or throat problems.
22 Asbestos levels at Ground Zero were 22 times higher than the levels in Libby, Montana, where the W R Grace mine produced one of the worst Superfund disasters in US history.
Image booster for the US
2,500 Number of public-diplomacy officers employed by the State Department to further the image of the US abroad in 1991.
1,200 Number of public-diplomacy officers employed by the State Department to further US image abroad in 2004.
4 Rank of the United States among countries considered to be the greatest threats to world peace according to a 2003 Pew Global Attitudes study (Israel, Iran, and North Korea were considered more dangerous; Iraq was considered less dangerous).
$66bn Amount the United States spent on international aid and diplomacy in 1949.
$23.8bn Amount the United States spent on international aid and diplomacy in 2002.
85 Percentage of Indonesians who had an unfavourable image of the United States in 2003.
Second-party endorsements
90 Percentage of Americans who approved of the way Bush was handling his job as president on 26 September 2001.
67 Percentage of Americans who approved of the way Bush was handling his job as president on 26 September 2002.
54 Percentage of Americans who approved of the way Bush was handling his job as president on
30 September, 2003.
50 Percentage of Americans who approved of the way Bush was handling his job as president on 15 October 2003.
49 Percentage of Americans who approved of the way Bush was handling his job as president in May 2004.
More like the French than he would care to admit
28 Number of vacation days Bush took in August 2003, the second-longest vacation of any president in US history. (Record holder Richard Nixon.)
13 Number of vacation days the average American receives each Year.
28 Number of vacation days Bush took in August 2001, the month he received a 6 August Presidential Daily Briefing headed "Osama bin Laden Determined to Strike US Targets."
500 Number of days Bush has spent all or part of his time away from the White House at his ranch in Crawford, Texas, his parents' retreat in Kennebunkport, Maine, or Camp David as of 1 April 2004.
No fool when it comes to the press
11 Number of press conferences during his first three Years in office in which Bush referred to questions as being "trick" ones.
Factors in his favour
3 Number of companies that control the US voting technology market.
52 Percentage of votes cast during the 2002 midterm elections that were recorded by Election Systems & Software, the largest voting-technology firm, a big Republican donor.
29 Percentage of votes that will be cast via computer voting machines that don't produce a paper record.
17On 17 November 2001, The Economist printed a correction for having said George Bush was properly elected in 2000.
$113m Amount raised by the Bush-Cheney 2000 campaign, the most in American electoral history.
$185m Amount raised by the Bush-Cheney 2004 re-election campaign, to the end of March 2004.
$200m Amount that the Bush-Cheney 2004 campaign expects to raise by November 2004.
268 Number of Bush-Cheney fund-raisers who had earned Pioneer status (by raising $100,000 each) as of March 2004.
187 Number of Bush-Cheney fund-raisers who had earned Ranger status (by raising $200,000 each) as of March 2004.
$64.2mThe Amount Pioneers and Rangers had raised for Bush-Cheney as of March 2004.
85 Percentage of Americans who can't Name the Chief Justice of the United States.
69 Percentage of Americans who believed the White House's claims in September 2003 that Saddam Hussein was personally involved in the 11 September attacks.
34 Percentage of Americans who believed in June 2003 that Saddam's "weapons of mass destruction" had been found.
22 Percentage of Americans who believed in May 2003 that Saddam had used his WMDs on US forces.
85 Percentage of American young adults who cannot find Afghanistan, Iraq, or Israel on a map.
30 Percentage of American young adults who cannot find the Pacific Ocean on a map.
75 Percentage of American young adults who don't know the population of the United States.
53 Percentage of Canadian young adults who don't know the population of the United States.
11 Percentage of American young adults who cannot find the United States on a map.
30 Percentage of Americans who believe that "politics and government are too complicated to understand."
Another factor in his favour
70m Estimated number of Americans who describe themselves as Evangelicals who accept Jesus Christ as their personal saviour and who interpret the Bible as the direct word of God.
23m Number of Evangelicals who voted for Bush in 2000.
50m Number of voters in total who voted for Bush in 2000.
46 Percentage of voters who describe themselves as born-again Christians.
5 Number of states that do not use the word "evolution" in public school science courses.
This is an edited extract from "What We've Lost", by Graydon Carter, published by Little Brown on 9 September
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
For a former college drop-out from Ontario and, briefly, a lineman stringing up telegraph wires on the railways of Canada, Graydon Carter, 55, has risen to impressive heights. The editor of Vanity Fair since 1992 after succeeding Tina Brown he is one of America's celebrity editors with clout, glamour and a nice line in suits.
It is hard to imagine Carter doing physical work of any kind, beyond exercising his thumb on his silver Zippo lighter. His labour is restricted to rejigging headlines in his magazine he is a self-confessed failure at delegation of duties and swanning to Manhattan parties. Martini in hand, he cuts an almost princely and dandyish figure, with billowing shirts and similarly billowing silver hair.
The spotlight on his activities has never burned brighter. In recent months he has transformed the regular editor's letter at the front of the magazine into less of a chat about its coming contents the spreads of Annie Leibowitz and rants of Christopher Hitchens and more a full-bore diatribe against the world of George Bush.
By Graydon Carter.
1 Number of Bush administration public statements on National security issued between 20 January 2001 and 10 September 2001 that mentioned al-Qa'ida.
104 Number of Bush administration public statements on National security and defence in the same period that mentioned Iraq or Saddam Hussein.
101 Number of Bush administration public statements on National security and defence in the same period that mentioned missile defence.
65 Number of Bush administration public statements on National security and defence in the same period that mentioned weapons of mass destruction.
0 Number of times Bush mentioned Osama bin Laden in his three State of the Union addresses.
73 Number of times that Bush mentioned terrorism or terrorists in his three State of the Union addresses.
83 Number of times Bush mentioned Saddam, Iraq, or regime (as in change) in his three State of the Union addresses.
$1m Estimated value of a painting the Bush Presidential Library in College Station, Texas, received from Prince Bandar, Saudi Arabia's ambassador to the United States and Bush family friend.
0 Number of times Bush mentioned Saudi Arabia in his three State of the Union addresses.
1,700 Percentage increase between 2001 and 2002 of Saudi Arabian spending on public relations in the United States.
79 Percentage of the 11 September hijackers who came from Saudi Arabia.
3 Number of 11 September hijackers whose entry visas came through special US-Saudi "Visa Express" programme.
140 Number of Saudis, including members of the Bin Laden family, evacuated from United States almost immediately after 11 September.
14 Number of Immigration and Naturalisation Service (INS) agents assigned to track down 1,200 known illegal immigrants in the United States from countries where al-Qa'ida is active.
$3m Amount the White House was willing to grant the 9/11 Commission to investigate the 11 September attacks.
$0 Amount approved by George Bush to hire more INS special agents.
$10m Amount Bush cut from the INS's existing terrorism budget.
$50m Amount granted to the commission that looked into the Columbia space shuttle crash.
$5m Amount a 1996 federal commission was given to study legalised gambling.
7 Number of Arabic linguists fired by the US army between mid-August and mid-October 2002 for being gay.
George Bush: Military man
1972 Year that Bush walked away from his pilot duties in the Texas National Guard, Nearly two years before his six-year obligation was up.
$3,500 Reward a group of veterans offered in 2000 for anyone who could confirm Bush's Alabama guard service.
600-700 Number of guardsmen who were in Bush's unit during that period.
0 Number of guardsmen from that period who came forward with information about Bush's guard service.
0 Number of minutes that President Bush, Vice-President Dick Cheney, the Defence Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, the assistant Defence Secretary, Paul Wolfowitz, the former chairman of the Defence Policy Board, Richard Perle, and the White House Chief of Staff, Karl Rove the main proponents of the war in Iraq served in combat (combined).
0 Number of principal civilian or Pentagon staff members who planned the war who have immediate family members serving in uniform in Iraq.
8 Number of members of the US Senate and House of Representatives who have a child serving in the military.
10 Number of days that the Pentagon spent investigating a soldier who had called the President "a joke" in a letter to the editor of a Newspaper.
46 Percentage increase in sales between 2001 and 2002 of GI Joe figures (children's toys).
Ambitious warrior
2 Number of Nations that George Bush has attacked and taken over since coming into office.
130 Approximate Number of countries (out of a total of 191 recognised by the United Nations) with a US military presence.
43 Percentage of the entire world's military spending that the US spends on defence. (That was in 2002, the year before the invasion of Iraq.)
$401.3bn Proposed military budget for 2004.
Saviour of Iraq
1983 The year in which Donald Rumsfeld, Ronald Reagan's special envoy to the Middle East, gave Saddam Hussein a pair of golden spurs as a gift.
2.5 Number of hours after Rumsfeld learnt that Osama bin Laden was a suspect in the 11 September attacks that he brought up reasons to "hit" Iraq.
237 Minimum number of misleading statements on Iraq made by top Bush administration officials between 2002 and January 2004, according to the California Representative Henry Waxman.
10m Estimated number of people worldwide who took to the streets on 21 February 2003, in opposition to the invasion of Iraq, the largest simultaneous protest in world history.
$2bn Estimated monthly cost of US military presence in Iraq projected by the White House in April 2003.
$4bn Actual monthly cost of the US military presence in Iraq according to Secretary of Defence Rumsfeld in 2004.
$15m Amount of a contract awarded to an American firm to build a cement factory in Iraq.
$80,000 Amount an Iraqi firm spent (using Saddam's confiscated funds) to build the same factory, after delays prevented the American firm from starting it.
2000 Year that Cheney said his policy as CEO of Halliburton oil services company was "we wouldn't do anything in Iraq".
$4.7bn Total value of contracts awarded to Halliburton in Iraq and Afghanistan.
$680m Estimated value of Iraq reconstruction contracts awarded to Bechtel.
$2.8bnValue of Bechtel Corp contracts in Iraq.
$120bn Amount the war and its aftermath are projected to cost for the 2004 fiscal year.
35 Number of countries to which the United States suspended military assistance after they failed to sign agreements giving Americans immunity from prosecution before the International Criminal Court.
92 Percentage of Iraq's urban areas with access to potable water in late 2002.
60 Percentage of Iraq's urban areas with access to potable water in late 2003.
55 Percentage of the Iraqi workforce who were unemployed before the war.
80 Percentage of the Iraqi workforce who are unemployed a Year after the war.
0 Number of American combat deaths in Germany after the Nazi surrender in May 1945.
37 Death toll of US soldiers in Iraq in May 2003, the month combat operations "officially" ended.
0 Number of coffins of dead soldiers returning home that the Bush administration has permitted to be photographed.
0 Number of memorial services for the returned dead that Bush has attended since the beginning of the war.
A soldier's best friend
40,000 Number of soldiers in Iraq seven months after start of the war still without Interceptor vests, designed to stop a round from an AK-47.
$60m Estimated cost of outfitting those 40,000 soldiers with Interceptor vests.
62 Percentage of gas masks that army investigators discovered did Not work properly in autumn 2002.
90 Percentage of detectors which give early warning of a biological weapons attack found to be defective.
87 Percentage of Humvees in Iraq not equipped with armour capable of stopping AK-47 rounds and protecting against roadside bombs and landmines at the end of 2003.
Making the country safer
$3.29 Average amount allocated per person Nationwide in the first round of homeland security grants.
$94.40 Amount allocated per person for homeland security in American Samoa.
$36 Amount allocated per person for homeland security in Wyoming, Vice-President Cheney's home state.
$17 Amount allocated per person in New York state.
$5.87 Amount allocated per person in New York City.
$77.92 Amount allocated per person in New Haven, Connecticut, home of Yale University, Bush's alma mater.
76 Percentage of 215 cities surveyed by the US Conference of Mayors in early 2004 that had yet to receive a dime in federal homeland security assistance for their first-response units.
5 Number of major US airports at the beginning of 2004 that the Transportation Security Administration admitted were Not fully screening baggage electronically.
22,600 Number of planes carrying unscreened cargo that fly into New York each month.
5 Estimated Percentage of US air cargo that is screened, including cargo transported on passenger planes.
95 Percentage of foreign goods that arrive in the United States by sea.
2 Percentage of those goods subjected to thorough inspection.
$5.5bnEstimated cost to secure fully US ports over the Next decade.
$0 Amount Bush allocated for port security in 2003.
$46m Amount the Bush administration has budgeted for port security in 2005.
15,000 Number of major chemical facilities in the United States.
100 Number of US chemical plants where a terrorist act could endanger the lives of more than one million people.
0 Number of new drugs or vaccines against "priority pathogens" listed by the Centres for Disease Control that have been developed and introduced since 11 September 2001.
Giving a hand up to the advantaged
$10.9m Average wealth of the members of Bush's original 16-person cabinet.
75 Percentage of Americans unaffected by Bush's sweeping 2003 cuts in capital gains and dividends taxes.
$42,000 Average savings members of Bush's cabinet received in 2003 as a result of cuts in capital gains and dividends taxes.
10 Number of fellow members from the Yale secret society Skull and Bones that Bush has named to important positions (including the Associate Attorney General Robert McCallum Jr. and SEC chief Bill Donaldson).
79 Number of Bush's initial 189 appointees who also served in his father's administration.
A man with a lot of friends
$113m Amount of total hard money the Bush-Cheney 2000 campaign received, a record.
$11.5m Amount of hard money raised through the Pioneer programme, the controversial fund-raising process created for the Bush-Cheney 2000 campaign. (Participants pledged to raise at least $100,000 by bundling together cheques of up to $1,000 from friends and family. Pioneers were assigned numbers, which were included on all cheques, enabling the campaign to keep track of who raised how much.)
George Bush: Money manager
4.7m Number of bankruptcies that were declared during Bush's first three years in office.
2002 The worst year for major markets since the recession of the 1970s.
$489bn The US trade deficit in 2003, the worst in history for a single year.
$5.6tr Projected national surplus forecast by the end of the decade when Bush took office in 2001.
$7.22tr US national debt by mid-2004.
George Bush: Tax cutter
87 Percentage of American families in April 2004 who say they have felt no benefit from Bush's tax cuts.
39 Percentage of tax cuts that will go to the top 1 per cent of American families when fully phased in.
49 Percentage of Americans in April 2004 who found that their taxes had actually gone up since Bush took office.
88 Percentage of American families who will save less than $100 on their 2006 federal taxes as a result of 2003 cut in capital gains and dividends taxes.
$30,858 Amount Bush himself saved in taxes in 2003.
Employment tsar
9.3m Number of US unemployed in April 2004.
2.3m Number of Americans who lost their jobs during first three Years of the Bush administration.
22m Number of jobs gained during Clinton's eight years in office.
Friend of the poor
34.6m Number of Americans living below the poverty line (1 in 8 of the population).
6.8m Number of people in the workforce but still classified as poor.
35m Number of Americans that the government defines as "food insecure," in other words, hungry.
$300m Amount cut from the federal programme that provides subsidies to poor families so they can heat their homes.
40 Percentage of wealth in the United States held by the richest 1 per cent of the population.
18 Percentage of wealth in Britain held by the richest 1e per cent of the population.
George Bush And his special friend
$60bn Loss to Enron stockholders, following the largest bankruptcy in US history.
$205m Amount Enron CEO Kenneth Lay earned from stock option profits over a four-year period.
$101m Amount Lay made from selling his Enron shares just before the company went bankrupt.
$59,339 Amount the Bush campaign reimbursed Enron for 14 trips on its corporate jet during the 2000 campaign.
30 Length of time in months between Enron's collapse and Lay (whom the President called "Kenny Boy") still not being charged with a crime.
George Bush: Lawman
15 Average number of minutes Bush spent reviewing capital punishment cases while governor of Texas.
46 Percentage of Republican federal judges when Bush came to office.
57 Percentage of Republican federal judges after three years of the Bush administration.
33 Percentage of the $15bn Bush pledged to fight Aids in Africa that must go to abstinence-only programmes.
The Civil libertarian
680 Number of suspected al-Qa'ida members that the United States admits are detained at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.
42 Number of nationalities of those detainees at Guantanamo.
22 Number of hours prisoners were handcuffed, shackled, and made to wear surgical masks, earmuffs, and blindfolds during their flight to Guantanamo.
32 Number of confirmed suicide attempts by Guantanamo Bay prisoners.
24 Number of prisoners in mid-2003 being monitored by psychiatrists in Guantanamo's new mental ward.
A health-conscious president
43.6m Number of Americans without health insurance by the end of 2002 (more than 15 per cent of the population).
2.4m Number of Americans who lost their health insurance during Bush's first year in office.
Environmentalist
$44m Amount the Bush-Cheney 2000 campaign and the Republican National Committee received in contributions from the fossil fuel, chemical, timber, and mining industries.
200 Number of regulation rollbacks downgrading or weakening environmental laws in Bush's first three years in office.
31 Number of Bush administration appointees who are alumni of the energy industry (includes four cabinet secretaries, the six most powerful White House officials, and more than 20 other high-level appointees).
50 Approximate number of policy changes and regulation rollbacks injurious to the environment that have been announced by the Bush administration on Fridays after 5pm, a time that makes it all but impossible for news organisations to relay the information to the widest possible audience.
50 Percentage decline in Environmental Protection Agency enforcement actions against polluters under Bush's watch.
34 Percentage decline in criminal penalties for environmental crimes since Bush took office.
50 Percentage decline in civil penalties for environmental crimes since Bush took office.
$6.1m Amount the EPA historically valued each human life when conducting economic analyses of proposed regulations.
$3.7m Amount the EPA valued each human life when conducting analyses of proposed regulations during the Bush administration.
0 Number of times Bush mentioned global warming, clean air, clean water, pollution or environment in his 2004 State of the Union speech. His father was the last president to go through an entire State of the Union address without mentioning the environment.
1 Number of paragraphs devoted to global warming in the EPA's 600-page "Draft Report on the Environment" presented in 2003.
68 Number of days after taking office that Bush decided Not to ratify the Kyoto Protocol, the international treaty to reduce greenhouse gases by roughly 5.2 per cent below 1990 levels by 2012. The United States was to cut its level by 7 per cent.
1 The rank of the United States worldwide in terms of greenhouse gas emissions.
25 Percentage of overall worldwide carbon dioxide emissions the United States is responsible for.
53 Number of days after taking office that Bush reneged on his campaign promise to regulate carbon dioxide emissions from power plants.
14 Percentage carbon dioxide emissions will increase over the next 10 years under Bush's own global-warming plan (an increase of 30 per cent above their 1990 levels).
408 Number of species that could be extinct by 2050 if the global-warming trend continues.
5 Number of years the Bush administration said in 2003 that global warming must be further studied before substantive action could be taken.
62 Number of members of Cheney's 63-person Energy Task Force with ties to corporate energy interests.
0 Number of environmentalists asked to attend Cheney's Energy Task Force meetings.
6 Number of months before 11 September that Cheney's Energy Task Force investigated Iraq's oil reserves.
2 Percentage of the world's population that is British.
2 Percentage of the world's oil used by Britain.
5 Percentage of the world's population that is American.
25 Percentage of the world's oil used by America.
63 Percentage of oil the United States imported in 2003, a record high.
24,000 Estimated number of premature deaths that will occur under Bush's Clear Skies initiative.
300 Number of Clean Water Act violations by the mountaintop-mining industry in 2003.
750,000 Tons of toxic waste the US military, the world's biggest polluter, generates around the world each Year.
$3.8bn Amount in the Superfund trust fund for toxic site clean-ups in 1995, the Year "polluter pays" fees expired.
$0m Amount of uncommitted dollars in the Superfund trust fund for toxic site clean-ups in 2003.
270 Estimated number of court decisions citing federal Negligence in endangered-species protection that remained unheeded during the first year of the Bush administration.
100 Percentage of those decisions that Bush then decided to allow the government to ignore indefinitely.
68.4 Average Number of species added to the Endangered and Threatened Species list each year between 1991 and 2000.
0 Number of endangered species voluntarily added by the Bush administration since taking office.
50 Percentage of screened workers at Ground Zero who now suffer from long-term health problems, almost half of whom don't have health insurance.
78 Percentage of workers at Ground Zero who now suffer from lung ailments.
88 Percentage of workers at Ground Zero who Now suffer from ear, nose, or throat problems.
22 Asbestos levels at Ground Zero were 22 times higher than the levels in Libby, Montana, where the W R Grace mine produced one of the worst Superfund disasters in US history.
Image booster for the US
2,500 Number of public-diplomacy officers employed by the State Department to further the image of the US abroad in 1991.
1,200 Number of public-diplomacy officers employed by the State Department to further US image abroad in 2004.
4 Rank of the United States among countries considered to be the greatest threats to world peace according to a 2003 Pew Global Attitudes study (Israel, Iran, and North Korea were considered more dangerous; Iraq was considered less dangerous).
$66bn Amount the United States spent on international aid and diplomacy in 1949.
$23.8bn Amount the United States spent on international aid and diplomacy in 2002.
85 Percentage of Indonesians who had an unfavourable image of the United States in 2003.
Second-party endorsements
90 Percentage of Americans who approved of the way Bush was handling his job as president on 26 September 2001.
67 Percentage of Americans who approved of the way Bush was handling his job as president on 26 September 2002.
54 Percentage of Americans who approved of the way Bush was handling his job as president on
30 September, 2003.
50 Percentage of Americans who approved of the way Bush was handling his job as president on 15 October 2003.
49 Percentage of Americans who approved of the way Bush was handling his job as president in May 2004.
More like the French than he would care to admit
28 Number of vacation days Bush took in August 2003, the second-longest vacation of any president in US history. (Record holder Richard Nixon.)
13 Number of vacation days the average American receives each Year.
28 Number of vacation days Bush took in August 2001, the month he received a 6 August Presidential Daily Briefing headed "Osama bin Laden Determined to Strike US Targets."
500 Number of days Bush has spent all or part of his time away from the White House at his ranch in Crawford, Texas, his parents' retreat in Kennebunkport, Maine, or Camp David as of 1 April 2004.
No fool when it comes to the press
11 Number of press conferences during his first three Years in office in which Bush referred to questions as being "trick" ones.
Factors in his favour
3 Number of companies that control the US voting technology market.
52 Percentage of votes cast during the 2002 midterm elections that were recorded by Election Systems & Software, the largest voting-technology firm, a big Republican donor.
29 Percentage of votes that will be cast via computer voting machines that don't produce a paper record.
17On 17 November 2001, The Economist printed a correction for having said George Bush was properly elected in 2000.
$113m Amount raised by the Bush-Cheney 2000 campaign, the most in American electoral history.
$185m Amount raised by the Bush-Cheney 2004 re-election campaign, to the end of March 2004.
$200m Amount that the Bush-Cheney 2004 campaign expects to raise by November 2004.
268 Number of Bush-Cheney fund-raisers who had earned Pioneer status (by raising $100,000 each) as of March 2004.
187 Number of Bush-Cheney fund-raisers who had earned Ranger status (by raising $200,000 each) as of March 2004.
$64.2mThe Amount Pioneers and Rangers had raised for Bush-Cheney as of March 2004.
85 Percentage of Americans who can't Name the Chief Justice of the United States.
69 Percentage of Americans who believed the White House's claims in September 2003 that Saddam Hussein was personally involved in the 11 September attacks.
34 Percentage of Americans who believed in June 2003 that Saddam's "weapons of mass destruction" had been found.
22 Percentage of Americans who believed in May 2003 that Saddam had used his WMDs on US forces.
85 Percentage of American young adults who cannot find Afghanistan, Iraq, or Israel on a map.
30 Percentage of American young adults who cannot find the Pacific Ocean on a map.
75 Percentage of American young adults who don't know the population of the United States.
53 Percentage of Canadian young adults who don't know the population of the United States.
11 Percentage of American young adults who cannot find the United States on a map.
30 Percentage of Americans who believe that "politics and government are too complicated to understand."
Another factor in his favour
70m Estimated number of Americans who describe themselves as Evangelicals who accept Jesus Christ as their personal saviour and who interpret the Bible as the direct word of God.
23m Number of Evangelicals who voted for Bush in 2000.
50m Number of voters in total who voted for Bush in 2000.
46 Percentage of voters who describe themselves as born-again Christians.
5 Number of states that do not use the word "evolution" in public school science courses.
This is an edited extract from "What We've Lost", by Graydon Carter, published by Little Brown on 9 September
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
For a former college drop-out from Ontario and, briefly, a lineman stringing up telegraph wires on the railways of Canada, Graydon Carter, 55, has risen to impressive heights. The editor of Vanity Fair since 1992 after succeeding Tina Brown he is one of America's celebrity editors with clout, glamour and a nice line in suits.
It is hard to imagine Carter doing physical work of any kind, beyond exercising his thumb on his silver Zippo lighter. His labour is restricted to rejigging headlines in his magazine he is a self-confessed failure at delegation of duties and swanning to Manhattan parties. Martini in hand, he cuts an almost princely and dandyish figure, with billowing shirts and similarly billowing silver hair.
The spotlight on his activities has never burned brighter. In recent months he has transformed the regular editor's letter at the front of the magazine into less of a chat about its coming contents the spreads of Annie Leibowitz and rants of Christopher Hitchens and more a full-bore diatribe against the world of George Bush.
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