NCR on Kindle - NCR classifieds - YouTube - Twitter - Facebook - Email Alerts - RSS
Advent reflections: Laying down pride
Cookie Monster has made his position known. “99 percent of the world’s cookies are consumed by 1 percent of the monsters,” he has reportedly said. “OCCUPY SESAME STREET!” And while mainstream pundits still ask balefully, “what do the Wall Street occupiers want?” every child on earth knows there is something dangerous and wrong when 1 percent of the monsters consume 99 percent of the cookies. They want it to stop; the situation is catastrophic.
You already know this: there has never been a wider gap in our country between the wealthy and everyone else, the 1 percent and the 99 percent. The imbalance has not only shaken our financial system, it is destroying our democracy. This is the context in which we must apply the words of Isaiah and John the Baptist in today’s readings. We don’t read the words of our forbearers in faith in order to sit comfortably in their courage and wisdom. At some point the maturing believer must apply the tradition to the present. Without application, the faith tradition falters.
|
Years ago, Dominican Albert Nolan wrote in Jesus Before Christianity, “This indeed is the heart of the problem. We have built up an all-inclusive political and economic system based upon certain assumptions and values and now we are beginning to realize that this system is not only counter-productive -- it has brought us to the brink of disaster -- but it has also become our master ... . The impersonal machine that we have so carefully designed will drag us along inexorably to our destruction.” (9 )
Our political and economic assumptions certainly do seem to have collapsed. We have just seen the President order the assassination of an American citizen in Yemen without benefit of any charges, trial or due process to determine guilt. It was enough that the military said he was involved in terrorism. Back home millions have lost their government or private jobs and are now adrift in a world of continued foreclosures, time-limited unemployment benefits, unaffordable health care, dysfunctional loan modification programs and stagnant hiring. One in five U.S. children is now endangered by food insecurity. Homelessness is epidemic, especially among children and veterans. This too is terrorism.
In the midst of all this, religion -- or at least religious talk -- is increasingly violent. Faith-based violence, not Judaism or Christianity or Islam, is becoming the dominant religion of the U.S.
Some blame all these deformations on government, others on capitalism, and others on God. But no suggests a viable fix. We are left to wait among the ideologues for an imminent second recession. Not the kind of second coming we had hoped for.
Isaiah did assign responsibility, and John a resolution. Today’s excerpt from Isaiah includes this familiar scenario: “Every valley shall be filled in, every mountain and hill shall be made low...” This is a reference to an earlier section in First Isaiah which named the mountain as pride. Isaiah tells us the problem is pride. Pride, an excessively high opinion of oneself, or one’s opinion, one’s ideology; conceit; arrogance; exceptionalism. When it is laid low, the glory of God can be revealed. Meanwhile, the mountain, our pride, is responsible for the coming catastrophe. And who among us cannot claim a fair share in that.
John the Baptist named the resolution as repentance. And a baptism by fire it is to achieve sorrow for our faults -- personal and national. At some level it will be called unpatriotic. In this City on a Hill is the necessary humility -- reading ourselves realistically -- possible? And repentance? Where would we begin?
“A voice cries out: in the desert prepare the way of the Lord! Make straight in the wasteland a highway for our God!” We are the desert. We and by extension the country for which we are responsible. Let us lay down pride and repent.
[For Advent 2011, Spiritual Reflections will feature the scripture reflections of Angie O’Gorman. O'Gorman’s essays have been published in America magazine, National Catholic Reporter, and Commonweal. She has been involved in human rights work and nonviolent conflict resolution in the United States, Central America, and the West Bank. Her novel, The Book of Sins, was published last January.]






Excellent, except I cringe
Excellent, except I cringe when I read the criticism of the assassination ordered of an American citizen without the benefit of charges, trial or due process. All people, not just Americans, should receive justice and deserve human rights from our country.
Old but great article by
Old but great article by Albert Nolan: http://www.scarboromissions.ca/Scarboro_missions_magazine/Issues/1990/Fe... I have kept the article for years and am pleased it is now online. So often Christians focus on "reconciliation" based on the false assumption that all things can be "reconciled". We have a preferential option for the poor. That does not mean faith-based violence; it does mean taking sides.
Just wondering how Catholics
Just wondering how Catholics and Christians and Social Justice issues have fared under Socialist agendas. Oh, that's right, they didn't! Keep preaching on sharing the cookies friend.
Very well said. Now we have
Very well said. Now we have heard that some in Congress would have a law passed to allow to arrest American citizens and others suspected of being terrorists and, further, to be able to hold them INDEFINITELY without formal charges or benefit of legal defense. The President has said he will veto any such legislation, but the chilling thing is that some American legislators would propose such measures in the United States. These are the tactics we say we are seeking to overcome in other countries by supporting the "Arab Srping" and other attempts at democracy. Basic human rights have got to be respected and protected.
On the Federal Assassination
On the Federal Assassination Proclamation, I'm with you. But one Q. on the percentages:
Who made the cookies? Or did they grow on trees?
I think it necessary that we
I think it necessary that we understand the difference between false pride and true pride.
False pride is composed of envy and hate. It is a wish that we had talents that we have not either developed or were unable to develop. It is failure to set aside beliefs of the past that have been shown incorrect. It is arrogance of one person believing he or she is better than another.
True pride is a self congratulation for a job well done. There is always a good place in a healthy ego for true pride of good accomplishment and false pride tears a person and society down. When I am proud of a child for their accomplishments --- eg graduation from college. This is a good thing. When I display “a loss of face” when that child marries some one I would not have picked, I may be engaging in false pride that is envious and murderous.
The 1% who believe that they should they should be indulged with high bonuses while doing little or no work or worse yet tearing down a banking system are engaging in false pride.
May we gain grace through peace and understanding,
R. Dennis Porch, MD
It is wise to analyze pride
It is wise to analyze pride as Dr. Porch has done. Far too often in Catholic education, children are made to feel insecure because their justified pride is denigrated.
It is a commonplace to call pride the root of all evil. I think this is wrong. From what I've observed and experienced, the root of evil is self-hatred.
Pride, especially dangerous
Pride, especially dangerous to those who occupy the higher positions in society or the Church, that pride that says to those who possess it, I know what's needed I have no need to listen to those beneath me, I will do what I have always done, I have tradition to back me up and tradition cannot be wrong. It's that blindness that results when one looks to the past while walking ahead and wonders why we are in the mess we have fallen into.
A masterpiece indeed,
A masterpiece indeed, Tony.
You said it far better than I was intending.
Thank you!
You are thinking nationally,
You are thinking nationally, when you should be thinking globally. If you make $50,000 per year, you are in the top 1% of the world's population income makers.
It is hard for me to believe that someone in Africa making $600 per year really cares that much about whinging Americans who just want more.
And if you really care about income distribution, more government is not the solution. A more powerful government will only encourage more crony capitalism, because the money will follow the power. If you want to reduce crony capitalism, and to improve lifestyle and liberty, reduce government power.
Yes Wardogoo, we should all
Yes Wardogoo, we should all be thinking how to help our brothers and sisters less fortunate than us. However, those who constitute the 1% in our society might well constitute the .001% of the whole world. Yet they posses an ever increasing amount of the worlds resources. In the US our income taxes should be much more of a graduated tax as was originally designed. Why should those people who clip coupons for a living (those living off returns on stokes and bonds) pay 15% income tax when a working person must pay over 30%. If anything, we should reward work over a system that those who do very little to obtain resources. Stock options very well could become a method of compensation that is relegated to the basement of history. This is where our system goes wrong. Perhaps if we can make the corrections in our own society, we can then again be taken as a better world model.
R. Dennis Porch, MD
Pride is the world's form of
Pride is the world's form of love, that is a love that is conditional, such as I'm so proud of you for, and you can put here just about anything that would make one think more highly of you, higher grade, promotion, raise in pay, etc.. Real Love is unconditional, regardless if your smart, handsome, stupid, ugly, or unsuccessful, or whatever, real Love is God Love, the Love that a Christian is supposed to have for one another, the Love that saved and saves. Real Love is God living in your heart.
Dear Tony, I think I
Dear Tony,
I think I understand what you are attempting to say but I must disagree with the words you use to say it. There is no such thing as unconditional love between adults or societies. The only time that humans approach unconditional love is when they do the mothering of a fetus or new born. A newborn if it is lucky is kept warm, fed and all its messes are cleaned up. This type of love can not be given to an adult. People who expect it are only in for disappointment. Indeed love MUST be conditional. Even if you are my spouse or sibling, I will not support your murderous envious behaviors. I can not love that part of you. In fact I must critique it even if it costs me loss of your love.
I think what you are saying Tony is that false expectations of another has nothing to do with love. I would go further and link these expectations to false pride. True pride is a good feeling about a job well done. When my child scores in a ball game. When he or she composes a wonderful artistic work, I can have good feelings (pride in my child) for what he or she has done. When I myself accomplish something that a set out to do and feel good about it this is good pride, and not only is it acceptable, it is important for humans to feel.
False pride is full of the false expectations of a parent attempting to live though his or her own child expecting of him or her to accomplishments that the parent wishes and is not in the child to do. If we look at the RCC, it seems to expect false pride when it shames others for not acting in the ways it (the church) would like. We all are individuals with free wills and unique talents. We should attempt to accomplish what our God given talents are pushing us to do. We must be guided by our own conscience. No finite person (and as recent history shows especially the RCC Episcopacy) has an omniscient conscience. This is the reason that an educated person should study the thoughts and feelings of others, and be particularly in tune with new observations and discoveries as well as historical beliefs and faith.
Post new comment