Progressive Revival

March 2009 Archives

Monday March 30, 2009

Categories: Economy, Environment

Refueling Detroit

For six years, I was the spiritual leader of a big church in Warren, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit. I lived in Detroit for a total of ten years; I feel I got to know the place.
   

Of the thousands of people who attended the church, and others I got to know while living in Detroit, most worked in some capacity, directly or indirectly, for the automobile companies. It's basically a one-industry town, as everyone knows.
    

My main impression of Detroit was of trapped light. Just beneath the surface - and it was a hard surface, no mistake about it - was the spirit of ingenuity and creativity that characterizes the best of America everywhere. But a corporate aristocracy runs that place, not only financially but socially. Their attachment to an old-paradigm capitalist bottom line of short-term economic gain for corporate shareholders no matter what, has kept the rank and file workers under an iron thumb for years But that doesn't mean the rank and file has been happy.       
    

People in Detroit are as hip as people anywhere else. The rot of unsustainable thought and behavior didn't permeate the car companies; it only permeated their leadership. Beneath the level of corporate offices at the Ren Center -- at technology, engineering, scientific and manufacturing labs throughout the area - people  have been chomping at the bit to transition to a more sustainable, green model of development....if only someone would give them that mandate.
   

Detroit is a microcosm of the country; it has all it takes to go in a different direction, once leadership lays down that gauntlet. President Obama has talked about how moving the economy is like turning around a big ship, not a small speedboat. But when you add the element of released creativity through the intention to do the right thing for a change, energies are released that fall somewhere in between the ship and the speedboat.
   

Top leadership of an organization does more than call the shots; it invokes invisible forces. It determines in ways both large and small whether people who work for the organization want to get up and go to work in the morning, or whether they wish they could crawl back under the covers and sleep the day away. For all America's talk about whether people have jobs or not, there is a conversation every bit as relevant to our recovery from this economic crisis: whether or not people have jobs that touch their spirits and make them want to work.
     

With the shift that Obama's task force is demanding of the car companies now, there is an opportunity to remove the iron hand that has sat on top of Detroiters for so many decades, and release them to their creative best. What I hope he will not do is import a bunch of greens from the West Coast, arriving to show Detroiters how to do what they know how to do and would have done decades ago if someone had simply let them.
   

What people want more than anything -- whether they live in South Africa or Kansas, Cairo or Detroit -- is to feel that their lives are part of a meaningful endeavor. Changing the civilization of this planet -- from an institutional nexus that disregards the needs of the earth and its inhabitants in favor of the inflated needs of an economic system now proven bankrupt both morally and financially -- is a meaningful adventure that both awakens the soul and answers to the deepest craving of the human heart.
    

What's happening to the car companies is what's happening to the world: not doing the right thing simply won't work anymore. Just moving our attention to that-- in this case, to developing energy and transportation based on sustainable, clean and renewable sources -- will so ignite the creativity and enthusiasm of people in Detroit and around the world, that the transition will in some ways be easier than people think. Institutions move slowly, yes, but the kind of shift we're talking about here is more than institutional or operational: it's spiritual. It gives the genuine thrill that only something aligned with the highest aspirations of the human race can provide, offering people the opportunity to participate in something truly important to the ages. In that intention -- to create new possibilities not only for the car companies, but for the very way we live our lives, treat the earth and treat each other -- lies the potential for a quantum explosion of new opportunities. Detroit can be turned into world headquarters for the development of clean energy and sustainable transportation, releasing light that has been trapped for a very long time. When and if that happens, it will more than shift Detroit; it will help to shift the world.


---- Marianne Williamson

 





Wednesday March 25, 2009

Categories: Abortion

How Many Times Will Anti-Abortion Activists Interupt Obama's ND Speech?

Pesident Obama will give the commencement address at Notre Dame.  The Bishop of South Bend, John D'Arcy has decided to not attend (boycott is the more provacative term).  But my guess is that the real excitment will come from the anti-abortion protesters who infiltrate themselves into the audience and call him a murderer one? two? three? times? times. 

My thoughts one this are informed by the National Democratic Convention where the opening worship service was interrupted three times by plants in the audience standing up and calling out "Obama kills babies" and the like, and the then senator wasn't even in the room.  My guess is that at Notre Dame, when the President is right there, it will be too tempting not to make a statement.  The problem for anti-abortion activists is that this generally pisses off people so much that they unwittingly aid the pro-choice movement. 

Any guesses?  You can put them below and we'll check back in May.  For the record I think it will be three times. But that is just my trinitarian impulse. 

Tuesday March 24, 2009

Categories: Christians, Race

Townhall.com - a Christian Backed Home for Racists

Chris Kelly reports at Huffingtonpost.com on the sad racist pathology at the Christian backed website Townhall.com. You can tell that this fellow Burt Prelutsky doesn't even really know he is being horribly racist and offensive by any common standard of decency in America.  It is shocking that someone like this could have an audience still in 2009.  Not to mention that a Christian organization is funding him and amplifying his hateful voice.   

If you don't like what you read below contact the owners of Townhall.com here  

Burt Prelutsky was a TV writer a long time ago. Then he aged out of it and became a crank. This wasn't one of those major loses like Steinbeck. Now he writes a column for Townhall.com, the popular website owned by a Christian radio network.
Here's something from his current offering:

Prelutsky: Take Michelle Obama...please. Every time I turn around, there she is on a magazine cover. Now, normally, like the Mafia, I lay off the spouses, but inasmuch as this particular spouse attended the same racist church as her hubby for 20 years, I'll make an exception in her case. After all, in spite of the fact that affirmative action got her an Ivy League degree and a $7,000-a-week salary and, moreover, has sent billions of dollars for no particularly good reason to Africa, she insists this is a mean country. The burning question in my circle is: if the First Family gets a female dog, will she be the First Bitch or will she have to settle for second place?

Prelutsky: Naturally, the left-wing media is now trying to convince us that this James Brown-look-alike has all the allure, glamour and fashion sense of Jackie Kennedy.

Prelutsky: If we were a racist society, Oprah Winfrey, your fairy godmother, certainly wouldn't be a billionaire; she'd be fetching someone's mint julep. And Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice wouldn't grow up to be secretaries of state; they'd be sweeping out the stables. And Will Smith and Denzel Washington wouldn't be movie stars; they'd be in the fields picking cotton.

You can read the rest at Townhall

Monday March 23, 2009

Dalai Lama Denied Visa to Peace Conference

UPDATE: They cancelled the conference. 

And now from the "what the heck were they thinking" department, the South African government has denied the Dalai Lama a visa to attend a peace conference to showcase - get this - South Africa's human rights record in anticipation of the 2010 world cup.  Because they didn't want to piss off the Chinese, South African officials decided to deny entry to one of the major figures of peace in the world - the Dalai Lama.  Good luck with that South Africa. 

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (CNN) -- South Africa has refused the Dalai Lama a visa to attend an international peace conference in Johannesburg this week, a presidential spokesman said.
The Dalai Lama fled China in 1959 after a failed uprising against Chinese rule.


The Tibetan spiritual leader and Nobel Laureate did not receive a visa because it was not in South Africa's interest for him to attend, said Thabo Masebe.

South Africa thinks that, if the Dalai Lama attended the conference, the focus would shift away from the 2010 World Cup -- the global soccer championship it will host next year.

"We cannot allow focus to shift to China and Tibet," Masebe said, adding that South Africa has gained much from its trading relationship with China.

The Dalai Lama's fellow laureate, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, said he would boycott the event.

Former president F.W. De Klerk, another laureate, backed Tutu, saying in a statement that he would also not participate in the conference if the Dalai Lama remained excluded.

De Klerk said that the decision to refuse the visa made a "mockery" of the peace conference.

Read the whole debacle here

Monday March 23, 2009

The Religious Control of the Israeli Army

This seriously upsetting article in the New York Times Sunday paper chronicles the increasing influence of the religious right in Israeli's armed forces and its affect on the execution of the war on Gaza.  Especially chilling is the quote from the Chief Rabbi of the military Gen. Avichai Rontzki who enouraged the slogan: "He is who is merciful to the cruel will end up being cruel to the merciful."  What a convenient little motto that can be!

It reminds one of the power that the religious right also has in the armed forces in America.  When religious hawks control our military mixing religious fervor with armed strength then every battle becomes one done in God's name and any means justify the ends.  If every battle becomes a Holy War then we will have war without end.  Here is an excerpt from the Times article written by Ethan Bronner: 

"The officer corps of the elite Golani Brigade is now heavily populated by religious right-wing graduates of the preparatory academies," noted Moshe Halbertal, a Jewish philosophy professor who co-wrote the military code of ethics and who is himself religiously observant but politically liberal. "The religious right is trying to have an impact on Israeli society through the army."

For Mr. Halbertal, like for the vast majority of Israelis, the army is an especially sensitive institution because it has always functioned as a social cauldron, throwing together people from all walks of life and scores of ethnic and national backgrounds, and helping form them into a cohesive society with social networks that carry on throughout their lives.

Those who oppose the religious right have been especially concerned about the influence of the military's chief rabbi, Brig. Gen. Avichai Rontzki, who is himself a West Bank settler and who was very active during the war, spending most of it in the company of the troops in the field.

He took a quotation from a classical Hebrew text and turned it into a slogan during the war: "He who is merciful to the cruel will end up being cruel to the merciful."

A controversy then arose when a booklet handed out to soldiers was found to contain a rabbinical edict against showing the enemy mercy. The Defense Ministry reprimanded the rabbi.

At the time, in January, Avshalom Vilan, then a leftist member of Parliament, accused the rabbi of having "turned the Israeli military's activity from fighting out of necessity into a holy war."

Hmmm, moving from a war of necessity to a war of choice and one viewed through the axis of good vs evil.  Sounds familiar to me.  I am near despair over the misguided fanaticism of the religious right whether it is Christian, Jewish, Muslim or Hindu.  Enlightened religious communities and secular humanists must join together in Israel, Palestine, America, India, Pakistan, and throughout the world to counter the dogma of war and domination that we see in religious fundamentalists throughout the world.  

Saturday March 21, 2009

Julian Bond: Black Rights and Gay Rights - A Common Struggle

This is a wonderful video for anyone who cars about the civil rights of all people.  It puts to rest the false idea that African Americans are more homophobic than other Americans.   Homophobia has no race and bigotry towards gay people...

Saturday March 21, 2009

Categories: prayer and ritual

Death as Mystery: On Natasha Richardson

Many years ago, at a party in Los Angeles, I had the pleasure of speaking for a while to Natasha Richardson.    What I remember is how kind and gentle she was. I realized her pedigree -- that she was Vanessa...

Friday March 20, 2009

Categories: Terrorism, War, torture

Six Years of Iraq War: Was it Worth It?

I remember coming out from my New York City apartment the day after 9/11.  In those days immediately after the attack, New Yorkers talked to random people in the street and a passerby turned to me and said - I'm...

Tuesday March 17, 2009

Categories: Catholics

The Pope, Condoms and (even more) AIDS in Africa

Pope Benedict once again put ideology and dogma over human life in his first day in Africa where 25 million people have died from AIDS by pronouncing: It (AIDS) cannot be overcome by the distribution of condoms. On the contrary, they increase...

Tuesday March 17, 2009

Categories: Economy

AIG Bonuses: A Spiritual Solution

AIG has a public relations problem. The company got a lot of money from the American taxpayer to bail out their bad work in managing risk and they still need more.  But now it comes to light that they are paying out...

Monday March 16, 2009

Whose Conscience? Balancing Claims by Health Care Providers and Patients

Despite media hype to the contrary, the proposed rule by the Obama administration to rescind the midnight Bush "conscience" regulation governing health care providers actually does respect the conscience and religious freedom of those in the industry who object to...

Sunday March 15, 2009

President Obama and his Pastors - Listen to Religious Women for a Change

The New York Time reports that President Obama has his circle of five pastors who offer him moral and spiritual guidance.  Given his history of being burned by Rev. Wright it is not surprising that the President is hesitant...

Saturday March 14, 2009

A Cancer Survivor's Argument for Embryonic Stem Cell Research

Rabbi David Wolpe writes in Washington Post's On Faith from the point of view of a cancer survivor and as a religious leader. From both vantage points he supports the president's lifting of the ban on embryonic stem cell research.  His concise...

Friday March 13, 2009

Q: Ever Wonder What Anti-Gay Rhetoric Leads To? A: "Corrective" Rape

"Corrective" rape is on the rise in South Africa.  For those of you who are not familiar with the term (like me until today) "corrective" rape is when men gang rape lesbians in order for them to become straight.  ...

Friday March 13, 2009

Categories: Christians, Race

Black Liberation Theology vs Victoria Jackson

I know I shouldn't keep picking on the lowest common denominator but they just keep on appearing on cable news talking about politics and religion.  We first had Chuck Norris talking about violently leaving the country and taking Texas with him and now...

Wednesday March 11, 2009

Memo to Chuck Norris: America, Love it or Leave It.

A couple days ago I needed a haircut and a shave.  Passing by an unfamiliar barber shop I noticed a sticker in the window that I hadn't seen for a few decades that read: "America: Love it or Leave it."  ...

Tuesday March 10, 2009

Categories: Buddhist

March 10th Statement of H.H. the Dalai Lama

Today is the 50th anniversary of the Tibetan people's peaceful uprising against Communist China's repression in Tibet. Since last March widespread peaceful protests have erupted across the whole of Tibet. Most of the participants were youths born and brought up...

Tuesday March 10, 2009

Will Faith Based Programs Go Sour on Obama?

From the beginning, there have been some religious leaders who greeted the funding of faith-based social services by government with ambivalence. On the one hand, they believed that these religiously grounded programs needed extra funding and were pleased that the...

Monday March 9, 2009

Categories: Buddhist

The Dalai Lama & Commemorating 'Tibetan Independence Day' on March 10

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Saturday March 7, 2009

Sex and Religion Kiss in Texas Public Schools

Ryan Valentine serves as the Deputy Director for the Texas Freedom Network, a nonpartisan organization of religious and community leaders who advocate a mainstream agenda of religious freedom and individual liberties.   The only thing more controversial than teaching about...

Friday March 6, 2009

Categories: Buddhist

'The Dalai Lama Is My Primary Model for a Life of Realization'

Guest post by Sharon Salzberg, co-founder of the Insight Meditation Society in Barre, Mass., and The Barre Center for Buddhist Studies. I went to India in March of 2008, journeying there for the first time in 12 years. For over three...

Thursday March 5, 2009

Categories: Evangelicals, Race

Rush, Race and the Religious Right

With Rush Limbaugh having asserted his claim to be the true and rightful leader of the Republican Party, it's tempting to argue that he is, in fact, the perfect embodiment for Republicans at this historical moment: loud, boorish, corpulent...

Thursday March 5, 2009

Categories: Homosexuality

Marriage Matters: Why California Must Overturn Prop 8

Guest Post by Rev. Debra W. Haffner, Director, Religious Institute on Sexual Morality, Justice, and Healing - a multifaith organization with more than 4400 religious leaders in its networkThe California Supreme Court will hear arguments today to invalidate Prop 8...

Thursday March 5, 2009

Categories: Economy

So, Greed is Bad Again?

Greed ranks third on the seven deadly sins, But only some of the time.  Nancy Folbre opens her revealing column called Sin Cycle with this reminder; In Oliver Stone's classic film "Wall Street," a charismatic capitalist named Gordon Gekko proclaims, "Greed is...

Wednesday March 4, 2009

Categories: Abortion, Election '08

Gov. Sebelius' Catholic Supporters Sideline Donohue

Gov. Kathleen Sebelius's nomination for HHS has largely focused on her abortion record thanks to a concerted effort by ultra conservatives such as the Catholic League's Bill Donohue who said:  "Sebelius' support for abortion is so far off-the-charts that...

Tuesday March 3, 2009

Rush Limbaugh and His Cowering Republicanettes

The Republicans are a funny lot right now - not funny ha ha, but funny sad.   Rush Limbaugh has become their de facto king and any time any person says that the king has no clothes, they get reprimanded and...

Monday March 2, 2009

Categories: Economy

Obama's Budget: Healthy Mind, Body and Spirit

I have always have been struck by the YMCA's foundational idea - healthy mind, healthy body, healthy spirit.  These three foci were meant to be integrated to provide the underpinning of a potent and moral life.  Mind, body and spirit...

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About Progressive Revival

Diana Butler Bass and Paul Raushenbush both stand firmly within the Mainline Protestant tradition and, along with guest bloggers of all religious backgrounds are dedicated to the revival of religious progressivism and its influence in American politics.

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Diana Butler Bass
Diana Butler Bass is a commentator and scholar in American religion. She is the author of seven books including A People's History of Christianity: The Other Side of the Story (HarperOne, 2009).
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Paul Raushenbush
Moderator of the Progressive Revival blog and the Associate Dean of Religious Life at Princeton University.
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