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Our Confused President

Symbol [ sim -b uh  l]  noun:  something used for or regarded as representing something else; a materialobject representing something, often something immaterial; emblem, token, or sign. ************** Patriot [ pey -tree- uh  t, -ot]  noun:   a person who loves, supports, and defends his or her country and its interests with devotion. Yesterday, President Trump asserted that NFL players who refuse to stand for the national anthem display "a total disrespect of everything that we stand for." But the national anthem is not "everything we stand for." Like the American flag, it is a symbol of everything we stand for, namely the ideals that were enshrined in the founding of our nation - "certain unalienable Rights," as stated in the Declaration of Independence, among which are "Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness." When some among us are deni...

It's All Connected - thoughts on the Total Eclipse of the Sun

As suggested by the "man of signs," which appeared in early American almanacs straight through to the end of the eighteenth century, p eople living before the triumph of modern science believed that everything was somehow, mysteriously, connected.   Individual bodies, churches ("the body of Christ"), communities and nations ("bodies politic") and heavenly bodies - our ancestors saw these many bodies as nested one inside the other, like Russian dolls. Benjamin Franklin, Poor Richard's Almanac, 1733 The man of signs came to my mind as I watched friends from across the United States react to the total eclipse of the sun this past Monday.  People within the "band of totality" described the experience in visceral, bodily terms.  Hearts beat faster, palms grew clammy. Inexplicably, and uncontrollably, people laughed and cried and shouted. Of course we understand a lot more than our ancestors did about how each of these different bodi...

Why Morality Matters - What the Founding Fathers Would Make of Donald Trump

Widespread conservative indifference to Donald Trump's personal failings raises fundamental questions. If a President pursues policies we like, and advances our party's agenda, why should we care if he (or she) is of questionable personal character? When it comes to Presidents, does personal morality matter?  And if it does, how? Immersed, as I have been, in the study of early American history, I thought I’d seek answers to these questions by turning to the men who led the American revolution and framed the U.S. Constitution. Like many people in the late eighteenth century, the founders of the United States conceived of human societies as composed of many bodies – individual bodies, ecclesial bodies (“the body of Christ”), political bodies, and so on. The struggle to establish, maintain and restore right order in these many bodies dominated every dimension of life in the early American republic - from the practice of medicine, to disputes over church doctrine and polity, ...

O God, Our Help in Ages Past ... a prayer of confession for white American Christians in the aftermath of Charlottesville

O God: We, your people, who count ourselves white and American and Christian, come to you with heavy hearts. The evil of white racism - a constant in our history as a nation - has made itself transparent in our land once more.  Lord, have mercy on us. O God, our help in ages past: we confess our sin to you this day.  We know that you are God of all peoples and all times and all places, but we are a prideful and stubborn people, prone to claim you as our own.  Cause us to recognize and reject the sins of our ancestors in demonizing, dehumanizing and denigrating people of other races, religions, and ethnicity.  O God, our help in ages past, our hope for years to come:  We recognize our need of you.  Un-blind us  to the ways you are working in the lives and histories of our neighbors.   Help us to incarnate the great truth that you made manifest in the birth and life and death and resurrection of Jesus: that all people are loved by you. ...

10 Years Later - The Border Church / La Iglesia Fronteriza

August 4, 2007 photo:  Maria Teresa Fernandez Ten years ago today, on August 4, 2007, I first served communion through the border fence at Friendship Park, the historic meeting place on the US-México border. It was a time when politicians from other parts of the country were waiving laws to build walls along the border, seeking short-term political advantage by appealing to the least noble parts of the American character. It was a time much like these. ( español a continuación) I did it because federal officials were threatening to eliminate public access to the US side of the park, despite that friends and families had gathered there peaceably for generations. Items passed through the fence, including the bread of our communion, we were told, were "contraband," violations of US customs law. Ten years later, this simple act has been transformed by the grace and power of God into a self-sustaining, bi-national community of faith that goes by the simple name of The Bo...

What if Donald Trump were a Democrat

I closed my last post   by asking:   at what point should our moral qualms about a politician's character outweigh our other reasons for lending them our support?    Given the current environment, it's very hard to entertain this question as a matter of principle, without getting dragged down in partisan politics.  To assist us in this endeavor, let's imagine, for just a moment,  that Donald Trump is President ... and a Democrat.  Imagine that Donald Trump, the Democrat, defeated an unpopular Republican in the 2016 presidential election - for convenience, let's say Newt Gingrich.   Imagine that President Trump (D) has a Congress controlled by Democrats, and is attempting to pursue an almost entirely blue political platform. Imagine he is nominating liberals to the Supreme Court, pursuing single-payer healthcare legislation, advocating for comprehensive immigration reform, and so on.  Imagine, in short, that his Presidency seems  to...

How Good People, in Good Conscience, Can Support Donald Trump

In  my last post , I shared my struggle with the question of whether, as a pastor, I should post about politics in the age of Donald Trump.  Many of the responses included comments like this: "How can people who call themselves Christian support that man?"  I have decided to take this question literally, and, as a spiritual exercise, I will try to answer it.  In reading these answers, I suspect some of my liberal friends may find their blood boiling.  But I am not trying to articulate these arguments because I agree with them.  Neither am I denying that less noble reasons also drive many people - including many Christians - to support Trump.  Those I will address on another occasion. In this post, I am simply  trying to articulate some of the reasons that good, Christian people I know and love support Donald Trump . Perhaps you know someone  perfectly decent and honorable like this, too - a cousin, a grandfather, an old friend from ...