The
Bible and the State of Political Dissent in America
by
Rev. Paul J. Bern
For
the last few years I have been watching as political dissent has
unfolded worldwide, first in form of the Arab Spring, then the
Occupy and 99% Movements, and most recently the rage that has boiled
over in Ferguson, Mo. and numerous other places, with the greatest of
interest, maybe even fascination. I have written
and published two books
about these worldwide political and social movements, with more in
the works (stay tuned). It is captivating to watch all of the
demonstrators stand up and make their voices heard, and it is
inspiring to see thousands of Davids going to battle with the
government Goliaths, especially knowing that “we the people” will
win again just like David did. One by one, the world's dictators and
America's racial barriers are falling, and it all started with one
man in Tunisia setting himself on fire. One guy! And now the civil
unrest over what amounts to the extreme abuse of authority has spread
all across the US, as I pointed out above. Today as I write this
there are organized demonstrations or grassroots organizations in all
50 states and in Washington DC. All these protests highlight the need
for authentic equality, more economic opportunity, the right to
decent housing and to a living wage, the right to unqualified access
to health care and higher education, and for the elimination of
poverty, hunger, crime and disease. Lately this has also begun to
include an end to all wars, and of the extreme abuse of power by a
few firmly entrenched bigots and haters. This, my dear readers, is
the stuff that really matters to real people, the ones who are caring
and compassionate and who show empathy and mercy towards others by
putting aside personal differences. What is needed today is more
people who are focused on the needs of others, and a lot less on
themselves.
In
order for workers throughout the world to make the case for their
right to organize without fear of reprisal, it is essential that they
be completely unified. To live and work in unity means that
relatively large groups can organize and demonstrate globally for the
common good, particularly in matters regarding basic human rights.
United we stand and divided we fall, so it is always in our best
interests to stand united with a common purpose. Unity is what
enabled the early thirteen colonies to throw Great Britain off the
North American continent and back home to England. Unity is what
repaired the United States after the American Civil War and paved the
way for a reunited America that established the remainder of the 48
contiguous states by the turn of the twentieth century. Unity is what
allowed America to win two world wars. We have since lost some of
that unity, partly due to apathy, ignorance and fear, but largely due
to being intimidated by abusive authoritarians of the US
military-industrial-incarceration complex. People have become tired
of getting pushed around and being told what to do by cold, uncaring
political and economic systems whose sole purpose for existence is
profit. Jesus himself made a timeless comment about this at the
'sermon on the mount' when He said, “No man can serve two
masters. Either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will
be devoted to one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God
and money”. (Matt. Chapter 6, verse 24)
Meaning, anyone who is devoted to the pursuit of profit despises God
whether he or she realizes it or not.
In
spite of all the raw greed in today's world, I have observed that
many other people everywhere are finally beginning to wake up, and
they're figuring out that we can get our country back from the
crooked Wall Street bankers that robbed the US Treasury via the 2008
government bailout (but only after cleaning out the retirement
savings of millions of innocent Americans beforehand). God has
already given us the power to resist evil through the power of His
Word, and so has the US Constitution and its predecessor, the
Declaration of Independence. If we pray to God for this Holy Spirit
power of resistance to evil, and do so believing that we will receive
it while maintaining a thankful heart, He will give it to us freely.
Remember what Jesus taught us? “Ask, and it will be given to
you; seek, and you will find; knock, and the door will be opened to
you. For everyone who asks, receives; he who seeks finds; and to him
who knocks, the door will be opened.” (Matt. Chapter 7, verses 7-8
NIV) When Jesus gives, that means without limits, people. By the
same token, if one will not bother to seek, ask or knock, that person
should not be surprised when they find themselves destitute, homeless
and hungry. Just as surely as people have united in the Arab world
against tyranny, as Labor Unions and affiliated workers in Wisconsin,
Ohio and Indiana stood up against the attempted liquidation of their
political and economic clout, and as surely as Ferguson Mo. burned
last summer, so will there be massive civil unrest right here in the
United States because of the tyranny of capitalism of, by and for the
very rich, and because of the tyranny of consumerism and materialism
that has us all completely infiltrated! Not to mention the fact that
the police these days are shooting at anything that moves. But if we
don't start fighting back, we will wind up with zilch at best, or
cooped up in some FEMA camp somewhere, or maybe even dead.
It
is disturbing to see the apparent lack of unity that still remains in
the US, particularly regarding the negative slant that the mainstream
media is showing on cable TV. It makes me wonder what is happening to
America? Why are we yelling and screaming at each other in town hall
meetings? Why have television and radio talk shows degenerated into
shouting matches? Why do hate-filled messages permeate the Internet
on all sides? What has happened to us as a people? There is a poison
flowing through the body politic of America, it will torpedo and sink
our democracy unless the flow is shut off, and that poison's name is
corruption. Those on the far-left accuse the far-right of being
fascist Neanderthals while those on the far-right accuse the far-left
of being heathen Communists. This kind of immature stereotyping and
deliberate polarization of America threatens to tear the fabric of
our country apart. Actually, the far-left and the far-right have more
in common then they would ever want to admit. Both sides are
absolutist in their ideology and uncompromising in their politics.
They see no shades of gray, only black and white. Each side believes
that they possess absolute truth and each side refuses to compromise
on its beliefs. That's why I identify with neither, which is why I'm
a political independent and always will be. I refuse to identify my
Internet
church with
any church denominations for similar reasons.
What
particularly troubles me in today's political environment is the
level of anger and even outright hatred that is being displayed. I
have been trying to figure out the source of this anger and hatred
for some time now. Some of today's rabid emotionalism can be traced
to old-fashioned racism but I think for many people it goes deeper
than that. I would suggest that this anger and hatefulness is really
a response to the fear of change. Fear is an emotion we don't like in
ourselves and anger is a way of covering up our fears with an emotion
that makes us feel more powerful. Anger, then, is like a drug, and
like a drug it can become habit-forming. The antidote, then, is to
face our fears and see them for what they are: being afraid of
negative outcomes that either never happen, or that get negated by
some other positive force, person or event. We live in a world where
society, technology, the economy and demographics are rapidly
changing and this change is deeply threatening to many people. They
are frightened that the world they have known is disappearing. This
deep internal fear of change produces an angered response that is
directed toward an outward target such as Wall Street bankers, the
government or even immigrants. We repress our fear by directing our
anger toward someone or something outside of ourselves. If we want
American democracy to survive, some of us need to grow up. We need to
stop yelling at each other and learn to start listening to each
other. Everybody can't be right about everything all of the time! We
need to accept the reality of change and begin working together to
find productive ways of dealing with a world that is constantly
changing, and doing so for the mutual benefit of all. The needs of
the many, Mr. Spock once said, outweigh the needs of the few. You
see, the future in which this idyllic truism exists has already
arrived.
The
fact is that America has been and is built upon compromise. Our great
experiment in democracy is founded upon the belief that each issue
has many sides and that the most workable solution comes from a
compromise that blends together many disparate views. Compromise is
the glue that holds America together. Change is inevitable. It's the
way the universe is constructed. The fact that time exists means that
change must occur. Rather than fear change, we need to make it work
for our benefit. Rather than trying to go back and trying to fix the
past (why bother?), we need to work together to create a better
future, to literally manufacture an entirely new world. If the
American experiment is going to grow and mature, 'we the people' have
to grow and mature. We have to put our irrational fears behind us and
start working together as mature adults in order to deal successfully
with the challenges that change presents to us, such as saving our
planet and getting ample food and clean water to the 2.5 billion
human beings who currently have no access to either. Those who refuse
to help the most vulnerable individuals make themselves accessories
to manslaughter on a global scale. What am I talking about here?
Fifty thousand per day. That's how many children under the age of 12
starve to death each day globally. Fifty thousand. Those who refused
to help them helped kill them all with not so much as a second
thought.
It's
time to refocus and to stop the childish name-calling – from the
presidential primaries all the way down to you and me – and to
start having rational, thoughtful discussions about the issues before
us. It's time to turn away from those in the media and on the
Internet who feed our fears and fuel our prejudices. It's time to
start respecting each other as fellow Americans regardless of our
individual differences. It's time for all of us to become part of the
solution. Waiting on the government to act is pointless! Each of us
must stand up for a fundamental American truth – united we stand,
divided we fall. As Americans we absolutely must stand together. We
must totally reject the anger and hatefulness that is dividing us and
start using our God-given common sense to work together for the
common good. Living in competition only grinds us down, but achieving
through mutual cooperation lifts everyone up. Competition may be a
good thing in the business world, but it is counterproductive for
human relationships. We must either learn to live in harmony or
perish. The choice is ours.
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