Monday, September 20, 2021

A reply on a friend's page complaining about "illegals" ...

Thank God there are no "illegals" in God's Kingdom ... and on a more practical level, a nation that has
spent trillions on war certainly can handle this. 

It's people, just plain people, looking for a better life. Driven by desperate circumstances, love for their children, hope for the future, seeking safety and refuge. 

God's arms are open; I pray that ours are, too. 

Sure, some will say, "Criminals are in their ranks," and that may be true ... but there are thousands of people willing to work hard, to make a contribution to our nation's future. 

When the Italians came, when the Hungarians and Irish came, when the Poles and Germans came, they were labeled "second class," "criminal," and "low-lifes." But millions came, and lifted up this nation, and their children went to school, to become doctors and scientists, ministers and teachers, librarians and engineers. 

It's all about the future. Some won't make it; some will make the wrong turn; but millions will become Americans - true blue Americans. 

And that's what makes this nation great.
9.20.21 - Happy to be Presbyterian

1 Corinthians 5 ... I wonder what's up?

Started reading through 1 Corinthians a few days back, and stopped for awhile this morning on the 5th chapter, wondering, and googling ... what were the circumstances?

And how easily the women in question is dismissed - and the man so easily condemned.

Sounds like a bunch of busybodies holding their noses without any regard for the two people in question, running off to Paul like 4th grade tattletales.

It occurred to me: was she much younger than the man's stepfather?

Was she abused?

Was the son rescuing her?

Were the woman and her "husband" divorced, or was she abandoned? Or had she run away?

With the uneasy feeling that, then or now, women are treated as property ... women belong to the men, and in this case, the son is "violating" property law - stealing from his father, if you will.

This morning, I wanted to ask Paul:

"Don't you have bigger fish to fry?

Have you looked into the matter?

Or are you just going by what the busybodies offer?"

I read Paul with the greatest respect - he gets a lot of things right, as I see it.

But his easy condemnation of the man, with no interest in the details, or the possible suffering of the woman, and maybe the man's kindness to redeem her, leaves me uncomfortable.

With years of ministry behind me: I know something of "sin," in my own life, and in the lives of others - there is sin committed with hubris, arrogance, and ego, power, and domination.

Then, there is "sin" committed because there's no easy answer to so many hard moments in life. And what the community busybodies might label as "sin" is nothing less then folks caught up in a messy situation, not directly or immediately of their own making, working to make the best of it, to mitigate further harm, and to practice kindness, and to find a way through.

Here, as anywhere, the ease with which the "righteous" condemn "sexual" immorality ... it's so easy to do, and it's so rewarding.

Comments????

Wednesday, March 3, 2021

Anti-Asian Violence

Let me venture into dangerous territory - the growing incidence of anti-Asian terrorism across America.

I raise this concern because Asians have often been touted as the Model Minority - images of hard work, education, drive, and moral discipline, are lifted up and celebrated, not only to mark Asian achievement, but, I think, to humiliate other minorities.

One result of this elevation, at least in Orange County, has been a hard turn to the right in Asian politics - some of it driven by the memories of the Vietnamese who shudder at the mention of anything "communist," and some driven by the love of money and the self-righteousness induced by achievement and wealth, often believing, as did many a Jew in pre-ww2 Germany, that "assimilation" and "being a good German" would spare them. But it didn't. And now around the country, Asians are facing a White Supremacy threat of real proportions.

What this domestic terrorism says, however, is this: "You're not a part of us, and you never will be. No matter your zip code, your money, your achievement, your hard work, you're not Amerikkkan, and you don't belong here. And we don't like you."

What will this do to politics? Will it occasion a shift to the left? To something more in solidarity with other minorities? With a recognition that hard work and success is what rankles white supremacists who resent non-whites getting a share of the pie.

I'm on dangerous ground, I realize, so please forgive any inaccuracies or missteps. But at the same time, I'd appreciate some commentary here, and especially from our Asian members.

This much I know: terrorism against Asian-Americans is on a precipitous rise.