Tuesday, 26 November 2019

I hear you’re a racist now Father!

I hear you’re a racist now Father?!

I was born and raised in Ireland and it has grown and changed even as I have. It is not the country I grew up in. It is hard to believe that fifty years ago we were a Third World country. Few nations on earth have experienced such a stellar evolution as the homeland of the Paddy and such a transition inevitably brings with it ‘stress cracks’ or ‘tears’ in the fabric of our culture. Our parents and their parent did not grow up in the same world as us and, therefore, were ill-equipped to prepare us for the challenges of the current age.

For example, growing up, in my case at least [and I was not alone] we were often so broke we went without food. In fact, such were the dire straits of my particular upbringing that we sometimes had no power and, therefore, were forced to cook what little we had on the fireplace. Good times! [Lest you miss my sarcasm, they were not good times - they were shit-est of times] When you live under such conditions you never have to worry about dieting – ever. You worry about where you’re next meal is going to come from. You wonder how many more meals you’ll this week but, one thing is certain, you will never, ever, ever, ask yourself – “Do I look big in this?” Gluttony was not a vice of that age: alcoholism, paedophilia, violence, and corruption were – but not gluttony. No one could afford gluttony, well – the one percent could but the food was so shite that few could muster the will to get fat.

They were the best of times and the worst of times. Unsurprisingly, I tended to measured everything in terms of poverty. Every movie I saw, every bible verse I heard, every song I listened to, all seemed to ring with one tone – the unquenchable yearning to overcome great obstacles, to emerge victorious after suffering rankest injustice. When I think of all the movies and songs, of the sheer quality of the cheese that was available to us back in those days: Dirty Dancing, talented poor kid lands upper class totty, Rocky – poor kid trains hard and fights his way to the top. For me everything was about the struggle between the “have’s and the have’s not” or perhaps, to be more specific, the challenges inherent in transitioning from a “have not” to a “have,” and that glorious dream of unqualified success, of a victory that no one could take from you.

I’ll never forget the shame of poverty. I’ll never forget the humiliation of having to beg for food. I’ll never forget the faces of those who made you squirm for it or who made the people I loved squirm for it. Nor will I forget the kindness of those who saw our plight and covered our shame – saints.

I always sided with the underdog, who doesn’t. It was this love for the underdog that drew my eye to the plight of the African American. I absolutely loved movies about African Americans, and was especially ripe for Hollywood’s propaganda drive on the evils of racism. To my young mind, being born black in America was structurally the same thing as being born poor in Ireland. The great African American comedian Reginald D. Hunter once quipped, ‘The class system is what white people do when they don’t have any black people to hate on.’ To me, there was no difference between black and white - we were the same in spirit.

Being poor was, and still is, dangerous. It was, and still is, synonymous with vulnerability, desperation, and ignorance, and all the ills and woes that trinity of evil can sire. Being born poor was not something you could help. You didn’t get a choice but you certainly had to deal with the consequences. When you came from the wrong side of the tracks the Law was considerably less forgiving. Young men from ‘poor backgrounds’ were much more likely to go to prison. I witnessed this countless times growing up. I saw kids from ‘well respected’ families do the same dumb shit every other kid did but when they got pulled up before the judge they got off with a stern warning, while my friends had to serve time. It was one law for Them and another law for Us. Years later, while in college, a lecturer once pointed out ‘if you want to know what’s important to a country, just look in its prisons:’ in America it’s race, in China it’s the Law, in England it was the Irish, in Ireland it is the poor.

In the Ireland of not too long ago being poor was a crime to be punished. Is it little wonder then my empathy for the injustices suffered by African Americans?

I was mightily moved by Martin Luther King Jnr.’s words, that our children should: ‘not be judged by the colour of their skin but by the content of their character,’ and I shed a tear of joy when Obama finally made it to the White House. It was the ultimate underdog story. Alas, by the end of his tenure my tears were for different reasons but that’s another matter.

It seemed only right to me that people should not be judged by where they’re from, for the accidental circumstances of their birth, but by what they aspire to be. It seemed fundamentally unfair to me that an individual should be punished for the accidental details of their birth like skin colour, class, or religion, and that a righteous or truly noble social order would endeavour in every way to facilitate the actualisation of the individual’s greatest potential regardless of incidentals. As far as I was concerned, a society or a person that failed in this had failed as a human being or failed as a nation.

In the Ireland I grew up in there was virtually no people of colour. The only time you would ever encounter them [outside of the telly] was in a hospital, they were doctors. I never met a black person that wasn’t a doctor. The Bill Cosby Show, which I loved, showed a black guy as a doctor and, but for the anti-racist propaganda coming out of Hollywood, I would have presumed that all black people were doctors. In the classic ‘Guess who’s coming to Dinner’, Sidney Poitier played a guy who came from the wrong side of the social and genetic tracks but who had managed to make something of himself – again, a doctor. I’ll never forget his monologues in that flick, they changed my life.

Over the years I’ve watched, genuinely thrilled, as our coloured brothers and sisters have landed on our shores. I thought, ‘Finally! Ireland’s going to be cool and cosmopolitan! It’ll be nice to have some colour to brighten up the endless sea of pasty face Paddys that trundle through our streets.’ I found it so cool to be strolling around, of a Sunday morning, and observe an African mother and her daughters waiting for the bus to bring them to church. Dressed up in those fabulous colours and outfits you’d only ever see on TV, and singing hymns getting their vocal chords warmed up for their church choir. It did my heart good. “Wonderful outfits, wonderful colours,” I thought, “wonderful singing, wonderful people,” and I smiled to myself thinking of how rich Irish culture would become thanks to the influx of this new blood.

In light of these experiences and insights I would never consider myself a racist. How can you be adversely biased against someone for whom you feeling genuine empathy and for whom you wish every victory? The media effected the same empathy in me for the gay community, as it did for people of colour. I personally feel that you have failed to live up to your potential as a human when you presume adversely against someone based on some one feature ‘X’.

People guilty of such foolishness could be termed an ‘X-ist’. An X-ist is a person that makes sweeping judgements about others based on ‘X’, i.e.: on some one accidental feature. My bug bear earlier was being see as ‘less than’ because of an accident of birth. I remember, with chagrin, my grandmother speaking to me about my ‘betters’ – that’s the sort of talk that makes people turn commie! I detested the idea of my ‘betters’ – that there was a class of people out there who were fundamentally better than I merely because they were born into the right class, religion, or skin colour. I always felt that it was deeply unfair to be thought less of merely because you happen to be born on the wrong side of the socially accepted and majority approved tracks.

I realise that you can’t judge individuals, individuals can always be exceptional, but groups -groups can be idiots, especially any group that held that I was somehow ‘less than’ because of things that were beyond my control. X-ists are unthinking idiots – everybody knows that, black or white, gay or straight, Christian or Jew – all fair minded people share a contempt for X-ists.

But if you cannot or, morally speaking, should not, make a negative presumption about a person due to accidental feature X, then are you justified in making a positive presumption? Can you assume that person is inherently good because of one feature? Is that not every bit as ridiculous as assuming the negative? Can you presume upon the intentions, good or bad, of an individual because of one feature? The answer, again, is no. That would be X-ist, that is you would have deluded yourself into believing the false notion [a generalisation] that all X is/are Y. That would be acting fundamentally against the great ideals of Dr. King: promoting a person based on one feature and not on the ‘content of their character’ – the body of work that comprises their lives.

We know that it is positively moronic to presume negatively upon someone based on any one feature X but it cannot be any less moronic to presume positively upon any one individual because of any one feature X. Therefore, while we certainly should not judge a person according to their skin, religion, class, or whatever ‘X’ is, neither should the very sight of feature X lead us to switch off our critical faculties and blithely assume that ‘X’ equals sainthood. It would seem logical, then, to treat everyone the same, that ‘by their fruits, and not by their roots, will you know them.’

Initiatives like Affirmative Action or any policy that ‘enforces’ diversity drives the very thing that it claims to eradicate: X-ism. Such policies seek to give preferential treatment to anyone that has feature ‘X’ and thereby must inevitably treat adversely all those who are not endowed with feature X. Besides merely being morally repugnant, spiritual laws teach us that we reap as we sow – that evil begets evil, and evil policy begets a society distorted and twisted by injustice and such conditions cannot be long endured.

Those that would attempt to silence critics of such morally bankrupt and socially retarding policies are guilty of either malignant ignorance or malfeasance.

I always considered the institutions that maintained the status quo, that have always sought to preserve the systemic inequalities – to preserve the advantages of the few over the many, especially heinous. The two great offenders are, and have always been, the judiciary and the media. These are the mighty institutional instruments of fear and intimidation wielded viciously against those who would dare question the legitimacy of the status quo. They are the appointed courts and executioners. Their hands are ever stained with the blood of the prophets.

As we mature, as individuals and a society, we come to question the status quo. The inequalities and injustices that are the fruit of an imperfect system run by corrupt people become more and more apparent, more and more difficult for the conscience to ignore, until they move from being merely unpalatable to being completely unacceptable. Finally, enraged, society is driven to destroy the unjust system and replace it with a better – fairer – one and so we evolve, dragging our institutions kicking and screaming behind us, led always by our prophets – our sincerest critics, those who love us more than anyone but who dare judge us by our highest ideals and hold us to account, into the future of a more equitable society.

Those who would silence questions and demonise those who might raise valid concerns about ineptitude, ignorance, and malfeasance are, as Obama so eloquently put it, “on the wrong side of history.” Their lies, subterfuge, and agenda will eventually be exposed to the light and they will have nowhere to hide their shame. There is a remarkable hypocrisy in the actions of those who claim to be the moral guardians of society and yet judge and punish her prophets – but who consider themselves immune to judgement and beyond punishment.

We all improve through constructive criticism, both the citizen and the state. Without it we stagnate and die, or worse. Criticism and questioning are not symptoms of hate but symptoms of love, symptoms of genuine concern, of the hunger for truth, a desire to understand and to know and through understanding and knowledge make things better for everyone. Without truth we are careening blindly through life and no good can possibly come from that! Those who would seek to prevent us from accessing truth, or highlighting truth, wish to keep us blindfolded and lead us to we know not where.

Would you trust a stranger to blindfold you and lead you somewhere you don’t know? Even if they said that by refusing to wear the blindfold means you are an X-ist? Would you allow a bully to shame you into submission? Would you trust such a person or institution? Isn’t it an interesting irony that the very people that accuse others of X-ism and who seek to promote policies that they allege will eliminate this bogey-man are in fact and truth the most reprehensible X-ists of all?!

Consequently, when people we don’t know suddenly invite strangers into our home, into our homeland – isn’t it fair and right to ask questions about this? And what would you consider might be the intentions of someone that sought to discourage questions or even made it illegal to criticise such behaviour? No matter how you slice it, there is no way that such facilitators have our best interests at heart.

Tuesday, 24 September 2019

Faith and Doubt

I wrote this in response to someone that was struggling spiritually.

Personally speaking, I "feel ya bro". I've had pretty much unshakeable faith since I was 20, or so I thought. I have never, since my awakening, once doubted the reality of God, the efficacy of His wisdom, or the surety of his love but, as the scripture teaches: the fining pot for silver, the furnace for gold but the Lord tries the heart of men. Experience has taught me that when the Father tests you, he'll bring you to breaking point. But if you can suffer it, out of the destruction comes resurrection and renewal.

I remember breaking down one night, after years of struggling with a personal issue, bawling my eyes out and, for the first time in my life, I really questioned the Father's love. I was shocked at myself and more than a little disgusted with my childishness and weakness.
Eventually, I realised that walking in this veil of tears is no easy task. Walking by faith, faith in the inevitable victory of truth, beauty and goodness, of faith in righteousness, mercy, tolerance, and forgiveness in a world that seems so terminally afflicted with corruption, is no mean feat.

I found it hard to believe that one could know God and life could still be so hard! For me, the contemplation of the Father and divine realities had always been a font of strength. However, years of bitter experience had made me weak; I guess. Or maybe I was just a naive "fair weather faith-er", it's 'easy' believe when things are going your way but it is challenging when everything you touch turns to shit.

I have learned to charge up most of my pain and heartache to my twisted vision of life and my limited understanding of reality and abandoned the blasphemous notion that the God of Love was indulging in His masochistic inclinations. As Paul said, "we perceive as through a glass, darkly". As a woman in the pain of childbirth reaches out for comfort, so when the soul is tried do we reach for the consolation of the Almighty. Indeed, how easy are our prayers when they are not carrying the weight of the world and, oh, how fervent when we must endure trials?

As I pondered the seeming injustices of life, my mind turned to the Son of Man and I realised that even Jesus wept. That, to me, is one of his unnoticed miracles - he wept: "he was in all points afflicted like as we are" but nothing, no suffering, no injustice, no cruelty could cause him to surrender his faith in the goodness and wisdom of the Father's way.

He was kind to the unkind, even with the unworthy. He was gentle, tolerant and forgiving even with the cruel, intolerant, and vengeful. His faith in righteousness and goodness was invincible and in this absolute faith he had the "peace that surpasses all understanding". The world laughed at him and called him a fool but he commended his soul to His Father's judgment. They heaped scorn on his ideals but his response was to pray for them.

Following Jesus is not a path of ease, it's a sure pathway to struggle but in these he walks with us; indeed, he leads the way.

Bruce Lee once taught, "don't pray for an easy life. Pray for the strength to endure a difficult one." Scripture teaches that the worst affliction is never to have been afflicted. While the world has no respect for one that has never experienced difficulties. The only people we admire are those that have overcome great trials and yet still remain sweet.

Please, I call you to faith! Don't allow momentary weakness to dupe you into parting with all the dignity and respect you have acquired over the years, which you have so successfully forged out of your firey struggles with the perplexing delusions born of our material existence.

Victory is yours by faith and grace, and not by any great effort on your part. The Father and your unseen angelic brethren fight for you with a passion and means that are beyond your imagining. God is good to heal the broken hearted. Doubt not, believe only. Have faith. You will overcome.

My apologies if this is too preachy.
Life is hard. The guy on the Cross knows that, but even that injustice could not dull the Master's love of mercy or his willingness to reach out to those in need. He would never allowed the injustices he suffered to serve as an excuse to visit injustice upon others. He was a breaker of chains! He invites us to follow him. He invites us into the dignity of divine sonship, thereafter will all things needful be added.

Thursday, 16 May 2019

'Be of good cheer; I have overcome the world!' Jn. 16:33

'Be of good cheer; I have overcome the world!' Jn. 16:33

Economically speaking, the West occupies a prosperous First World state. However, spiritually speaking, it languishes in Third World squalor. The spiritual poverty of the West, more specifically western Christendom, is at the root of much of the worlds suffering. The challenge lies then not so much in the fact that the West dominates the world's purse as in the fact that her children are still charmed by the lure of 'shiny things,' the pursuit of materialistic goals, to the exclusion of other, more noble aspirations eg.: the riches inherent in actualising the divine self. Its children are, in real terms, still quite immature. And so it is that, 'Only when man has become sufficiently disillusioned by the sorrowful disappointments attendant upon the foolish and deceptive pursuits of selfishness, and subsequent to the discovery of the barrenness of formalized religion, will he be disposed to turn wholeheartedly to the gospel of the kingdom, the religion of Jesus of Nazareth.'i

True poverty is not simply a case of empty pockets but a heart empty of spiritual ideals, values, dreams and vision, a life bereft of values, meaning and purpose.

The Christian scriptures teaches 'out of the heart come the issues of life, murder, theft, adultery' Mat. 15:19 or 'as a man thinketh in his heart so is he' Prov. 23:7. The social and cultural realities of this world are reflections of our inner realities. Culture, in all its multitudinous hues – dark or delightful, is simply the shadow cast by the human heart. Consequently, all lasting transformation must occur on an inner level and all such transformations are a matter of personal attainment, personal growth – spiritual growth. Any effort not specifically focused on facilitating personal growth, spiritual regeneration and inner transformation, is an effort focused on the effect and not the cause of our social ills; it is to attack the branch yet leave the root untouchedii. It was for this reason that Jesus enjoined his followers to pray that God 'create in me a clean heart.' As a result of these insights it can be seen that the first goal of any transformational effort should begin with education, spiritual education - education on ideals and idealism, and the nobility of service.

The ills that plague the nations of the Third World will never be solved with mere money. Were we to hand over a trillion dollars to uneducated peoples, the money would be squandered as a direct result of the fact that their cultural experience would unlikely have furnished them with the intellectual tools required to manage such a resource nor would they likely have acquired the skills of personal restraint and self-discipline necessary to manage such wealth. Merely throwing money at a problem, without adequate vision and support, would not only be of no practical use, it would undoubtedly make things worse. It might be wise to make note that though the West presently dominates this wealth it certainly has a ways to go in the wise and magnanimous management of it.

Challenging the oppressive structures of this world, while significant, is not the 'final solution' to the ills that assail us. Utopian civil structures demand first an ideal type of citizen; only thereafter may such illuminated individuals safely employ the civil structures and social institutions that govern such a society. Unless the lives and the action/decisions of the citizens of any hypothesised Utopian state are founded upon some transcendent Ideal then the structures are of no import. Corruption is a cancer to any system but it begins in the human heart. Consequently, perfect social systems without similarly perfection oriented individuals are doomed. Changing the system, without also inculcating the ideals of perfection within the cultural experience of that society's same citizens would be akin to putting a plaster on a bomb. Such social shortsightedness can only lead to tragedy on an epic scale. This is the insight alluded to within Jesus' parable of the Foolish Builders, Matthew 7:24-27. Without sound foundations, no project can stand the test of time. Our greatest foe is never the cultural milieu and structures into which we are born but the evil tendencies that ever spring from the soil of the imperfect corrupt human heart.

Similar views have been expressed by Daniel G. Groody, in an essay of his to be found in the journal Theological Studies, Vol. 62, No. 2., 2008; 'Globalizing solidarity: Christian anthropology and the challenge of human liberation.' He notes that 'to argue in favor of the strengths of the free market and material prosperity without reference to the weaknesses of human nature is to court moral and social disaster because it unravels the bonds that unite us as a human family.'iii Pointing out that:


'Without an adequate vision of human life, it is easy to lose sight of our interconnection with each other and become vulnerable to an inner slavery that not only ignores human need but even rewards human greed. Structural reform is certainly needed, but politics and economics alone are insufficient to bring about the renewal and reordering of society. Nor can they map out the contours of a liberating human anthropology. Fundamental structural reform must be accompanied by a more fundamental inner change that originates in the human heart.iv


While the value of the observations made by Liberation Theologies that 'many of the problems and disorders of the modern world... have their roots in structural and systemic issues that create and perpetuate global injustices,'v cannot be discounted, Groody is concerned that the deeper issues at hand have gone relatively unexplored. Pointing out that 'these disorders on a more fundamental level are related to what happens within people.'vi Stressing that, 'Our inability to deliver ourselves from inner discord not only contributes to global disorder but also distorts our understanding of how we come to realize our identity as human beings. This problem, at root, is not simply a political, economic, or social one but a spiritual one.' vii


Thus can we more clearly appreciate the depth of insight implicit in the teachings of Jesus. When he declares, 'the kingdom is within' – it wasn't simply a figurative statement. By giving preeminence to inner realities, he was laying emphasis on the fact that it is our hopes and dreams or lack of them, our passions and ambitions idealistic or craven, above all – our loving devotion to one another or its absence, that shapes our realities; while circumstances merely offer the context for their extemporisation.




'Fear not little flock; for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom.' Luke 12:32


The radical nature of the Gospel Jesus lived and died preaching, is – to a degree – eclipsed by the tremendous social transformations that have been realised in His name since last he walked the earth. His prayer was always that all his followers, both present and to come, should be one – that they enjoy the same unity and communion that he shares with the Father among each other and with the Father, Jn 17: 20 - 22 . This facet of his teachings was taken up by Paul in Galatians 3:28 when he declared that: 'There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female: for ye are all one in Christ Jesus.' This teaching is implicitly opposed to any forms of oppression, any form of inequality, and challenges his followers to establish a radical equality, among one another and throughout the world. However, it should be borne in mind that the Master understood the delusion of 'equity' for he pointed out that 'the poor ye shall always have with ye.'

It should be realised that the prayer's Jesus uttered have a formative influence on this world and have not gone unanswered. In the eyes of the Eternal Father the unity for which His Son so ardently prayed, and died to establish, has already been granted and so already 'IS', at least in terms of the experiential consciousness of Deity. We, however, occupy a temporal frame of reference and therefore consciously experience it as a relatively endless series of transformations. Consequently, those of us that strive to bring about the unity of the world and that endeavour to vanquish oppression KNOW that the long sought after day will come. We know that the days of darkness and struggle are numbered and can draw succor from that; while concurrently strength can drawn from the truth that every effort, weak or strong, every success or failure, brings the day of victory over oppressive forms that bit closer.

It was during that fateful dialogue with Peter that Jesus made another instructive statement. Having finally led his apostle's to the point where they were now capable of recognising his true identity, he then said that he would commit to their keeping the 'keys of the kingdom'. Thereby establishing the Christian community as an instrument of G*d on earth. It is their G*d given right to organise themselves as they see fit, and according to purposes envisioned by themselves, that is perhaps their greatest strength. It is this 'spirit led' community that is thus endowed with the necessary wisdom, personal fortitude, and devoted commitment to kin-dom values that is destined to bring the world into balance.

This community can, has, and will continue to grow and nothing can stop it, not 'all the forces of evil' nor 'the hosts of sin'.

From this study it should be plain that the concept of kingdom as taught by Jesus sought to co-ordinate many dynamic realities. While it is significant that many of the metaphors that Jesus used to exemplify the nature of the kingdom shared a common element, namely 'growth', it should be pointed out that the multifaceted nature of the expositions of Jesus regarding this subject served to highlight the many varying dimensions of kingdom, thus offsetting any inclination to limit conceptual range – while at the same time facilitating the elucidation of some of the more instructive elements. However, the repeated references to 'growth' indicates that Jesus envisioned the kin-dom growing, much as a seed will through the seasons, until the time of the harvest. Harvest, in the context outlined in this essay, can be nothing other than the day referenced in the words uttered by the prophets Jeremiah and Isaiah, 'and they shall teach no more every man his neighbour, and every man his brother, saying, Know the LORD: for they shall all know me, from the least of them unto the greatest of them, saith the LORD. Jer. 31: 34. "And they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks: nations shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more." Is. 2:4


Jesus was introducing humanity to eternity and to the means of engaging with it in time, as has been established by the Source of Time and Eternity, Deity, i.e.: the will of God, the mechanism through which the children of time find their way into the presence of the Eternal and the means whereby the Eternal can both commune with and positively guide the children of time. It was by means of commitment to the doing of God's will that Jesus was empowered to 'overcome the world' and thus if his followers similarly wish to 'overcome the world' then to them Jesus has only one thing to say:

If you dare to believe in me and wholeheartedly proceed to follow after me, you shall most certainly by so doing enter upon the sure pathway to trouble. I do not promise to deliver you from the waters of adversity, but I do promise to go with you through all of them.viii





i The Urantia Book 195:9.7

iiThis idea is found as theme within the works of the author James Allen, undoubtedly among many others. Three titles reflecting this are 'As a man thinketh', 'The Byways of Blessedness' and 'Above Life's Turmoils'. All these works can be downloaded freely from The James Allen Free Library.

iii Groody, Daniel G.; 'Globalizing solidarity: Christian anthropology and the challenge of human
liberation. Theological Studies, Vol. 62, No. 2., Section: Pg. 250(19) 2008

ivOp. cit.
vOp. cit.
viOp. cit.
viiOp. cit.
viii The Urantia Book, The Urantia Foundation, 1955. [159:3.13]