The Dalai Lama cancels his visit to South Africa due to concerns of not being granted an entry visa. This has caused outrage in retired Archbishop Desmond Tutu towards the South African government. [Huffington Post]
The Dalai Lama cancels his visit to South Africa due to concerns of not being granted an entry visa. This has caused outrage in retired Archbishop Desmond Tutu towards the South African government. [Huffington Post]
President Obama– I’m going to start being non-partisan, stop the name calling and work with everyone in Washington just like I promised in 2008. Vice-President Biden– I promise to stop saying stupid stuff so folks won’t say I’m stupid. Secretary Hillary Clinton– I’m going to force the President to stand strong for Israel, and I’m going to stop listening to Bill tell me how I need to take Obama on! Speaker Boehner– I’m going to keep my temper under control and resist the urge to momma slap the President in the Oval Office. And I’m going to try not to momma slap those pesky fiscal Republican members as well. Read the rest of… As New Year’s Resolution Week continues at The Recovering Politician, The RP himself cross-posted his own pledges and promises at The Huffington Post. As a recovering politician (6 months, clean and sober!), the RP has a lot of atoning to do. So in the spirit of the season, he offers his own half-Letterman list of New Year’s resolutions. Click here to read “The New Year’s Resolutions of a Recovering Politician” at The Huffington Post. My New Year’s Resolution is to embrace evangelism. Shanah Tovah. I’ve been on the RP’s staff since the website’s launch, but this is the first long piece I’ve written for this site. I usually stick to short blurbs in the Weekly Web Gems on Faith and Food. In order to understand my New Year’s resolution, you need to know a little about me. I’m a progressive/liberal Christian, and a candidate for ordination in the Presbyterian Church (USA). I’m a person of deep faith who tries to respect the religious views of all people, but since I’m only human, I inevitably respect some religious view more than others. Many mainline Protestants, myself included, shy away from traditional evangelism. I don’t like to push my beliefs onto others. To me, the “E” word sparks images of angry Christians clad in sandwich boards with megaphones in hand, yelling at others about their sinful ways. Telling people that they are damned is contrary to my faith convictions and theological understanding of the Holy. That being said, this past week, I irreverently used evangelism as a weapon against a con artist, and the result was both bizarre and amazing. The lesson I learned is that while I will never agree with the evangelist I meet on a street corner, there may be some value in daring to share my beliefs with others. One day last week, a man who went by “Tom” called the office where I work, stating that one of our employees owed his company money. We quickly became aware that Tom was nothing more than a con artist working a scam. Tom began calling our office incessantly, often becoming very profane and vulgar on the phone. He eventually told us that he would not stop calling until we sent him money. For two days, the phone calls continued, which interrupted our work and tied up our phone lines. While we tried to remain professional by simply hanging up, our patience eventually waned and we began return insult with insult. Near the end of the second workday, we came to the realization that nothing we were doing was working. To no successful end, we filed a police report and tried to get the number blocked. What we needed was an immediate solution because he was driving us crazy. We were getting desperate, so I told my co-workers to let me answer the phone and try something out. Since evangelical fundamentalists tend to grate on my nerves, I decided to try out my acting skills and take-on that role in hopes that Tom would get so annoyed that he would hang up on me, and never call back. I knew it was a long shot, but since no there were no better ideas, I went with it. The next time Tom called, I answered, and my religious irreverence went something like this (in a loud, preacher-like voice): “Hi, is this Tom? I am so glad that you called. I’m extremely worried about your soul. I worry that if you continue on your dishonest path, you are headed towards eternal damnation. I believe that your phone calls are actually a gift from God because I now have the opportunity to save a soul.” No, I didn’t really believe in anything that I told him, and he saw right through my plan. We were now at war. Who could outlast the other? Who would hang up the phone first? I persisted on by reading him passages from the Bible, praying for him enthusiasticall and asking him to give his life to God. About 30 minutes into my extreme evangelism, however, something happened and things got real. I told him that he was obviously a hard-working determined person, and that he should use those God-given talents for good, rather than to steal money from others. I told him that I understand that he needs to make money to meet his basic needs, but that there were other, honest ways to do so. Tom responded by telling me about his childhood—his parents died when he was young, so he’s had to do whatever he could to feed himself. He asked me if I sincerely thought he could lead a different life. He asked me if I really thought there was a God who loved him. I had not expected our conversation to take such a turn. Luckily my seminary training came in handy and I was able to transition from my mocking tone to one of pastoral counselor. Yes, no matter how much this man had angered and harrassed me and my co-workers, I believe in a God of grace and love, and Tom too was a beloved child of God. Tom and I spoke for another 30 minutes, and I shared my faith convictions with him in a real way. At the end of our conversation, Tom apologized for all the hurtful things he has said to all of us in the office. Tom also thanked me—he said that no one in his life had ever spoken to him so kindly. I have to admit that I felt some guilt since my initial purpose in answering his phone call was to use religion as a weapon to get him to stop calling. In the end, I got what I wanted. Tom hung up the phone. He didn’t hang up out of annoyance as I had originally planned. He apologized again for what he had done. I told him that I forgave him and I wished him happiness in life, then we both said goodbye. We received no more calls from Tom. My experience with Tom was the motivation behind my New Year’s resolution. Evangelism as a weapon may be effective to annoy con artists. Embracing an evangelism based in sharing genuine faith convictions, however, may be a way to offer hope to those who need it most. 1. Do my part for peace in Jerusalem. 2. Improve relationships with people on my periphery 3. Make new acquaintances 4. Advance technological acceptance.
New Year’s Resolutions? This week, Jews all over the world commemorate the Days of Awe, a ten day period which begins on Rosh Hashanah (literally, “head of the year”) and culminates in Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. These ten days are always very special to me and remind me why I so appreciate my religion. While there are some important communal celebrations, the High Holy Days are primarily a time for personal reflection, reassessment and introspection: What do we regret about our actions in the past year? Whom have we hurt or offended? How have we failed to honor our responsibilities to our faith, and to love our neighbors as ourselves? Most significantly, it is a time to chart a more righteous path for the coming year. Unlike the secular New Year, in which some of us make resolutions to lose weight, exercise more, or strive for a promotion; for the Jewish New Year, we try to self-analyze and figure out how we can better honor God, family and friends. We also try apologize and seek forgiveness for our own mistakes, while promising to do better in the months ahead. As a recovering politician (6 months, clean and sober!), I have a lot of atoning to do. So in the spirit of the season — and of my website, which gives me and two dozen other former politicians an opportunity to recover by writing candidly about the system and the issues of the day — I offer my own half-Letterman list of New Year’s resolutions: Read the rest of… As Jews around the world celebrate Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, we will be devoting next week to New Year’s resolutions. All of next week at The Recovering Politician, our contributors will be sharing their own New Year’s resolutions. And whether you are Jewish, Jew-ish, Gentile, or with no religious beliefs at all, we encourage you to do the same. Just send us your New Year’s Resolutions to staff@TheRecoveringPolitician.com by Saturday at 10 PM. They can be a sentence or two; or if you prefer, send us a 1500 word essay. Or anything in between. Thanks, and we look forward to reading your resolutions in next week’s The Recovering Politician. In September? If you are confused, then you are looking at the wrong calendar. According to the Hebrew Calendar, today is the first full day of Jewish New Year. And to all of my Jewish friends, I wish you a very happy and healthy new year. Today, Jews all over the world celebrate Rosh Hashanah (“head of the year”). On this High Holy Day, we celebrate the Earth’s creation, and we begin a ten day period called the Days of Awe, which culminate in Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. These ten days are always very special to me and remind me why I so appreciate my religion. While there are some important communal celebrations, the High Holy Days are primarily a time for personal reflection, reassessment and introspection: What do we regret about our actions in the past year? Whom have we hurt or offended? How have we failed to honor our responsibilities to our faith and to love our neighbors as ourselves? Most significantly, it is a time to chart a more righteous path for the coming year. Unlike the secular New Year, in which some of us make resolutions to lose weight, exercise more, or strive for a promotion; for the Jewish New Year, we try to self-analyze and figure out how we can better honor God, family and friends. We also try apologize and seek forgiveness for our own mistakes, while promising to do better in the months ahead. Accordingly, all of next week in The Recovering Politician, our contributors and I will be sharing our own New Year’s resolutions. And whether you are Jewish, Jew-ish, Gentile, or with no religious beliefs at all, I encourage you to do the same. Just send us your New Year’s Resolutions to staff@TheRecoveringPolitician.com by Saturday at 10 PM. They can be a sentence or two; or if you prefer, send us a 1500 word essay. Or anything in between. Thanks, and we look forward to reading your resolutions in next week’s The Recovering Politician.
As promised, I wanted to share with you the ways in which you can honor his memory, according to the wishes of his family. If you are in the Louisville area, you can pay respect to Owsley and his family at the following events: Thursday, 9/29, from 3-6 PM: a public visitation will be held at The Speed Art Museum, 2035 South 3rd Street, on the University of Louisville campus. Friday, 9/30 at 10 AM, his funeral will be held at Christ Church Cathedral, 421 South Second Street, in downtown Louisville. The family requests that donations be directed to the Louisville Metro United Way or the Louisville Fund for the Arts, two charities that were very close to Owsley’s heart. Owsley Brown II lived a life that mattered, one defined by his generosity, compassion, and love of his neighbors, particularly those most vulnerable. If your life was touched by Owsley like mine, or if his story moves you to follow in his example, I strongly encourage you to support the organizations that I linked above. Thank you.
Well, the last month has been interesting. The Bills did not win that first preseason game against Chicago, which had inspired my post, and looked so awful in the second preseason game the following week in Denver that many professional observers (not to mention the self-flagellants within Bills Nation who populate most Internet discussion boards devoted to the team) concluded that this team was likely to be the worst in the NFL this year, if not in history. One columnist, seconded by a chorus of disappointed Buffalonians, called the Buffalo roster “a crumbling monument to neglect and bad personnel moves,” and predicted nothing good for the immediate future. Words such as “disaster” were thrown around, and cynics even claimed to espy a dark conspiracy of conscious destruction a la Major League, preparing the way for the team to move to Los Angeles or, worse, Toronto.
But wait, there is more. In the following week’s home opener at Ralph Wilson Stadium, the Bills fell behind 21-3 at halftime to the Oakland Raiders. The skeptics and naysayers claimed to have been right all along, and began listing the team’s many weaknesses. Then the second half began, and the Bills scored a touchdown, followed by another… then another. Indeed, in five-second half possessions, the Bills scored touchdowns on every one, playing enough defense to walk away with a stunning 38-35 victory, and the team’s first 2-0 start since 2008. Sprits were very high indeed on web sites such as twobillsdrive.com (the very best place to go for Bills news and conversation, period). Read the rest of… |
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