|
|
|
#21
|
||||
|
||||
|
http://www.rslevinson.com/gaylesissu...phelpsmain.htm
An unpublished book on Phelps "Addicted to Hate." |
|
#22
|
||||
|
||||
|
Quote:
By showing fundamentalists how some of their core beliefs are the same as those of Phelps and his crew, I hope to prompt them to evaluate whether they truly believe the things they say. A) Homosexuality is not a sin. B) The bigger issue is what does God do to "sinners," and therefore what should we do them. Quote:
People don't need to hear condemnation and judgement when they're doing something wrong. They already hear it because they are speaking it to themselves. They need to hear how God sees them. They need to hear that their past has nothing to do with who they really are. They need to hear that they can take responsibility for their lives and for being the man/woman that God is calling them to be. Quote:
|
|
#23
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
and again... Quote:
I think there is such a distaste for the word "judgment", it causes an automatic revulsion and is thrust away into that dreaded fundamentalist camp, and we think our hands are washed. When the concept and ideas behind it are dismissed as well, then we cut ourselves from the roots of discernment and the ability to recognize good from evil... I have always taken the biblical admonishment to 'judge not...' to mean: do not Damn or claim to be able to redeem another's soul. We have no right or power for such things. But call each other on the damage you do, then help get beyond it. Phelps fails horribly in this and will have to answer for it. God's gonna be way more pissed at him than us, and I hope he sees the evil of his ways. The same cannot be said for simple Christians...
__________________
shamelessselfpromotion |
|
#24
|
||||
|
||||
|
Awediot --
There is an alternative -- that is, to love the sinner and the sin alike! (Which I phrase in a deliberately provocative way.) To love the sin is to recognize my own capacity to sin, and I don't mean in terms of abstract, fluffy concepts like original sin. It's meaningless if it isn't crushingly, shockingly concrete. It's easy to say I would never kill, but would I? What if it's ostensibly to save the life of another? What if my partner were threatened? Or, less nobly, what if somebody cuts me off on the road and I say I want to kill that bastard? I'm not really free of murderous impulses, or lustful impulses, or proud impulses. On and on... but as I spend time with myself in meditation, I find less and less reason to hate those impulses, either in myself or in others. Just recognizing that they're there, but not feeding them with extra energy (either positive or negative), is enough for them to recede in importance and exert less influence over my actions. What I haven't figured out is how to love the sin of Fred Phelps... people like that make it really hard! But, if your spiritual path isn't hard, then it's neither spiritual nor a path ("I'm Linda Richman, there's your topic, discuss"). James
__________________
dewdrop_world music for dancing · thinking · breathing · love · life http://www.dewdrop-world.net |
|
#25
|
||||
|
||||
|
James, I'm Verklempt (a huh site?)
Uhhmmm, WHY? I am always open to an alternative, even when I'm not looking or least expect it, but, uhhm, nah, screw sin. My capacity to recognize my shocking and crushing capacity to sin all over the place is just fine without having to love it. To toot my own horn, I am free of murderous impulses (not anger). I never wish anybody dead. Defense has nothing to do with sin (or road rage). Now lust, pride (I'll leave it at that), sure, GUILTY as charged. I do not "hate" those impulses, I struggle at times to ignore them, block them, up-root and dilute them until they fade away. But you're right, hate takes too much energy, and love? At best they slip in unnoticed with my overall gratitude and joy of experiencing what being a human feels like. They are, however, responsible for the times when that experience sucks. I'll take some of that back, and stick with hating them a little. God forbid you ever learn to love the sin of Phelps... May I suggest you not seek to make your path harder just because you think that makes it more spiritual. Enjoy the rare times its comfortable. Just trying to love the man, separated from his actions, is tough enough.
__________________
shamelessselfpromotion |
|
#26
|
||||
|
||||
|
Seeing someone who is doing something malicious or "sinful" and knowing that you could easily be them... had you been brought up in their world, having their challenges, weaknesses, disabilities, etc... will help you have compassion on them.
You can embrace their weakness or sin because you see your own potential for weakness and sin. Realizing they are you and you are them... "Love your neighbor as you love yourself." |
|
#27
|
||||
|
||||
|
Quote:
Quote:
Realizing we all have to account for pain we have caused is a great leveler. How much better are you than your enemy? How certain are you of your answer? Do you know them so well, and are you so sure you're efforts don't damage? They are just as convinced. Loving your neighbor is easy, we are called to love those who hate you... It is not always done by raising them up to the position of how wonderful you think yourself to be, put occasionally lowering your own defensive pride to see your not that different...
__________________
shamelessselfpromotion |
|
#28
|
||||
|
||||
|
Quote:
The other part of what I was trying to get across is that conquering sin is not the only valid approach (which, I think, is implicit in the idea that hating sin is necessary to overcome it). Sin is also frailty, and it seems to me generally true that a compassionate response to frailty just might not include whipping the frailty into submission. If frailty indicates a weak point (at least that's the case for me when I look at my sins in meditation), weak points can be made strong by loving them and taking care of their needs (which is not the same as capitulating to their wishes). When the weak points are nourished and made whole, whenever it was that caused the sin in the first place naturally, gracefully becomes less compelling. In other words, it's a matter of healing, which in due course produces an ethical life, rather than enforcing morality in the hopes of producing (or at the very least imitating) an ethical life. That's what I meant by loving the sin -- not "loving" as an enabler but as a nurturer, bringing about behavioral change as a side effect of inner growth. A question that occupies me greatly is, "If neocons are ruled by fear, what can we do to alleviate the fear?" Would reducing the fear reduce the need to judge? Hence my interest in nonviolence, and in what Thich Nhat Hanh calls deep listening and loving speech. James
__________________
dewdrop_world music for dancing · thinking · breathing · love · life http://www.dewdrop-world.net |
|
#29
|
||||
|
||||
|
Yea James! you're not insane...
I was sure I was missing your definition of 'love' somehow, but instead of presuming your point, just managed to tear one off from where you left it...You bring up a major theme here. In that many people think that man's inherent nature is evil, whereas it seems to me our natural, necessary "flaw', is weakness. And compared to that which created us, how could it be otherwise? Quote:
Quote:
I hate having to say this, but you will have people with power over you, judging you for the rest of your life. SoulForces goals are misguided if all they focus on is changing others to make life easier. It ain't gonna happen. Focus on the other prong of understanding where your enemy comes from first, and how you can "gird your loins" (silly, apt parallel) to deal with them first. We fail if we hinge our joy on their changing to please us. The advantage, and next step in loving your enemy, is that in seeing the pain they inflict on their own stupid heads, and knowing the divine justice they will inevitably endure, you begin to pity them. As furious as you may rightfully feel toward the things that they do, you can still feel sorry for the battered soul they once were, and still may become. And thats KEY... it is pure, loving, productive to all, defines nonviolent and they HATE it. Pity stuns the most vile and wicked of us, crushes false pride, shines a brilliant light that bounces back on you. That weakness in them, packed with arrogance, judgmentalism and novicane, widens like an infected wound, and being the salt of the earth, is double edged...The difficult, unwanted ability to hurt them for the greater good, begins here.
__________________
shamelessselfpromotion |
|
#30
|
||||
|
||||
|
Oh, I think those you describe are indeed motivated by fear. I think they fear death. I think they fear death for us...we, who they see as facing the ultimate death. They fear judgment...for themselves and for us. So much of their rhetoric against us is marinated in their fears.
I have a friend who once told me that all human motivations are rooted in either fear or love. I was never quite sure he was right, but I agree that this polarity informs a great many of our choices. It was once said that perfect love drives out fear. I think this a true statement.
__________________
There is no law against love. |
|
#31
|
||||
|
||||
|
I dunno...
It seems most of the ultra-saved are plenty confident in their own souls destination. The righteousness they speak with exposes quite a comfortable position on mortality, and those I know who fear death, avoid the topic like the plague. These guys thrive on it. This goes for their haughty assuredness toward their own upcoming trial as well... I think it is that very lack of fear that allows them to be so judgmental and flippant in tossing around the ideas of heaven and hell. It only applies to everyone else... Is it just an overcompensation? Can the ultimate fear be so well hidden?... Haven't seen it yet.If they fear for my soul, is that not out of love for my soul? And certainly the love precludes any worry or concern (bless their misguided little hearts). Odd thing about being driven by fear, its usually a quiet, shameful and isolating motivator you don't draw attention to, and the actions that result from it are usually pretty desperate and innocent... Not quite a description of our moral protectors. I hope I'm wrong, as fear is much easier to defeat than untouchable, exaggerated self-love. Both of which can be used to destroy. ...and from SF own lips...I believe that my adversary's motives are as pure as mine and of no relevance to our discussion. (2nd time)
__________________
shamelessselfpromotion Last edited by awediot; 04-30-2006 at 02:30 AM. |
|
#32
|
||||
|
||||
|
There's this thing that is often called the "great commission"--go make disciples, etc...
A common interpretation of it (rooted in Ezekiel) makes the Christian who does not warn the "sinner" of the coming sword guilty of their death. I don't know your background...but I was as fundamentalist a fundamentalist as any there are before I was (thankfully) broken. I've listened to this fear-based motivating rhetoric...I've believed it...I've lived in fear because of it... It is good to understand where they come from, despite what you repeat about their motivations being pure and of no consequence. No...we do not believe them to be "wicked" or "evil" in their motivations and, yes...it is completely irrelevant to label them as such while we try to engage in dialogue. (That, of course, requires vigilance to oppose our own temptations to call them such, because we are horrified again and again at what we face and the abuse of their lips against us.) Fear permeates much contemporary Christian thought...well historical also. I disagree that fear can come from love as you say... Fear is fear...and love and fear do not mix well. An example of what I mean: My own father protected his children out of a healthy understanding of the dangers in life...caution, or what one might call "fear." Yet...sadly...he also shared some very irrational fears with me...fears not based in reality...fears of how I was going to make a living when I grew up...fears based in his own limited understanding. By raising these fears in conversations with me, I took them up as burdens. This is different from being proud of and confident in your loved ones' abilities, and has a different effect upon them. Love heals and strengthens. Fear weakens. I take note of the fear in anti-gay voices and actions, if for no other reason than to not let it weaken me. The accusing spirit whispers, "guilty...guilty...guilty." Even when Christians are "set free" from sin and "saved", this spirit continues "guilty...guilty...guilty for them as well..." But I will not be a child of that spirit. I recognize the fear for what it is, and it helps me to be strong. Nor is this recognition something of which I should be ashamed. Nor do I think fear is easy to defeat. It is pernicious and pervasive. It is a weed that grows ever thicker as often as it is trimmed. The weed always grows faster than the flower. It takes a very perfect love to drive fear out, and words will likely be of little use.
__________________
There is no law against love. |
|
#33
|
||||
|
||||
|
Aaahhk!!!
yer new av. scared me a second there. (I like it, but you were cuter in the other)I can see we are going to have to agree to disagree on a couple things. But thats fine. The causing no harm thing seems well in place... As you said, words will be of little use, but they're still a drug I indulge. Fundementalist? Boy, the longer I hang on this site the more I look like one. And I thought I was a rebel. Who Knew? I do believe in the fundementals of Biblical Christianity, and though no one seems to believe me, it is not simply because my grandmother influenced my mother to try to influence me in her S. Baptist ways, which btw, what little stuck, I abandoned for Carlos Casteneda and what amounted to be Aztec mysticism, the art of stopping the world, stalking, mushrooms and programmed lucid dreaming in order to create my doppleganger. All of which encompassed reincarnation, karma, a method for hopping between ley lines to achieve immortality and the acceptance that the Catholic Church was a cult of witches, Lucifer was indeed the light bearer saving us from a despotic God and Jesus a megalomaniacal fraud... my pendulum doth swung. Then didn't exactly swing back, but more broke off, spun around and knocked me silly. The Truest light I see out there has apparently turned me into what is called a fundementalist...I have no idea what that is. I just dig the fact that it is what persues me, and remains as bright whether I pay attention or not. Clearly, the definitions of Love (God is not love, God made Love) Fear ( a mere sense somethings not right) Sin (extra harm) guilt (sense of responsibility for that harm) etc... would need to be hashed out before the deeper ideas could make any progress... We could weave a shroud with the threads it would take. (or pillow shams, place mats... I'm such a downer) I'll offer this obtuse slice of life above as a rebuttal, rather than pick apart your gracious response... But for something substantial to chew on. Dracula Loves blood, Hitler Loved his race, Dahmer loved those boys, Andrea Yates loved her kids and Bush loves this country. Its just a word too, as personally defined and potentially lethal as many others...
__________________
shamelessselfpromotion |
|
#34
|
||||
|
||||
|
Quote:
Quote:
Hi... You're right that the word "love" is used in so many ways that we could weave...let's say a summer hat ...with the myriad threads needed to hash it out.For my purposes, I do repeatedly fall back on "Love does no harm," which is less a definition than a test, I guess. The activities of the Phelps clan and the anti-gay rhetoric that issues from the mouths of many "loving" people are perfect opportunities for applying this test. We experience the harm that their words and actions cause and believe that their love is not real love. Their response would most likely involve words like "surgeon", "necessary", "pain", and "healing." But generally speaking, their ministrations are offered not at the request of those they wound, but forced upon their "patients." Not only so, but the beneficial effects of their medicants are also roundly disputed by many who have experienced a better love. It's just my contention that they are driven to hasty, and deadly acts by their many fears... Fear of sin...fear of God judging them for not warning us...fear of their nation and culture changing...fear of us and our differences. Their kind of "love" seems terribly self-serving also...it makes them feel better...it assuages their fear and their guilt...it stokes the fire of their own self-righteousness. What it does not do is build others up...it eshews all kindness, gentleness and patience with their victims. For the sake of holiness and the law, they are prepared to snuff our little lights out and would rather see us in hell than with them in heaven.
__________________
There is no law against love. |
|
#35
|
||||
|
||||
|
From a k.d. Lang song... (awww...I love k.d. Lang!)
Flawless light in a darkening air
Alone...and shining there Love will not elude you Love is simple I worship this tenacity And the beautiful struggle we’re in Love will not elude us Love is simple Be sure to know that All in love Is ours And love, as a philosophy Is simple I am calm in oblivion Calm, as I ever have been Love will not elude me Love is simple Be sure to know that All in love Is ours... Is ours... That all in love Is ours And love, as philosophy Is simple... And ours...
__________________
There is no law against love. |
|
#36
|
||||
|
||||
|
Quote:
It's possible (and beneficial!) to hold one's own, or another's, sin in agape love, out of which transformation arises. James
__________________
dewdrop_world music for dancing · thinking · breathing · love · life http://www.dewdrop-world.net |
|
#37
|
||||
|
||||
|
All righty guys, maybe we are starting to get each other. and maybe not...
'Love' is indeed tossed around like some magical justifier, making all things done in its name instantly for the good of the recipient, whether they are willing to be loved into place or not. Quote:
Quote:
It is an intense capacity we humans have to harm for the greater good. And it takes sharp discernment and experience to know when it is in fact a valid and holy action. We would jump at the chance to briefly, productively harm Phelps' cult out of existence. We are right to try and it would be done out of Love. But it would hurt like hell. I also fear being called to do such things, and fear being stopped by the label self-righteous. But I am... (pretty song. wish I were simpler. feels like something I can rest in someday) and James, goes without saying. My wonder lies in how easy it is to consider our own love always agaper than those we disagree with.
__________________
shamelessselfpromotion |
|
#38
|
||||
|
||||
|
[Having an unaccountably difficult time expressing myself...may have reached the limit of my self-understanding...Yikes!]
Quote:
Quote:
They have no power over me. Nothing this world can do to me will destroy me. Killing me would not change the power and beauty of my being. That's not to say that the world can't cause me a great deal of pain. In truth though, I'm a very, very, very, very...very, very dull person, and I'm quite unlikely to ever find myself in a position to be directly harmed by the world. This is how I feel personally...for myself. For others...Yes...I am sorry that we cause each other so much pain, and I am troubled...often...by it. I'm angered by the pain that is in the world, and I'm saddened by the blindness that prevents most of us from seeing beyond our present pain and frustration. I am deeply frustrated by my own inability to offer anything much of value in terms of comfort to the world. Nonetheless, I do not fear for anyone's ultimate destruction. I am confident in God's love for people. I just don't know much about sin and damnation anymore. I can't see beyond the overwhelming passion that the Divine feels for humanity. I realize that we are a degenerate race, and I think we are foolish beyond reason. I think our eyes will be opened, and we will grieve over our foolishness, but I don't think God's gonna flush us down the toilet. I don't think there is any harm in the love that I know. I can't conceive of any harmful action that I would participate in to rid the world of the Phelps clan. As strange and bizarre as I find them...as distressing as their behavior is...despite the anger that it kindles inside me, I wouldn't lift wounding finger against them. (Lord!!! I suffer from great temptations for hatred and disgust sometimes. This family does, I admit, generate some very ugly sensations within me. Ugh!!) Quote:
Do not fear me, Awediot. :-D But...you describe yourself as "not being driven by those fears." That makes me think that we may be trying to say the same thing in our own diverse languages.
__________________
There is no law against love. |
|
#39
|
||||
|
||||
|
From my own 'coming out' experience (as well as throughout life in general), I find that fear and love are two separate emotions that aren't all that related if at all. At times love can push back fear, and fear can push back love.
My aunt is afraid that I am doomed to eternal hell forever and that if she allows dialogue about this between us, the evil spirit of homosexuality will overtake herself and she will lose her own salvation. She may love me, and I don't doubt that she does, but her fear has nothing to do with love. When her love is apparent, her fear is not (and vice versa). My stepmom is afraid of homosexuality because it is basically foreign to her and because she listens to the likes of Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell and company (her entire life), hours upon hours every day, telling her that it is a horrible abomination. So she is afraid to even confront the issue - fear of the unknown combined with what she has heard. One of my sisters (the other has no problem with it at all) has kind of a combo - fear of the unknown and fear of losing salvation. When their love is apparent, they are comfortable with me and we can have loving peaceful conversations. When the fear is evident, their love is supressed and they preach sin and damnation. My aunt sent me what I call "hate mail" on my birthday - that wasn't love, it was total complete desperate fear. Phelps and gang don't do their protests out of love - it's out of fear, and some hate and anger. It doesn't mean that they don't love this country or each other, it's just that their fear - and hate and anger used as a defense mechanism - take over and push back the love. Anyway, just my thoughts on it... |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|