Sunday, July 19, 2009

Sunday Sermon [The Heart of the Matter]

¡Hola! Everybody...
Whenever you relive an insult -- or think or dwell on it -- you have repeated that same insult. In this way, you relive and re-experience all the insults of your life.

Think about that...

* * *

-=[ Forgiveness ]=-

All isms end up in schisms.

-- Huston Smith


Several years ago, I was having a very rough time at a community meeting. I was trying to educate a group of people on the effectiveness of alternative to incarceration programs. For me, it was a no-brainer: treat the root causes and crime decreases. Treat the addiction and it has a double effect. It’s more effective and cheaper than incarceration which is extremely expensive failure. Address education meaningfully by investing in smaller classroom size and making schools more accessible to parents and we prevent crime before it ever begins. I had the charts, the facts -- in short I had everything I thought I needed to help people see that locking up millions of individuals (mostly young people of color) wasn’t a very smart or effective way to create a moral and just society.

Man, was I getting beat up that day! LOL

At one point, during an intermission, this young white man came up to me and asked if he could address the audience briefly. I don’t why I trusted this individual, I had never seen him before, and I had had it to here

::grabs dese nuts::

... with angry white men. But inwardly acknowledging that the meeting couldn’t possibly get any worse, I shrugged and told him, “Go ahead, finish putting me out of my misery.”

He got up and told of how two men brutally murdered the woman who raised him, his grandmother -- the only family he had. He told of the agonizing pain and hardship; the anger he felt; of how he wanted those who took his grandmother’s life to be punished -- to have their lives taken also. Then he spoke about something that floored everybody. He spoke about his journey from being consumed with vengeance to forgiveness. In the process of speaking of that healing process, he managed to do what all my facts and charts didn’t: he opened people’s hearts to the possibility of a different community; of a different society. A society based not on revenge and killing and an “eye for an eye,” but a society predicated on empathy and compassion and equality. I was never so moved as when I heard this man speak so openly about being torn down only to be arise again. What a lesson! And, no, he wasn’t a religious man, at least not in a rigid sense.

I think this man was able to touch upon the essential nature of vengeance and forgiveness. Vengeance comes from desire -- a desire to make things “right” no matter what the expense. If you killed mine, then I must kill you. And in the short term, vengeance serves to alleviate our pain. But in the long term the desire for vengeance -- like all unskillful desire -- erodes our basic humanity. It eats at us from the inside until we become empty of anything even remotely resembling an enlightened species. Compassion and empathy comes from the part of the brain that triggers love, creativity, collaboration and, physiologically, it releases chemicals and responses that heal -- that strengthen the immune system and encourages fellowship.

I would suggest a different form of spirituality: one that recognizes a universal energy in everything, the humility to admit mistakes, one that promotes flexibility instead of rigidity, and a willingness to tolerate differences.

And isn’t that a story that mirrors any kind of redemption? Couldn’t such a shift be an evolutionary quantum leap? In fact, this is where we stand today: at the precipice of an evolutionary and spiritual chasm, and leap we must or become the first species to cause its own extinction.

Love,

Eddie

4 comments:

  1. "Compassion and empathy comes from the part of the brain that triggers love, creativity, collaboration and, physiologically, it releases chemicals and responses that heal -- that strengthen the immune system and encourages fellowship" - and we can be compassionate about that which has hurt us and turn it into the vengence you write about before this. Its all about our CHOICES - we may have deep, strong, passionate feelngs about a situation, but what we CHOOSE to do in response is the key. It would be wonderful to change the world to make a choice of love - for SELF, for others for your creator/the univeral energy. I teach that to my students, attempting to change the world, one class at a time. great sunday sermon and reminder, mahalo, Kumu

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  2. Seems to me forgiveness is a huge part of what true Christian teaching is all about.

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  3. Forgiveness is a wonderful thing. I wish more people would exercise it. Hell, it makes you a lil more sane if you do it.

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  4. Whenever you relive an insult -- or think or dwell on it -- you have repeated that same insult. In this way, you relive and re-experience all the insults of your life.........BRILLIANTLY said Eddie ....

    The stories we create from the past, are what we let dictate our future...

    The reason he touched so many people (the angry white dude ;) is because he was completely authentic when he spoke, it creates energy that people are drawn too.

    Forgiveness is a powerful tool ..... people often give it the wrong meaning and think it’s about letting go of the past, I think it’s about changing your view and realising that awful things happen, but not giving that awful thing the power to dictate who you are, know who you are, and that’s an extraordinary human being.

    Also know that everyone on this planet is extraordinary too, if not it’s a decision, they decide not to be, not chose, decide ...there is a big difference.

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What say you?

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