Tuesday, September 4, 2007

Feast Day Of Paul Jones

Paul Jones was born in Pennsylvania in 1880. He became a priest in the Episcopal Church and went to serve in Utah, where he was made Bishop of the Missionary District of Utah.

He was an outspoken pacifist, and when World War I began in 1914, he spoke against it. As the war progressed, and when the United States entered the war in 1917, many Americans were vehement in holding that pursuing the war was a moral duty, and opposition to the war was immoral. In the spring of 1918, yielding to pressure, Bishop Jones resigned as Bishop of Utah.

He continued to speak out for peace and against war until he died in 1941. He was a man after my own heart.

From James Kiefer at the Lectionary.


READINGS:

Psalm 133
Malachi 2:17-3:5
John 8:31-32


PRAYER:

Merciful God, who sent your beloved Son to preach peace to those who are far off and to those who are near: Raise up in this and every land witnesses, who, after he example of your servant Paul Jones, will stand firm in proclaiming the Gospel of the Prince of Peace, our Savior Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever.

UPDATE: I found this article online in Time magazine from 1929, on Bishop Jones. When Bishop Spaulding needed a volunteer from the seminary to send to Utah, [s]tudent Paul Jones echoed Isaiah: "Here I am, send me."

The article gives the account of a specially appointed Commission of the House of Bishops meeting, in which the bishops requested his resignation because of speaking out against war.

Kathleen Norris Video

If you're a fan of Kathleen Norris' books, like Amazing Grace, The Cloister Walk, and Dakota, along with her books of poetry, you may want to see the short video at the Episcopal Café. I liked hearing her actual voice after reading and enjoying her books. I find that her rather simple way of talking about Christianity is quite appealing.

Monday, September 3, 2007

On The Light Side

You may want to have a look at the pictures at Themethatisme's website Conscientisation. His name is hard to spell, and his blog name is harder to spell, but his pictures and captions are funny.

Here's how he describes himself in his Blogger profile:

A 41 year old post-cynic more interested in the Omega course than the Alpha Course.

I'll raise a glass of red to that.

Iran Next?

From the UK Sunday Times:

THE Pentagon has drawn up plans for massive airstrikes against 1,200 targets in Iran, designed to annihilate the Iranians’ military capability in three days, according to a national security expert.

Alexis Debat, director of terrorism and national security at the Nixon Center, said last week that US military planners were not preparing for “pinprick strikes” against Iran’s nuclear facilities. “They’re about taking out the entire Iranian military,” he said.


Thanks to FranIAm for the link to the Times article.

My thought is that if Bush attacks Iran, he will not go to Congress for permission. Here's how the maladministration reasons they can do this.

From Barnett R. Rubin at Informed Comment Global Affairs:

The U.S. cannot mount a ground invasion or occupation of Iran, but it might be capable of an air attack and sea embargo. The administration has prepared a legal justification by floating its plan to designate the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps a terrorist organization. Since the IRGC is under the command of the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, the administration, with its usual legal acuity, could claim legal authority for an attack on Iran under Senate Joint Resolution 23 of September 18, 2001,which authorized the use of military force against "those who plan, authorize, commit, or aid terrorist attacks against the United States and its interests -- including those who harbor terrorists."
....

Finally, where are the Democrats and sensible Republicans? It's time to amend the Authorization for the Use of Military Force to make clear that it does not authorize a pre-emptive war on Iran.


Indeed, where are the sensible people? FranIAm suggests that we write to our representatives in the House and the Senate to urge them to take action. She says it's best to write a real letter, rather than send an email. I have heard that because of security procedures, letters may take a while to get to the Congress. The best suggestion seems to be to send a letter through the mail, and, at the same time, fax the letter to the office of the senator or representative.

Are you getting tired of my Chicken Little postings on Iran? I will be very happy if those of us who keep talking about this are found to be wrong, but I fear the worst.

I was Chicken Little before the war with Iraq, and I take no pleasure in having been right.

Sunday, September 2, 2007

From Prior Aelred

I received an email from Prior Aelred at St. Gregory's Abbey, in Three Rivers, Michigan, with this at the bottom with his signature:

Cogito ergo sum Episcopalian
- Prior Aelred


I like that. No offense meant to my friends in other denominations. I know that you're thinking people, too, or you wouldn't come here to visit.

The Spirit Lives On

David Zirin gave the keynote address at the Rising Tide Conference. He's a young sports writer, who loves sports but sees, without rose-colored glasses, the reality of so much that's wrong with sports today. He's a sportscaster/writer in the vein of Keith Olbermann, the thinking sports fan's man.

Early in his talk, he mentioned that in the midst of the wreckage left in New Orleans, the Superdome, the home of the New Orleans Saints football team, is back in business, fixed to the tune of $185 million. Priorities?

The images of the Superdome as "the homeless shelter from hell", as Dave labels it, had to be erased from sight and preferably from memory pretty damned quick. Last year, after losing season after season, the New Orleans Saints had a fantastic year, thus lifting the spirits of the fans who had remained faithful throughout the losing years. That's great. I'm happy for the Saints fans. Those who were in the Superdome after Katrina were generally not folks who could afford a ticket to go to a Saints football game. The Saints have their home back in shape. I wonder how many of the evacuees who sheltered there are back in their homes.

Dave recently published a book, titled Welcome to the Terrodome; the Pain, Politics, and Promise of Sports , which I bought at the conference, but which I have not yet read. Keep an eye out for Dave as a young man on the way up - at least, I hope he's on the way up.

This post is in reference to an op-ed that he wrote in the Houston Chronicle upon his return from the conference:

I felt the fear before my plane even landed at Louis Armstrong International Airport. As we began our descent, dark jagged shadows jutted across the verdant swampland. It was all too cinematic. I found out later that what I thought were dramatic shadows was wetland defoliation; the banal reality proving to be far more frightening than the supernatural.
....

I was in the Big Easy as an invited speaker at a conference of NOLA bloggers called Rising Tide II. In most cities, bloggers practice a peculiar virtual cannibalism, tearing each other apart for sport. But at Rising Tide, among people young and old, black and white, I saw my first glimpse of what can be termed blogger solidarity. It stemmed, as one told me, from "the necessity of coming together after Katrina."
....

They were also the perfect people for me to speak with to learn the ground-truth about post-Katrina New Orleans. They're not paid to write about the myriad of issues they confront — from mental health to public housing to the loan swindles to the state of art. They do it because they want everyone — those staying away, the transplants from the North, the ones who get their information from the mainstream media — who sees New Orleans as merely a symbol to know the facts: the good, the bad and the ugly.

And the ugly side is that the majority black city is still being left to wither slowly on the vine. There is a reason President Bush did not say the word New Orleans in the last State of the Union. This is Moynihan's "benign neglect" writ large. But it has had a bizarre boomerang effect. Because the future of city is at stake, the neglect that guides federal policy is something that both whites and blacks have to confront.
....

Katrina is something ephemeral, a sadness seeped into the humidity. It gets in your clothes, your eyes, your hair. It's everywhere, even if you aren't staring at a house with a black X, with a number underneath, denoting a death at the hands of levees.
....

Make no mistake, there is anger and a sense of desperation among the city's poor. Sometimes it's inward, as the mental health and suicide studies show. Often it is outward, as the violent crime demonstrates. That feeling of being abandoned by this country and this criminal administration, of being left to die on a roof, remains. And yet, they still, so very inconveniently, continue to live, love and, most importantly, struggle and agitate. Everyone in this country should travel to New Orleans and be among a people supposed to perish, who act like they just didn't get the memo.


Amen, Dave.

You might want to read his book. All fifteen reviews give it five stars.

Saturday, September 1, 2007

Wounded Bird


Painting by Luiz Coelho, Sr.

Luiz Coelho is a dear virtual friend who lives in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and works in one of the poorest Episcopal parishes in the city, Christ the King, located in the City of God slum - one of the most dangerous in the city. God bless Luiz and the priest, Fr. Eduardo, with whom he works and the people of the parish.

Luiz's father, also named Luiz, passed away in 1990. He was an artist. Luiz sent me a link to the website which features pictures of his father's art, paintings and water colors, which the family still owns. The site includes a brief biography.

Luiz pointed out to me that one of the paintings is named "Wounded Bird". His father painted the picture a few months before he died, and Luiz helped him to choose the colors and the title. When I went to the site, tears came to my eyes when I saw the painting. There it is up there, with the same title as my blog. Isn't it beautiful?

I asked Luiz' permission to link to the site and copy the painting and post here. I choke up every time I look at the picture. It seems like a gift from God.

Luiz blogs at Wandering Christian.

Note: I corrected the name of the parish in which Luiz works.

Clergy Need Counseling

From the Associated Press:

Clergymen struggling to comfort the afflicted in New Orleans are finding they, too, need someone to listen to their troubles.

The sight of misery all around them — and the combined burden of helping others put their lives back together while repairing their own homes and places of worship — are taking a spiritual and psychological toll on the city's ministers, priests and rabbis, many of whom are in counseling two years after Hurricane Katrina.
....

Almost every local Episcopal minister is in counseling, including Bishop Charles Jenkins himself, who has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.

Jenkins, whose home in suburban Slidell was so badly damaged by Katrina that it was 10 months before he and his wife could move back in, said he has suffered from depression, faulty short-term memory, and difficulty concentrating or sleeping.

Low-flying helicopters sometimes cause flashbacks to the near-despair — the "dark night of the soul" — into which he was once plunged, he said. He said the experience felt "like the absence of God" — a lonely and frightening sensation.


This is a serious problem not only for pastors, but for all in the helping professions. Please pray for them.

Roman Catholic priests have not reported any unusual counseling needs, said the Rev. William Maestri, spokesman for the Archdiocese of New Orleans. He said one possible reason is that priests do not have wives or children to support and protect.

Despite the seriousness of this article, I burst out laughing at the reason the Rev. Maestri gave for his priests' apparent superiority in mental health.

Yes! Celibacy is best! The Roman Catholic celibate priests are strong and stand up to life's adversities on their own, without any need of outside help. Or could the Rev. Maestri be in denial?

Since Fr. Maestri is the spokesman for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans, he is often quoted in the media. On several occasions, I have found that his remarks indicate that he is somewhat clueless on various subjects. He has a history with me.

Please include the Roman Catholic priests in your prayers. I believe they may need prayer as much as the others.

Friday, August 31, 2007

The Day The Levees Broke

Two years ago today the levees broke. The levees which were built to protect New Orleans from flooding failed, and New Orleans drowned. Remember there were two events, Katrina and the levee breaches. The levee breaches were not a natural disaster.

From Paul Krugman (behind the wall at TimesSelect) in the New York Times:

Two years ago today, Americans watched in horror as a great city drowned, and wondered what had happened to their country. Where was FEMA? Where was the National Guard? Why wasn’t the government of the world’s richest, most powerful nation coming to the aid of its own citizens?

Leave it to Krugman to say it so well.

Future historians will, without doubt, see Katrina as a turning point. The question is whether it will be seen as the moment when America remembered the importance of good government, or the moment when neglect and obliviousness to the needs of others became the new American way.

Do read the whole column if you can.

Our Bishop Speaks

Wow! Bishop Charles Jenkins of the Episcopal Diocese of Louisiana has written a letter stating what he'd like to say to President Bush if he had the chance. It's here:

Excerpts from the letter:

Recognizing our vulnerability, not to terrorism, but to the deadly force of severe weather, I would like to ask the President how he plans to clearly demonstrate his calculation of our people’s worth and his government’s commitment to our safety? The question is one that Providence has put to this President, and it is one of those tests all human beings dread – the kind that determines who you really are.
....

The volunteers of this country are still coming in larger numbers than ever to help heal the lives of their fellow Americans – the same vulnerable Americans we saw trapped, suffering and dying on our televisions two years ago this week. And those “looters,” “those people down there” as the President has called us, are proving to be some of the most courageous and resilient citizens of this land. Mr. President, did you know that according to a survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation, 98% of survivors interviewed in the Houston Astrodome following the federal flood said that their faith in God is what had enabled them to survive? I am proud to be one of “those people.”
....

This is what the gathering grief and anger of a nation is about this August 29, 2007. The people of this country still honor the social contract between citizens. We need to see clear evidence that our President shares this humanity, conscience, and sense of moral duty.
....

We can be reconciled, Mr. President. New Orleanians are a long-suffering and forgiving people. But to be so you must show us that you see and value our humanity before it is too late.


Please, please take to time to read the entire letter. It's passionate and excellent. You won't be sorry.

Thanks to Ormonde at Through The Dust for calling the letter to my attention.