Saturday, September 10, 2011

'REJOICE IN THE LORD ALWAYS'

The Apostle Paul - Rembrandt - National Gallery of Art, Washinton DC
Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice. Let your gentleness be known to everyone. The Lord is near. Do not worry about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.

Philippians 4:4-7
The passage above from today's Lectionary is one of my favorites, one which I have committed to memory because I speak or call to mind the words so very often in times of stress and trouble. Sometimes, after I call the passage to mind, I think, 'It's easy for you to say, Paul,' but, in my heart of hearts, I know Paul's life was not easy, and he came to a tragic end because of his zeal for spreading the Gospel of Jesus Christ. He spoke the words in faith despite the suffering he had already endured and his knowledge that more suffering would surely come his way.

And I speak the words in faith that they may become a reality in my life.

Image from Wikipedia.

Friday, September 9, 2011

GAYER GARMENTS

 

1940 English ad.

Posted without further commentary, except to say: Don't blame me. Blame Lapin.

PAR FOR THE COURSE

No, neither Grandpère nor I are golfers. The title is a metaphor for our lives. If Grandpère would submit to an evaluation, I'm fairly sure he would be diagnosed with ADHD. My friend Cathy thinks I have ADD, and I tend to agree with her. The diagnosis would explain a lot about my life. An instance: My grandmother, who was an excellent pianist, tried to teach me to play the piano, but as soon as I moved on to playing with two hands, I was blocked. I could not concentrate and coordinate playing different keys and rhythms with two hands. My grandmother and I tried and tried, because I wanted to play the piano, but I could not do it. End of piano lessons. It's quite difficult for me to focus on more than one thing at a time. You know the saying about walking and chewing gum? I'm not quite that bad, but you get the idea.

Today was Grandparents Day at my grandson's school, or so Grandpère and I thought. However, neither of us paid close attention to the letter from the school, which advised that only grandparents whose names started with 'M' to the end of the alphabet were to be at the school today. The 'B's were next Friday. Of course, Grandson was not in church for the mass where we were to meet him, because we were there on the wrong day. Someone went to get GS out of his classroom, and the authorities were going to permit him to stay with us, because other grannys and grandpas had come on the wrong day, too, and all was to be cool.

Grandson didn't fall far from his grandpa's and grandma's tree, as he has ADHD, too. GS glides more smoothly through life when routines are followed, and GP and I were out of sync with the school's routine, so he really did not want to be with us today. Plus I believe we may have embarrassed him by showing up on the wrong day. He's 11, in the 5th grade. We decided we'd let him off the hook and walked him back to his classroom. However, his teacher urged him back out to the mass with us, but when we were outside, GS began to tear up. I said, 'You really, really don't want us to be here today, do you?'

He said, 'No, I want you next Friday, but now my teacher probably won't let me back in the classroom.'

I said, 'Come with us, and we'll explain to your teacher, and maybe she'll let you stay.' And she did, so we'll return next Friday. Oh dear! We will have to do better!

We'd planned to go to the computer store after the Grandparents Day activities, so on we went a bit earlier to buy a new computer before our old machine not only crashes frequently, but dies forever. We accomplished the task, and the store will be transferring my material to the new computer. For now, I'm functioning on my laptop without all my stuff, documents, pictures, music, all of which were difficult to use on the old computer anyway, because if I had more than 3 tabs open, I was asking for a crash.

Our son, Grandson's dad, joined us for lunch, and when we told him the story, he said, 'Oh no! With him, the routines must be followed.'

There you have it - the story of half our day.

BOROWITZ SAYS....

From the wonderful Andy Borowitz:
Rick Perry Needs to ‘Tone Down’ His Rhetoric, Says Kim Jong-Il

‘He Scares Me,’ North Korean Dictator Says
Read the rest at the link.

Thursday, September 8, 2011

SEPTEMBER 11, 2001 - FROM COUNTERLIGHT'S ROOF

This is the first picture that I took from the roof of my building at 256 East 10th street.

The words and pictures here are those of Doug Blanchard, aka Counterlight. He posted them several days ago, and I was so impressed by his posts that I asked his permission to repost them here on Wounded Bird.
Part 1: My Pictures

I've posted these pictures before about 3 years ago.

I took these pictures from my roof that morning with a cheap little camera that still had some film left in it. I was getting dressed and listening to the radio when a bulletin announced that a plane had just crashed into the World Trade Center. Thinking a Cessna flown by a drunken pilot crashed into Windows On The World, I ran upstairs to the roof to take a look. Seeing that this was a major catastrophe with black smoke billowing out of the North Tower, I ran downstairs and called my mother and brother in Dallas. They had not yet heard any news about the attack, and there was nothing yet on the teevee about it. I grabbed my camera and ran back upstairs where my neighbors in the building were already gathering. I arrived and began taking pictures just as the second plane struck the South Tower.
The second plane just struck and I instinctively began clicking the shutter button.


Hundreds of people gathered on the rooftops of neighboring tenement buildings to watch the disaster unfold.
Part 2: This is the second of a 2 part essay.

A lot of people found renewed religious faith in the wake of September 11th. I had the exact opposite experience. I ran away from religion screaming in horror. The religious motivation behind the attacks horrified me. I remember reading extensive translations from Mohammed Atta's admonitions to the attackers recovered from their effects. It was a chilling experience. I don’t know why that so affected me. I’ve always known that history is full of sectarian massacres, and this was one of them. I came to agree with the graffiti I saw all over town that said, “religion is the problem, not the answer.” I still agree with that graffiti a lot of the time, even after I’ve returned to an active religious life. I was deeply angry at religion. I’m still angry at religion.

I was not angry with God. I refused to blame God for a manmade calamity. I’ve never believed in God as the ultimate causality who controls everything and who makes happen everything that ever happens. God made us together with the world, but we are on our own to make as bloody a mess as we please. As WH Auden once wrote, ”The God of Love will never withdraw our right to grief and infamy.” I’ve never believed in God the Rescuer. Bad things happen to good people, not because we are bad or because God is bad, but because we are mortal. I learned that the hard way when my non-smoking father died of lung cancer in December 2000. Whatever belief I had in moral causality in the cosmos whether it’s karma or what most people call “original sin” died with him. God didn’t kill my father, the tumor did. He didn’t “deserve it” or “ask for it.” There was no reason for his death other than the fact that shit happens. We suffer because we are mortal and we are vulnerable. The people who died that morning on September 11th certainly didn’t “deserve it” either. However good or bad any of those people may have been, none of them ever did anything in the entire course of their lives to merit such a death sentence.

My father’s tumor was incapable of malice, but the men who did this bloody awful thing on September 11th did so out of great malice, and malice driven by a fanatic belief that reduced their neighbors to abstractions, to card board cut outs, which made them easier to kill. In the wake of the attacks, this quote from Blaise Pascal came to my mind:

“Men never do evil so willingly and so happily as when they do it for the sake of conscience.”

And later on, this quote from Montaigne came to mind:

“When they try to become angels, men become beasts.”

Those notorious comments by Falwell and Robertson in the immediate wake of the attacks that effectively endorsed them only confirmed my anger, and my conviction that the only real difference between our fanatics and theirs is a shave. The Phelps band from Topeka turned itself into Al Qaida’s most enthusiastic and notorious apologists in the USA, picketing the funerals of American soldiers killed in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, declaring with Bin Laden that the attacks were God’s judgment upon a decadent liberal United States. There’s no depravity like pious depravity.

Those comments by Falwell and Robertson are a lesson; that we must be careful when we look at our enemies that we are not looking into a mirror. People who live by their fears and hatreds tend to turn into the very things that they fear and hate. We must always be vigilant, and be careful to live according to what we are for, and not what we are against.

In the end, I decided that I was unfair to religion, that messy and conflicted enterprise. People of great religious faith helped me out very generously during times of terrible hardship in my life. They were good people, and some even saintly in their selflessness. Lumping them together with Osama Bin Laden, with Phelps, Falwell and Robertson, with the hijackers, with all the suicide bombers and all the violent hateful fanatics in the world would be a gross injustice. And certainly the Object of all religion never deserved to be placed in such loathsome company, no matter how frequently or fervently or loudly they invoke Him. After a little more than a year, I rediscovered the happiness that comes with religious life, the happiness of feeling joined across time and space to my neighbors (living and dead), to the world, to nature, to time itself, to the spirit, and to God, a happiness that I had missed.

The real threat is not from any one religion or from religion or from no religion. The real threat is from our very worst addiction, not to booze, drugs, tobacco, sex, or sugar, but to certainty. We demand absolute certainty in a world that promises none. We frail mortals, always confined to one point in space and one moment in time, can only be more or less certain about anything. Our certainties always carry with them the possibility that we could be wrong. That is not irresolution. That’s humility. Nonetheless, we demand clear unequivocal answers where there are none to be had. We refuse to live with ambiguity. We have no patience for paradoxes or for nuances. If we can’t get answers, then we’ll make our own. To cut through the Gordian Knot of the tangled difficulties of life in the name of clarity and simplicity is to cut through life’s very fabric. To try to reshape life according to a preconceived doctrinal or ideological abstraction is to kill it by a thousand slices. That is the path of arrogance, dogma, ignorance, brutality, and finally to crime of the worst sort. Those men who hijacked the planes and flew them into the buildings did so in the name of certainty, of clarity, of simplicity, and purity. They believed that those people who worked in the towers forfeited their right to live by failing to live according to a divine template. They believed that those people deserved to die because they failed the tests of purity and holiness. The hijackers believed that the people they were going to kill lived in a corrupt and decadent society doomed by God. They believed themselves to be the instruments of God’s judgment.

The hijackers died trying to kill indiscriminately as many people as possible.

Hundreds of firefighters and rescue workers rushed into the burning towers and died trying to indiscriminately save the lives of as many people as possible, frustrating the designs of the hijackers. Those were the real saints that day.

In their honor, I remember Father Mychal Judge, a Franciscan priest, who was among the first responders to die, killed by falling debris. He was a beloved pastor to firefighters for many years, riding with them to fires, visiting the injured in hospitals, and the families of those who died in the line of duty. He was a tireless and fearless friend of those rejected and disposed of by society, including AIDS patients, immigrants legal and illegal, alcoholics, the mentally ill, and the homeless. He was an openly gay man not afraid to publicly challenge his church’s teachings and their treatment of LGBTs. He lived out St. Francis’ command that we should always preach the Gospel, sometimes with words.

Mychal Judge lived out the Gospel message that there is no greater love than to lay down one’s life for one’s friends; and so did Mohammed Salman Hamdani, the 23 year old Muslim NYPD cadet who ran into the towers and died trying to rescue people. So did the almost 500 other firefighters, police, and rescue workers, Christians, Muslims, Jews, and others all together, who gave their lives that morning.
More pictures may be found at the link to Part 2.

I did not intend to publish this post until the 10th anniversary on Sunday, but I accidentally hit publish, and the unfinished post would have stayed in Google Reader until I posted the final version, so here it is today.

THE JEALOUS HUSBAND

A suspicious and jealous husband hired a private detective to check on the movements of his wife. The husband wanted more than a written report; he wanted a video of his wife's activities.

A week later, the detective returned with a video. They sat down together to watch it. Although the quality was less than professional, the man saw his wife meeting another man! He saw the two of them laughing in the park. He saw them enjoying themselves at an outdoor cafe. He saw them dancing in a dimly lit nightclub. He saw the man and his wife participate in a dozen activities with utter glee.

"I just can't believe this," the distraught husband said.

The detective said, "What's not to believe? It's right up there on the screen!"

The husband replied, "I can't believe that my wife could be so much fun!"


Cheers,

Paul (A.)

Paul (A.), thanks for the palate cleanser after all the talk of the Republican forum.

REPUBLICAN LINE-UP FOR SEPTEMBER 7, 2011

Check it out and note Rick Perry's ready-to-draw stance. A navy suit seems to be the mandatory uniform.

IN COLD BLOOD



Last night, I watched about 24 minutes of the Republican candidates for president forum on MSNBC, and that was all I could take. I missed the portion of the debate shown in the video. The applause at the mention of 234 executions which took place during the terms of Rick Perry as governor of Texas is chilling, even before Perry's explanation that he doesn't struggle with the executions, at which point the audience erupts in wild applause.

I remember my horror at reading Truman Capote's book In Cold Blood, about the murder of the Clutter family in Kansas by Richard Hickock and Perry Smith. Each time I hear about a state execution I think of the title of Capote's book. What is a state execution if not killing in cold blood?

Lord, have mercy.
Christ, have mercy.
Lord, have mercy.

A PRAYER FOR THE AGES - ÓSCAR ROMERO


It helps, now and then, to step back
and take the long view.
The kingdom is not only beyond our efforts,
it is beyond our vision.

We accomplish in our lifetime only a tiny fraction of
the magnificent enterprise that is God's work.
Nothing we do is complete,
which is another way of saying
that the kingdom always lies beyond us.

No statement says all that could be said.
No prayer fully expresses our faith.
No confession brings perfection.
No pastoral visit brings wholeness.
No program accomplishes the church's mission.
No set of goals and objectives includes everything.

This is what we are about:
We plant seeds that one day will grow.
We water seeds already planted, knowing that they hold future promise.
We lay foundations that will need further development.
We provide yeast that produces effects beyond our capabilities.

We cannot do everything
and there is a sense of liberation in realizing that.
This enables us to do something,
and to do it very well.
It may be incomplete, but it is a beginning, a step along the way,
an opportunity for God's grace to enter and do the rest.

We may never see the end results,
but that is the difference between the master builder and the worker.
We are workers, not master builders,
ministers, not messiahs.
We are prophets of a future not our own
Amen

Óscar Arnulfo Romero y Galdámez (15 August 1917 – 24 March 1980)[1] was a bishop of the Roman Catholic Church in El Salvador. He became the fourth Archbishop of San Salvador, succeeding Luis Chávez. He was assassinated on 24 March 1980. Wikipedia

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

PLEASE PRAY...

Joel is in the hospital. He has chronic and serious health issues. If you follow their story at Margaret's blog, Leave It Lay Where Jesus Flang It, Margaret lost her job; they are now trying to sell their house; and day before yesterday was their 30th wedding anniversary. In the face of all their trials, Margaret posts:
Paul (to the Philippians beginning at 2:1)

If then there is any encouragement in Christ, any consolation from love, any sharing in the Spirit, any compassion and sympathy, make my joy complete: be of the same mind, having the same love, being in full accord and of one mind. Do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility regard others as better than yourselves. Let each of you look not to your own interests, but to the interests of others. Let the same mind be in you that was in Christ Jesus...

Margaret: I consider these words to be a description of the Christian life-style... but was Paul himself ever able to live them? No... which is where the glory comes in --the glory. And that Paul himself was never able to live them makes them not less true, but more true and more the glory.

At least, that is my hope --the glimpses... of glory....

...but all of us do get glimpses of it... every now and then...

The great riddle of the Gospel --it's all ours, not because of what we do, but because we are loved --so we should try to do... but even what we do in faith will need redemption... so it is all grace. All is grace.
From the Book of Common Prayer for which I am so very grateful:
O God, the strength of the weak and the comfort of sufferers: Mercifully accept our prayers, and grant to your servant Joel the help of your power, that his sickness may be turned into health, and our sorrow into joy; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
Let us pray for both Joel and for Margaret. The prayer that comes to mind is from Morning Prayer for individuals in the Book of Common Prayer.
Lord God, almighty and everlasting Father, you have brought us in safety to this new day: Preserve us with your mighty power, that we may not fall into sin, nor be overcome by adversity; and in all we do, direct us to the fulfilling of your purpose; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

From the Houston Chronicle:
Texas wildfires claim 2 lives

A wildfire is forcing authorities to evacuate an area of more than 2,000 residents in Waller County this afternoon, according to the Waller County Sheriff's Office. The area being evacuated is south of FM 1488 between Kickapoo Road and the Montgomery County line.

---

Fed by wind and parched vegetation, wildfires continued to rage Tuesday through Central Texas, where an out-of-control blaze claimed two lives and 550 homes, and in the Magnolia area, where officials ordered the evacuation of more than 4,000 households.
Sadly, that's not the end of it. Read it all.

O God, creator and preserver of all mankind, we pray for those who died. May they rest in peace and rise in glory. May God give comfort, consolation, and the peace that passes understanding to all who grieve.

We pray for those who lost their homes, that they will receive help in their time of need and distress, and that God will give them strength and courage to rebuild their lives and their homes.

We pray for the safety of the firefighters.

We pray for all in the path of Texas wildfires, especially for the sick and disabled and those who care for them; for all who watch and wait in uncertainty; we ask you to comfort and relieve them and bring them safely through the fires. And this we pray for Jesus Christ’s sake. Amen.