October 11 was the 60th anniversary of the opening of the Second Vatican Council. In his sermon on that occasion and elsewhere, Pope Francis has repeatedly called on the Church to recover “the spirit of the Second Vatican Council.” A month ago, the eleventh assembly of the World Council of Churches (WCC) was held in Karlsruhe, Germany, 11 August to 8 September. Pleas for peace and unity are prominent in both the Pope’s pronouncements and the WCC’s statements.
It is significant that so little of the agendas of either Vatican II or the WCC have been accomplished in the past 6 decades. That can be because these agendas were very optimistic and bold. But I have a darker suspicion that institutional change is essentially an oxymoron. Institutions exist to conserve. Even on the one item, church unity, no substantial progress has been made. In fact, the very first steps toward that were abandoned before they could be taken. I had a little window onto what happened. A close friend of mine, the Rev. Dr. Lewis A. Briner, a professor at McCormick Theological Seminary, was chosen to be one of the Protestant observers at Vatican II sessions. He came away very excited about the prospects for reconciliation and reunification. The initial project was to be a common lectionary, a 3-year cycle of scripture readings that all churches could use, and which would be the core for liturgy that both Protestants and Catholics would share. There were progressive groups on both the Protestant and Catholic sides that were enthusiastic about this achievable project of a common lectionary. It was a time of fervor for healing denominational divisions and finding inter-religious common ground. On December 4, 1960, Eugene Carson Blake, long-time Stated Clerk of the United Presbyterian Church (USA), preached a historic appeal for reunion at the Episcopal Cathedral in San Francisco. That led to the creation of a Consultation on Church Union (COCU). Meanwhile, mergers and reunions were taking place that led to the United Church of Christ, the United Methodist Church, the united Church of South India, the Uniting Church of Australia, and several others. COCU rode the wave toward a mass-reunion. The WCC actively encouraged this movement, which also embraced better relationships with Jewish and Orthodox groups and reached out to Muslims. Vatican II seemed to open the door for Roman Catholics to join. While Vatican II was still ongoing, Pope John XXIII died (in 1963). Pope Paul VI (1963-78) continued Vatican II to its conclusion in 1965. But he fought a backlash from those opposed to changes in the mass, in particular, and had to walk a thin line on many matters. He will be remembered for his passionate initiatives and travels to make connections and have religions work together for peace. But he had to compromise. That was ominous. Despite the momentum toward unity, there was already, by 1970, just 5 years after the end of Vatican II, the first hesitation, barely noticed. Dr. Briner returned from Rome full of energy for liturgical reform built on the common lectionary. But by 1969 he was disappointed and bitter. The meetings to forge a common lectionary were hindered by Rome from making any changes to the readings prescribed for Roman Catholic churches. Pope Paul had to juggle his priorities and it seems that he opted to fight for modernizing the Mass. The common lectionary became essentially a matter of accepting the Catholic version. So, work on a common lectionary continued without Catholic participation. To insiders like Dr. Briner, the prospects for a fully-united church were dim if there couldn’t even be agreement about a list of scripture readings. Pope Paul VI was replaced by Pope John Paul I who hoped to reinvigorate the goals of Vatican II, but he died after only 34 days on the throne of St. Peter. His successors steadfastly worked to restrict the changes inspired by Vatican II. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, COCU’s goals were abbreviated as the tide shifted away from merger and unity. By the beginning of the 21st century COCU ceased to function and was replaced in 2002 with Churches Uniting in Christ (CUIC). Its focus was on reconciliation between predominately white and predominately Black denominations in the USA, aimed at recognizing and overcoming racism in American churches. Institutional mergers were no longer on the table. The WCC has followed this same arc. Work toward unity is now about united efforts toward environmental welfare, justice, and peace. The WCC’s most recent assembly denounced the Russian invasion of Ukraine and apartheid in Israel, for example, without giving consideration as to how to work toward institutional mergers or even how to strengthen associations. Our Christian Council of Asia appears to be losing financial support and cutting back on its activities, year after year. However, on October 11, this year, after the celebratory Mass commemorating the opening of Vatican II 60 years ago, the general secretary of the Synod of Bishops commented that “the spirit of the Second Vatican Council” continues to guide the church. This has caused theologians to ask, “How does Vatican II guide the Church?” Is it through its written pronouncements (called “magisterial documents”) ALONE as Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict insisted? Indeed, the phrase “the spirit of Vatican II” was deplored by both popes. They insisted there was no basis for the church to pay attention to anything not written and proclaimed formally, and those magisteria were restricted in their language. Now, it appears Francis is interpreting the Council differently, challenging conservatives, saying that the significance of Vatican II is the impulse to change and reform. Perhaps this is another window open to let in fresh air. If the spirit of Vatican II is a spirit of change, could the spirit of ecumenism which burned so brightly after World War I and II also blaze again? Colleagues of mine have chided me for pronouncing ecumenism dead, killed by rampant nationalism and tribalism. The ecumenical movement is alive, they tell me, moving forward with more important objectives than institutional mergers. Everywhere that the church is valid and vital, the work of Christ is healing wounds, supporting victims, mitigating hatred, reducing injustice, and promoting peace. When institutionalism gets in the way, it is bypassed. We should rejoice that the current generation of Christians no longer shares our octogenarian fascination with obsolete structures.
3 Comments
Now begins a festival season for Buddhists of North Thailand.
Today, the 15th day of the waxing moon, the full moon of Uposatha Day, is the end of the rainy season confinement when monks are restricted from normal travels and stay in their monasteries. There are two narratives related to this day. The first describes how the season of confinement, called "phansaa" referring to the rainy season, came to be. As the number of monks attending the Lord Buddha began to increase, their traveling about sometimes trampled on the rice planted during the rainy season, so villagers appealed to the Lord Buddha to help them. He responded by instructing his disciples to remain in the monasteries for the season which lasts for about 90 days. The second narrative is that during the 7th of these seasons after his enlightenment the Lord Buddha traveled to heaven to interpret the Dharma (the Word of release from bondage to error, and thereby release from the endless cycle of birth-death-reincarnation-suffering and death). He preached to his mother and the other divine beings throughout this season. Then, having brought his mother and myriads of these beings to enlightenment, he descended from Indra's heaven. The rainy season is subdued, but as it ends festivals begin. On this very day, people go to the temples early in the morning to make merit and to provide offerings of food in behalf of their deceased parents and ancestors. When that is over, the monks of the sub-district gather in a temple to renew their vows. This is regularly done, but especially on this day. A protege describes it this way: 'Another name for today, "Awk Phansaa" is "Wan Maha Bowanna". Monks of every status "bowanna" (invite one another to give advice about unbecoming behavior) but it must be mutually compassionate based on equality because the word "bowanna" is translated as "permission" or "allowance".' The implication is that the "bowanna" is not forced but is requested. I am pretty sure layers of meaning indicate that through this event monks are released from confinement, released from guilt, and released from complicated suspicions that disrupt monastic life. Dr. Kenneth Wells reports that once a year the bowanna ritual is substituted for the usual recital of the monastic rules which is done fortnightly. At this time the monks are given opportunity to mention faults, rumors of faults, and to admonish one another. In order of seniority, they say "I make bowanna before the Sangha regarding anything they have seen, heard, or suspected (concerning me). May you be merciful and tell me. When I have seen the fault I will correct it." If the group is large, they may agree to make this as a group. In this way the monks make themselves ready to resume their normal duties of disseminating Buddhism. For the next few days some monks go visiting colleagues, often accompanied by laity. One more festival is worth mention, as it is related to the Lord Buddha's descent from heaven. In some temples this will be reiterated with a Dhevo-hanna ceremony. The most impressive of these that I have ever seen was quite near our village. On the crest of a ridge of hills stands Wat Doi Sapan-U with gigantic standing images of the Buddha facing the 4 cardinal directions. At an early hour, a line of monks and novices descend a long stairway to meet laity at the base. The festival was suspended because of COVID, but we think it might be coming again soon. For a description of the Dhevo-hanna or "Thay-wo" please refer to my blog of October 8, 2017: http://www.kendobson.asia/blog/beyond-spectacle In my 60 years as a Presbyterian pastor I have heard a lot of reasons given for people wanting to retain membership in a particular church. These are in addition to the assumed question, "Why are you a Christian?" The answer to that is usually "Because I believe in God," or "Jesus Christ is my Lord and Savior."
The top-ten reasons are (in no particular order): 1. To uphold a family tradition. "Our family has been in this church for generations." 2. The church performs valuable community services. "We feed the hungry." 3. Children need a religious dimension in their lives. "We are here for the kids." 4.To make a contribution for a better world. "This is a Peace Church." 5. The worship services are inspiring and stimulating. "The sermons are great. The music is uplifting. The liturgy is inspirational." 6. The church building is important. "Our grandfather helped build this church. Everywhere I look there are memories. Mom is interred in the columbarium downstairs." 7. The church is an ethnic center. "This is the most important Taiwanese gathering place." "This is almost like going back to Seoul." "I want the kids to speak some Urdu." 8. The church has civic importance. "This is where the leaders are." 9. A funeral is coming. "Grandmother is comforted, knowing that the pastor knows her and we will take care of everything." 10. "I am valuable here. These are MY people." "That singles group is the only safe place for someone like me." "I am needed and I am committed to my ordination as a deacon / choir member / etc." Image credit: Oblate School of Theology website. Pen was born on July 19, 2013 at 4 am. From the beginning it was obvious that Pen was physically handicapped. She had a hair-lip and cleft palate. These were surgically correctable. But after 2 months the pediatricians became concerned about her development. DNA tests showed that she had a rare genetic abnormality: autosomal recessive spinal muscular atrophy (level 2), "floppy baby syndrome." Pen has never been able to sit, move her arms or legs, speak, or swollow, or even cough or sneeze.
Within her first year she required hospitalization 3 times. She was given a tracheotomy and she was attached to oxygen enhancement equipment from then on. She was fed liquid formula through a tube. Close members of the family took training to care for Pen and her like-support equipment. Pen nearly died 3 times. On August 12, 2022 her equipment failed for a few minutes, long enough "to kill half her brain," the cognitive half. She was in the provincial Pediatric Intensive Care Unit until September 2 when we brought her home. On September 12 at 4 pm Pen's heart stopped and she died peacefully. Pen lived among us for 9 years, 24 days, and 12 hours. The family and community are busy with funeral arrangements with a final service on September 15. There is another, and more significant, part to Pen's legacy. 1. No one in the extended family has provided us as much chance to make merit through selfless caring for others. Folklore in North Thailand tells us that she was sent among us to do this, as no one else in the family has ever done in equal measure. 2. Pen was a teacher of patience by her example of dealing with fate serenely. Compared to her our troubles are puny and temporary. We had Pen right here in our midst all the time showing us that we are grasping at trivialities. This lesson she provided throughout her sustained lifetime. (She lived 3 times longer than impressed doctors had predicted, thanks, they said, to the family's dedicated focus on her. I want to give credit also to medical staff, and prayer groups, and to donors of help over the years.) 3. Pen was one of us. She was not an "other" or a strange character with whom we could choose to exist at a remote distance or to ignore. We learned not shudder as we tended to her every need. She could not provide for herself in any of the ways we take for granted. She demonstrated that we, too, are dependent on one another, and without all of us we are diminished. 4. Even her death has taught us something. We were surprised by grief. After the long hospitalization and the struggle we imagined Pen was enduring we thought her passing would be a relief to her and us. But the grief taught us that we will miss her, and that she was important. Life will be very different without her, especially for her mother and grandparents who were her primary caregivers. Pen's legacy is the lesson that we leave the mark of our impact. We make a difference. We are not entirely gone when we die. WHAT ARE THE BOUNDS OF FREE SPEECH?
The attempted assassination of Salman Rushdie on August 12 has reignited debate about freedom of speech. 33 years ago, he wrote a book entitled “The Satanic Verses” which included fictional mention of Mohammed. Three months later, on Valentine’s Day 1989 the Ayatollah Khomeini of Iran delivered a fatwa, a religious decree, calling on “all brave Muslims of the world [to] kill [the author] without delay.” Although, official denunciations of Salman Rushdie have diminished, the fatwa remains and finally someone tried to murder him and nearly succeeded. Rushdie was attacked because of what he wrote and because of what the Ayatollah wrote. Is that fatwa protected speech in the USA and elsewhere? It might be, because it is promulgated as a religious act. I remember a preacher recently proposed stoning gays to death; it was widely reported. Were I to try to post a suggestion that we do mortal damage to the ____ (fill in the blank with the name of a national leader) I would be banned from social media and arrested by the police. I am not an Ayatollah. More basically: Can we have both unconditional respect for everyone’s dignity and also unlimited free speech? The implied demands of the two are mutually exclusive. It is currently self-evident that respect for everyone includes respect for their feelings, so restraint is not only advocated but required. Subject matter and terminology that offends or consigns a recipient to any type of unhappiness or discomfort must be avoided, and the perpetrator must bear responsibility along with all those who supported the perpetrator into the position where such injurious expressions were possible. There are penalties for those who transgress. They include relegating the offender to shunning and rejection. Teachers have been fired and schools have been attacked for such things as suggesting that students think again about a historical event or a literary classic. The State of Florida has now made it illegal to “say the word gay” in any school in the state. Ethnic references can be branded as slurs and academics must take care. Reports about these incidents are so cautionary that anyone who will write or speak to an unrestricted audience tends to hesitate and self-censor. Nesrine Malik commented, “The enemies today aren’t Muslims or beardy clerics, but those described as social justice warriors, whose overzealousness in protecting marginalized identities wields what some equate to a fatwa: self-censoring, no-platforming, ‘cancellation’.” [“Admire Rushdie as a writer and a champion – but don’t forget he is a man of flesh and blood”, The Guardian, 15 Aug 2022] Self-censorship, too, is a limitation of expression. It may not be an outright breach of freedom of speech as understood by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights or the First Amendment to the US Constitution which guarantees freedom of religion and freedom of speech. But it is a principle in practice that has power. It is not entirely a voluntary observation of social boundaries since a significant motive is to avoid consequences that would otherwise, presumably, be forthcoming. This self-censoring feels compelled. Things are being withheld. Encapsulated sounds do not reverberate. Censorship deprives society of unspecified contributions that come from robust debate and generation of alternative ideas neither debater anticipated. Most of the time this loss of potential contributions is too abstract and hypothetical to influence censors’ decisions. They are un-swayed by what might have been. Yet it is also obvious that some expression is corrosive and inflammatory. These eruptions may be caused by hate or ignorance; the one is largely voluntary but the other is not. The results, once set in motion, are irretrievable and too often irremediable. The antisemitic rants of a small clique in Germany in the 1920s led to the Holocaust. Very recent outbreaks of violence in the USA are too numerous to try to list. But it was rhetoric, first of all, that led to a mob invading the US Capitol on January 6, 2020. At the local level, a hateful remark, even if it is a lie, can destroy some part of a target’s life if not all of it. In any case, context matters and context evolves. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, published in 1884 was a remarkable work that abolished racial prejudices by narrating them. Today, a lot of the language of that time is considered derogatory and forbidden. In the UK The Satanic Verses and its author are protected, but not in Iran. Context triumphs, almost always. Religious context, unfortunately, evolves reactively. It is inevitably slower than culture at large. When a religion has become cultic (with authority to control social behavior and with actions that are not accountable to any higher power) the cult tends to imagine threats with supernatural origins now invading the human domain. They take it as a holy duty to combat threats with all the weapons at their disposal. It is well to include in this category even secular cults such as those which elevate a supreme leader or royalty to a level beyond criticism. This is how blasphemy supersedes all lesser expressions. So it is, that written and spoken utterances come to be considered as pernicious as physical acts of violence, or more so. After all, a bomb decimates a target and is over and done with, but a work of art exerts influence who-knows-where. As the culture war of the twenty-first century continues, the battles become personal. Rather than posing ideas and concepts for dialogue, the first thought is to ferret out illicit thinkers for castigation. A transgression, even if it is a blunder, potentially invalidates everything the person has done, unless that work has been simply massive and renders the person beyond cancellation. Circumstances matter, of course. Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s writings (and his associations) got him killed in a Nazi prison just days before the war ended that would have spared him, but he is considered a saint. Winston Churchill would be a villain if some people had their say, but that demotion is unlikely. Harry Potter (i.e. the importance of the books and films) still elevates J.K Rowling above most of the flood of disdain she let loose for her persistent rants against trans people, but she keeps undermining herself and reminding us how much she is endangering people who used to love her. Robert E Lee is not the hero he was a hundred years ago. Unsurprisingly, Salman Rushdie has been a leader in the freedom of expression movement that proposes, somewhere, there is a clear difference between writing which peaceably challenges and that which violently devastates. Beyond that which is verifiably true, there is that which expands our experience. Writing which makes life safer and more understandable must be protected if society is to prosper. Fiction must not be taken as an assault on any non-fictional reality, although it may pry open new options for consideration. Academic writing is legitimate on any subject as long as the applicable rules of the discipline are carefully adhered to. Propaganda, even sheer opinion in behalf of a suspicious cause, must be allowed if it is understood to be the conjecture that it is and is not proposed as something else (which it often is). Opposition to unfettered legitimate free expression is increasingly vigorous. I am persuaded it is time to defend the truth, the right to search for still more truth, and the right to say what we have found. The context for doing this must be mutual respect of everyone’s dignity. Survival is at stake. ---------- I have written on related topics. Links to those blog-essays are as follows: http://www.kendobson.asia/blog/entitlement http://www.kendobson.asia/blog/civil-discourse http://www.kendobson.asia/blog/woke http://www.kendobson.asia/blog/free-speech http://www.kendobson.asia/blog/choices http://www.kendobson.asia/blog/terf http://www.kendobson.asia/blog/religion-and-politics http://www.kendobson.asia/blog/second-civil-war http://www.kendobson.asia/blog/black-lives-matter 57 Years ago today, August 17, 1965, I arrived in Chiang Mai on a DC-12, one of Thai Air’s 3 flights a week from Bangkok. (There are 3 flights an hour, these days). I was met by Dr. E. John Hamlin, principal of the Thailand Theological Seminary and the entire student body. We stopped at Wat Suan Dawk for my first glimpse at the religious mystery I have now spent a lifetime investigating.
Arriving in Chiang Mai was like stepping into a totally different setting, with an almost completely different cast of characters and only a rudimentary script. I was told in a hundred ways to improvise. I turned out, to my great surprise, to be OK at improvisation. The drama of my life has had a few radical twists. August 17 was when I first caught sight of the setting for several separate acts to follow. After life as an Illinois town and farm boy, I came to Chiang Mai, and then became an American pastor in Illinois, before returning to Chiang Mai, and again going back to Illinois. Now I am back in Chiang Mai, and this act may be the final one. It is lacking most of the dramatic challenges of previous acts, which is good. I learned one thing in this extended sojourn: One cannot be sure of what is to follow. THE TOP 9 REASONS THE CHURCH IS DECLINING
1. Gen X has withdrawn because church services are boring. 2. Churches are not valuable because they are not doing anything for the world and for people that can't be done better outside the church. 3. Conservative churches, especially nationalistic ones, have distorted Christianity. 4. Sexual malpractice and worse (as well as cover-ups) by clergy have driven people away. 5. The church's unrenounced history of suppression of minorities has exposed the church's hypocrisy. 6. The church continues to reject many spiritual practices that people have found valuable. 7. The church is no longer a social space where people expect to intersect with those who they think it might be important to know. 8. The central narratives, including those in the Bible, have lost relevance and no longer seem "all that important" to have children learn. 9. Being a church member is no longer central to one's identity. THE CHURCH DOESN'T MATTER enough to retain as many people as it used to do. WOMEN ARE NOT AS DISTINCT AS THEY USED TO BE
The New York Times published a passionate, thought-provoking opinion article the other day that argued women are being ‘erased’ and discounted not only by the political right wing (who want women back in ‘their place’) but also by the left (who want to replace the term “women” with some other term such as “people with vaginas” or “those who menstruate”) and thus they would do away with decades of struggle for equality for women. “Woman” is a valuable term for an identifiable population, the author argued. Ah, ha! There are multiple struggles going on these days. Advocacy movements are in a growth phase. It has dawned on me as we are celebrating successful PRIDE events and decrying the threats posed by the US Supreme Court, that one characteristic of these human rights movements – as they appear online and in the media, at least – is their exclusionary bent. Each of them tries to draw distinct boundaries in order to make it crystal clear who is included and who is being excluded, who is being advocated and threatened and by whom. So, we have grown aware of our distinctions. We have gone from being merely “gay” to LGBT and now on to being LGBTQIA with a + to signal our openness to still more awareness. In some places we add “2S” for two-spirit people, and here I habitually add K for “kathoey” (people aware of their third gender identity). Our banner has grown from its rainbow stripes into much more complicated patterns as well. This is in the commendable effort to be fair and to articulate distinctions. What makes US distinct, we might say, is that we are different from confirmed, satisfied, confident, cisgender heterosexuals. We are not like them in very important ways, and they do not like us so there is a war going on between them and us as we pridefully march. But then we notice that Q not only stands for “queer” which we have proudly reclaimed but also for “questioning” (maybe there should be 2 Qs, but it’s getting unwieldy). In short, we’re pretty sure about a few of us and a little unsure about others. These distinctions we are insisting upon are not as precise as they need to be if we’re going into battle over them. Take the I (intersex), for example. Some I people profess emotional / romantic attraction and sexual preference for those who manifest as males, some for females, some for both (they are I and B), and some for none (they are I as well as A). See the overlap? Some bisexual persons prefer to call themselves pansexual, whereas others abhor the idea that “pansexual” could include those who seek sex with little children, or dead bodies, or sheep. These 3 have established terms: pedophile, necrophile, and zoophile. We are fairly OK with them being excluded from our list of companions. It also turns out that many pansexuals are bisexuals who object to something implied by the “bi” part. Oh, my. I have come to believe that we make a mistake when we try to be clear and exclusive. Every one of our categories overlaps parts of other categories. The attempt to do scientific compartmentalization has its down side. It only works when we can isolate a set of characteristics, DNA for example. Human intelligence (IQ) can be determined to an extent that makes it meaningful for certain determinations, such as whether an individual should be held accountable for some action of legal consequence. But IQ cannot help suggest the cause of every human behavior or even the value of the human individual, as some early 20th century eugenics projects tried to do. Human sexuality has no set of characteristics that can be isolated from all other aspects of human nature. If we have learned anything in the past 50 years it is that human sexuality is complex. In the 1980s we were looking for a gay genetic causality. By 1990 we knew there is no gay gene or chromosome. Part of sexuality is developed, not organically, but in the same way as one’s story is developed. Romance is narrative. “Narrative-influence” exerts enough power to convince some people that their same-sex activities are irrelevant to their identities. Their cisgender bias is not disturbed. For others, a same-sex experience might be profound, changing their self-understanding. But whether that new understanding is affirming and positive or destructive and threatening is a matter of how one’s narrative goes forward. And that is based on all the stored experiences (i.e., stories) that led up to this experience. The mind works on an experience and concludes “that was a punishment,” or “that was an exception of no consequence,” or “that means something.” Things like that. Romance is an internalized insight. Romance is also social. It is about a relationship. So, it involves how one succeeds or fails to express and respond to characters in a romantic story. It involves how the other person (or persons) participates and reacts. Even when one of the participants is passive because of need or rape, the perpetrator’s action is part of his or her ongoing story. It is never one thing and never simple. It would be better if we accepted how transitional our understanding is. Does this mean I think the opinion in the New York Times is right? Is feminism being undermined by its former allies? My “ah-ha” about this is that “women” is a term for a group that overlaps other groups to some extent. The way to accomplish equality was through an Equal Rights Amendment to the US Constitution, we thought, and we fought for it. Now we have new perspectives brought by greater awareness of diversity. The way to achieve equality is not by doubling down on gender definitions but to recognize how they fail to describe reality. “Men and women” is a flawed binary. Can you pick out the "women" in the picture accompanying this essay? They all attended Chiang Mai PRIDE 2022. Are all of them women, or just some of them? Careful, careful. Having said that, I admit I don’t know of a society that is ready to dispose of its binary thinking. So, it is too soon to hope for an end to the polarization that results from sub-dividing human beings into boxes and categories. But it helps me to try to wrap my mind around a few things: 1. Nobody is any one thing, even if they think they are. 2. A person’s sex is more than the sum-total of their anatomical components. 3. Anything that can be said about a person has exceptions and the more persons you are talking about the smaller the area of things they have in common. 4. Girls are not fully developed women when they first menstruate and boys do not turn into men in a single day. 5. A human right is a philosophical concept before it is a political decision. 6. Human progress toward greater inclusiveness is not without interruptions and never to be taken for granted. DEMOCRACY CANNOT SURVIVE WHEN PEOPLE NO LONGER BELIEVE IN IT
On June 23 the expected announcement came that the US Supreme Court had overturned the 1972 ruling in Roe v Wade that permitted abortions nationally. This decision, reducing a basic human right after 50 years, is historic in that it’s never happened before, although previous decisions have extended rights. The announcement had been leaked (much to the consternation of Justice Clarence Thomas and others) a few weeks ago, so it was no surprise and responses were obviously ready to post. The Internet was full of chatter about this. People with longer memories were most alarmed that now abortions will again become illegal in all cases, no matter the motives, in half the states of the USA. That was a tragic era of desperate women going to desperate means with often lethal results. Furthermore, in a concurring opinion statement Justice Thomas advocated reconsideration of a list of other prior decisions regarding contraception, same-sex intercourse, and same-sex marriage. Thomas’s concurring opinion got just as much attention as the decision. Further comment by informed observers clarified that there was widespread legal agreement that some of the cases on which human sexual rights had been affirmed were not stated precisely as might be necessary to stand up over the coming decades, although Roe v Wade has done so until now. Perhaps, reconsideration does not mean reversing those decisions, maybe. Possibly. In fact, all laws upholding the “Right to Privacy” principle based on the 14th Amendment to the US Constitution could now be challenged according to Thomas. Think about what a nation would be like when there is no right to privacy in any way. It’s not impossible. China is employing technology to do that right now. It is equally clear that the US Supreme Court now has the conservative edge needed to continue to pursue the GOP agenda, including eliminating same-sex marriages next. That is a high priority for them. This court, we remember, now contains a replacement member nominated by Trump and pushed by the US Senate led by Mitch McConnell after they had blocked a year-long attempt by Obama to nominate a replacement for Sandra Day O’Connor. In 4 years, Trump got three people onto the Supreme Court while Obama was blocked by conservative Republicans. It was McConnell who spearheaded the GOP blockade of everything that Obama proposed, essentially wiping out all new legislation. And then McConnell was the quarterback for Trump’s 4-year attack on all of Obama’s executive actions. The effort is still on to install a neo-fascist white-supremacist nationalistic regime. The politicization of abortion was instigated by Jerry Falwell. At the time he seized upon abortion as a signal and began to expand the definition of when life begins, all religious opinion was unconcerned about establishing an exact date on it after conception, but all religions supported the idea that the mother’s life was paramount if it came to a crisis choice between a fetus and the mother. Using expanded access to mass media, evangelical-conservative Christians picked up killing unborn babies as an emotional issue to draw a line in the sand dividing good people from evil people. Polarization began with this very issue. It now includes a few other issues that defy debate, including the right to own any guns one wants. New issues come up and some gain traction at least for a while. Current battles are being waged over what rights people have to declare their gender (and where Trans people belong in social spaces), whether the USA is a Christian Nation and what that entails, and movements that advocate clarifying racial realities in US life such as “Black Lives Matter” and “Critical Race Theory.” Now we come to the crux of the matter. It has come back to the way the government operates. The representative democracy of the United States of America was founded on the fragile principle that it exists at the will of the people. It is not by divine right that the government derives its authority, not by military might that it has power, and not by personal whim of any leaders (however brilliant or charismatic) that a democracy makes decisions. There are three branches of government with checks on each other. The Executive with the President of the US in the White House oversees the execution of government processes, the Legislative with the US Congress in 2 houses debating and determining laws, and the Judicial with the Supreme Court of the US as the final authority in interpreting laws’ validity. None of the three branches can operate without the cooperation and consent of the other two. Nor can they continue without the will of the people. Constitutional law and systematic accountability are matters of agreement by the people, without which democracy crumbles. We have now come again to the treacherous brink. This is a season of peril for our democracy. Never, in the past 150 years have the branches of government been held in so little regard. Every single branch has lost respect. The Supreme Court has become the last to fall. “The court has lost legitimacy. They have burned whatever legitimacy they may have had. They just took the last of it and set a torch to it with the Roe v. Wade opinion.” [Senator Elizabeth Warren on ABC News “This Week” Sunday, June 26 quoted in www.businessinsider.com later that day.] Events surrounding the insurrection on January 6, 2021 have begun to make it clear how undermined the Executive branch is in the minds of people across the country and around the world. Decisions by the Executives-in-charge have eroded confidence for decades, but the actions culminating in January 6 have turned-off confidence that democracy is working for a large portion of US citizens, especially those under 50 years of age. Two gauges measure how a democracy is faring. One is how much regard people have for the system of government. That, arguably, is now below the level where the democracy of the USA can be sustained. The other is how the actions of the government meet the expressed needs and hopes of the people. It is a two-way street. The people must support the government and the government must respond to the people. Then it works. It is not working. In issue after issue over the past few decades the government has failed to act in accordance with the expressed wishes of the people. There are so many cases in which this is obvious that it is beyond the scope of this essay to list them. The American people overwhelmingly support action for a sustainable environment, but the government has undertaken hardly any measures to stabilize the climate or develop alternative technologies to replace carbon exploitation. The people expect legislative measures to equalize justice and provide for essential welfare, but the legislature has refused to move against the “military-industrial complex” and international financial structures; and the legislature has even made it hard for people with any social, racial, economic, or medical deviation from some moveable “normal” to survive. Now we have this attack by the judicial hierarchy. Roe v. Wade was supported by 2/3 of the population, but overturned by 5 court justices. What if the government loses the support of the people, as appears to have happened? What happens then? When the majority refuse to be actively involved in readjusting processes that are destroying democracy, the minority have free reign. The minority in this case is inclined to consolidate power and take measures to prevent the majority from arising. There is a window for this to happen. The minority in this instance is made up of neo-fascist supremacists with a military mindset in an implied alliance with limited-agenda conservatives deadest on particular objectives (such as ending sexual excesses of some kind such as sodomy or abortion). This alliance operates without acknowledgement. The majority have an array of disadvantages. The window of opportunity to reassert itself is not going to stay open for long. The majority includes many who are disillusioned and have resigned into the background. Leadership must emerge and inspire renewed hope that effective remedies are achievable without unbearable sacrifices. So, the costs must be specified, and that is hard to do. Civil war might fix things, but the cost is unthinkable. That is one of the reasons that the minority has an armed ultra-wing and the majority does not. That is, it does not unless it can once again attain the people’s allegiance to a political solution. The US Government has one of the largest military powers in history. Thankfully, it is steadfastly neutral in this. As the month of our astonishment draws to a close, as we shake loose from the illusion that things will work out while we’re trying to stay cool and safe indoors. That’s where we are, on the brink hoping for no more earthquakes. “The secret of the ‘gay agenda’ is to be loved and accepted … without having to change or be changed.” So what’s the fuss? My supportive niece Amber reposted this thought from Susan Cottrell, Freedhearts.org. We can count on Amber and Susan to be positive, affirming, and persistent. May their tribe increase.
However, I question whether there really is such a ting as a gay agenda. It is like “gay community” in that regard. These two terms are current. They are being used extensively by both those who are supportive and those who object to what they think of as the “gay agenda” and “gay community.” The terms are handy. They are headlines to allude to a cluster of ideas that are real but abstract. As with such abstractions, they are accurate within their contexts. When ultra-right conservatives in Hungary or Houston say “gay agenda” they agree with one another that it is a bad thing that rots civilization as they want it to be. When it is mentioned by those in a Gay Pride event it refers to an agreeable set of goals. “Gay community” is another helpful term as long as it is used by those who have defined the term and are in agreement. The dictionary says an abstraction describes a “general quality or characteristic, apart from concrete realities, specific objects, or actual instances.” There is such an entity as the gay community, in the abstract. It does not actually exist in any identifiable, universal way that includes all LGBTIAN+ people, basically because there is no such society. There are groups and they coalesce and dissolve, grow and change, are here and there. If you listen to individual stories, it becomes clear no aspect of community is applicable to all of them any of the time or to any of them all of the time. Narratives are so helpful to get to what’s really real. I used to collect gay stories. Each person’s story, when I got enough of it, was so full of factors, forces, and features that it is unique. A compilation of scores of anecdotes and longer accounts showed stunningly that no two individuals had more than a few motives and characteristics in common. I long for the time when sexual diversity is so well understood that it is no longer an issue of note. Creating the notion of a clear-cut sexual binary has been a disaster. It has devolved even farther into male supremacism / female subjection, and then into hierarchies and persecution. So far, we have failed to overcome this social deterioration. But we are working on it. We have come a long way since Oscar Wilde was imprisoned, Turing was castrated, and riots erupted at Stonewall 53 years ago this week. The clearest indication we are making progress is the emergence of vigorous opposition. The work is getting somewhere. We are even making impacts upon national governments. As we speak, the Thai parliament has before it 4 (count them, four) proposals advocating same-sex unions. On June 15 they passed the most comprehensive one called a “Marriage Equality Act” by a vote of 210 to 180. [The picture accompanying this article is of a group overjoyed when the news came from inside the Parliament building.] The other three bills would also recognize same-sex relationships (and that would be progress) but as somehow distinct from heterosexual marriages – the “standard” way to understand marriage up to now. We are waiting for the second and then the final reading of the act. Parliament could still reverse itself and reject all four. It won’t be over until it’s signed and posted in the Royal Gazette. This week in Japan the courts began to spar about whether marriage must be “between both sexes,” (which means “heterosexual”). An Osaka court ruled that the Japanese Constitution upholds marriage between both sexes, and rejected a claim brought by 3 same-sex couples that being unable to marry was unconstitutional. A Sapporo court in 2021 ruled that failure to recognize same-sex marriage was unconstitutional. So now there are two court rulings in direct contradiction of one another. The Osaka court said that more public debate was needed. Opinion surveys say the public now favors same-sex marriage. The Osaka court ruling may slow down laws recognizing that fact. This is how progress is made, case by case. Parliaments and courts make decisions after considering principles and politics. The abstract principle in question at the moment is about what a marriage is. But this is a social issue, as the Osaka court seems to have discerned. The US Supreme Court ruled in favor of same-sex marriages in 2015 when public opinion became clearly in favor of it; a previous ruling in 2013 was that a national consensus had not yet developed. We can call this “political” but actual public attitudes are swayed by people becoming acquainted with one another. (Would that this happened all the time, but some families do fracture when confronted with gay members.) Stories matter if they are told and heard. Meanwhile, I’ll agree with Amber and Susan that the gay agenda is no threat because it’s no different than everyone’s agenda, and I’m going to be there on July 3 when our big Chiang Mai gay community celebrates Pride 2022. |
AuthorRev. Dr. Kenneth Dobson posts his weekly reflections on this blog. Archives
December 2022
Categories |