Saturday, December 24, 2016

CHILDREN EVERYWHERE--BEWARE!

Once again it the time of the year to issue a warning to all children everywhere.  All year long Santa watches what children do—writing down who has been naughty and who has been good.  But Christmas is a day all good children not to let up just because you got all your Christmas presents!  No!  No!

I am speaking of a magical creature who takes a special watch on how you act on Christmas day.  I am talking about the dreaded Christmas Weasel!  Never heard of him?  How lucky you are!  You must have been real good on days of Christmas past.

If on Christmas day a child is bratty, won’t share his toys, talks back to his parents, or throws a fit because he must put his toys aside and go to visit his Grandma and Grandpa, the Christmas Weasel will sneak into your house t night when you asleep and steal all your new toys.  Imagine how upset you’ll be the next day!

Santa gives the Christmas Weasel permission to take your new toys back to the North Pole so that he can give them to more deserving children next year.  So mind how you behave on Christmas Day!

By the way, all you adults aren’t exempt either.  If you give your spouse a hard time because you got a blender, if the diamond isn’t big enough, if you only got a new tie or socks, or even if all you got was a new supply of trash bags so you can take out the trash, the Christmas Weasel will run up a huge bill at that fancy restaurant with your credit card or maybe your 401K will suddenly have no money in it.

So, be nice.  The Christmas Weasel is watching you!

Friday, December 23, 2016

CAN'T WE ALL GET ALONG?

It is now over a month since the 2016 Presidential election and we have been treated to thousands of post-election analyses.  The left—and the some of the right—have issued dark mutterings about the dystopia to come with the Age of Trump.   The left seems to concentrate on their predictions of the ascendency of racism, sexism, militarism, disregard for the poor, and a general atmosphere of division and hate.  Those on the right focus—as they had from Trump’s announcement of his run in 2015—on his disqualifications to be called a “conservative” and the damage he will do to the traditional conservative agenda of liberty and limited government. 

The dissatisfied on the right have uniformly accepted the legitimacy of Trump’s election while being of different minds on why he beat out the host of other Republican candidates and why he succeeded in becoming President in the end.  The host of conservative “never-Trumper’s” still vow to be critical and oppositional toward Trump even though—as they see it-- most conservatives didn’t have the good sense to follow their lead during the election.

The left, on the other hand, has taken a four prong approach.  The first being outright rage involving mass protests and nationwide incidents of violence.  Second, a dissection finding the dark forces in America which allegedly thrust Trump to high office.  The third involved a menagerie of conspiratorial theories from the clandestine exposure of Democrat officials’ emails, F.B.I. head James Comey’s opening-closing-and reopening of Hilary Clinton’s handling of state secrets, and Russian digital interference in the election.  And, fourth, several efforts to undermine the legitimacy of Trump’s election:  recounts of voting in crucial states, questioning the validity of the Electoral College’ authority over the popular vote, attempts to persuade the Electors to switch their votes to Clinton, disqualifying Trump citing possible conflicts of interests between affairs of state and his business holdings, promising mass disruptions of the inauguration, and even issuing threats of impeachment

All this being said, we’d be best advised to approach a Trump Presidency with a little humility and historical restraint.  In all the aftermaths of each American President—whether good or bad-- America survived.  Sometimes for the worse.  Sometimes for the better.  But the Republic still stands.  We have no reason to believe that under Trump we will cease to be a free and self-governing people.  Yes, there is no situation so bad it can’t get worse.  But, on the other hand, many times we have wound up with a better nation—sometimes in spite of ourselves.  Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Carter, Reagan, the Bushes, Clinton, and Obama didn’t destroy the United States.  Our nation is stronger than that.



On another note, however, one of the unhappiest elements of the election is some folks abandoning their friendships and no longer speaking to one another due to the candidate they supported.  I myself have lost a few friends and have a few family members who no long speak to me.  I hope this is all temporary.  Maybe this folly will come to an end as tempers cool and the election sinks further into the past.  Until then, I leave all of you with this little cartoon.



Saturday, December 17, 2016

RING YE HOLY SANTA CLAUS SILVER BELLS!!!

I’ll going to start right off I say that I love Christmas.  I love nearly everything about it.  I love the whole Santa Claus thing:  elves, midnight sleigh rides, down the chimney, gifts for all the children around the world.  Toys…oh, yes…toys!  I love paper snowflakes.  Christmas programs by children.  Christmas movies on TV.  Charlie Brown, Linus and Snoopy.  Frosty the Snowman.  Christmas trees.  Green boughs and mistletoe.  Multi-colored lights on houses.  Christmas decorations in stores, on lamp posts and mailboxes.  The Christmas hymns and the more “secular” carols (a surprising number actually written by Jewish composers).  Crèches with Joseph, Mary, angels, donkeys and cattle around the baby Jesus. And even the peculiar Indianapolis tradition of turning the Civil War Soldiers and Sailors Monument into the world’s largest “Christmas tree”.

Many Christians will demure from the mixing up the birth of Christ with all Santa Claus/winter wonderland business; but I see no reason in getting superior about the matter.

In one congregation I once belongs to, a large number of parents believed it was their holy duty to raise their children to be unattached to material things and disdainful of our culture of American consumerism.  So toys were reserved only for Christmas and for Christmas only—often times only grudgingly at that.  For birthdays, presents consisted of clothes, shoes, socks, and underwear.  I don’t know what they were thinking but oddly enough, these adults were absolutely bewildered when during Christmas-Eve services their charges were practically bouncing off the walls in wild excitement.  One can only wonder if, when these children grew up, they were somewhat muddled about the “true meaning” of Christmas.  In seeking to discourage materialism, did the parents inadvertently end up promoting it?

On another occasion, I came to meet an itinerant Lutheran pastor.  His undertaking was to aid and nurse other Lutheran pastor who were troubled and emotionally exhausted after many years in the ministry.  Among his other curiosities, he did not…as he put it…”keep Christmas”.   He was not reticent in looking down his nose at other Christians who did and he answered contemptuously when other Christians asked why.  As I understood him, he believed the spiritual pursuit of holiness (“walking in the Spirit”) mandated a rejection of all human traditions—Christmas being one of those traditions.  Christmas, he believed, had been so imbued with pagan Teutonic influences it was virtually a spiritual deathtrap.  I’m sure this man had many fine qualities and he was after all a precious lifeline for many distressed pastors; but for the most part, those sitting the pews thought he was a jerk.

No.  Getting all superior over the “American Christmas” is misguided at best.  You are liable to get yourself at least labeled a Grinch.  You run the risk of actually being a Grinch.

Christmas in America (a.k.a. “The American Christmas”) is one big thick sloppy mess.  It is uneven contradictory, spiritual, and materialistic.   It celebrated by believers and unbelievers, crooks and lawmen, spendthrifts and moneygrubbers, the generous and con-men alike.  It is another instance of an annual national occasion being a mercurial concoction of the sacred and the mundane at the center of its soul.  It’s what happens when human beings live together over time and over generations.  It is that unwieldly thing called culture.   Meanings appear, diminish, and over-lap.  However much one tries to keep the bits of meat, fruit and vegetables separate on the plate, it all turns into one mash in the stomach.

“Ah!”  It is said.  “Put Christ back in Xmas!” 

OK.  We all know what they mean by this.  “Remember the reason for the season!”  Any good Christian…and many a bad one for that matter..will have more than a little sympathy for this admonition.  But, in truth, this reminder itself has become as routine and predictable as the atheists’ annual lecture that Christmas is just an echo of earlier pagan celebrations at the same time of the year and just as pointless.  A bit of barbwire in the white noise of the season.
The truth is—no matter how sincere—we can’t put Christ back in Christmas.  We can’t “put” Christ anywhere.  It is not in our ability to do so and, left to our own devices, we wouldn’t really do so if we could.  We couldn’t and wouldn’t choose such a God.  He can’t be pulled off the shelf to give our holiday meaning.

Such a God…Christ Jesus…must be heard.  The only thing that cuts through the white noise is the Proclamation.  It is His Word that goes out and does not return to Him empty.  The true Christmas Spirit…the true Christmas faith really…comes in the hearing.  Come and hear:

At that time Emperor Augustus ordered a census to be taken throughout the Roman Empire.  When this first census took place, Quirinius was the governor of Syria.  Everyone, then, went to register himself, each to his own hometown.
Joseph went from the town of Nazareth in Galilee to the town of Bethlehem in Judea, the birthplace of King David. Joseph went there because he was a descendant of David.  He went to register with Mary, who was promised in marriage to him. She was pregnant,  and while they were in Bethlehem, the time came for her to have her baby.  She gave birth to her first son, wrapped him in cloths and laid him in a manger—there was no room for them to stay in the inn.
8There were some shepherds in that part of the country who were spending the night in the fields, taking care of their flocks.  An angel of the Lord appeared to them, and the glory of the Lord shone over them. They were terribly afraid,  but the angel said to them, “Don't be afraid! I am here with good news for you, which will bring great joy to all the people.  This very day in David's town your Savior was born—Christ the Lord!  And this is what will prove it to you: you will find a baby wrapped in cloths and lying in a manger.”
 Suddenly a great army of heaven's angels appeared with the angel, singing praises to God:
 “Glory to God in the highest heaven,

    and peace on earth to those with whom he is pleased!”


 When the angels went away from them back into heaven, the shepherds said to one another, “Let's go to Bethlehem and see this thing that has happened, which the Lord has told us.”


Sunday, October 23, 2016

THE AMISH OPTION?

What to do?  What to do?  Christians of all stripes are faced with an uncomfortable decision of either voting for (depending on your point of view) a racist demagogue or a lying crook November 8.  Of course, it is not just Christians.  The entire American public shares this dilemma—a truly catch-22 if there ever was one.  But it is for Christians we will focus our present comments.

Not that either candidate lack for enthusiastic Christians who will vote will for them without reservations.  These breakdown into the usual predictable partisan actors we have all come to know and love.  It is fair to say, however, it is more out of devotion to Trump or Clinton’s respective policy positions than any actual love for either one.   The fact is lending support to either candidate often means turning a willful blind eye to Trump or Clinton’s grim culpabilities. 

At this point, the Clinton insiders are so confident of eminent victory that they are measuring the White House for drapes.  Indeed, it seems those reporting and commenting on the election believe it is all but over and are preparing to celebrate the inauguration of this nation’s first woman President.  It is also true that Trump is stealthily cutting into Clinton’s lead with some predicting an upset of the likes of the recent Brexit vote in England.

Many prominent and many not-so ditinguished Christians have made the argument that a Christian cannot vote for Trump without seriously compromising their Christian witness.  More to the point, they make the allegation that supporting Trump involves totally abandoning (if only temporarily) one’s Christian values.  These Christian anti-Trumper’s can be quite persuasive.  The problem is that, if supporting Trump damages one’s Christian witness, the very same contention can be made for supporting Clinton.  While unsavory revelations of Trump’s mistreatment of women roll out daily, nasty exposures of Clinton’s duplicity and criminal activity continue to mount everyday as well.

The usual actors dependably assert that those on the right embrace the devil in all his works and ways.  Likewise, other actors, as surely as the sun rises in the east, assert that those on the left are in an unholy marriage with the approaching Anti-Christ.  In part, Trump will bring a hostility and diabolical “inhospitality” toward illegal immigrants (or “undocumented workers”, “unauthorized persons”, etc. whatever is the current euphemism for people who cross America’s national borders in violation its immigration laws).  He will also ensconce Wall Street in the very heart of Washington.  Clinton will bring a coercive animus using the power of government toward second amendment rights.  She will also institutionalize a more serious animosity toward religious liberty.  (She may not attack religious liberties personally it is said; but she will not stand in the way of those who seek to undermine religious liberties in order to advance some secular agenda.)  Of no slight concern is the sort of judges each would nominate to the Supreme and Federal courts.

Some Christian writers have assumed a “pox on both houses” stance—declaring genuine Christians cannot support either Trump or Clinton.  “We must bring an authentic Christian witness to the political process”.  Exactly what they mean by this is somewhat vague.  More to the point, what is the “genuine Christian” to do in the voting booth November 8th?  Vote Libertarian or Green?  Neither one by their own design bring a Christian witness to the nation.  At best, both Libertarians and Greens harbor deep suspicions of any Christian political activism.  Are we to write-in some figure on the ballot who will “bring an authentic Christian witness” to our troubled nation?  And just who would that be?

These same “pox on both houses” Christian divines object the suggestion that they are advancing some version of Christian quietism—in effect, withdrawing from the main stage of political debate.  But, using a poker image, how does one engage in the game if you refuse to play by the cards that are dealt?  Again, these divines offer little practical advice of what the Christian is to do in the voting booth.

Some, like Rod Dreher, on the other hand, declare that the game is up.  The culture wars are over and orthodox Christianity has lost.  The abortion regime is thoroughly entrenched.  It won’t change because we can’t change.  We can’t “compromise”.  We can’t seek a “middle ground”.  The Supreme Court has all but totally foreclosed any political deliberation on abortion—even the most extreme abortion procedures such as partial birth terminations are protected.  Same-sex marriages are a fiat accompli by judicial injunction and its long march through both public and private institutions continue apace toward total victory.  (The ELCA not only allows sex-same marriages; but has produced its own SSM liturgy.)  Christianity in America has ceased to be a conveyance of subversive transformation of a secular and materialistic America.  It is only when the Church carries the water for secular causes that it finds any measure of acceptance.

Dreher has predicted that a dark night of hostility and persecution is about to descend on churches and organizations faithful to orthodox Christianity.  Indeed, that dark night has already arrived.  Dreher and others advocate orthodox Christians who want to maintain their faith should separate themselves to some degree from mainstream society and try to live in intentional communities or other subcultures.  He refers to this as the “Benedict option”.  I don’t think Dreher himself would say this; but it would seem the Amish would be a model that comes to mind.
Two weeks out, incriminations and the long knives are being drawn within each candidate’s respective parties.  If Clinton should lose, fault will be laid at the feet of those who insisted on putting forth who is largely unlikable as a person.  These will be relegated into the political wilderness for time—some perhaps permanently.


Of more profound repercussions will be what happens to the Republican Party if Trump should lose.  Many Republicans in Washington assume matters will settle back to business as usual once the party finally gets Trump out of its system.  However, much of the blame will be set of the feet of the party’s Never-Trumpers—especially those who made a point of voicing their support for Clinton in the national media.  

It is to be remembered that several prominent conservatives came out support of Obama in 2008.  One thinks of the likes of Colin Powell, Christopher Buckley, and Peggy Noonan.  While each continue to publish, they are no longer welcome nor taken seriously in most conservative circles.  Obama has been a disaster for conservative causes and the promised improvement in race relations failed to materialize—indeed, one could straightforwardly argue race relations are the worst they have been in years.  We have gone backward…not forward. 

 Those who support Clinton in this round are likely to seen as Benedict Arnolds for failing to support the choice of the majority of Republican voters.  Such demonstrations of bad faith will not be seen as an “I told you so” vindication in the election’s aftermath.  As a Clinton administration advances its agenda, the bitter divisions within the Republican Party will be exacerbated.  This may please many to no end.  A reduction in the opposition to the progressive agenda will be most welcome.  But, if one believes in the principles of limited government, one will have a rough go of it. 

What do I myself say to you?  The short of it is that I am in deathly fear of what Hillary Clinton will do to the Republic.  My liberal friends are shocked that, given all my grave misgivings and distaste for Donald Trump, I will not eagerly pull the level for her.   They are genuinely befuddled that I really believe we will lose some rights and constitutional protections in a Clinton administration.  Right or wrong, those are my settled conclusions.

Many have advanced that viewpoint that there is no guarantee Trump will abide by his professed conservative principles once in office.  That may be.  But, as Thomas Sowell has put it, voting for Trump may be like playing Russian roulette.  With one bullet loaded in one of the six chambers, one has a fair chance that one will not blow one’s head off when he pulls the trigger.  With Hillary, it is like putting the muzzle of a loaded double barrel shotgun in your mouth and then pulling the trigger.   We may not know what Trump will do.  But, with Hillary Clinton, we have no doubt what she will do.

Monday, September 5, 2016

ACCOUNTABILTY AS BUZZWORD. MERE BOILERPLATE OR SIGN OF THINGS TO COME?

Those of us who have worked in the corporate world are familiar with statements issued from the boardrooms and the top executive offices concerning company goals and “philosophy” of purpose.  For a time, these exercises were all the rage on the advice of highly paid consulting firms.  

Many believe that, because money is at stake, business is by necessity more rational and practical minded than the otherwise typical pursuits.  This is widely believed but it is true only to a limited degree.   The truth is, precisely money is involved, business leaders are given to fads, superstitions, and whatever is the current views among experts in the improvement of the bottom line.  Often positive results have been either as best temporary or, more typically, negligible—leaving business titans susceptible to the next enthusiasm to come down the pike.
Middle management flesh out and implement these Olympian visions the best they can because that’s what they do.  Those down the ladder are left to tolerate, listen to this stuff, participate in the prescribed group exercises and then go about their jobs the same as the day before—that is, as long as the visionaries stay out of the way.
Sometimes, however, the results are disastrous.  Speaking metaphorically, higher-ups have been known to take aim, shoot themselves precisely in the foot, and then stumble around for the next six months wondering why it hurts so much.  For the regular employees, the consequences may be the loss of their jobs, or the piling on more responsibilities without the corresponding authority to carry them out-- which compels many to seek other employment. 

The churches, unfortunately, have their own versions of these processes.     The ELCA (which is our main focus) has been swift to adopt whatever enthusiasms which emanate from the political left.   They deny this, of course.  Nevertheless, these enthusiasms are dressed up in religious window dressing.  To be fair, most do not see themselves succumbing to the vapors of the zeitgeist.  They patiently explain to whoever will listen that “X” is not due to the influence of partisan politics but is rather “a matter of the gospel”—perhaps they may even say they are dutifully responding to the movement of the Spirit.   Nevertheless, in view of the chronicles in the larger culture, many doubt the Holy Ghost has much to do with it:  more “spirit” than “Spirit”.

(The more conservative churches themselves are similarly susceptible to the influences from the political right; but that is a subject for another day.)
Which brings us to the Presiding Bishop’s recent column in the August issue of The Living Lutheran magazine (formerly “The Lutheran”).   Entitled “A Proclivity For Paradox”, Bishop Eaton notes that that the Lutheran faith is filled polarities of opposites.  She first illustrates this fact by quoting from Luther’s “Freedom of a Christian”: 

 A Christian is a perfectly free lord of all, subject to none. A Christian is a perfectly dutiful servant of all, subject of all, subject to all.

Out of such LutheranProclivity For Paradox “,  Bishop Eaton explains the recent resolutions to come out the deliberations by synod assemblies, synod councils, the Conference of Bishops, the ELCA Church Council, ELCA ethnic associations, churchwide staff, the Faith Formation Network, individuals, agencies and institutions” after prayer and “considering together” what might be our Lord’s will for the ELCA.  All in the framework of law and gospel, saint and sinner, free and bound, Eaton observes that the Lutheran Church is a “both and” church in an “either or world.”
Which brings us up to the real subject of Eaton’s article:
Spoiler alert: I’m going to lift up two of the themes now. First, in describing what it means to be an ELCA Lutheran or in answering the question “What is God calling the ELCA to become?” we overwhelmingly answered “a diverse, inclusive, multicultural church.” In the settings where I led the conversation, I gently admonished pastors to let the laypeople speak so all of the baptized could be heard. Diversity was understood to be ethnic, economic and generational. We said congregations should reflect the communities in which they are planted. Marvelous!
The second theme I will raise now is that the ELCA is constituted so there is very little enforceable accountability. ELCA members can decide to participate in the life of their congregation or not. Congregations can decide to participate in the life of the synod or greater church or not. Pastors can decide to be engaged beyond their congregations or not. Even synods and bishops are often caught between their specific contexts and participation in churchwide decisions.
 Eaton believes this lack of accountability stems from the congregational structure favored historically by American Christians, the American belief in the autonomy of the individual, and the absent trust among the ELCA members in their relatively new Church.  
(As an addendum, it should be noted that decisions from church assemblies and the various churchwide organizations, councils and associations may have undermined trust for many average Lutherans in the pews is not mentioned.)
Before concluding her article with Luther’s observation that the Christian faith is always personal but never private, Eaton writes:
Our conversations in the Called Forward Together in Christ process show that we believe God is calling us to be a diverse and inclusive church. We need to be clear about our motivation. If it is a desire, no matter how well-intentioned or noble, to diversify the church, I don’t believe God will bless our efforts. But, if it’s our earnest desire to share the intimate and liberating love of Jesus, then we will have to hold each other accountable as we take the hard but holy steps to open up a 94 percent white church.
 (I don’t know where Bishop Eaton gets the 94% number for white Lutherans.  According to the Pew Research Center, 96% of ELCA Lutherans are white while only 2% belong to one of the many minority groups.  One assumes the remaining 2% either refuse to associate themselves with a particular race out of principle or are children of bi-racial marriages.)

At first glance, we can give a full “amen” to Eaton’s assertion that, if our concern is the numbers, God will not bless our efforts to reflect the makeup of the communities the individual local parishes are in nor the makeup of the nation at large.  But on further reflection there are a few troubling thoughts:
[1] Eaton and other ELCA leadership operate from the assumption that, in a free and just society, the various ethnic and racial groups will voluntarily distribute themselves evenly across its assorted institutions and associations.   But economists, sociologists and anthropologists tell us there is little reason to assume that in such a hypothetical ideal culture we would necessarily find individuals choosing to spread themselves out equally across society’s endeavors.   As far as it goes for the Lutheran Church, its theology its appeal.  For the church-shopping folk, most Protestant churches are interchangeable with each other.  Such “attractions” such as engaging preaching, choirs, and children’s programs as decisive in choosing to join a church.  Theology comes in way down the list of essential criteria in joining a particular congregation—somewhere below driving distance.   But the Lutheran Church is not interchangeable with other Protestant churches.  It has a particular “favor” with a particular appeal.  A congregation’s choirs and children’s programs may be nice, but at some time pretty quickly one has to come to terms with its theology.  Compared to other Protestant evangelization, Luther is challenging and demanding.   It is so demanding that sola fide, sola gratia, and Solus Christus come up front and center in nearly everything it does.  More importantly, I can tell you from experience, other Protestants find Lutheran theology impossible to be true.  Other Protestants may shout “by faith alone” to the roof tops, but they are positively allergic to what it actually means.   (In technical terms, Lutherans hold to a divine mongeristic view of justification while most Christians take a synergistic viewpoint.)   Thus for historical, specific, and concrete reasons, one shouldn’t expect every ethnic or racial group to find Lutheran evangelism appealing.
[2] Statements the ELCA leadership have made reflecting their passion in expanding the composition of our membership have led many with the unfortunate impression that the Church our leaders have is not the Church they want.  This has a damaging effect on the cohesiveness within the ELCA its leaders bemoan so much.  This perceived failure of the ELCA’s leadership to accept the church they have only contributes to many in its membership of a sense of alienation from the larger churchwide ELCA.
[3.] “Accountability” is one of those buzzwords one finds in a lot of corporate statements of company values.   Much of the time, it is a mere element of business boilerplate.  But what does it mean here?  Is it also mere boilerplate or it is a sign of things to come?  How would the ELCA enforce such accountability?   Does it mean the ELCA will stick its nose into the operations of each otherwise “independent” congregation?    Who knows?  It could be nothing or it could be nothing.


[4.] As much as we may want a diverse and inclusive church, does God have His own purposes?  By no means is a multicultural/multigenerational congregation a bad thing.  Perhaps having one would even be ideal.  But is it really so easy to see the movement of God around us?   Lincoln noted that churches both in the North and South prayed to the same God, each asking for victory; but God’s providential work transcended the intersessions of both.   In spite of our conviction that a multicultural denomination is a Gospel imperative, nowhere is it promised we will be.  Undoubtedly racism and prejudice plays a large role in how the various races and ethnicities separate themselves into the churches which look most like themselves.   We are a sinful people.  Racism has no excuse and the Church should teach to resist it—beginning first with ourselves.   But even at our best, nowhere is it promised we will have a diverse and inclusive church.  We only think our commendable intentions, earnest outreach, and open hearts will lead to one.   The reality is we often sit back in frustration at the fact that some congregations with weak or even compromised theologies have more diversity without even trying.   How do we account for such things?  This side of the Lord’s return, there is no accounting.  God has his own purposes.  Perhaps, God is more concerned that we proclaim the gospel.
[5.] Has anyone actually gone out to each of the minorities and asked them what they want in a church?  If so, I haven’t read or heard about it.  A search through the web says nothing about it.  However, a 2009 Pew Research Center portrait of African-American religious beliefs show that Black Americans favor mainline Protestant Churches by only 2%.  (Catholic by 5%).  59% overwhelmingly prefer historically Black churches.  Among Blacks who attend church services once a week or more, they are far more likely to believe in the existence of God, miracles, and the existence of angels and demons.  Far more ELCA members entertain doubts or unbelief in each of these.  Moreover, observant Blacks tend to read the Bible literally.    This high degree of Biblical literalism would make ELCA leadership and academia significantly uncomfortable.   Somehow, I don’t think offering a cup of coffee, a cookie, and a warm handshake will obviate these differences.





Wednesday, July 6, 2016

THE SOUND AND FURY OF "CLINTON SKATES"

To my chagrin, it appears the many who months ago said that the fix was in and Hillary Clinton would never be indicted were correct.   

The day after Independence Day, FBI Director James Comey gave a long address concerning his agency’s findings on Clinton’s handling of classified materials in which she sent and received Secret and Top Secret information from her unclassified, unsecured e-mail account.   For several minutes, it seemed that the Director was building a case for a criminal prosecution to the Justice Department.   But at the end of his comments, Comey stated that the FBI could not find indication of “intent to harm the United States”.   Thus, Director Comey recommended against prosecution of the law violations.

While the substantial unlikelihood that the Justice Department would pursue prosecution was good news for Hillary Clinton, it was not all good.   Contrary to the assertions coming from the Hillary camp, Clinton was far from being exonerated.  In brief, Comey meticulously outlined Hillary Clinton’s wrongdoing and falsehoods:

  • ·        With lawful access to highly classified information she acted with gross negligence in removing and causing it to be removed it from its proper place of custody, and she transmitted it and caused it to be transmitted to others not authorized to have it, in patent violation of her trust.


  • ·        Former Secretary Clinton was “extremely careless” and strongly suggested that her recklessness very likely led to communications (her own and those she corresponded with) being intercepted by foreign intelligence services.
  • ·        Of the 30,000 e-mails Clinton turned over to the State Department in 2014, 110 e-mails in 52 e-mail chains contained information that was classified at the time the message was sent or received. Eight of those chains contained information that was “Top Secret,” and seven contained “Special Access” intelligence (the most sensitive classification available). These chains involved Secretary Clinton both sending e-mails about those matters and receiving e-mails from others about the same matters.   Any reasonable person in Secretary Clinton’s position, or in the position of those government employees with whom she was corresponding about these matters, should have known that an unclassified system was no place for that conversation.


  • ·        That many of the e-mails may or may not have been “marked” classified when they were received by Secretary Clinton is immaterial:   “Separately, it is important to say something about the marking of classified information. Only a very small number of the e-mails containing classified information bore markings indicating the presence of classified information. But even if information is not marked ‘classified’ in an e-mail, participants who know or should know that the subject matter is classified are still obligated to protect it.”


  • ·        Messages containing classified information were also found among thousands of e-mails not provided by Clinton’s lawyers — who, Comey reports, deleted e-mails that were not in fact “personal” and “cleaned their devices in such a way as to preclude complete forensic recovery.”


  • ·   
        
    Clinton set up not just one but “several” personal servers during her time at State.   She used several administrators for those servers and used not two (as Clinton claimed) but several personal devices in her communications.  None of these servers or devices were supported by full-time security staff.


Andrew C. McCarthy, currently a columnist for the National Review and Commentary, served as an Assistant United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York.  He is most notable for leading the 1995 terrorism prosecution against Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman and eleven others. The defendants were convicted of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and planning a series of attacks against New York City landmarks.  He also contributed to the prosecutions of terrorists who bombed US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.   He is no longer in government service; nevertheless, McCarthy makes a number of arresting remarks on Comey’s conclusions as a matter of law.

He writes:

There is no way of getting around this: According to Director James Comey (disclosure: a former colleague and longtime friend of mine), Hillary Clinton checked every box required for a felony violation of Section 793(f) of the federal penal code (Title 18): With lawful access to highly classified information she acted with gross negligence in removing and causing it to be removed it from its proper place of custody, and she transmitted it and caused it to be transmitted to others not authorized to have it, in patent violation of her trust.

McCarthy continues:

Yet, Director Comey recommended against prosecution of the law violations he clearly found on the ground that there was no intent to harm the United States.
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In essence, in order to give Mrs. Clinton a pass, the FBI rewrote the statute, inserting an intent element that Congress did not require. The added intent element, moreover, makes no sense: The point of having a statute that criminalizes gross negligence is to underscore that government officials have a special obligation to safeguard national defense secrets; when they fail to carry out that obligation due to gross negligence, they are guilty of serious wrongdoing. The lack of intent to harm our country is irrelevant. People never intend the bad things that happen due to gross negligence.
I would point out, moreover, that there are other statutes that criminalize unlawfully removing and transmitting highly classified information with intent to harm the United States. Being not guilty (and, indeed, not even accused) of Offense B does not absolve a person of guilt on Offense A, which she has committed.

It is a common tactic of defense lawyers in criminal trials to set up a straw-man for the jury: a crime the defendant has not committed. The idea is that by knocking down a crime the prosecution does not allege and cannot prove, the defense may confuse the jury into believing the defendant is not guilty of the crime charged. Judges generally do not allow such sleight-of-hand because innocence on an uncharged crime is irrelevant to the consideration of the crimes that actually have been charged.
It seems to me that this is what the FBI has done today. It has told the public that because Mrs. Clinton did not have intent to harm the United States we should not prosecute her on a felony that does not require proof of intent to harm the United States. Meanwhile, although there may have been profound harm to national security caused by her grossly negligent mishandling of classified information, we’ve decided she shouldn’t be prosecuted for grossly negligent mishandling of classified information.

I think highly of Jim Comey personally and professionally, but this makes no sense to me.

Finally, I was especially unpersuaded by Director Comey’s claim that no reasonable prosecutor would bring a case based on the evidence uncovered by the FBI. To my mind, a reasonable prosecutor would ask: Why did Congress criminalize the mishandling of classified information through gross negligence? The answer, obviously, is to prevent harm to national security. So then the reasonable prosecutor asks: Was the statute clearly violated, and if yes, is it likely that Mrs. Clinton’s conduct caused harm to national security? If those two questions are answered in the affirmative, I believe many, if not most, reasonable prosecutors would feel obliged to bring the case.

I am not an attorney so I no way of evaluating McCartney’s points.   Indeed, Clinton has plenty of advocates (legal and otherwise) defending Comey’s resolution against prosecution.    Still, one has the sick feeling that Clinton “got away” with it.   Comey’s additional comment that only contributes to that unease:

 “To be clear, this is not to suggest that in similar circumstances, a person who engaged in this activity would face no consequences. To the contrary, those individuals are often subject to security or administrative sanctions.”

Is the cynic, who says this is a case of one law for the little people and another for the powerful, right?  A substantial portion of the American public will think he is.   Several legal authorities contend that many in government have been fined, demoted, imprisoned or fired for less under the same law which befouled Clinton.

A majority of Americans already think Hillary Clinton is untrustworthy and corrupt—that she is a part of an elite who uses the system to her own personal advantage and enrichment.   In other words, they believe she is a liar and a crook.  One may think they are wrong about that; but the perception is there and Comey’s findings will only augment those views.   To many, just on its face, there is only one reason she would have set up a personal server in the basement of her home and that was to evade governmental scrutiny and the legal demands for documents by civic organizations under the Freedom of Information Act.  

Unlike many in the media, I don’t think Comey’s decision not recommend prosecution puts Clinton’s e-mail calamity behind her.     The body of Comey’s remarks provides the rich stuff of opposition political ads.  On the other hand, the Republican Party’s penchant for failing to take up on an opportunity to advance its cause may come through for Hillary Clinton once again.

But the past is prologue.   Controversy, scandals, charges of conflicts of interest, accusations of criminal activity, and apparent lying have followed both Bill and Hillary from the very beginning of their entrance into public life.   Expect no change in that in another Clinton presidency.   There are more than a few rumors that the FBI is investigating possible connections between foreign donations to the Clinton Foundation and actions Hillary undertook in her capacity as Secretary of State.


Nothing may come of that either.   But, as one attorney told me with a wick of his eye, a finding of “not guilty” only means there wasn’t enough evidence or drive to convict.   “Not guilty” doesn’t mean the same thing as “innocent”. 

Saturday, July 2, 2016

THE NEW YORK TIMES CITES THE BIBLE

It is a commonplace observation that Biblical literacy among the American populace is…well…somewhat woeful these days.  There was a time when one could count on a thorough knowledge of the Christian scriptures and allusions to the Bible in the literature of the time and public addresses made by politicians and others.  Biblical literacy was so widespread that even atheists knew there Bible.

Perhaps the most well-known example of such discourse is Lincoln’s address at his second inaugural.   Lincoln used his Second Inaugural Address to touch on the question of Divine providence. Lincoln wondered what God's will might have been in allowing the war to come, and why it had resulted in the appalling magnitudes it had taken. He attempted to speak to some of these quandaries, using allusions taken from the Bible.

Although it is the second shortest inaugural address in American history, Lincoln’s speech is probably the most striking in language and substance. Despite its succinctness, it addresses the nation’s relationship to God at pronounced seriousness.  Within 701 words Lincoln referenced God fourteen times, quotes the Bible four times and invokes prayer three times.”  Later, Supreme Court Chief Justice Chase gave the Bible to Mrs. Lincoln, marking the pages from Isaiah 5:27-28 which the President kissed.   In part:

“One eighth of the whole population were colored slaves, not distributed generally over the Union, but localized in the Southern part of it. These slaves constituted a peculiar and powerful interest. All knew that this interest was, somehow, the cause of the war. To strengthen, perpetuate, and extend this interest was the object for which the insurgents would rend the Union, even by war, while the government claimed no right to do more than to restrict the territorial enlargement of it. Neither party expected for the war, the magnitude, or the duration, which it has already attained. Neither anticipated that the cause of the conflict might cease with, or even before, the conflict itself should cease. Each looked for an easier triumph, and a result less fundamental and astounding. Both read the same Bible, and pray to the same God; and each invokes His aid against the other. It may seem strange that any men should dare to ask a just God’s assistance in wringing their bread from the seat of other men’s faces; but let us judge not that we be not judged. The prayers of both could not be answered; that of neither has been answered fully. The Almighty has His own purposes.

‘Woe unto the world because of offences! For it must needs be that offences come; but woe to that man by whom the offence cometh!’ If we shall suppose that American Slavery is one of those offences which, in the providence of God, must needs come, but which, having continued through His appointed time, He now wills to remove, and that He gives to both North and South, this terrible war, as the woe due to those by whom the offence came, shall we discern therein any departure from those divine attributes which the believers in a Living God always ascribe to Him? Fondly do we hope–fervently do we pray–that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away. Yet, if God wills that it continue, until all the wealth piled by the bond-man’s two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash, shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said “the judgments of the Lord, are true and righteous altogether.”

“With malice toward none; with charity for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation’s wounds; to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan – to do all which may achieve and cherish a just, and a lasting peace, among ourselves, and with all nations.”

Whatever you believe about Lincoln (a skeptic to the very end or an incipient believer) or his theology (some are positively allergic to any suggestion of a loving God having and dispensing His wrath), one has to note the sophistication in his reflections.    This was a very public meditation made during an auspicious national event.  What is more, the public understood his message and recognized its Biblical roots.
Fast forward to today.  

In the June 15th issue of the New York Times, reporters Jeremy W. Peters and Lizette Alvarez write an assessment of the then current split among legislators over the civil rights of the LBGT population of the United States entitled “After Orlando, a Political Divide on Gay Rights Still Stands”.     They pen in part:

For a fleeting moment this week, it seemed as if the massacre in Orlando, Fla., was having the unlikely and unintended impact of helping to bridge the chasm between Republicans and many in the gay community.

Mitt Romney offered “a special prayer for the L.G.B.T. community” after he learned of the attack. Senator Marco Rubio of Florida granted an interview to The Advocate, the gay news magazine, and expressed outrage at the Islamic State’s persecution of gays. And Donald J. Trump repeatedly expressed solidarity with gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people, declaring, “I will fight for you” — an unprecedented show of support from a presumptive Republican presidential nominee.
But the deep divide over gay rights remains one of the most contentious in American politics. And the murder of 49 people in an Orlando gay club has, in many cases, only exacerbated the anger from Democrats and supporters of gay causes, who are insisting that no amount of warm words or reassuring Twitter posts change the fact that Republicans continue to pursue policies that would limit legal protections for gays and lesbians.

In the weeks leading up to the killings, they pointed out, issues involving gays were boiling over in Congress and in Republican-controlled states around the country. More than 150 pieces of legislation were pending in state legislatures that would restrict rights or legal protections for sexual minorities. A Republican congressman read his colleagues a Bible verse from Romans that calls for the execution of gays.  (Emphasis mine) Congress was considering a bill that would allow individuals and businesses to refuse service to gay and lesbian couples.

We won’t get into the main thrust of the article.  I certainly don’t want to get into the vagaries of Republican politics.  Instead, I want to focus on the reference to St. Paul’s letter to the Romans.
The article does not provide any context relating how the congressman used Romans in his banter.  One supposes that such use of an archaic ancient text justifying the constraint of LBGT legal protections is damning in and of itself.   The problem is that, after two thousand years of reading and commentary on Romans, it is startling to be told there is a new textual discovery which discloses that Paul commands capital punishment for homosexuals.  

A fair guess is that Peters and Alvarez had Romans 1: 26-27 in mind:

For this reason God gave them up to dishonorable passions.  For their women exchanged natural relations for those contrary to nature; and the men likewise gave up natural relations with women and were consumed with passion for one another, men committing shameless acts with men and receiving in themselves the due penalty for their error. (ESV)

Even if one accepts the assumption in your reading that “dishonorable passions” refers to all gay sex, these two verses fall way short of calling for killing gays.   Far more likely “due penalty” would refer to God’s judgement.

To get to the assertion that Romans calls for the execution of gays, one would have to abridge verses 26 through 32 to something like “their women exchanged natural relations for those contrary to nature; and the men likewise gave up natural relations with women and were consumed with passion for one another….those who practice such things deserve to die”.   But such a condensation totally obliterates the point Paul makes and anyone actually familiar with Romans knows this. 

To get Paul’s argument, one has to read verses 28-32 in their entirety: 

And since they did not see fit to acknowledge God, God gave them up to a debased mind to do what ought not to be done.   They were filled with all manner of unrighteousness, evil, covetousness, malice.  They are full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, maliciousness.  They are gossips, slanderers, haters of God, insolent, haughty, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient to parents, foolish, faithless, heartless, ruthless.   Though they know God’s righteous decree that those who practice such things deserve to die, they not only do them but give approval to those who practice them. (ESV)

Without getting into too much detail, what we have here is Paul’s notorious trap.   Verses 26-27 plays to the Roman smug belief that the Greek empire fell because the populace practiced “unnatural relations”.    In other words, Greece fell because it deserved to.   The Romans did not do such things and it is only fitting that God also didn’t approve.  Thus, Greece’s collapse came about through God’s judgement.  And the Romans took pride in the “fact” God took their far more superior side.
But then Paul list other evils debased minds practiced.   These evils are common in all nations and their peoples.   Not just in a people at large; but in each and every individual.  We all fall under God’s judgement.  WE ALL DESERVE TO DIE.

Paul’s actual message is lightyears away from what Peters and Alvarez believe it to be. 

Perhaps it is not realistic to expect contemporary journalists to be conversant in the Christian Scriptures much less the historic theology of the Church.  Nevertheless, it is incumbent on all journalists to investigate and strive to get it right—even if it is only a minor detail in a much longer piece.  As it stands, Peters and Alvarez support, if only unintentionally, the prejudice that “orthodox” Christians take their backward positions from the worst, most odious parts of their religion.