Interfaith Insight - 2021
Permanent link for "Spiritual responses to polarization" by Doug Kindschi on January 19, 2021
How can we respond to polarization in our communities and in our
nation? Last week’s New York Times column by David Brooks identified
the polarization not only in religious communities generally, but
specifically in the white evangelical churches. It is so sad to see
political polarization and strife infect our society right down to
families and religious congregations. When a church community that
preaches love and forgiveness descends to cursing, nastiness, and even
death threats, we must all be concerned.
Are there spiritual practices that can help us in these times?
Five years ago, the book “Finding Peace through Spiritual Practice”
offers, as its subtitle suggests, a “Guide to Personal, Social, and
Environmental Healing.” The three authors, a Jewish rabbi, a
Christian pastor, and a Muslim imam, have since the 9/11 tragedy been
working together to provide perspective and hope that seeks “an inner
place of reconciliation of opposites and awakening to the reality of peace.”
They begin by identifying the inner spiritual life as not the
opposite of social action and compassion in the larger world. It is,
in fact, a critical first step. “Spirituality demands action,” they
write. “We all want greater peace, and that requires both inner and
outer action.”
While peace strives for the absence of violence, it is sometimes
also defined as the absence of conflict and fear. They suggest, to
the contrary, that conflict when properly managed often leads to
positive change and growth. Absence of fear would endanger our safety.
It would be harmful to ignore the fear of the hot stove or the fear of
a highly contagious virus. They define true peace as “a way of living
in which our conflicts lead us to more meaningful relationships, fear
awakens us to live with greater safety, and pain reminds us of where
we need support. Peace is an environment in which we help each other
become the very best we can be.”
They identify polarization as our basic challenge, not just
externally in the public arena, but also in our personal lives. Our
human makeup, they write, “permits, promotes, and even perpetuates the
pain we bring on ourselves and each other,” while at the same time “is
also responsible for the compassion, love, and peace in our lives.”
The Russian dissident and author, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, points
out the conflict. “If only it were all so simple! If only there were
evil people somewhere insidiously committing evil deeds, and it were
necessary only to separate them from the rest of us and destroy them.
But the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every
human being. And who is willing to destroy a piece of his own heart?”
The book’s Jewish co-author, Rabbi Ted Falcon, notes that the
creation story from Genesis begins with contrasts of light and
darkness, day and night, man and woman, as well as days of work and
days of sabbath rest. Creation begins with the interaction of
opposites. He says that this is true not only in the world but also in
ourselves. According to rabbinic teaching, our human makeup includes
“the yetzer tov, the inclination toward good, and
the yetzer ha-ra, the inclination toward evil.” Rabbi
Falcon notes that the yetzer ha-ra comes from the drive for
self-satisfaction and is actually a necessary force for
self-preservation. Without it, humans would not build shelters,
accumulate goods, engage in commerce, or procreate. The evil
inclination tends to turn these efforts to selfish indulgence,
destructive of others and the physical and social environment.
Christian co-author and Pastor Don Mackenzie, recognizes the
temptation to evil, even as Jesus was tempted in the wilderness to
respond to the needs of the ego. Jesus resisted the mere satisfaction
of physical needs as well as the temptation of pride and worldly
power. In referring to the Sermon on the Mount, he writes that Jesus
goes further by teaching, “love your enemies and pray for those who
persecute you.” (Matthew 5:44) Pastor Mackenzie urges that we not only
see others as they might appear to us, but see them in terms of their
potential. In discussing the parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke
10:25-37), we see ways that even the one who appears as a potential
enemy can be seen showing mercy, and thus the true caring neighbor.
Imam Jamal Rahman shares Islamic views on the self and our “human
tendency to insist that our opinions and judgments prevail. …We can be
adamantly attached to our entrenched positions for the sake of
individual or tribal interests and unwilling to make compromises for
the common good.” He writes that the ego is morally neutral and that
at creation we were “infused with the spirit of God,” but our lower
self tends to lead us astray. Furthermore, he writes, “Much of the
polarization and conflict that we experience in the world is a
reflection of that inner conflict. If we could heal and reconcile the
wars that rage inside of us, there would be no seeds for war in the
world around us.”
To warn of the danger of having an exaggerated opinion of
oneself, he relates the story of the religious leader who in his
evening stroll peers down into a well and sees the image of the moon.
Worried that the moon has fallen from the sky he gets a rope and hook
to retrieve it. When the hook gets stuck he tries to force it, but
when it gives way he falls to the ground. Looking up he sees the moon
in the sky and in self-satisfaction exclaims, “Thank God I came along.”
From each of these faith communities we observe the dangers of
taking oneself too seriously and only seeing an extremely limited view
of one’s own opinions. Polarization can be the result. But by being
open to others and their understanding, we can seek a peace that
welcomes all as neighbors and will lead to the flourishing of every
human being. In our communities and at this critical time in our
nation, let this be our quest.
Posted on Permanent link for "Spiritual responses to polarization" by Doug Kindschi on January 19, 2021.