T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
66.1 | Revolutionary force | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | A Higher Calling | Tue Oct 23 1990 16:42 | 7 |
| "In some circumstances, religion is a profoundly revolutionary force,
holding out a vision of how things might or ought to be. Historically,
religion has been one of the most important motivations for change
because of it's particular effectiveness in uniting people's beliefs
with their actions, their ideas with their social lives."
- Meredith B. Maguire
|
66.2 | Jesus is at the top of the list | CARTUN::BERGGREN | Haven't enuf pagans been burned? | Wed Oct 24 1990 10:32 | 90 |
|
Richard,
The following are some of my favorite quotes on the subject
of radical social activism. There are many many Christians who
have courageously followed this path and spoken/acted upon
various corruptions and injustices they experienced in their political
and religious cultures. If I have an opportunity, I'll list a few
of these "radical social activists" in another reply... heading
the list would be Jesus Christ.
Any religion which professes to be concerned about the souls
of men and is not concerned about the social and economic
conditions that can scar the soul, is a spiritually moribund
religion only waiting for the day to be buried.
-- Martin Luther King, Jr.
Prophetic inspiration, is for the sake, for the benefit, of
a third party. It is not a private affair between prophet
and God; its purpose is the illumination of the people rather
than the illumination of the prophet. The prophet in us says,
"NO! This is not the way the Creator wanted the universe to
respond to the blessing that creation is. We can -- we must
-- do things differently."
-- Rabbi Abraham Heschel
Only when redemption in Christ is understood as historical,
as an affirmation of God's original intention for creation,
rather than a rejection of creation, will it become possible
to see the great New Testament theme of equality in Christ
as a mandate, not merely of flight from the world, but of
transformation of the world in the direction of justice.
-- Rosemary Ruether
First, it is imperative in the name of the gospel to make
the underdeveloped masses aware of their human dignity, of
their rights to a better lige, one which is worth of the
human person. The second point is to stir the consciousness
of the rich at home and abroad.
-- Dom Helda Camera
What does the Lord require of you but to do justice and to
love kindness and to walk humbly with your God?
-- Mic. 6:8
If you love the justice of Jesus Christ ore than you fear
human judgement, then you will seek to do compassion.
-- Mechtild of Magdeburg
To watch over a man who grieves is a more urgent duty than
to think of God.
-- Elie Wiesel
A radical conversion of the non-poor is needed today.
-- Maria Augustine Neal
Jesus repeatedly addresses himself to the individual in terms
of re-creation. When he approaches the poor, the oppressed,
and the sinner, he does not simply console them in their plight;
he proposes to re-create their present situaiton and thus do
"justice" to them. This is the quintessence of Jesus' under-
standing of the kingdom.
-- Jon Sobrino
Joy was in fact the most characteristic result of all Jesus'
activity amongst the poor and the oppressed.
-- Albert Nolan
As a rule it was the pleasure-haters who became unjust.
-- W. H. Auden
Compassion means justice.
-- Meister Eckhart
The prophet in each of us is our social conscience.
-- Matthew Fox
|
66.3 | Just a question. Really! | XLIB::JACKSON | Collis Jackson | Wed Oct 24 1990 11:07 | 4 |
| Would Operation Rescue be considered "radical social activism"? (Not
to discuss abortion, just whether or not it fits into this category.)
Collis
|
66.4 | | CARTUN::BERGGREN | Haven't enuf pagans been burned? | Wed Oct 24 1990 11:16 | 7 |
| Collis,
> Would Operation Rescue be considered "radical social activism?"
Of course. :-)
Karen
|
66.5 | I appreciate the input | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | A Higher Calling | Wed Oct 24 1990 13:11 | 8 |
| Thanks, Karen, for entering those provocative thoughts.
I'm not so sure I'd categorize Operation Rescue as radical.
I tend to see Operation Rescue as reactionary. However, I will
remain open to the possibility.
Peace,
Richard
|
66.6 | always a matter of opinion | CARTUN::BERGGREN | Haven't enuf pagans been burned? | Wed Oct 24 1990 14:25 | 19 |
| Richard,
re Operation Rescue - radical or reactionary?
That's why I added the smiley face at the end of .4.
I'm fairly sure that those inside the Operation Rescue movement
see it as being radical as opposed to reactionary, while others
may tend to see it differently.
But that's the nature of "radical social activism". It defies
consensus. :-)
> However, I will remain open to the possibility.
I think this is always a good idea Richard. The Holy Spirit has a
heck of a time working through closed minds. ;-)
Love ya bro,
Karen
|
66.7 | Radical | ANKH::SMITH | Passionate committment/reasoned faith | Wed Oct 24 1990 15:20 | 8 |
| Richard,
If you believed what OR folks believe, how much more radical could your
response be? :-| <-- indicates serious face, serious question
Nancy
|
66.8 | Not unsympathetic | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | A Higher Calling | Wed Oct 24 1990 16:06 | 15 |
| As stated elsewhere, I'm not entirely unsympathetic to OR.
Most folks tend to think of _any_ extreme as radical. However,
as indicated in my basenote, I am using radical to mean "favoring
sweeping (pervasive, diffuse) social change." Also, I mean
radical to mean to cut through to the "root" of the issue. OR
seems to be reacting to a symptom rather than dealing with the
cause.
There also the right-wing or conservative factor to consider. The
John Birch Society, for example, may think of itself as radical, but
it is genuinely reactionary.
Peace,
Richard
|
66.9 | define, please | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Wed Oct 24 1990 16:37 | 14 |
| re Note 66.8 by CSC32::J_CHRISTIE:
> John Birch Society, for example, may think of itself as radical, but
> it is genuinely reactionary.
Define "reactionary", please.
(I came to the conclusion a while ago that everybody was
"conservative" about something -- you are conservative about
that which you consider essential. Thus a wild-eyed liberal
is conservative at least with respect to their liberal
principles.)
Bob
|
66.10 | | COOKIE::JANORDBY | The government got in again | Wed Oct 24 1990 16:37 | 21 |
|
>I am using radical to mean "favoring sweeping (pervasive, diffuse) social
>change." Also, I mean radical to mean to cut through to the "root" of the
>issue.
Richard, I don't know this, but take for assumption that the social
changes being sought are:
To perceive an unborn human a baby.
To eliminate sex outside of (yes, heterosexual) marriage
I don't know this, but I suspect that OR sees these as the roots, a
mindset that will dehumanize one class of people for the sake of
satisfying one's sexual desires. I also suspect that they see these as
completely opposite of God's view on the subject. I suspect that they
see themselves as part of a radical movement, regardless of academic
classification by some other yardstick.
Jamey
|
66.11 | Re .9 | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | A Higher Calling | Wed Oct 24 1990 16:50 | 7 |
| Bob,
Reactionary (Webster's): Marked by reaction, esp., opposing progress
or liberalism.
Peace,
Richard
|
66.12 | Pointer to Notes 29, 30 & 31 | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | A Higher Calling | Wed Oct 24 1990 17:07 | 11 |
| Jamey,
While I'm not entirely unsympathetic to the purpose of Operation
Rescue, I cannot find it within myself to dehumanize pregnant women
by legally forcing them to become, simply put, biological maturation
support units.
As you know, this topic is pursued in 3 other notes.
Peace,
Richard
|
66.13 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | We won't play your silly game | Wed Oct 24 1990 21:23 | 3 |
| thanks Richard
Bonnie
|
66.14 | something to consider | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | A Higher Calling | Mon Oct 29 1990 16:26 | 6 |
| It is really true, that all exercise of morality or religion
in the western world is performed on a cushion of wealth;
if not one's personal wealth, then the wealth of one's surrounding
community and culture; and this wealth has been accumulated at the
world's expense.
|
66.15 | something to consider | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | A Higher Calling | Mon Oct 29 1990 16:27 | 4 |
| The morality of rules and laws based upon rewards and punishments
leads to the ruling of "slaves" by the benevolent exploitation of
their illusions.
|
66.16 | something to consider | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | A Higher Calling | Mon Oct 29 1990 16:27 | 4 |
| When you give bread in order to be charitable, live with with a man
or a woman in order to be faithful, eat with a minority in order to be
unprejudiced; you may still never "see" or "know" the other person.
|
66.17 | Something to consider | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | A Higher Calling | Mon Oct 29 1990 16:29 | 6 |
| Women represent over 1/2 of the global population,
1/3 of the global labor force,
control less than 1% of the world's property,
are responsible for 2/3 of all working hours
and earn less than 20% of the total wages.
|
66.18 | Fear? Or how to handle problems? | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Gandhi with the Wind | Fri Nov 02 1990 22:07 | 8 |
| "Every school day, one hundred thirty five thousand U.S. children
bring guns to school."
- Children's Defense Fund
What are the spiritual implications of this?
Richard
|
66.19 | Found this really interesting quote in my research | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Gandhi with the Wind | Tue Nov 06 1990 17:15 | 9 |
| "If a religion informs believers that their misfortune is part of God's
plan to test their faith, they are not likely to challenge that misfortune.
Believers are unlikely to try changing a situation that the belief system
has defined as one that humans are powerless to change. Belief systems
that embody this kind of fatalism are not conducive to social activism."
Page 205
Meredith B. Maguire, "Religion: The Social Context," 1987, Wadsworth Publishing
Company.
|
66.20 | Also... | EDIT::SMITH | Passionate committment/reasoned faith | Wed Nov 07 1990 09:28 | 11 |
| >"If a religion informs believers that their misfortune is part of God's
>plan to test their faith, they are not likely to challenge that misfortune.
>Believers are unlikely to try changing a situation that the belief system
>has defined as one that humans are powerless to change. Belief systems
>that embody this kind of fatalism are not conducive to social activism."
I think the same thing can be said of a religion that emphasizes the
spiritual over the physical, or that emphasizes life after death to the
exclusion of the importance of life now.
Nancy
|
66.21 | Part 1 of 5 | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Not by Might | Tue Dec 04 1990 12:12 | 59 |
| THE PIKES PEAK REGION
=====================
Colorado Springs is a place of unparalleled, rugged beauty.
So magnificent and awe-inspiring is its surrounding natural beauty
that someone once remarked that it looked more like a backdrop for
a motion picture than a place where people could actually live. Its
legendary panorama of mountains is dominated only by the majesty
of Pikes Peak, which is said to have inspired the popular patriotic
anthem, "America the Beautiful."
Somewhat paradoxically, Colorado Springs and vicinity lies
dependently at the bosom of America's militaristic bastions. The
city is embraced on all sides by military installations and
institutions: to the Northwest, the United States Air Force Academy;
to the East, Peterson Air Force Base; to the Southeast, the Strategic
Defense Initiative's National Test Bed located at Falcon Air Force
Base (an air base conspicuously absent any form of landing strip);
to the South, Fort Carson Army Base; to the Southwest, insulated
within the depths of Cheyenne Mountain, NORAD.
Military-related government contracts, long pursued as both
dependable and lucrative, have lured large corporate interests to the
vicinity, especially high tech companies such as Digital Equipment
Corporation, Hewlitt-Packard, Ford Aerospace, and Kaman Sciences.
With churches listed in the local telephone directory numbering
in excess of 250, the region is saturated with churches and parachurch
organizations. Colorado Springs hosts the worldwide headquarters of
Compassion International, Young Life, and the International Bible
Society. The city has been selected to become the future home of
Dr. James Dobson's 'Focus on the Family,' and in 1989, Colorado
Springs was under consideration for the headquarters of Campus Crusade
for Christ. Numerous other less formal and presumably less
institutionalized religious collectivities and enterprises, often
meeting in homes and promoted mostly through word of mouth, are not
uncommon.
Though segmented, religion is a regular part of the local
popular media. Some churches occasionally purchase broadcast
advertising, particularly through the smaller, syndicated television
station (KRXM). Newspaper advertising by congregations is a regular
part of the Saturday Religion section of the Gazette Telegraph. For
years, one of the local car dealers, Will Perkins, has devoted his
TV commercials during the Advent season to messages of salvation,
offering a telephone number for viewers to call and claim their
"gift of redemption".
It would not be unfair to say that Colorado Springs is a city of
predominantly conservative politics, traditional family values, and
strong nationalistic pride. Radical social activism is very much at
negative tension with local culture. As one observer has noted:
"Given that Colorado Springs is such a conservative, military
town, what interested me when I moved here was that progressive
social activism was much more visible than in other conservative
communities where I have lived; more importantly, much of that
activism has been faith-based." (Valenza)
|
66.22 | Part 2 of 5 | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Not by Might | Tue Dec 04 1990 12:13 | 130 |
| PROFILING THE RADICAL COMMUNITY
===============================
Organizationally, the peace movement of Colorado Springs is
highly unstructured. There exists no titles and no hierarchy. Yet,
unquestionably, there is leadership. Leadership appears to be
deferential, based upon an unspoken concurrence regarding an
individual's breadth of involvement, experience, integrity, and not
surprisingly, personal charisma. Unlike some highly structured
organizations, little or no intra-movement struggle or maneuvering
occurs over seizure of power or prestige.
The Colorado Springs peace community is largely, but far from
exclusively, Roman Catholic. A few claim no faith expression at all.
The community is predominantly caucasian. Since no membership
statistics are kept, it is difficult to gauge the ratio of male to
female activists. Based on my own observation, I would speculate that
men and women are close to equal in number. Ages of most activists
range from teens to retirement. However, it is not uncommon to see
children carrying banners at demonstrations, rallies, and other
events.
In 1986, the core of the peace community was estimated to
consist of about 30 individuals, with about 100 persons making up
a "wider ripple" (McCaffrey). These figures probably haven't shifted
significantly since then. From these few, countless other lives are
touched and influenced (McCaffrey). The configuration is occassionally
affected by variables such as relocation and personal circumstances.
In the course of researching this paper, I interviewed five
local residents who are widely recognized for their involvement in
radical activism in the region. I shall introduce them in chronological
order as interviewed:
Geoff Parker is currently the Director of the Pikes Peak Justice and
Peace Commission. In addition, Parker volunteers regularly at the
soup kitchen and at Bijou House, a hospitality house which provides
support and direction, in addition to shelter, to persons experiencing
economic instability.
Joan Brown, a Franciscan sister, is Editor of "Active for Justice,"
a journal published eleven times yearly by the Pikes Peak Justice and
Peace Commission. Joan is also a regular volunteer at the soup
kitchen. Brown and Susan Mataresse, a Benedictine sister, operate
Peace House. Parallel in mission to Bijou House, Peace House offers
hospitality specifically open to women. Brown is a prolific
journalist, contributing many of the recent articles published in
the Colorado Springs Catholic Herald, a monthly publication of the
local diocese.
Claiming a Mennonite faith and heritage, Mary Sprunger-Froese is the
Director of the Arts for Peace project of the Pikes Peak Justice and
Peace Commission. Mary, who has exhibited a flair for the performing
arts, has been involved in numerous local theatrical productions. She
presently is tasked with exploring artistic endeavors to convey socially
conscious messages in the hope of reaching a wider audience.
Steve Handen and Mary Lynn Sheetz are married to each other. Handen,
at one time a Roman Catholic priest, is considered one of local
activism's most articulate and visionary spokespersons. So highly
respected is Handen that in the course of my research, when I
approached Colonel Ken Wenker of the Air Force Academy for his
comments, he recommended that I pursue this particular topic with
Handen. Wenker, who has publicly debated opposite Handen, maintains
that there's not the level of antagonism between those of opposing
viewpoints in Colorado Springs as he has witnessed elsewhere. Wenker
describes his relationship with Handen as cordial, and one of mutual
respect. He defends Handen and others as possessing, "the right and
the obligation to act out their faith," though he personally may be
in vehement disagreement with much of it.
Sheetz, a lively and expressive woman in her own right, is integral
to the operation of the soup kitchen and of the Bijou House.
Sheetz has demonstrated a strong talent for the graphic arts.
Sheetz and Handen make their home in a smaller dwelling located behind
the Bijou House.
Of these five persons I interviewed, I observed a number of
commonalties:
o All have aligned their lives and lifestyles with the poor and
dispossessed. All have chosen to live in voluntary poverty.
Their choices of clothing, adornments (jewelry, timepieces),
hairstyles, and cosmetics could be described in terms such as
practical, essential, and austere. Sprunger-Froese, for
example, customarily wears no more jewelry than her handmade
wedding band composed of three intertwined metal strands;
symbolizing herself, her spouse, and God. Sr. Joan Brown
wears a stylized crucifix and a medallion of her order on
a simple chain necklace.
o All site a spiritual premise or foundation for their actions,
choices, and involvement in radical activism. During our
conversations, all spoke comfortably using Biblical allusions
and religious terminology. For example, Geoff Parker said,
"There comes a time to have confidence in the God who raised
up the Radical," clearly refering to the Christian belief in
the resurrection of Jesus.
o Though not all presently hold membership ties with any of the
local institutional churches, all were raised in an overtly
religious home environment.
o In my own judgment, it is likely that each one would be defined
at the pinnacle end of two widely recognized spectrums of
measuring spiritual development and style.
o All have been arrested multiple times for engaging either in
acts of civil disobedience or non-violent protest.
o All are well educated. All have had at least some college
education.
o All tended to be positive about the possibility of affecting
social change. Not one, however, was so optimistic as to
believe that change would come without struggle or setbacks.
o None experienced a singular "breakthrough" moment in reaching
their present understandings. Rather, each expressed
experiencing an incremental conversion; a gradual new
awakening or consciousness. Brown indicated that, for her,
conversion was an ongoing process. Handen quipped, "To put
it into computer terms, I think the software was already
in place. The application was the only thing that really
changed."
o None are inclined to conform for the sake of conformance. None
considered any matter immune from questioning and scrutiny,
particularly when power systems and authority were involved.
|
66.23 | Part 3 of 5 | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Not by Might | Tue Dec 04 1990 12:21 | 53 |
| THE JUSTICE AND PEACE COMMISSION
================================
The Pikes Peak Justice and Peace Commission provides a more
formal vehicle for cohesive radical efforts. Proclaiming in its
mission statement to be grounded in the principles of Jesus Christ,
the Commission exists "to facilitate growth toward justice and peace
in ourselves and in our sisters and brothers of the Pikes Peak
community by providing alternate sources of information, facilitating
formative experiences, and encouraging prophetic witness."
About 2 years ago the Bishop of the Colorado Springs Roman
Catholic Diocese offered to take the Commission under the wing of the
Church to serve as its social action arm. The Executive Board, which
was then composed of 2 Catholics, 4 United Methodists, 2 Unitarian
Universalists, and 1 Latter Day Saint, declined the offer, indicating
a desire to remain ecumenical.
The Commission is responsible for the publication of "Active for
Justice," which boasts a postal subscribership in excess of 600, and
is mailed as far East as Malta, as far West as Hawaii, as far North as
Saskatchewan, and as far South as Nicaragua. The masthead of each issue
declares this paper to be "A voice for social justice and nonviolence."
Hundreds of copies are regularly distributed free of charge through area
churches, libraries, college campuses, and merchants.
The oldest and largest organization of its kind in the area,
the Commission serves as a hub for the exchange of information among
several organizations in affinity, including Citizens for Peace in
Space, Beyond War, Amnesty International, Habitat for Humanity, Pledge
of Resistance, Veterans' Peace Action Team, a Native American support
group and a Central American support group.
The Commission offers numerous educational programs. One such
program called "The Urban Experience" exposes church, school, and
community service groups to the 'invisible' poverty within Colorado
Springs.
Steve Handen remarks, "It is a fairly easy thing to feed the
hungry. One of the richest churches in the city regularly volunteers
a work day at the soup kitchen.
"After fulfilling their Christian obligation," says Handen,
"these well-meaning churchpeople quickly return, seemingly unaffected,
to lives of comfort and affluence. It's a far more unpopular and
necessary thing to ask, 'Why are there hungry people in the first
place?' This question requires people to examine their own lives
and their own daily choices."
According to its Executive Board, part of the mission of the
Pikes Peak Justice and Peace Commission is to pose these kinds of
probing and disturbing questions.
|
66.24 | Part 4 of 5 | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Not by Might | Tue Dec 04 1990 12:28 | 48 |
| SOME SOCIOLOGICAL CONSIDERATIONS
================================
Were it to be considered a religious collectivity, the
orientation of local peace community most likely would be classified
as sectarian, given its negative tension with society, and the virtuoso
level of commitment characteristic of its core members (Magwire:124).
Moreover, it would qualify as a 'fraternita' (ie, little brotherhood),
in that the movement seeks communality and tends to be integrated more
by "spirit" than by formal organization (127).
A sense of community sustains and nurtures local activists in
an environment that is less than hospitable to radical activism. This
sense of community, as with a religious sect, creates cohesion and
support among those who possess analogous world views which are at
profound variance from those of the dominant culture (140). For some,
this sense of community transcends time and location. For Joan Brown,
it means a feeling of solidarity and spiritual kinship with such
religiously rooted radicals as Jesus of Nazareth, Francis of Assisi,
Martin Luther King, Jr., Dorothy Day, Daniel Berrigan, Jim Douglass,
and the people of Central America and elsewhere.
It is the consensus among the people of the peace community
that, for the most part, the institutional church has compromised
itself by failing to address issues of public morality (economic,
political, martial, and environmental). "The church has a very narrow
range of parameters," charges Geoff Parker, asserting his perception
of the church's reluctance to step outside the realm of personal piety
and private morality. "The church in Colorado Springs is more closely
aligned with civil religion than with the gospel," says Steve Handen.
And, it was this dichotomy that led Handen to eventually leave the
priesthood. "The church is guilty of tacit complicity with the forces
of oppression and war-waging," remarks Mary Lynn Sheetz, lamenting
the prevalent degree of religious privatization.
"Believers are unlikely to try changing a situation that the
belief system has defined as one that humans are powerless
to change. Belief systems that embody this kind of fatalism
are not conducive to social activism." (Magwire:205)
Commenting on the preceding, one observer comments, "I think the
same thing can be said of a religion that emphasizes the spiritual over
the physical, or that emphasizes life after death to the exclusion of
the importance of life now." (Smith) Says Sprunger-Froese, refusing
to relinquish power and passively accept the status quo, "I for one
accept a different Lordship than the state. I cannot remain silent
in the face of pervasive addictions to wealth, and the military
measures deemed necessary to protect that wealth."
|
66.25 | Part 5 of 5 | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Not by Might | Tue Dec 04 1990 12:31 | 22 |
| SUMMARY
=======
Social activism is absolutely integral to the faith expression
of all those I interviewed. Mary Sprunger-Froese and Joan Brown both
cited the Gospels specifically as their central source of motivation
Others have made similar connections between ancient religious beliefs
and modern social responsibilities.
Though difficult to quantify, religion is inextricably
intertwined into the very fabric of radical social activism in
Colorado Springs.
Frequently criticized as recklessly naive or lacking a
balanced perspective, often accused of twisting Scripture to fit
their own world view, and commonly maligned as the misguided dupes
of un-American ideologies, this highly visible minority stands in
defiance of formidable cultural currents and political pressures.
Uncompromising and unglorified, the radical activists of Colorado
Springs possess an unquenchable striving to create a world somehow
more compassionate and less prone to violence than it is at present.
They also have the audacity to believe it is possible.
|
66.26 | Credits | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Not by Might | Tue Dec 04 1990 12:35 | 30 |
| Resources
---------
Sr. Joan Brown, OPC, Colorado Springs, interviewed 10/14/90.
Meredith B. Maguire, "Religion: The Social Context," Wadsworth
Publishing Company, 1987.
Raymond McCaffrey, Colorado Springs Gazette Telegraph, Section B,
11/05/86.
Geoff Parker, Colorado Springs, interviewed 10/9/90.
Pikes Peak Justice and Peace Commission Executive Board meeting,
Colorado Springs, 10/25/90.
Steve Handen, Colorado Springs, interviewed 10/21/90.
Mary Lynn Sheetz, Colorado Springs, interviewed 10/21/90.
Mary Sprunger-Froese, Colorado Springs, interviewed 10/21/90.
Mike Valenza, Digital Equipment Corporation, Christian Perspective
Computer Conference, 10/29/90.
Nancy Smith, Digital Equipment Corporation, Christian Perspective
Computer Conference, 11/7/90.
Col. Ken Wenker, Philosophy Department, US Air Force Academy, 11/5/90.
|
66.27 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | The Lion with the Lamb | Fri Oct 04 1991 21:01 | 8 |
| I accept my own personal responsibility to replace darkness with light;
hatred with love; suspicion with trust; lies and hypocrisy with honesty;
abuse with fairness; frustration with patience; fear with understanding;
bias, prejudice, and discrimination with tolerance; ignorance with knowledge;
indifference with concern; and apathy with action. May the Most Holy One
guide me in every step I take. So be it.
Richard
|