I write about culture and community, faith and family, humor and sometimes heartache. If you agree with what I write, be in touch; if you disagree, just wait for me to be in touch with you. Actually, feel free to read, reflect and respond.
Sunday, June 30, 2019
Tuesday, June 04, 2019
What advocacy is
To get to advocacy, let's start with politics --
Politics is not primarily about campaigns or candidates or
even elections. Politics is about the water you drink and the air you breathe
and making sure both are clean. Politics is about children not going to bed
hungry. Politics is about all of us having access to the health care we need.
Politics is about people being at war or at peace.
Politics is about distributing economic goods and defining
what property rights are. Politics is about determining what a crime is and how
it will be punished. Politics affects the degree to which we can speak or write
or even worship. Politics defines who will be accepted as members of a
community and who will be placed in the margins. Politics even seriously
influences how you raise your children by determining the circumstances of
family life and, don't forget, establishing much of the subject matter of their
education.
So, then, the question "should religion have a role in
politics" is the wrong question. It does. Religion matters. A better
question is how should religion and politics interact or relate? Religion has
long been important to people who are concerned about politics, and politics
have been important to the people who are most concerned about religion.
Let me say it another way. Those who are serious about
politics must also take religion seriously and those who are the most deeply
religious must pay attention to politics.
Throughout history, and perhaps never more so in this
country than in the last 25 years, many different avenues have emerged for
religious people to become active in politics. For example, some have portrayed
their struggle for political power as the very essence of religious life.
At the other extreme, some religious folk have conceived
politics as a summary of all the evil against which the righteousness of God
stands. Both of these perspectives, while they differ sharply in the details,
take politics seriously. So then, how should religion and politics interact?
If religious values are to influence the public sphere, they
ought to make our political discourse more honest, more civil, and more
spiritually sensitive especially to those without the voice and power to be
fairly represented.
Recently, the increased visibility of partisan religion in
politics has often made our political discourse even more polarized and even
less sensitive to the poor and the dispossessed. You see, what is at stake here
is not just politics; it's deeper than that.
In a way, it's deeper even than faith itself. At stake here
is the very meaning of our life together.
I challenge, even reject, any political litmus test that
distorts the independent moral conscience that faith can bring to politics.
I challenge those who want to undermine the integrity of any
religious conviction that does not conform to some narrow ideological agenda. I
am deeply concerned about the distortion of prophetic religious faith when
wealth and power are extolled rather than held accountable and when more
comfort is brought to those on top of society than to those at the bottom.
At the West Virginia Interfaith Center for Public Policy, we
are seeking to bring all of this and more to the table. It is the table where
some families, at least, still gather together for a meal. It is the table that
cements social and spiritual connections. It is the table of gathered loved
ones that sometimes marks a reunion or a holiday celebration. It is the table
where we have conversations sometimes light and lively and sometimes difficult,
even uncomfortable.
When we come to this table, we see each other's faces, and
we remind ourselves of the ties that bind us together regardless of our race,
our religion, and our economic or social status. At this table, we rededicate
ourselves to who and what we are meant to be. At this table, we have an
opportunity to be thankful. At this table, new political visions can be born.
At this table, we can see the possibilities for poor as well as rich that can
bring us together.
Anyone can come to this table and if there are not enough
chairs we will get some more. If there is not enough room, we will make the
table larger. Even the shape of this table will change as we discover who we
are and who we are becoming.
All of us, you and I, can find a place at this table. At
this table, we will have some honest discussions and maybe even debates. At
this table, we will share our resources - resources of time, energy, finances
and connections.
Who knows, at this table, we may even laugh together or shed
a tear. We will write letters, we will organize visits, and we'll study issues
and do credible research. We will educate others and try, oh we'll try, to
mobilize. We will advocate with and on behalf of those underrepresented. Some
of us may support forums, town meetings. Some of us may march or do a
demonstration.
You see, at this table we will remind each other and apply
the lessons of David and Isaiah, of Jeremiah and Nehemiah, of the councils and
teachers, of Jesus and his followers. The lessons of Gandhi and George Fox, of
Rosa Parks and Saul Alinsky, of Martin Luther King Jr. and Oscar Romero, of
Hussein Nasar and Martin Buber.
These are lessons that will teach us that new politics
depend on all of us and on each of us. Each of us is like an individual trickle
of water, which, when they come together, turn into streams and then merge and
become rivers. And with enough energy and force these rivers can become mighty
rivers, so mighty that they could have the power to shape or reshape the very
landscape around them.
Today, our public landscape could use some new shaping. So
let's create a new table. All of us, a whole bunch of little trickles, let's
form together into streams that become a mighty river.
Let us join our voices with the prophet Amos and say let
justice roll down like waters and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream.
Nathan Day Wilson
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