Showing posts with label america. Show all posts
Showing posts with label america. Show all posts

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Land Of My Sojourn

And the coal trucks come runnin'
With their bellies full of coal
And their big wheels a-hummin'
Down this road that lies open
Like the soul of the woman
Who hid the spies who were lookin' for
The land of the milk and the honey

And this road she is a woman
She was made from a rib
Cut from the sides of these mountains
Oh! these great sleeping Adams
Who are lonely even here in paradise
Lonely for somebody to kiss 'em
And I'll sing my song
Yes, I'll sing my song
In the land of my sojourn

Now the lady in the harbor
She still holds her torch out to these
Huddled masses who are
Yearning for the freedom
That still eludes them
The immigrants children see their
Brightest dreams shattered

Here on the New Jersey shoreline
In the greed and the glitter of those
High-Tech casinos but some
Mendicants wander off
Into a cathedral
And they stoop in the silence and there
Their prayers are still whispered
And I'll sing their song
Yes, I'll sing their song
In the land of my sojourn

Nobody tells you
When you get born here
How much you'll come to love it
And how you'll never belong here
So I'll call you my country
And I'll be lonely for my home
I wish that I could take you there with me

And down the brown brick spine
Of some dirty blind alley
All these drainpipes are drippin' out
The last sons of thunder
While off in the distance
The smokestacks are belching back
This city's best answer

And the countryside was pocked
With all of those mailpouch posters
Thrown up on the rotting sideboards
Of these rundown stables
Like the one that Christ was born in
When the old world started dyin'
And the new world started comin' on
And I'll sing His song
Yes, I'll sing His song
In the land of my sojourn

-Rich Mullins



Saturday, January 15, 2011

Land of the Sioux - Home of the Brave

This week I listened to several Christians lamenting the fact that Carlos Gonzales - an associate professor at the University of Arizona College of Medicine with no Wikipedia profile - was invited to give a traditional Native American blessing as an introduction to President Obama's speech memorializing the Tucson shootings.

Time out.

What does "Native American" mean? It means a native of America. It means someone who was here long before the Puritans. That blessing was being spoken over this soil when Valley Forge was just a dim glint in the future. This is not an argument about the rightness or wrongness of anybody's prayer - this is simply to point out a claim that Carlos Gonzales and his people have on this land that most of us seem to have forgotten: precedent.

You probably think Jesus was appalled that a pagan was allowed to speak a blessing at a public event. I think he weeps for joy when things like this happen. That man represents a minority that this country has cheated, oppressed, abused, and trampled on, and we still begrudge him a measly little invocation and a feather. Fill ye up the sins of your fathers.

"I can see a people dispossessed
Broken and brave in the face of so much fear
Driven from their homes by the greed of a nation
Whose treaties were as good as litter along the trail of their tears"
-Rich Mullins, The Howling

Jesus is with the outcast. Jesus is with the dispossessed. And if we want to be where Jesus is, we should be there too. (That's a paraphrase from - no, not Family Force 5 - Bono.)

You can't talk out of both sides of your mouth about the separation of Church and State. Either they are joined, which means no religious freedom, or they are separate, which means your pet church is separate too. There is no special pass. (Really, the sacred/secular divide is somewhat artificial, as the state (because it is operated by people) will inevitably include some spiritual/metaphysical elements and motivations, however small and stunted. So the Christian Right responds by clamoring for the state to separate out every spiritual voice and influence but their own. Snap out of it. You're not in Kansas anymore. This is pluralism, Charlie Brown, and if you can't learn to respect people who are different from you then you shouldn't be preaching Christianity in the first place.)

Glenn Beck - that darling of the free and the brave - in November ridiculed another Native American, this time a Nevada college student, for her decision to sing a traditional tribal song in honor of American veterans and troops instead of the national anthem. He compared it to another incident in Colorado in 2008 where a black woman also sang "the wrong song." (How dare you sing an alternate song when you're supposed to sing the song about freedom?) If you put the Kool-Aid down for a second, it's Beck who sounds like the Nazi.

"That is 'power/knowledge,' not knowledge as power, but having the power to constitute what counts as knowledge."
-John Caputo, What Would Jesus Deconstruct? - Kindle Location 1359

Far from being a culture-toppling victory for secular* humanism, this is the type of positive gesture that promotes healing. Affirmation and respect - whether you smear them as mere "political correctness" or not - are still affirmation and respect.

Peace to Carlos Gonzales and the Yaqui.



*Yes, I heard the blessing attacked as "secular." It was secular like the Pope is secular.