Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Boston

There are no adequate words to express appropriate outrage, fear and sorrow that result from the attack on yesterday's Boston Marathon. Many of us have friends who have run in it, were running in it, or were scheduled to run in that race. It is difficult for us to imagine what it must have been like to be so victimized.
 
There is no word yet on responsibility for the bombing.
 
A friend and colleague asked this morning, "Why is there so much hate?" I can answer that question. There is so much hate because there is so little love. Human beings can put an end to hatred by practicing acceptance, tolerance and love. This process entails more than simply believing in acceptance, tolerance and love. We must, as persons, organizations, churches and nations embody love in direct and intentional acts of kindness, generosity, mercy and forgiveness.
 
Why is there so much violence? Because there is so little peace. Somewhere, at some point, the culture in which we live turned a corner around which resides a tremendous lack of respect, a deeply abiding selfishness, and a disregard for the wellbeing of others. Peace is impossible if it is not derived from an authentic desire for the wellbeing of others.
 
If there is any calling in the tragedy of Boston, April 15, 2013, it is to exercise a sense of urgency in changing the world. The methodology for achieving that new world is the direct action of men, women and children to embody love, acceptance, tolerance, peace, grace and forgiveness. It is an intentional turn from the divisive vitriol of the political and economic realm. It is stemming the tide of selfishness, greed, disregard, intolerance, bigotry, and isolationism.  
 
If we fail, we can anticipate more Bostons, another Oklahoma City, another Atlanta, another London, until we reach the point of destroying ourselves for the sake of political positioning. If we fail to do that to which we are called, the world suffers.
 
If, however, we can embody the ethic of Jesus Christ, that which lies as a common core of all of the world's religions, then we can indeed usher in a new age. We can live in love. We can live in peace. We can live in God's kingdom on earth.
 
It is time. Boston is clear evidence.  

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