Richard Rohr's mail out today seems quite pertinent to remembrance of MLK:
Disrupting the Status Quo
Richard Rohr describes how speaking truth to power is an essential part of the prophet’s mission:
One of the gifts of the prophets is that they evoke a crisis where one did not appear to exist before their truth-telling. In the 1960s, Martin Luther King Jr. was blamed for creating violence—but those who had eyes to see and were ready to hear recognized, “My God, the violence was already there!” Structural violence was inherent in the system, but it was denied and disguised. No one was willing to talk about it. Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Parks, and others said, “We’re going to talk about it.”
Prophets always talk about the untalkable and open a huge new area of “talkability.” For those who are willing to go there, it helps us see what we didn’t know how to see until they helped us to see it. That’s how we begin to recognize a prophet—there is this widening of seeing, this deepening of a truth that was always there.
Prophets generate a crisis, so it’s almost understandable why they’re usually called troublemakers and so often killed. They generate the crisis because while everybody else is saying the emperor is beautifully clothed, they are willing to say, “No, he’s naked.” We’re not supposed to say that the emperor has no clothes!
It’s the nature of culture to have its agreed-upon lies. Culture holds itself together by projecting its shadow side elsewhere. That’s called the “scapegoat mechanism.” René Girard, Gil Bailie, and others have pointed out that the scapegoat mechanism is the subtext of the entire biblical revelation. It’s the tendency to export our evil elsewhere and to hate it there, and therefore to remain in splendid delusion. If there isn’t a willingness to be critical of our country, our institution, and ourselves, we certainly can’t be prophets. [1]
When the prophet is missing from the story, the shadow side of things is always out of control, as in much of the world today, where we do not honor wisdom or truth.
It seems the prophet’s job is first to deconstruct current illusions, which is the status quo, and then reconstruct on a new and honest foundation. That is why the prophet is never popular with the comfortable or with those in power. Only a holy few have any patience with the deconstruction of egos and institutions.
The prophets are “radical” teachers in the truest sense of the word. The Latin radix means root, and the prophets go to the root causes and root vices and “root” them out! Their educational method is to expose and accuse with no holds barred. Ministers and religion in general tend to concentrate on effects and symptoms, usually a mopping up exercise after the fact. As someone once put it, we throw life preservers to people drowning in the swollen stream, which is all well and good—but prophets work far upstream to find out why the stream is swollen in the first place. [2]
[1] Adapted from Joan Chittister and Richard Rohr, Prophets Then, Prophets Now (Albuquerque, NM: Center for Action and Contemplation, 2006). Available as MP3 download.
[2] Adapted from Richard Rohr, Soul Brothers: Men in the Bible Speak to Men Today (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 2004), 31, 39, 40.
Image credit: A path from one week to the next—Benjamin Yazza, Untitled 10, 8, and 13. Used with permission. Click here to enlarge image.
Prophetic truth catalyzes us to stop avoiding uncomfortable truths.
John S. Jackson, thank you for posting Richard Rohr’s email today. It’s very insightful.
Another thing which I recommend to the community is Robert F. Kennedy‘s Indianapolis speech, where he announces King’s death to his audience. In my mind, it is the greatest completely-extemporaneous speech in US history.
It’s almost heartbreaking to imagine how much different, and hopefully better, our history would have been had both men not been violently torn from us.
Fabulous picture KAJ, I admire it every time I see it. As a veteran and a high school English instructor, I've emphasized Dr. King's efforts and brilliant writing & speaking for decades. Trust me when I say I truly find your efforts toward peace and equality for all via every one of your writing & speaking opportunities similarly inspirational and unwaveringly positive. Thanks for all you've done and continue to do on behalf of optimism for humanity. [Whether we deserve it or not at times.... ]
Peace to you & yours on this venerable national holiday.
It is never unkind in my opinion. I liken it to helping someone when they have spinach on their teeth, toilet paper on their shoe or their fly is down.
Kareem- Thanks for sharing an amazing photo! Had a wonderful time yesterday celebrating Dr King's life at the Bethel AME Church in Boston. The focus of our event was climate justice which is a subject that would have been close to Dr King's heart.
Richard Rohr's mail out today seems quite pertinent to remembrance of MLK:
Disrupting the Status Quo
Richard Rohr describes how speaking truth to power is an essential part of the prophet’s mission:
One of the gifts of the prophets is that they evoke a crisis where one did not appear to exist before their truth-telling. In the 1960s, Martin Luther King Jr. was blamed for creating violence—but those who had eyes to see and were ready to hear recognized, “My God, the violence was already there!” Structural violence was inherent in the system, but it was denied and disguised. No one was willing to talk about it. Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Parks, and others said, “We’re going to talk about it.”
Prophets always talk about the untalkable and open a huge new area of “talkability.” For those who are willing to go there, it helps us see what we didn’t know how to see until they helped us to see it. That’s how we begin to recognize a prophet—there is this widening of seeing, this deepening of a truth that was always there.
Prophets generate a crisis, so it’s almost understandable why they’re usually called troublemakers and so often killed. They generate the crisis because while everybody else is saying the emperor is beautifully clothed, they are willing to say, “No, he’s naked.” We’re not supposed to say that the emperor has no clothes!
It’s the nature of culture to have its agreed-upon lies. Culture holds itself together by projecting its shadow side elsewhere. That’s called the “scapegoat mechanism.” René Girard, Gil Bailie, and others have pointed out that the scapegoat mechanism is the subtext of the entire biblical revelation. It’s the tendency to export our evil elsewhere and to hate it there, and therefore to remain in splendid delusion. If there isn’t a willingness to be critical of our country, our institution, and ourselves, we certainly can’t be prophets. [1]
When the prophet is missing from the story, the shadow side of things is always out of control, as in much of the world today, where we do not honor wisdom or truth.
It seems the prophet’s job is first to deconstruct current illusions, which is the status quo, and then reconstruct on a new and honest foundation. That is why the prophet is never popular with the comfortable or with those in power. Only a holy few have any patience with the deconstruction of egos and institutions.
The prophets are “radical” teachers in the truest sense of the word. The Latin radix means root, and the prophets go to the root causes and root vices and “root” them out! Their educational method is to expose and accuse with no holds barred. Ministers and religion in general tend to concentrate on effects and symptoms, usually a mopping up exercise after the fact. As someone once put it, we throw life preservers to people drowning in the swollen stream, which is all well and good—but prophets work far upstream to find out why the stream is swollen in the first place. [2]
[1] Adapted from Joan Chittister and Richard Rohr, Prophets Then, Prophets Now (Albuquerque, NM: Center for Action and Contemplation, 2006). Available as MP3 download.
[2] Adapted from Richard Rohr, Soul Brothers: Men in the Bible Speak to Men Today (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 2004), 31, 39, 40.
Image credit: A path from one week to the next—Benjamin Yazza, Untitled 10, 8, and 13. Used with permission. Click here to enlarge image.
Prophetic truth catalyzes us to stop avoiding uncomfortable truths.
John S. Jackson, thank you for posting Richard Rohr’s email today. It’s very insightful.
Another thing which I recommend to the community is Robert F. Kennedy‘s Indianapolis speech, where he announces King’s death to his audience. In my mind, it is the greatest completely-extemporaneous speech in US history.
It’s almost heartbreaking to imagine how much different, and hopefully better, our history would have been had both men not been violently torn from us.
Love and peace to you for the work you do.
Fabulous picture KAJ, I admire it every time I see it. As a veteran and a high school English instructor, I've emphasized Dr. King's efforts and brilliant writing & speaking for decades. Trust me when I say I truly find your efforts toward peace and equality for all via every one of your writing & speaking opportunities similarly inspirational and unwaveringly positive. Thanks for all you've done and continue to do on behalf of optimism for humanity. [Whether we deserve it or not at times.... ]
Peace to you & yours on this venerable national holiday.
The speech Dr. King delivered the night before his murder, where he profesized his own demise, was chilling in its accuracy.
Wishing you an empowering MLK day. (Is it unkind to point out a typo? It should say ENSHRINE.)
Actually, I appreciate it. I know it's enshrine, but I still got it wrong. Not the first time--won't be the last.
It is never unkind in my opinion. I liken it to helping someone when they have spinach on their teeth, toilet paper on their shoe or their fly is down.
wow. cooooool. had no idea.
Excellent!
Pride (In The Name of Love) U2
The March Continues.
Beautiful. His memory is truly a blessing.
Great Pic
Thank you, Kareem.
Love this. I was hoping to see this picture again. This is why your perspective for the young ones is so valuable.
Thanks Kareem. Keep the faith
Amen!
Kareem- Thanks for sharing an amazing photo! Had a wonderful time yesterday celebrating Dr King's life at the Bethel AME Church in Boston. The focus of our event was climate justice which is a subject that would have been close to Dr King's heart.