November 2021 Gallup Journey Magazine

Page 14

SPIRITUAL PERSPECTIVES

The Shadowlands of Domination

W

estern civilization has failed to learn how to carry the shadow side of all things. Our success-driven culture scorns all failure, powerlessness, and any form of poverty. Yet Jesus begins his Sermon on the Mount by praising “the poor in spirit” (Matthew 5:3)! Just that should tell us how thoroughly we have missed the point of the Gospel. Instead, we developed a system involving winners and losers, which is not Jesus, who identified with the losers without hating the winners. What a recipe for transformation of culture! We avoid the very things that Jesus praises, and we try to project a strong, secure, successful image to ourselves and to others.

by Richard Rohr & the Center for Action & Contemplation

live with the ongoing stigma of defeated peoples who have endured genocide, the intentional dismantling of cultural values, forced confinement on less desirable lands called “reservations,” intentionally nurtured dependency on the federal government, and conversion by missionaries who imposed a new culture on us as readily as they preached the gospel. . . .

[Indian peoples] suspect that the greed that motivated the displacement of all indigenous peoples from their lands of spiritual rootedness is the same greed that threatens the destruction of the earth and the continued oppression of so many peoples and ultimately the destruction of our White Because we did not teach our people relatives. Whether it is the stories “Many of us have little ability how to carry the paschal mystery (the the settlers tell or the theologies to carry our own shadow universal entanglement of life and they develop to interpret those death) that Jesus embodied, it is now stories, something seems wrong side, much less the shadow coming back to haunt us. Many of to Indian people. But not only side of our church, group, us have little ability to carry our own do Indians continue to tell the shadow side, much less the shadow side nation, or period of history. stories, sing the songs, speak of our church, group, nation, or period the prayers, and perform the But shadowlands are good and ceremonies that root themselves of history. But shadowlands are good and necessary teachers. They are not to deeply in Mother Earth; they are necessary teachers.” be avoided, denied, fled, or explained actually audacious enough to away. They are not even to be forgiven think that their stories and their too quickly. First, like Ezekiel the prophet, we must eat the scroll that ways of reverencing creation will some day win over our White settler is “lamentation, wailing, and moaning” (2:10) in our belly. relatives and transform them. Optimism and enduring patience seem to run in the life blood of Native American peoples. American Indian scholar George Tinker offers a clear view of the May justice, followed by genuine peace, flow out of our concern for shadow side of the Western conquest of the Americas, particularly in one another and all creation. [1] the United States. American Indians continue to suffer from the effects of conquest by european immigrants over the past five centuries—an ongoing and pervasive sense of community-wide post-traumatic stress disorder. We

[1] George E. “Tink” Tinker, American Indian Liberation: A Theology of Sovereignty (Orbis Books: 2008), 42, 56. Richard Rohr, The Wisdom Pattern: Order, Disorder, Reorder (Franciscan Media: 2020), 183, 185.

Based in Albuqueque, NM, Franciscan priest Richard Rohr founded the Center for Action and Contemplation (CAC) in 1987 because he saw a deep need for the integration of both action and contemplation—the two are inseparable. Contemplation is a way of listening with the heart while not relying entirely on the head. Contemplation is a prayerful letting go of our sense of control and choosing to cooperate with God and God’s work in the world. Prayer without action, as Father Richard says, can promote our tendency to self-preoccupation, and without contemplation, even well-intended actions can cause more harm than good. OUR VISION: Transformed people working together for a more just and connected world. Instead of accusing others on the left or the right, Jesus stood in radical solidarity with the problem itself, hardly ever offering specific answers to the problem. Instead, his solidarity and compassion brought healing. In today’s religious, environmental, and political climate, our compassionate engagement is urgent and vital. When we experience the reality of our oneness with God, others, and Creation, actions of justice and healing naturally follow. If we’re working to create a more whole world, contemplation can give our actions nonviolent, loving power for the long haul. For more infor go to: cac.org/category/daily-meditations/

14 November 2021


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