Many Americans Hunger
For a Different Kind of Society
Ultimately, one of the best ways to take care of our souls is to build a society that supports rather than undermines our highest moral and spiritual intuitions and inclinations. Yet, building that society can never be divided from the daily practices through which we live out our ethical and spiritual lives, both in the way we treat others around us, and in the way we nourish the God within us.
Whoever you are—whether you are a postal worker, autoworker, lawyer, doctor, high-tech expert—there are multiple ways you can advance the cause of love, kindness, and generosity.
Many Americans hunger for a different kind of society — one based on principles of caring, ethical and spiritual sensitivity, and communal solidarity. Their need for meaning is just as intense as their need for economic security.
Turns out that Americans, like everyone else on the planet, are willing to sacrifice material well-being to serve higher ethical goals, if they think that others are willing to do the same.
In
place of the Old Bottom Line of money and power, a New Bottom Line of
Love and Generosity is possible. People of all faiths need to shape a
political and social movement that reaffirms the most generous,
peace-oriented, social justice-committed, and loving truths of the
spiritual heritage of the human race.
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The new world will be created by people who know better than to be realistic. Realism is crumbling all around us. We will learn what is possible by struggling for the world we desire.
What
is particularly striking is that the American people were able to rally
to the values of what we in the Network of Spiritual Progressives call
“The Caring Society — Caring for Each Other and Caring for the Earth”
despite the fact that neither Obama nor the Democratic Party articulated
these values clearly.
Corporations care very much about maintaining the myth that government is necessarily ineffective, except when it is spending money on the military-industrial complex, building prisons, or providing infrastructural support for the business sector.
This focus on money and power may do wonders in the marketplace, but it creates a tremendous crisis in our society. People who have spent all day learning how to sell themselves and to manipulate others are in no position to form lasting friendships or intimate relationships.
Reality
is much more complex than any judgment of right and wrong encourages
you to believe. When you really understand the ethical, spiritual,
social, economic, and psychological forces that shape individuals, you
will see that people’s choices are not based on a desire to hurt.
Instead, they are in accord with what they know and what world views are
available to them. Most are doing the best they can, given what
information they’ve received and what problems they are facing.
In
a dog-eat-dog world it makes sense to bite before bitten. But in a
cooperative world gone awry, it makes sense to extend empathy and a hand
of friendship, and seek healing.
The prophets’ clear message is that those who do not care for the poor and the oppressed are defiling God’s name.
The
environmental crisis is the #1 spiritual challenge facing the human
race in the 21st century. Spiritual Progressives should provide
leadership in this struggle.
Energy always flows either toward hope, community, love, generosity, mutual recognition, and spiritual aliveness or it flows toward despair, cynicism, fear that there is not enough, paranoia about the intentions of others, and a desire to control.
The upsurge of Spirit is the only plausible way to stop the ecological destruction of our planet. Even people who have no interest in a communal solution to the distortions in our lives will have to face up [to] this ecological reality. Unless we transform our relationship with nature, we will destroy the preconditions for human life on this planet.
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A spiritual sensibility encourages us to see ourselves as part of the fundamental unity of all being. If the thrust of the market ethos has been to foster a competitive individualism, a major thrust of many traditional religious and spiritual sensibilities has been to help us see our connection with all other human beings.
Instead of a bottom-line based on money and power, we need a new bottom-line that defines productivity and creativity as where corporations, governments, schools, public institutions, and social practices are judged as efficient, rational and productive not only to the extent they maximize money and power, but to the extent they maximize love and caring, ethical and ecological sensitivity, and our capacities to respond with awe and wonder at the grandeur of creation.
We need to build millions of little moments of caring on an individual level. Indeed, as talk of a politics of meaning becomes more widespread, many people will feel it easier to publicly acknowledge their own spiritual and ethical aspirations and will allow themselves to give more space to their highest vision in their personal interactions with others. A politics of meaning is as much about these millions of small acts as it is about any larger change. The two necessarily go hand in hand.
Next time you are at work, or at a social gathering, try the following exercise: Look at every single person, one by one. See each one as embodiments of God, one of God's many faces.
Nothing is more contagious than genuine love and genuine care. Nothing is more exhilarating than authentic awe and wonder. Nothing is more exciting than to witness people having the courage to fight for their highest vision.
I seek peace, let me BE peace.
― Rabbi Michael Lerner
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Please check out Michael Lerner's new book:
Revolutionary Love:
Rabbi Lerner will also be speaking at Powell's Books
in Portland on Tuesday, Decemeber 10th:
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