Tuesday 31 December 2019

Love One Another or Die


The poet W.H. Auden wrote, “love one another or die.”  This seems to me to be a rather unusual message for this season but I believe it is right on point.  First, we need to be aware that Christmas is not over.  The presents may all be opened and the leftover turkey is probably down to one last turkey sandwich, but fact we are only still in the midst of the season of Christmas in the church calendar.  Sunday was the first Sunday after Christmas (Day).  We are in the twelve days of Christmas and if you go by the song, today it is the day when the songsters true love gave him (or her) six geese a laying.

If you have time on your hands you might want to figure out how many gift the true love gave to the songsters in total.  Well, in the spirit of Christmas, I won’t make you do the math, it was 364, which, as it happens, one for each day of the year minus one - I wonder which day would be the giftless one. 
Turning to where I started – as TS Eliot say, and know the place for the first time – that quote from Auden was connected to his poem September 1, 1939 as noted on https://reasonandmeaning.com/2014/05/22/w-h-audens-we-must-love-one-another-or-die/ Auden’s poem “September 1, 1939“—with its obvious reference to the beginning of World War II—begins like this:
I sit in one of the dives
On Fifty-second Street
Uncertain and afraid
As the clever hopes expire
Of a low dishonest decade:
Waves of anger and fear
Circulate over the bright
And darkened lands of the earth,
Obsessing our private lives;
The unmentionable odour of death
Offends the September night.
If we believe that love came down at Christmas as the carol by Christina G. Rossetti extols, Auden’s words are all the more vital than when he wrote them.  They seem to be frighteningly prophetic about the decade just past with “clever hopes” and “a low dishonest decade”, with its “waves of anger and fear” whipped up by social media and Trumpian rallies. 
Love truly is what is needed in the coming decade or this world will truly die many deaths.  Christians are called to love one another as the one we follow declared that we are to love God and love our neighbours who are, we must remember, the despised Samaritans and not just the those who are familiar and comfortable for us to love. 
Blessings on your Christmas journey.

Tuesday 24 December 2019

Love


On Sunday, we completed the Advent journey with the lighting of the last Advent candle in the wreath.  Following the lighting of candles for Hope, Peace, and Joy, we lit the candle for Love.   What has been written about love is beyond measure so I will leave you the words of the beautiful carol by  Christina G. Rossetti which sums it up  - I would update the third line of the third verse to read “Love to God and love to all.” 

Love Came Down at Christmas
1.    Love came down at Christmas,
Love all lovely, Love divine;
Love was born at Christmas,
Star and angels gave the sign.
2.    Worship we the Godhead,
Love incarnate, Love divine;
Worship we our Jesus:
But wherewith for sacred sign?
3.    Love shall be our token,
Love be yours and love be mine,
Love to God and all men,
Love for plea and gift and sign.

Have a blessed Christmas and open our hearts to receive the love of Christ who will be born again to us this Christmas.




Friday 20 December 2019

The Fight with the Shadow of Trumpism



With the recent world events and especially events in our neighbour to the south and the election of Donald J Trump as president, I was inspired to reread a book we have up on the shelf, Jung on Evil, selected works of Carl Jung on the subject of evil, selected and introduced by Murray Stein. 
One of the pieces in the collection is, The fight with the shadow[i]  I was very taken with how relevant it is for the current circumstances in the world political situation, especially the situation in the United States under President Donald J. Trump.  The article is a broadcast talk in the Third Programme of the B.B.C., on November 3, 1946.  As such it was a commentary on the events of Hitler’s rise to power in pre-WW2 Germany which, of course, led to the terrible events of the war.  The cessation of manifest conflict had occurred in the previous year. 

First let me give a brief description of the shadow in Jungian psychology.  The shadow is an archetype (or organization of energy common to all people) within the human psyche.  The shadow contains those aspects of the person, which are usually negative, which are unacknowledged by the individual.  They can be aspects or characteristics which have never come to consciousness in the individual or have been consciously rejected by the person.  The overriding characteristic of the shadow is that they are not something which the ego wants in any way to acknowledge is part of the composition of the person. 

In the article it is interesting that, despite the title, Jung does not directly address the concept of the shadow in Hitler or Pre-war Germany.  However, he does speak of the power of the unconscious negative energy to affect people individually and collectively.  It is, of course, the collective impact that Jung is primarily concerned with in addressing the collective psychosis of the German people that led to Hitler coming to power and the global conflict that followed.

Jung holds, quite rightly, that “the psychology of the masses is rooted in the psychology of the individual” (174). Jung’s primary, but not exclusive method of exploring the content of the unconscious in an individual is through dreams.  He notes that he “noticed peculiar disturbances in the unconscious of my German patients which could not be ascribed to their personal psychology” (175).  He further elucidates that non-personal manifestations will occur in collective culture of a people in such things as fairy tales, legends, and mythologies which he has named the aforementioned archetypes. He advises that, “There was a disturbance of the collective unconscious in every single one of my German patients” (175).   

Jung is concerned with the collective impact on the German people.  However, he expounds that it was no means solely a German phenomenon as was shown in the events of WW2.  He does propose that the German people are more susceptible to such developments due to “the marked proneness of the Germans to mass psychology” (175).  Although Jung maintains that the individual that is the prime vehicle for the expression of the unconscious energy, he confirms that this becomes truly dangerous when individuals become a group, “I was fully aware of the immense dangers involved when such people crowd together” (175).  The people that Jung is referring to are those in which the “powers of darkness” i.e. the negative content of the unconscious have become active in the psyche.  Jung had been aware of this collective manifestation after WW1, “ the tide that rose in the unconscious after the First World War was reflected in the individual dreams, in the forms of collective mythological logical symbols which expressed primitively, violence, cruelty: in short, all the powers of darkness” (175).  He goes on to propose that when these dark symbols manifest in a significant number of individuals they act as a magnet to draw the people together into mass movements. There is, as was seen in Germany leading up to WW2, “immense dangers when such people crowd together” (175). 

The uprising of this archetypal energy from the unconscious is released and the individual is unable to consciously deal with them.  When this occurs in Jung’s theory, there is a compensating drive by the “archetypes of order”.  However, people are usually unable to incorporate this energy, “the vast majority are incapable of integrating the forces of order” (176).  There is a battle between these two opposing forces which have the dangerous probability of violence breaking out.  As Jung declares, “We see the first symptoms everywhere: totalitarianism and State slavery.  The value and importance of the individual are rapidly decreasing and the chances of his being heard will vanish more and more” (176). 

Jung posits that this led in Germany to the individual feeling out of control and powerless in the face of the increasing appearance of chaos. This was responded to in an outbreak of a demand for power:
The individual’s feeling of weakness, indeed of non-existence, was compensated by the eruption of hitherto unknown desires for power.  It was a revolt of the powerless, the insatiable greed of the have-nots. (177)
Into this maelstrom of competing energy came Hitler who proclaimed a “new order”.  This was the convergence made in Hell rather than heaven.  As Jung notes, “The Germans wanted order, but they made the fatal mistake of choosing the principal victim of disorder and unchecked greed for their leader” (178). 

Jung’s description of Hitler is decidedly apt for our purposes in examining the situation of the current “Leader of the Free World” who heads government in the United States:
He was utterly incapable, unadapted, irresponsible, psychopathic personality, full of empty, infantile fantasies, but cursed with a keen intuition of a rat or a guttersnipe.  He represented the shadow, or inferior part of everyone’s personality, in an overwhelming degree, and this reason why they fell for him. (178)
Jung proposes in the companion article, after the catastrophe, which appears in the same collection, that Hitler can be diagnosed with the condition of “pseudologia phantastica”, which he describes as:
that form of hysteria which is characterized by a peculiar talent for believing one’s own lies” …A sorry lack of education, conceit that borders on madness, a very mediocre intelligence combined with the hysterics cunning and the power of fantasies of an adolescent, were written all over the demagogue’s face.  His gesticulations were all put on, devised by an hysterical mind intent only on making an impression.  He behaved in public like a man living in his own biography, in this case as the sombre, daemonic “man of iron” of popular fiction, the ideal of an infantile public whose knowledge of the world is derived from the deified heroes of trashy films.  (188) 
I have quoted Jung’s analysis of Hitler at length as it is so apt for out discussion of President Trump and the conditions in the United States that brought him to power.  I want to be clear that at this point there no comparison between the action of Hitler and the actions of Trump.  Trump is constrained by the democratic institutions that exist in the United States and to a certain extent in the world.   However, the similarities between Jung’s description of Hitler and Trump and the conditions in pre-war Germany and pre-election United States are striking.
Let me start with what strikes me as the dominate trait on Donald Trump.  He could be described with the soubrette of ‘Father of Lies’ which is sometimes given to the devil.  Trump appears to be vying with the devil for this title.  He has been shown to lie constantly as if it is beyond his control.  One source noted, “When Huffington Post catalogued his lies over the course of just one town hall event, they came up with 71 lies”[ii].  There has been speculation that he actually does believe the lies that he spouts uncontrollably.  Here we have the primary condition for the definition of Jung’s diagnosis of pseudologia phantastica i.e. peculiar talent for believing one’s own lies.
Now, what about the other vivid, perhaps even lurid description of the character of Hitler that Jung proposes?  Let us examine to what extent they apply to Donald Trump: 
·  utterly incapable, unadapted 
As Trump was, and apparently continues to be despite his so-called ‘blind trust’, a successful businessman can he be considered to the incapable?  There is the assessment that Trump’s business success is not as great as it appears to be.  However, he is successful by most standards today, having accumulated great wealth through his business endeavours.   His capability as the President of the United States is certainly in question.  His initial weeks in office has shown him to be less than capable of putting together an effective team around himself who are taking control of the Executive Branch of the United States Government.  His administration does by many measures seem to be floundering.  In this extent it can be said he is unadapted in the transition from business leader to political leader.

·         irresponsible, psychopathic personality.
Trump has continually shown himself to be irresponsible in the statements he makes on social media primarily through Twitter.  He “shoots from the lip” in a seemingly uncontrolled, impulsive manner with no concern for the truth or the consequences of the musing e.g. his declaration on Twitter early one Saturday morning that he had been wiretapped by  his predecessor.  No evidence of this outrageous claim has been subsequently produced.

In the matter of psychopathology, I am not qualified to make such a clinical diagnosis of Trump.  However, let us look at one definition of a psychopath and see if it fits:
symptoms of psychopathy include: lack of a conscience or sense of guilt, lack of empathy, egocentricity, pathological lying, repeated violations of social norms, disregard for the law, shallow emotions, and a history of victimizing others.[iii]
Trump does appear to generally fit this definition.  He does what he pleases without concern for the effect on others.  He recently seemed to be moved by the plight of child victims of chemical attacks on Syria.  His response to this has been without apparent thought to the long-term consequences.  However, he has notable lack empathy for those he considers against him and is known for his vindictiveness for those who he considers have not treated him with the respect and adulation he believes he deserves.  This reflects his overriding egocentricity in which he presents himself as the best at everything he does and is.  I have already addressed his tendency to lie.  The violation of social norms may be open to debate but he seems to live by his own rules as is operating as if the norms of the presidency do not apply to him e.g. maintaining ownership of his business empire with the faux blind trust; he refusal to release his tax returns; the outrageous nepotism of close family members in official and quasi-official position in his administration; the approval of official White House endorsement of his daughters business endeavours, to name a few. He victimized others in his business dealing e.g. the students of Trump University which were sold a pig in a poke regarding their education and job prospects. 

·         full of empty, infantile fantasies
Trump has consistently fed his fantasies to a gullible public who bought them hook line and sinker e.g. building a wall to keep out Mexican immigrants and making Mexico pay for it; locking up “lying Hillary” (with an apparent unawareness of the iron, after becoming President; immediately repealing and replacing Obamacare with “something terrific” the first attempt to have it repealed failed dramatically with something that, by any assessment, was certainly less that terrific; his admiration for and perhaps envy of the totalitarian powers of Vladimir Putin; Global warming being a plot by China.  

·         cursed with a keen intuition of a rat or a guttersnipe
Trump certainly has been acknowledged to have a genius for reading his audience and the mood of his followers and the public in general.  This has been the key to his success.  In the crowds at his rallies he has consistently intuitively know what tone to strike with outrageous declarations about the lying press; Mexico sending the United States its rapists and murderers; lying Hillary; draining the swamp of Capitol Hill, and on and on. 

I believe this has established the appropriateness of applying Jung’s analysis of Hitler to Trump.  If their still remains some doubt in some reader’s minds I will add a few references to his gesticulations during his public performances which certainly appear to be put on for effect.  He does not appear to have been educated effectively, with there being questions about his ability to read and write coherently with reports of others actually doing his on-going and never ceasing Tweets for him.  Here is the iron man of fiction who is the self-proclaimed only one who can save the nation from the chaos that is threatening it from the inside and the outside—If not superman, he is certainly Mighty Mouse who has “come to save the day”. 

With this assessment of Trump, what then of the people of the United States who elected him president as the people of German enabled Hitler to gain power?  What dark forces lie in the collective psyche of the American people?  Jung proposes that he, “noticed particular disturbances in the unconscious of my German patients” 174).  Was there a similar disturbance in a significant number of American people?  Unfortunately, I have no access to such data or access to the dreams of Americans.   There is certainly evidence of a mass movement as people were drawn together as if by a magnetic force as the came in droves to the rallies held by the Trump campaign in the election.  The response by the assembled crowds certainly had more than a ting of hysteria as Trump urged them to violently throw out anyone who dared oppose him.  There was also the odour of a Roman circus with the media substituting for Christians in the spectacle. 
Jung declares that, “The individual’s feeling of weakness, indeed of non-existence, compensated by the eruption of hitherto unknown desires for power. It was the revolt of the powerless, the insatiable greed of the have-nots” (177).  Trumps attraction to the disaffected middle class who have lost their manufacturing and other blue-collar jobs has certainly been proposed if not completely quantified.  The lack of a voice in the seats of power have reflected the sense of powerlessness and Trumps claim that he would “drain the swamp” in Washington.  These are people who have been left behind by developments in the economy and the major loss of manufacturing jobs in the United States due to outsourcing and robotics.  I do not agree that these people have an “insatiable greed’ despite being what could be described as being have-nots.  They are more accurately people who have been deprived, through no fault of their own, of a secure existence in society where their basic needs are met and where the expectations that their children would have a future that was on par or better they had come to expect.  Undoubtedly, they felt powerless as they in reality are. 

If there are many people in these blue-collar classes that feel powerless is there anything in the American people collectively that reflects a feeling of powerlessness?  It seems perhaps ridiculous to think that the most powerful nation on earth would feel powerless.  However, it is this very power that the sense of powerlessness stares back at us.  The sense of exceptionalism, of being perhaps God’s new chosen people, which contains the seeds of fear that informs the need to build walls and armies and missile systems to defend themselves against those that would attack their very exceptionalism.  Jung insightfully addresses this process of compensation in the individual, “The world-wide confusion and disorder reflect a similar condition in the mind of the individual, but this lack of orientation is compensated in the unconscious by archetypes of order” (176).  This is just as true for the collective people.  This desire for protection against the threats, perceived and real, from outside means that they put their trust in the concrete security of collective defense.  Individually the increasing obsession with personal protection through the ever more outrageous interpretation of the Second Amendment to the Constitution compensates for their personal fear and dread of outside threats to their personal safety.

This collective powerlessness was crystallized in the events of 9-11.  The fact that this event can be symbolized by these two numbers connotes its archetypal nature for the United States and consequently for the world.  A new world order has resulted from this act which, although it resulted in a significant number of deaths pales in comparison to the lives that are lost in other non-external ways e.g. in 2010, guns took the lives of 31,076 Americans in homicides, suicides and unintentional shootings. This was approximately ten times the number of lives lost in the 9-11 attacks as reported by The Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence[iv].    The fact this event was from the outside and not from within gave it the power to transform the nation and the world.  In contrast look at the Oklahoma bombing which was also devastating but had relatively little impact on the psyche of the American people.  It was perpetrated by one of their own people rather than dark skinned Arabs from another countrynot Iraq which the United States attacked but their ally Saudi Arabia; an inconvenience that was quickly overlooked in the mass hysteria that followed.    

This analysis of the current state of the collective psyche of the American people (it is tempting to call it psychosis) does not leave us with much hope for the near future in any case.  Jung notes the challenge danger in not facing the internal (either personal or collective) forces that arise, “Anything that disappears from your psychological inventory is apt to turn up in the guise of a hostile neighbour” (179).

Jung’s assessment of post-WW2 Germany and the German people also paints a seriously doubtful picture for the future:
If you compare the present state of the mind of Germans with my argument you will appreciate the enormous task with which the world is confronted.  We can hardly expect the demoralized German masses to realize the importance of such psychological truths, no matter how simple.  But the great Western democracies have a better chance, so long as they can keep out of those wars that always tempt them to believe in external enemies and the desirability of internal peace. (179)
The American people certainly seem to be demoralized, if not to the extent of post-war Germany.  In addition, the Western democracies have given no indication of the ability to avoid wars, especially recently.  However, there is hope in the fact that Germany did rise from the ashes of the post war era to become a marker of hope for as one of the leading Western Democracies in which Jung placed his hope.  It has been a shining beacon of hope in the current Syrian refugee crisis.  However, even the great expression of humanity expressed by Germany is being threatened by similar forces which I believe can be accurately called the Shadow of Trumpism.  We can only hope (and yes even pray) that there will be a similar compensating force that will eventually lead to a new world order which is not grounded in fear but rather is grounded in hope.    



[i] Collective Works CW 10 paras 444-57
[iii] [iii] http://www.minddisorders.com/Flu-Inv/Hare-Psychopathy-Checklist.html
[iv] http://smartgunlaws.org/gun-deaths-and-injuries-statistics/

Tuesday 17 December 2019

Joy to the World


We continued our celebration of Advent with Sunday past being the third Sunday of Advent.  In addition to the first two Advent candles for Hope and Peace, we lit the third candle representing Joy.  This candle is different from the other two as well as the fourth candle which we will light next Sunday – those being purple/violet.  The violet represents preparation and repentance in anticipation of the birth of the Christ Child.  The third candle is pink which is the liturgical colour for joy.   This Sunday is also called Gaudete Sunday, Gaudete being the Latin word for rejoice. 
For me, joy has been a somewhat challenging concept to understand.  It’s not that I did not and do not experience joy but I have pondered what it is.  I have wondered what the difference is between joy and happiness.  I was aware there is a difference but I was not sure what that actually was.  One definition I found on-line addresses the difference:
Joy and happiness are wonderful feelings to experience, but are very different. ... It comes when you make peace with who you are, why you are and how you are, whereas happiness tends to be externally triggered and is based on other people, things, places, thoughts and events.
This does capture the sense that resonates with me.  There is a sense that joy is not related to specific experiences or events which can result in the sense of happiness.  Happiness, then is dependent on external events which may or may not result in happiness.  Joy is a reflection that state of being where you are right with yourself and with the world and, I dare say, with God.    What comes to mind as I write this is the Shaker hymn, the Gift to be Simple, “when we find our selves in the place just right, 'twill be in the valley of love and delight.”   To be right with myself and with God is truly joyful.   
I also came across this reflection on joy by The Rev. Kim Jackson, an Episcopal priest based out of Atlanta, Georgia:
I watched some children play hide-and-seek at a party recently. The little girl turned away, squeezed her eyes closed, and counted. Then, with a loud giggle, she spun back around. The look on her face when she turned was one of pure joy and excitement as she anticipated finding her friends.
We are invited this day to turn our hearts towards God. May we do so with great anticipation and find joy in discovering that God is ready to be found.
May you be blessed with joy on your Advent journey to Bethlehem.


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Thursday 12 December 2019

Peace on Earth


Last week I began the Advent Journey - Advent is a time of preparation for the advent of the birth of the Christ Child.  It is a season of the church year which, regrettably is trampled in the rush to begin the celebration of Christmas and the material expression of what is actually a celebration of Bacchanalia in our culture with the extravagance of gift buying and giving and receiving.
The idea of giving at Christmas is, in and of itself, a positive thing.  I am sure that charitable giving increases at this time of year as people open their hearts and wallets to give to good causes.  However, if we ignore a time of preparation, we are missing what is actually central to the celebration of Christmas.   We desire the instant gratification of all the good stuff about Christmas such as beginning as soon as possible to play the beautiful Christmas music which should not actually be sung until Christmas Eve and the beginning or the real Christmas season.  This, of course, would be impossible and even Churches surrender to the inevitability of beginning the bedecking of the halls early in the Advent Season.  However, many churches still celebrate Advent with the hope that we Christians will observe a Holy Advent in preparation for the birth of the Christ Child.

The observance of the four themes of Advent is a wonderful way to actually prepare for Christmas.  The four themes of Hope, Peace, Joy and Love are marked with the lighting of a candle in the Advent Wreath.  They are cumulative so that we do not forget the theme me marked in the previous week(s) and are able to build on what has gone before. 

Last week we lit the candle for Hope and this week we lit that candle again and also lit the candle for Peace.  The theme of peace is, of course, an easily recognized theme for Christmas.  With the Christ Child being considered the Prince of Peace, as proclaimed in the chorus from Handel’s Messiah, which I will be part of a performance later this week (yes, I know, before Christmas):
For unto us a Child is born, unto us a Son is given, and the government shall be upon His shoulder; and his name shall be called Wonderful Counsellor, the Mighty God, the Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace.
Well, if Jesus is the Prince of Peace, peace certainly hasn’t arrived yet.  But what would it look like if there was peace of earth as was announced by the angels to the shepherds?  Peace is not just a cessation of violence.  If all wars ceased would that mean that there was peace of earth and goodwill to all people?  Actually, no.   True peace is much more than that.  It involves justice where the proverbial lions would lie down with the lambs and all people would be treated as they truly are – children of God.  Poverty would be overcome and racism, hate and violence would end.  That is truly something to hope for.

During this Advent let us especially peace and work for a world where true peace will overcome hatred and fear.  Blessings on your Advent journey.



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Monday 2 December 2019

Things Hoped For


For those of us who do not jump into the Christmas season early and often, we began the season of Advent yesterday.  Yesterday was the first Sunday of Advent.  I believe that Advent is more important than ever.   The secular Christmas season is well under way in our society.  I haven’t been to a mall recently but I imagine that Christmas carols are being played to encourage people to buy, buy and yes, buy more to honour the child that was born in a stable with a manger for a bed.  It is, all in all, the height of irony that Christmas bacchanalia has the world - at least the Western world in its death grip.  Sorry – I am being rather over the top here.  I promised myself that I wouldn’t indulge in my annual Christmas/Advent rant but I seem to have broken it – and it wasn’t even a New Years resolution.  There will be lots of opportunity to not live up to any New Years resolutions that I might rashly make in about a month’s time.

Back to Advent which is supposed to be the topic of today’s – rant, sorry – reflection.  In both worship services I was part of yesterday, we celebrated the First Sunday of Advent.   We had the ritual of the lighting of the first Advent candle on the Advent Wreath.  Each of the four candles represent a theme, or value, or virtue which we can reflect on during Advent in our preparation for the coming (advent) of the Christ Child.  There can be some variation in the themes but generally they are, Hope, Peace, Joy, and Love.  The order may vary but we lit the first candle representing Hope.  So, let’s turn our attention to Hope.

Hope generally means a feeling of expectation and desire for a certain thing to happen.  We can hope for many different things.  If you reflect on what you may have hoped for in the past or what you hope for today, what things would they be?  I can think of times when I hoped for fame, fortune, happiness and generally the fulfillment of what I happened to desire.  This could vary greatly depending on my circumstances.  However, they were usually focussed on what I thought would fulfill my life.  There was an element of being like the kind of person I admired at that time. 
If I examine what I hope for these days, what comes to mind is things like good health and happiness for me and for my loved ones.  I also think of hope that our leaders will be wise and bring a sensed of right purpose to the decision they make – although at times that seems like a very faint hope.  However, if I turn my thoughts to more spiritual things which does seem appropriate when we consider Advent, there are many possibilities of what we can hope for.  One source noted that in the Bible, hope is the confident expectation of what God has promised and its strength is in His faithfulness. Turning to one of the sources I depend on, Richard Rohr writes:
Hope, it seems to me, is the fruit of a learned capacity to suffer wisely and generously. The ego needs success to thrive; the soul needs only meaning. (Daily Meditation December 3, 2014)
On reflection, much of what I have hoped for in my life have been ego driven.  The ego does not want to have to suffer, even when the suffering will bring us to a better place – which is not true of all suffering.  What doesn’t kill us does not necessarily make us stronger.  But we can (appropriately) hope that we will be able to see that God is with us even, or especially in our suffering.  We can hope for soul work in our lives that will open us more fully to God.  That is something to be devoutly hoped for.

Blessings on your Advent journey.


Wednesday 27 November 2019

A Rule of Life


I have been taking the Bible Challenge for about the last seven or eight months at the suggestion of our bishop at the time, Bp Linda Nicholls.  This is a website https://thebiblechallenge.org/ which enables you to “read” the whole bible in a year.  This is a seven day a week, fifty-two-week challenge - there is no sabbath rest in this challenge.  I put “read” in quotes because it enables you to listen to the bible passages each day rather than reading them – which I find a helpful way of taking this challenge.  This challenge is helpful for me as I am not as knowledgeable about some parts of the bible as I would like to be, and perhaps should be, given my education and experience as an Anglican priest.

I have just finished listening to the book of Ezekiel and was struck by the vision of the new temple which is recorded in that book.  This is a vision of a new temple to replace the temple in Jerusalem:
In the twenty-fifth year of our exile, at the beginning of the year, on the tenth day of the month, in the fourteenth year after the city was struck down, on that very day, the hand of the Lord was upon me, and he brought me there. He brought me, in visions of God, to the land of Israel, and set me down upon a very high mountain, on which was a structure like a city to the south. When he brought me there, a man was there, whose appearance shone like bronze, with a linen cord and a measuring reed in his hand; and he was standing in the gateway. The man said to me, ‘Mortal, look closely and listen attentively, and set your mind upon all that I shall show you, for you were brought here in order that I might show it to you; declare all that you see to the house of Israel.’ (Ezekiel 40: 1-4)
A vision like Ezekiel’s, would be significant enough and can be analyzed as you might a dream, exploring the significance of the temple and the other images which occur in it.  However, what is revealed in in the vision is a master builder’s plan for this amazing structure.  There is a hint of what is to follow with the scene that is set in this introduction.  The man whose “appearance shone like bronze” has a linen cord and a measuring reed.  What follows is an amazing picture of a structure which is given is such incredible detail.  Her is a small example of what goes on for in great detail regarding the design of the temple and the practice of worship in the temple:
 Now there was a wall all round the outside of the temple area. The length of the measuring reed in the man’s hand was six long cubits, each being a cubit and a handbreadth in length; so he measured the thickness of the wall, one reed; and the height, one reed. Then he went into the gateway facing east, going up its steps, and measured the threshold of the gate, one reed deep. There were recesses, and each recess was one reed wide and one reed deep; and the space between the recesses, five cubits; and the threshold of the gate by the vestibule of the gate at the inner end was one reed deep. (Ezekiel 40: 5-7)
Now, I am not a detailed person, rather being more comfortable with the big picture, so I find this level of detail to be rather hard to deal with.  If you are so inclined and like a visual representation, you can find the three dimensional plan of the temple on-line at  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YNmERZkT6JM.  This is helpful in getting a grasp of the detail provided of the vision.
There is much of what you might find significant in this vision or a any dream or vision like this.  What engaged me initially was the importance of having a detailed plan when you are considering the possibility of something new in your life.  This can be a new project you are undertaking or a new vocation or even a new way of living your life, in effect a rule of life.  For example, if you are wanting to have a deeper connection in your spiritual life, it is helpful and even necessary to work out how you are going to accomplish this.  Rather than just saying, “I want to be more (fill in the blank).”  How am I going to reach that goal, or to put it another way, what do I need to do to travel the path that will take me closer to that goal.  Many goals we might have cannot be reached once and for all.  However, we can begin that journey which will bring us closer to the goal.  If you want to have a closer relationship with the divine, what do I need to do.  Make a detailed plan on what you are going to do to follow that path e.g. what spiritual practices will you engage in.  There are many possibilities and you might want to engage more fully in the ones that you are currently doing and also try new ones to see if they can help you on your journey.   But as the dream/vision maker in Ezekiel’s vision demonstrated the more specific the better.

Now to practice what I am preaching – that is the challenge.

Blessings on whatever journey is truly yours.





Tuesday 19 November 2019

Dreams, God’s Forgotten Language


Last Saturday, Lorna and I led a workshop entitles Dreams, God’s Forgotten Language at St. John’s-by-the-Lake Anglican Church in Grand Bend, Ontario.  As the title suggests the workshop is from the perspective that God speaks to us in our dreams.  We explored how, as in biblical times, God continues to speak to us through the means of our dreams.  The title of the workshop is based on a book by that title by John Sanford who is an Episcopal priest and Jungian analyst.  The workshop title is by way of the Haden Institute where I received training in leading dream groups which utilize the method and concept of dream work developed by Carl Jung.

The approach that we use recognizes that God spoke to many people in the bible through dreams in both the New and Old Testament.  I’m sure that anyone who has a basic familiarity with the bible can identify some occasions in which God spoke to people in and through their dreams.  Indeed, as Sanford notes, there are over seventy occasions in the bible in which God’s uses dreams to send messages to people or passages which refer to dreams and visions.  In the bible and in my understanding, visions are waking dreams.

Dreams come in the service of health and wholeness of the dreamer and in the language of that old Gospel hymn, they are a balm for our sin-sick souls.  However, unlike the people of biblical times, we no longer understand the language of dreams.  Carl Jung, building on the work of Freud, began to develop this language in a way that is compatible with our modern understanding of psychology.  In effect, the language of dreams is metaphor and symbol which make it a challenge for our logical minds to understand and comprehend the message which is contained in them for the dreamer.

There are many dreams which do not have a direct message from God as in many of the biblical accounts.  However, they give us information about where we are in our lives and how we can understand where God is leading us to become the people that God intends us to be.  We are all on a journey in which we may not be aware of what is our true destination or even when we have run into road blocks and have chosen the wrong route.  Dreams can help us find the right path for that journey.  There are many different ways in which can help guide us on that journey.  In my experience, dreams are one of the best ways.  Jung called that journey individuation. 

Blessings on your journey into becoming the whole person God created you to be.



Tuesday 12 November 2019

Lest We Forget


Yesterday was Remembrance Day when we honour those who laid down their lives for our sakes in service to Queen and country in times of conflict.  I have the privilege of serving at Chaplain to Branch 341 of the Royal Canadian Legion in Parkhill, ON.  It was a busy day for Legion members.  We attended the Remembrance Day assembly at the North Middlesex District High School.  This undertaking is student led and it is wonderful to see the results of what must be a significant effort among all the many activities of High School life.  This was followed by the service pf Remembrance at the Cenotaph in Parkhill at 11:00 – the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month.  It is gratifying to see the support by the community for this event – particularly the attendance by the students for the two elementary schools in town.  In the afternoon there was a service of Remembrance the Cenotaph in the smaller nearby community of Lieury. 

There was a time in my life in which I was more ambivalent about Remembrance Day and all that it represented.  I grew up in a family that did not embrace the tradition.  My father, who was someone who, I believe, viewed Remembrance Day as being focused on the militarization of our country rather than an occasion to honour those who had served and made the supreme sacrifice.  This is speculation on my part as, regrettably, I never discussed this with him.  That influenced my early attitude towards my attitude towards Remembrance Day.  However, I have come to understand that we can and must honour those who served and made the ultimate sacrifice but we must also hope and pray and work towards and world in which war is no longer seen as the answer to conflict between peoples and nations. 

I will close with the Prayer of Remembrance for Remembrance Day from the Chaplain’s Manual of the Royal Canadian Legion:
Almighty God, as You have gathered Your people together this day in hallowed remembrance, we give you thanks for all who laid down their lives for our sake, and whom You have gathered from the storms of war into the peace of Your presence.  Let the memory of their devotion ever be an example to us, that we at the last, being faithful unto death, may receive with them the crown of life; through Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen. 

Blessing on your journey.

Tuesday 5 November 2019

All Hallow What?


In the last week, I was introduced to a new addition to the church calendar – All Hallowtide.  It is the marking of the three days of All Hallows’ Eve, All Hallows’ Day and All Soul’s Day.  I’m sure that makers it crystal clear for everyone.  Well actually, it probably is still like seeing through a glass darkly – to use the language from the King James Version of the bible.

Some of this is recognizable to the less that liturgically obsessed.  All Hallows’ Eve is better known as Halloween.  I hope everyone survived that occasion with more treats than tricks.  Halloween got its origins in the ancient Celtic celebration of Samhain, when people would light bonfires and wear costumes to ward off ghosts.  The church, which was very good at co-opting festivals from other religions, in the 8th century Pope Gregory III declared November 1st to be the feast to celebrate all the saint of the church - All saints Day.   All Hallows’ Eve was the eve of All Saints which transmorphed in Halloween and took on many of the attributed of Samhain.  The approaching long nights of winter were dangerous days of witches, ghosts and goblins which had to be appeased by treats.
All Soul’s’ Day is the commemoration of all those who have gone before us whom we honour and owe a debt of gratitude.  One source I consulted notes that it had its origin in the Benedictine Monasteries of the 6th century which had the practice of, “a commemoration of the deceased members at Whitsuntide.” 
We have, therefore a celebration which can be considered an autumnal Triduum – I thought I would throw that little liturgical tidbit in make the glass even darker – calling on the inspiration of Leonard Cohen’s last album “You want it Darker”.  The great Leonard was someone who could be described as the prince of the bright darkness.  But I digress a little.  The Great Triduum is the liturgical name for the Feast of Easter comprising the three days from Maundy Thursday to Easter Sunday.  For those of you who are counting, I know this comprises four days, Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, Easter Saturday and Easter Sunday.  But it is considered by the church to be only three days going from the evening of Maundy Thursday to the Easter Vigil on Saturday.  Easter Sunday is the beginning of the Easter season in the church year. 
So, we have another Triduum – The three days of the autumnal Triduum in which we celebrate those who have gone before us and whom we owe so much and whom we can honour.  I realize that some may have little to honour in the lives of those who preceded them but all in all we are here in the world we inherited from them and like us they were flawed, imperfect people but they made us who we are, and hopefully we will work to make ourselves and the world better.   This was well stated by Br. Curtis Almquis SSJE, “The saints remind us that in the best of times and in the worst of times, life is possible and passable, and that we are not left alone. Today we remember all the saints, and they remember all of us.
 Blessings on your journey from the Autumnal Triduum to the Great Triduum. 




Tuesday 29 October 2019

The Journey into Wholeness


This past weekend I was helping to lead a workshop on dreams.  The workshop took place in Toronto at the Danforth Mennonite Church.  As the title of the workshop - Dreams, God’s Forgotten Language – indicates in our approach to dreams, we understand dreams as a way that God speaks to us.  This was the first event of a new group which has been established to promote this understanding of dreams – Dreamwork Canada https://dreamworkcanada.squarespace.com/. 

The workshop was a great success thanks to the work of all the members of the leadership/planning team; Mary Sanderson. Betty Puricelli, Mary Klein and John Epp as well as me.  This was an ecumenical effort comprised of members of the United Church, Mennonite and Anglican denominations. We will have a return engagement on April 24th and 25th of next year at the same location.  All in all, it was a rewarding time with great participation by those in attendance who were very enthusiastic and receptive to the approach to understanding dreams which can sometimes - perhaps I should say often – be rather less than clear to the logical part of our brains.

In the past ten years or so I have done quite of few of these workshops after completing a program on facilitating dream groups at the Haden Institute. Many of these have been with my wife, Lorna Harris.  Lorna was attending the birthday party for our Granddaughter.  Lorna and I will be offering a one-day event on November 16th at St. John’s by the Lake Anglican Church in Grand Bend Ontario.  If you are interested in being involved please contact Lisa Gumb 519-238-6600 or lgumb@hay.net.
The approach to dreams that we share in our workshops utilizes the concepts of Carl Jung.  However, as I noted above, dreams are a way in which God has always communicated with us.  God did so from the beginning of scripture with many accounts of people receiving divine messages in dreams.  God continues to do so today. 

One of the principles of working with dreams that dreams come in the service of health and wholeness of the dreamer and the world.  This is one of the guiding principles that informs my approach and appreciation of dreams.  I believe, despite what is often misunderstood about God’s desire and intention for us, God does not desire our perfection.  God desires our health and wholeness and for us to become as fully as possible the people God created us to be.
Coincidentally – if you believe in coincidences – the November issue of the Anglican Journal arrived in my mail box this morning - that is my snail mail box.  It contained an article by our new Primate Archbishop Linda Nicholls – that is the head of the Anglican Church of Canada and not the other kind of primate.  Archbishop Linda was writing about What it means to be whole.  She writes, speaking of efforts to set up a healing centre:
One of our first tasks was to define what it means to be whole - to be healed.  This is actually more difficult than it seems.  Are we ever fully healed and well?  There always seems to be some aspect of our life that is in pain, distressed or unbalanced!
I could not agree more – which is very fortunate as I wouldn’t want to have a serious disagreement with my Archbishop.  Dreams can be of great assistance in guiding us on that journey to health and wholeness. 

May each of us have dreams which bless us on our journey.

Wednesday 16 October 2019

Give Thanks in All Things



Happy Thanksgiving to my Canadian Friends which we celebrated on Monday.  We jump the gun on the United States in this one and perhaps on other things as well – but I won’t go there today.

It is a time where it is especially appropriate to give thanks and as I have said previously, we can give thanks in all things even when it is hard to give thanks for some things. Lorna and I have had a safe journey home – or I should say to our Ontario home from our Prince Edward Island home.  It was our seventh summer at the cottage – which is shocking.  Both the years and this summer have gone by in no time it seems.  Time must be speeding up – it can’t be that I am getting older – I just won’t look to closely in the mirror.  But it is good to be back here in Parkhill and find that everything was in good order – something to give thanks for indeed.  Our trip home was uneventful except for our effort to find hwy 407 – I do wish that the Ministry of Transportation would install some road signs to get to the 407 (which is a toll road that bypasses Toronto).   The Ontario government sold hwy 407 some years ago to private corporation which I didn’t agree with at the time – talk about killing the goose that laid the golden egg.  Oh well, this is supposed to be about giving thanks and not about griping or complaining. 

Remembering to give thanks – to show gratitude in all things is something that we can all strive for.  I believe that if we are able to do this through practice it will become second nature and will be a way of having joy in our lives.  I have not been able to do that yet and have to remind myself to give thanks for all that God has given me and to give thanks regardless on what is happening in my life - giving thanks in all things.  I find it hard to do when things don’t go the way I expect them to and people don’t live up to my expectations.  I do find that frustrating to find the universe is not set up to meet my needs all the time. 

As someone – I believe it was Julian of Norwich – said, all shall be well and all manner of things shall be well.  I could add that it often seems just not yet.  However, be thankful in all things.

Blessing on your journey.


Tuesday 1 October 2019

From the Heart


Last week, Lorna and I had a mini-vacation from our summer home in PEI and visited Halifax for three days.  We saw a lot and walked as much and had a great time.  We experienced many of the sights of Halifax including a tour of the Alexander Keith’s Brewery - great beer with a great history, Point Pleasant Park, the Public Gardens and much more. 

The two experiences which engaged me most were the Pier 21 Canadian Museum of Immigration, and the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia.  The Canadian Museum of Immigration touched me on a deep level when I engaged the stories of so many people from so many different lands that have been an integral part of the story of Canada.  We are all immigrants except the first nations who were also honoured for their place in Canada.  What impressed me greatly was the indisputable fact that we are at our best as human beings when we open our hearts to welcome the stranger who has come into our lives.  This is one thing that set apart the Israelites from other nations around them.  As noted by one source http://ronrolheiser.com/welcoming-the-stranger-2/#.XZIQgHdFzIU:
In the Hebrew Scriptures, that part of the bible we call the Old Testament, we find a strong religious challenge to always welcome the stranger, the foreigner. This was emphasized for two reasons: First, because the Jewish people themselves had once been foreigners and immigrants. Their scriptures kept reminding them not to forget that. Second, they believed that God’s revelation, most often, comes to us through the stranger, in what’s foreign to us. That belief was integral to their faith.
This welcoming of the stranger is a foundational part of our call as Christians.   Many of the groups which were there to welcome the immigrants at Pier 21 were church groups including the “Women's Missionary Society of the United Church, Presbyterian, Anglican, Lutheran and Roman Catholic workers, as well as the I.O.D.E.

The second encounter which truly engaged me was, as I noted, the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia.  Specifically, it was the exhibit of the life and works of Maud Lewis.  I had been aware and impressed by Maud’s story previously, particularly in the movie if her life, Maudie. I was enthralled by how Maud’s life and who she was, was expressed through her art.  What I saw was an indominable spirit of someone who did not let all the challenges of this life; physical, economic, and cultural, prevent her from expressing in the most powerful way what and who she essentially was.  Her whole life and everything around her became an expression of her true self. 

These two events showed me what can be accomplished when the spirit of our being is allowed to spring forth into the world which God created and intended that creation to be and become. 

Blessings on your journey