This Christmas, as all the ones before,
we celebrated the coming of the Christ and with it the hope of peace
in this world.
If one was cynical one could ask,
whose peace? The Republican, the Democratic, the Catholic,
Nondenominational, Presbyterian, or maybe the Jewish or Islamic
peace?
Peace, is not about whose view or
ideology wins and who gives in so that harmony may prevail.
Peace has a very important ingredient.
That ingredient is trust.
Whom can we trust? We are all born to
parents whom we feel we can trust unconditionally – until the
child's trust-bubble is burst by abuse, neglect or maybe even the
parent's divorce.
That high haven of trust comes tumbling
down at the child's feet. Sections of it may be still intact like
remains of a ruin still upholding hope for that one parent or person
who protected the child.
As we grow older we learn that there
are people we can trust and others who betray that trust. However, if
those protective walls have already crumbled early on, the chilly
wind of betrayal cuts much deeper into the soul.
God trusted us – sending his son that
we might believe him and treat him well. Yet, God also knew the human
heart. How do you trust in spite of knowing that there are times you
can't trust?
Can we as humans do what God did?
How often have I heard someone yell: “I
trusted you.....!!!” with a long silence implying....”but you
betrayed that trust.” The person then runs off in anger, in disgust
or in tears.
Many of us have become cynical,
distrusting and fearful....while we are hiding behind gated
communities. We do so, however, illogical that may be because even
there we will encounter those we cannot trust. We do background
checks which can only reveal the past of someone – never will that
reveal their future decisions. We give lie detector tests and
psychological tests which provide answers that can vary from day to
day and can be manipulated. We stop voting because we don't trust the
democratic process. We watch our co-workers to see if (s)he acts
strange or does something against the code or company ethics. Yet
even company ethics, can it be trusted or does it just serve the
institution so they won't be sued?
We engage spies because we do not trust
the government of other countries. We hire investigators to dig up
dirt on ex-spouses, on future politicians or anyone rising up a
public ladder. These are all actions which will erode our trust even
further.
Trust is a fickle thing and yet so
essential in the functioning of a society, organization or family.
Lack of Trust will
crumble any society or community.
WHAT if we have
been trusting in the wrong thing all this time, the perfect human?
However, there is
no such a thing.
One
thing we can trust
is that we all are imperfect, that we all make mistakes.
We also can trust that we all need to be loved and we all need to
give care and love to someone, to something. We all have been given
the ability of empathy and compassion, some more so than others –
however, all do have the ability.
How can a world function if there is only imperfection and people's
need for love? It could not were it not for a Higher Power guiding
us, a power some of us call God. We can trust God to protect us and
to guide us in this maze of a world. Within this guidance we find the
ability and willingness to become empathic and compassionate. Why
would we want to be compassionate, even if some do not believe in a
Higher Power? This is, because we too need other's compassion when we
stumble.
Instead of private prisons and more prisons, why not save money and
ask the person who made the mistake to rectify it? The thief should
repay what he took, the one who created damage have it fixed. Maybe
when we change our mindset from the “Criminal” to “the human
who made a mistake,” we might be able to mend the torn fabric of
our society.
Jesus
told us: “Judge not – and ye shall not be judged: condemn not,
and ye shall not be condemned: forgive, and ye shall be forgiven.”
(Luke 6:37) from
King James Version.
There is nothing more important than those teachings, if we want to
repair trust and learn to truly love as Jesus loved us in our
imperfection.
We attempt to negotiate peace treaties with a heavy gnawing of
distrust at the very hearts which should exude that hope, peace and
trust which they search. We may be quite surprised that these
treaties fail. Yet is it a wonder? Deep down in our own heart trust
has crumbled from betrayal a long time ago. In our current society
those crumbled walls have continued to crumble because there are so
few people who show or teach empathy or compassion. It is hard to
find those who are worthy of trust.
What is trust? Trust, if you truly reflect on its quality is safety,
being able to lean on someone, a group, or family. Trust is being
able to rely on someone while being allowed to remain who you truly
are and still be loved.
I know this is a tall order. In its perfection only God is capable of
carrying that out. Yet, we humans can come close, if we exercise and
practice empathy and compassion. This must be practiced not only in
thought and word but also in deed and commitment to each other.
In a world of empathy and compassion where we can learn to trust
again, we may be able to avert many things that ail us now. Crimes
and terrorism may decline if there is someone listening to a
person's or group's plight and is truly inclined to help. For that
matter being able and willing to hear each other is where trust must
start.
I
am also aware that there are atrocities that happened in our history
which are hard to mend. This brings to the forefront questions that
are hard to answer. How do we mend murder? We cannot resurrect the
dead. How do we mend the holocaust and other irreparable damage? We
can't!
We can choose to approach these happenings from a different
view-point.
First
we can choose to weave these experiences into our human historic
fabric and let its tears, which are glistening like diamonds, fill
in the gaps. When we then take a look at this fabric we will have patterns of glistening diamonds spread throughout our fabric filling in
its holes. Kenji Miyazawa once said: 'We must embrace pain and burn
it as fuel for our journey.” Maybe we can weave it as a pathway of
diamond-light into our fabric, a path that may just lead us to peace.
We must acknowledge that there are unspeakable things that happened
and learn from that history so that it will not be repeated. We also
must be alert and aware of the symptoms that led to these atrocities
so we can prevent them in the future. Equally important is that we
examine ourselves each day, in our thoughts, words and actions. We
need to ask ourselves: “When is remaining silent harmful?” When
is speaking up harmful?” We must also realize that if we silently
accept what others ask of us especially if it is harming a whole
people, we come in agreement with our perpetrator.
Secondly, we must embrace forgiveness. This is the hardest thing to
do. There must be a time when we ask God to help us let go and give
us the peace of forgiveness. By not forgiving we are chained to our
perpetrator, to the darkness of the past event. We must forgive so
that we ourselves can become free. With peace of forgiveness a
strange thing happens, we start to be able to trust again.
I am aware that it is hard to live a life of self examination, it is especially hard in a convenience driven society.....yet we must change for our own sake
I am aware that it is hard to live a life of self examination, it is especially hard in a convenience driven society.....yet we must change for our own sake