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Last Updated: Tuesday - 07/13/2010Week of August 5, 2002Three things for conservatives to ponder
By FR. RON ROLHEISER, omi
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"I don't look at whether a congregation is liberal or conservative; I look at how devout they are."- Sally Bingham |
For example, as conservatives, it is easy for us to look at a culture such as exists in Holland and assess it negatively from a Christian point of view: Holland has legalized abortion, euthanasia, prostitution and various drugs. Church attendance is low, many people no longer bother to get married inside of the church or even inside of a courthouse, and, from many points of view, things look very post-Christian.
Yet Holland has established one of the most compassionate, peace-loving cultures in the world. They take care of their poor better perhaps than any other country, are peace-loving, solicitous that everyone have equal rights, anxious about the environment and display religious and ethnic tolerance.
These are no small moral achievements. Too often we don't see this because obsessive focus on one moral issue blinds us to the larger moral picture. Sadly, this is also true, in reverse, when we assess more conservative cultures.
3) The social gospel is just as non-negotiable as the sexual one.
As conservatives, we can be proud that we have remained prophetic in terms of affirming a higher sexual ethos, the road less-taken.
But sometimes our vigilance has been one-sided. We have been healthily vigilant about sexual morality and what it protects (marriage, family life, emotional stability, social order, personal integrity, proper transparency, the capacity for trust) without, at the same time, being equally (or at all) solicitous about the other half of the Gospel, justice and feeding the poor. Like our liberal colleagues, we too are selective in our morality, able to compartmentalize, and able to feel comfortable with neglecting important parts of the gospel because of our passion for one area of it.
Jesus, however, makes social morality and private morality equally non-negotiable. In the Gospels, we don't go to heaven if we break the commandments, but we don't go there either if we don't feed the poor.
Sally Bingham was asked how she adjusts herself in terms of speaking to a conservative or a liberal congregation. "I don't look at whether a congregation is liberal or conservative; I look at how devout they are."
Sound advice for us all.
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