Joshua 1:7 ÒOnly be strong and very courageous, being careful to act in
accordance with all the law that my servant Moses commanded you; do not turn
from it to the right hand or to the left, so that you may be successful
wherever you go.Ó
I was watching a news anchor
during one of the days in the past couple of weeks that the Dow was falling off
the face of the earth. It was
after the congressional rescue package had been passed and the commentators
were asking each other why that seemed to have little effect on the
market. One person noted that it
was fear that had gotten out of control.
The anchor then asked a question that hit me between the eyes, ÒHow do
you turn around fear?Ó she asked.
The question hit me because it
illustrated that, like with the issue of the greed that got us here, we have
left the realm of policy discussion.
ÒHow do you turn around fear?Ó is a psychological and theological
question. Once fear takes hold,
you canÕt legislate your way out of it.
Fear moves behavior out of the purely rational realm and into the realm
of spirit. In biblical terms, we
have Òsown the wind and reaped the whirlwindÓ (Hosea 8:7) and now the whirlwind
is pretty scary. ÒHow do you turn
around fear?Ó
IÕve been thinking about that a
lot since hearing the question, and my mind naturally jumped to one of my
favorite biblical passages: 1 John 4:18
ÒThere is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear.Ó ThatÕs the short answer. Fear is a gaping hole that threatens to
suck us into its vacuum. We
eliminate it, not by trying to hang on to other things in order to resist the
pull, but by picking up a shovel and filling the hole with love. The trouble with the short answer is
that itÕs pretty vague and easily misunderstood. How do you love the Dow Jones? What does it mean to love in an economic meltdown? ThatÕs where I think Joshua comes in.
Rev. Peter Gomes in his new book The Scandalous Gospel of Jesus says,
ÒThe opposite of fear is not courage, but compassion.Ó He then references the same 1 John
passage above. I basically agree,
but I would like to tweak that a bit more. I think courage actually is compassion. I think courage is the form love takes
in the face of fear. Courage
happens when someone stops running from a threat and turns to face it for the
sake of love. Courage happens when
a father runs back into a burning building to save his child. Courage happens when a Marine goes into
enemy territory for the love of country or to retrieve the body of a
comrade. Courage happened when Rosa
Parks refused to take a back seat for the love of justice. Courage happened when Bobby Kennedy
ignored law enforcement advice the night of Martin Luther KingÕs assassination
and spoke to the African Americans of Indianapolis for the love of peace. Courage happens when a woman faces down
breast cancer for the love of life or when anyone faces death filled with the
love for family and friends and looking to the love of God in that great
unknown. When we meet fear with
compassion, we call it courage.
So what does that look like in
our economic crisis? Think about
it. Greed is often a form of
fear. We hoard money or possessions
when at some level we fear that we will not have enough. Greed is also a lack of compassion for
others. When we keep more than our
share of wealth (which is one way to look at debt), we fence off GodÕs
resources from others. The prophet
Micah says this quite plainly, ÒWill you rob God?Ó Our greed over decades has robbed God and GodÕs poorer
children and now, in the end, it is robbing us as well.
Now is the time for courage,
which means living the economy of God for the love of God and humanity. It means living within our means and
giving excess to others—not because it is forced on us, but out of
compassion. In times when our fear
tells us to close our fists tightly, we open them and honestly look at whatÕs
there. In Massachusetts we are
about to vote on a ballot provision to eliminate the state income tax. Our economic fears make that sound
appealing, but the movement in the churches calls for compassion for those
whose services will be eliminated without that revenue: the elderly, the disabled, the
children, the poor. The church calls
for courage in the voteÉto eliminate the fear of taxes by arousing loving
compassion for others.
Joshua cautioned the Israelites
that it would take courage to act in accordance with the Law of Moses (which
had huge economic implications), but that such courage would lead to
success. It is no different
now. Taking the courageous steps
to show compassion for others in hard economic times will turn around the fear
and restore hope. When economists
say we are sinking because of fear, that is a challenge that people and
communities of faith are uniquely suited to address. May we have the courage to do so.
Increase our love, God, that we might manifest that
love in courage. Amen.
Copyright
by Anne Robertson, 2008
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