Archive for August, 2008

jill bolte taylor: my stroke of insight

Neuroanatomist Jill Bolte Taylor had an opportunity few brain scientists would wish for: One morning, she realized she was having a massive stroke. As it happened — as she felt her brain functions slip away one by one, speech, movement, understanding — she studied and remembered every moment. This is a powerful story about how our brains define us and connect us to the world and to one another.

http://www.ted.com

http://drjilltaylor.com

candidates’ church chat erodes U.S. principles

Let’s be honest: Forum with Warren was religious test for McCain, Obama

At the risk of heresy, let it be said that setting up the two presidential candidates for religious interrogation by an evangelical minister—no matter how beloved—is supremely wrong.

It is also un-American.

For the past several days, most political debate has focused on who won.

Was it the nuanced, thoughtful Obama, who may have convinced a few more skeptics that he isn’t a Muslim? Or was it the direct, confident McCain, who breezes through town hall-style meetings the way Obama sinks three-pointers from the back court?

Suffice it to say, each of the candidates’ usual supporters felt validated in their choices. McCain convinced and comforted with characteristic certitude those most at ease with certitude; Obama convinced and comforted with his characteristic intellectual ambivalence those most at ease with ambivalence.

The winner, of course, was Warren, who has managed to position himself as political arbiter in a nation founded on the separation of church and state.

The loser was America.

In his enormously successful book, “The Purpose-Driven Life,” Warren begins: “It’s not about you.” Agreed. Nor is this criticism aimed at Christians, evangelicals, other believers or non-believers—or at Warren, who is a good man with an exemplary record of selfless works. Few have walked the walk with as much determination or success.

This is about higher principles that are compromised every time we pretend we’re not applying a religious test when we’re really applying a religious test.

It is true that no one was forced to participate in the Saddleback forum and that both McCain and Obama are free agents. Warren certainly has a right to invite whomever he wishes to his church and to ask them whatever they’re willing to answer.

His format and questions were interesting and the answers more revealing than the usual debate menu provides. But does it not seem just a little bit odd to have McCain and Obama chatting individually with a preacher in a public forum about their positions on evil and their relationship with Jesus Christ?

The past few decades of public confession and Oprah-style therapy have prepared us perfectly for a televangelist probing politicians about their moral failings. The Warren Q&A wasn’t an inquisition exactly, but viewers would be justified in squirming.

What is the right answer, after all? What happens to the one who gets evil wrong? What’s a proper relationship with Jesus? What’s next? Interrogations by rabbis, priests and imams? What candidate dare decline on the basis of mere principle?

Both Obama and McCain gave “good” answers, but that’s not the point. They shouldn’t have been asked. Is the American electorate now better prepared to cast votes knowing that Obama believes that “Jesus Christ died for my sins and I am redeemed through him,” or that McCain feels that he is “saved and forgiven”?

What does that mean, anyway? What does it prove? Nothing except that these men are willing to say whatever they must—and what most Americans personally feel is no one’s business—to win the highest office.

Warren tried to defuse criticism about staging the interviews in his church by saying that though “we” believe in the separation of church and state, “we” don’t believe in the separation of faith and politics. Faith, he said, “is just a worldview, and everybody has some kind of worldview. It’s important to know what they are.”

Presumably “we” refers to Warren’s church of fellow evangelicals. And while, yes, everybody has some kind of worldview, it shouldn’t be necessary in a pluralistic nation of secular laws to publicly define that view in Christian code.

For the moment, let’s set aside our curiosity about what Jesus might do in a given circumstance and wonder what our founding fathers would have done at Saddleback Church. What would have happened to Thomas Jefferson if he had responded as he wrote in 1781:

“It does me no injury for my neighbor to say that there are 20 gods, or no God. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg.”

Would the crowd at Saddleback have applauded and nodded through that one? Doubtful.

By today’s new standard of pulpits in the public square, Jefferson—the great advocate for religious freedom in America—would have lost.

Washington Post Writers Group

Kathleen Parker is a syndicated columnist. E-mail: kparker@kparker.com

we are perfect as we are

This most exhalted of creatures must needs formulate a science; without it, he is bound to suffer this process of nature passively, and suffer it until the arduous task of awakening his consciousness has been achieved, meaning the consciousness of the eternal Being within us. Without that, what good is all the rest? What good all the endless discussions of philosophy? What good the science that destroys itself? What purpose in awakening every morning for the wearisome daily struggle to reach the evening in a state of exhaustion, to reach the agony of such an empty life?

If our existence were conducted in the spirit of truth, all suffering would be joyous, all effort fruitful; nothing would be worth troubling over, for the aim would illumine us, and this entire passage would be looked upon as a mere tragi-comedy, without importance in itself; only the aim counts.

As long as cerebral intelligence governs the world, it will be dominated by beings of inferior mentality, for man’s life will be but struggle of force and power, struggle of vanity, struggle of wealth, struggle for an existence whose aim is warped. All of life will be based only on the equilibrium of arguments where every affirmation can be contradicted, every proof destroyed and denied, making man the most ferocious of beasts.

But man is not a beast; he is animated. Man is an epitome of the cosmos, a creature housing a divine spark. Man is not an evolved amphibian, an animal form that has become what we are.

Man is perfect at his origin, a divine being who has degenerated into what we are.

– R.A. Schwaller de Lubics (The Egyptian Miracle)