Showing posts with label leadership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label leadership. Show all posts

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Righteous Indignation, Ch. 12 (p 87-93)

Righteous Indignation, Ch. 12 (p 85-93)
Redemption for Radicals: Jewish Congregation-Based Community Organizing -- Rabbi Jonah Pesner

(1) While the two primary examples in this chapter relate to health care (general access/coverage and nursing home care), the two over-lapping themes of community organizing and story-telling can be applied to any social justice issue.

The first example of community and stories was especially powerful for me because my wife and I personally struggle with health care access and cost. If there is a time for organizing on this issue, it is now as Daschle begins tackling this issue anew. What is your health care story?

(2) "Though the story of the recent Massachusetts health reform is powerful, it is not unique. It is but one example of Jewish participation in the emerging movement called Congregation-Based Community Organizing (CBCO)" (p 88).

The Jewish Reconstructionist Federation website lists three CBCO characteristics:

  1. Congregants engage in one-to-one conversations within their synagogue, and often with other congregations, about their social justice passions.
  2. Leaders engage in extensive clergy and lay leadership training and development.
  3. Synagogue leaders work side-by-side with dozens of faith institutions and progressive organizations in their community, across lines of race, class, and faith.
Would your local congregation be open to telling their stories? What social justice passions would you want to discuss? What would it take to get the spiritual leaders of your faith community to engage in this conversation? How open is your community to working with people of other faiths? How open are you?

[More resources at/by Interfaith Funders, Unitarians, DART and YouTube.]

(3) "For people of faith, the first step toward justice is when we cry out" (p 89). The examples given of people who listened to the cry are Pharaoh's daughter, Moses and God.

I once prayed that God would open my ears to the cry of the oppressed. It wasn't long before I was overwhelmed. Cries from every direction were disorienting. Where to start? What to do? What was the first priority? "Okay, God. There is too much. Your kingdom come; your will be done. And how can I be a part of that right here, right now?"

What was the first cry for justice that you remember hearing? When have you cried out? Did anyone listen and respond?

(4) Since this blog is for "ordinary radicals," let's look at the definition of radical given on page 90.

"The radical is that unique person to whom the common good is the greatest personal value.... The radical is so completely identified with mankind that he personally shares the pain, the injustices, and the sufferings of all his fellow men" (p 90; quoted from Reveille for Radicals by Saul Alinksy).

How radical am I? In what ways do I share in the pain, injustice and suffering of others? How does this lead to their redemption? And to my own? If the common good is not my greatest personal value, what is?

(5) "First and foremost, [the Exodus story] teaches that in every time and place, redemption is possible. It begins with a cry... It continues with rage at the injustice, and a willingness to act. It requires leadership and relationships.... The people must begin to articulate their story..." (p 91).

Crying, rage, willingness to act, leadership, relationships and story-telling. Where am I at on these themes? Am I crying or hearing some else's cries (or both)? Do I have rage? At what? Am I willing to act? Am I acting? Am I offering leadership? Am I follow others who are more experienced than I? What condition and quality are my relationships? Are there key relationships I need to focus on to bolster community change? I am telling my story, listening intently on other's stories, providing an environment what words can be shared and heard?

(6) "In the globalized twenty-first century, justice transcends categories of race, class, and faith. Today, standing together for redemption means discovering our shared suffering and being challenged by each other's divergent traditions" (p 91).

What groups do I still not listen to? Why? What barriers am I allowing to stop their story? What stories am I telling myself about these groups? What suffering might I share in common with them? Am I open to hearing anything from this group's faith tradition?

(7) "The power for systemic change emanates from the Divine, but it comes only from authentic relationships both inside the Jewish family and beyond, with other communities who share a vision of a world redeemed. We can harness the power of our relationships and engage together in bold, public action, across lines of faith, class, and race, and address the structural sources of economic and social injustice" (p 93).

"Redemption isn't just for radicals. Redemption is for everyone" (p 93).

May we build relationships across barriers of faith, socio-economic class, age, ethnicity, political party, and every other characteristic we use to describe "them" and "us." And in these relationships, may we find divine power to build a more just world.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Righteous Indignation, Ch. 6 (p 45-52)

Righteous Indignation, Ch. 6 (p 45-52)
Religious Leadership and Politics -- Rabbi David Saperstein

Although I'm not Jewish, this is yet another essay that relates directly to concerns I have about my faith community. Here, I refer to the need for the spiritual leader to also be the social justice leader and the necessity of training in order to do this well.

(1) The commitment to social justice within the Jewish community is said to be bolstered by three converging forces:

  1. The "texts of traditional Judaism" (p 46).
  2. The Age of Reason (p 46).
  3. "...a renewed interest in those manifestations of religion that bring existential fulfillment to our individual and communal lives" (p 47).
How do you think these three factors have influenced your faith and priorities? What else has influenced your personal path to care about and work for social justice?

(2) "...good people must never stand idly by while others are oppressed, persecuted, and victimized" (p 47).

Proverbs 31:8 teaches, "Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves, for the rights of all who are destitute" (NIV). Who needs my voice today? Who is destitute? Why? What intervention can I be a part of? Who else needs to get involved? How can I engage these other parties?

(3) Saperstein asks the question, "How should a synagogue or a rabbi balance the five basic types of social justice programming (educating the synagogue or broader community on issues, providing social services, community organizing, legislative advocacy, and tzedakah)?" (p 51).

Which of these are you currently engaged in? How many of these is your faith community actively involved with? In what ways? What is working? What is next?

(4) The questions about rabbinic courses (p 51) speak to me because I am contemplating attending a Christian seminary, and I am finding few that deal with these issue in any depth. So far I've found two--Palmer Theological Seminary of Eastern University (Ron Sider, Jim Wallis, Tony Campolo and Shane Claiborne have ties to either the seminary or the university) and the Mennonite seminary in Indiana. This is a tragedy and a scandal. Surely, there are more. What can you share with me?

(5) "As we look toward this new century, it should be clear that if the Judaism we offer our community and our young does not speak to the great moral issues of their lives, their country, and their world, it will fail to capture their imagination or loyalty--and will fail to capture the authentic meaning of Judaism for our lives" (p 52).

This resonates with me. How do you react? What are the "great moral issues" to you?