Some quotes to consider in 2020 -
We have a duty to live up to our heritage of open-mindedness. We must always be tolerant and fair and never simply revile others for their opinions. The way to silence error is by truth, not by various subtle forms of aggression. But we will always prefer violence to truth if our imaginations are at every moment over-stimulated by frenzied and dangerous fantasies.
Therefore on of the most important tasks of the moment is to recognize the great problem of the mental climate in which we live. Our minds are filled with images which call for violent and erratic reactions. We can hardly recover our senses long enough to think calmly and make reasoned commitments. We are swept by alternate fears and hopes which have no relation to deep moral truth. A protest which merely compounds these fears and hopes with a new store of violent images can hardly help us become men of peace. (p.44-45)
The problem is much more complex, much more tragic, than people have imagined. To begin with, it is something that extends beyond America. It affects the whole world. The race problem of America has been analyzed (by such writers as William Faulkner, for example) as a problem of deep guilt for the sin of slavery. The guilt of white America toward the Negro is simply another version of the guilt of the European colonizer toward all the other races of the world, whether in Asia, Africa, America or Polynesia. (p.134)
Gandhi long ago pointed out that western democracy was on trial…The problem of American Christianity is the same as the problem of Christianity everywhere else: Christianity is suffering a crisis of identity and authenticity, and is being judged by the ability of Christians themselves to abandon unauthentic, anachronistic images and securities, in order to find a new place in the world by a new evaluation of the world and a new commitment in it. (p.138)
In fact we (Christians) are learning that we are as other men are, that we are not a special kind of privileged being, that our faith does not exempt us from facing the mysterious realities of the world with the same limitations as everybody else, and with the same capacity for human failure. Our Christian calling does not make us superior to other men, does not entitle us to judge everyone and decide everything for everybody. We do not have answers to every social problem, and all conflicts have not been decided beforehand in favor of our side. Our job is to struggle along with everybody else and collaborate with them in the difficult, frustrating task of seeking a solution to common problems, which are entirely new and strange to us all. (p.142-143)
What did the radio say this evening? I don’t know. What was on TV? I have watched TV twice in my life. I am frankly not terribly interested in TV anyway. (p.150-151)
Does it not occur to us that if, in fact, we live in a society which is par excellence that of the simulacrum, we are the champion idolaters of all history? (p.152)
My thesis is now clear: in my opinion the root of our trouble is that our habits of thought and the drives that proceed from them are basically idolatrous and mythical. We are all the more inclined to idolatry because we imagine that we are of all generations the most enlightened, the most objective, the most scientific, the most progressive and the most humane. (p. 154)
The great question then is how do we communicate with the modern world? If in fact communication has been reduced to pseudo-communication, to the celebration of pseudo-events and the irate clashing of incompatible myth-systems, how are we to avoid falling into this predicament? How are we to avoid the common obsession with pseudo-events in order to construct what seems to us to be a credible idol?
It is a nasty question, but it needs to be considered, for in it is contained the mystery of the evil of our time.
I do not have an answer to the question, but I suspect the root of it is this: if we love our own ideology and our own opinion instead of loving our brother, we will seek only to glorify our ideas and our institutions and by that fact we will make real communication impossible. (p.163)
…Vietnam seems to teach another perilous lesson: we know how to escalate, but we apparently don’t know how to reverse the process and de-escalate. (p.166)
---the delusions on both sides reinforce and aggravate each other, and there is enough emotional violence packed into America today to blow the whole place sky high, no matter how reasonable some of us may still hope to be. (p.177)
As Christians, we must remember that in Christ there is no meaning to racial divisions. There is no white and black in Christ (p.179)
There is, however, such a thing as collective responsibility, and collective guilt. This is not quite the same as personal responsibility and personal guilt, because it does not usually follow from a direct fully conscious act of choice. (p.180)
…the challenge issued by the Death-of-God theology is not to be evaded. In order to disentangle Christian faith from the crisis and collapse of western culture, and open it to entirely new world perspectives, we have to be able to renounce the mighty spirit that has let himself be set up in the place of God: the Angel of the West. (p.198)
…Dr. Marty adds: “Nationalism can produce an ecstasy which few other idolatries can.” (p.203)
I think the existence of the Christian in the modern world is going to be more and more marginal. We are going to be “Diaspora” Christians in a frankly secular and non-believing society. This is not necessarily as tragic as it may sound, (p.209)
It should not disconcert anyone who knows, from the Bible and from the mystics that the silences of God are also messages with a definite import of their own. (p.211)
My own peculiar task in my Church and in my world has been that of the solitary explorer who, instead of jumping on all the latest bandwagons at once, is bound to search the existential depths of faith in its silences, its ambiguities, and in those certainties which lie deeper than the bottom of anxiety. In these depths there are no easy answers, no pat solutions to anything. It is a kind of submarine life in which faith sometimes mysteriously takes on the aspect of doubt when, in fact, one has to doubt and reject conventional and superstitious surrogates that have taken the place of faith. (p.213)
We would like to be quiet, but our restlessness will not allow it. Hence we believe that for us there can be no peace except in a life filled up with movement and activity, with speech, news, communication, recreation, distraction. We seek the meaning of our life in activity for its own sake, activity without objective, efficacy without fruit, scientism, the cult of unlimited power, the service of the machine as an end in itself. And in all these a certain dynamism is imagined. The life of frantic activity is invested with the noblest of qualities, as if it were the whole end and happiness of man: or rather as if the life of man had no inherent meaning whatever and had to be given a meaning from some external source, from a society engaged in a gigantic communal effort to raise man above himself. Man is indeed called to transcend himself. But do his own efforts suffice for this? (p.216)
Science and technology are indeed admirable in many respects and if they fulfill their promises they can do much for man. But they can never solve his deepest problems. On the contrary, without wisdom, without the intuition and freedom that enable man to return to the root of his being, science can only precipitate him still further into the centrifugal flight that flings him, in all his compact and uncomprehending isolation, into the darkness of outer space without purpose and without objective. (p.224)
…there is in fact no such division in Christianity. It is not a matter of either God or man, but of finding God by loving man, and discovering the true meaning of man in our love for God. Neither is possible without the other. (p.262)