1. CVA Sweatshirts
2. Take Heart! Feedback
3. CVA Podcasts
4. Activist Feedback
5. Christianity and the Problem of Human Violence
- Prophecy and Creativity
1. CVA Sweatshirts
For those of us up north, it's getting chilly -- time to break out a
warm, comfortable CVA sweatshirt. To get yours, go to
https://christianveg.org/books.htm.
2. Take Heart! Feedback
“Your newsletter is just remarkable-you always find a way to inspire
and challenge us, so thank you!” ~ Karen, New Mexico, USA
The CVA offers Sustaining Membership to those paying our $25 annual
subscription. In addition to the weekly e-newsletter available to all
members, Sustaining Members receive the Take Heart! daily e-messages,
which include inspirational comments, biblical commentary, health tips,
an advice column, and recipes.
3. CVA Podcasts
Check out: http://www.allcreatures.org/cva/podcast/index.htm for our
weekly podcast, which includes highlights for the
e-newsletter,
interviews, and more.
4. Activist Feedback
Paris writes: The World Vegetarian Day [in San Francisco was a great
2 day event! Everything went wonderfully with 3000 or so attendees. It
seemed the table was always swarming with people.
As at the Harmony Festival, Pat was there tirelessly refusing to
leave the table to go listen to a speaker or tour around, etc. "I think
I should stay here." She is a wonderful and very organized volunteer,
and a great vegan chef by the way. She brought fudge and brownies!
5. Christianity and the Problem of Human Violence
- Prophecy and Creativity
[This series reflects my views and not "official" CVA positions. It
is being archived at
http://www.christianveg.com/violence_view.htm.]
There seems to be an innate human desire to be creative. What makes
one creative person’s work “great,” while most people’s writings,
paintings, music, etc. are ignored or quickly forgotten? Great art
speaks to important aspects of human experience. “Pop culture” often
presents human experience in simple, black-and-white terms. This has
certain appeal, because such art is readily accessible, requires little
intellectual work, and generally reinforces the values and beliefs of
its intended audience. Pop culture has little lasting power, however,
because it generally does not meaningfully describe the people’s
greatest inner conflicts or their deepest spiritual longings and needs.
The writings of the Hebrew prophets exemplify great literature. At
first glance, one might expect the ancient Hebrews to have ignored or
rejected the writings of the later prophets, who railed against the
faithlessness and sinfulness of the Hebrews and denounced scapegoating
violence. Yet, these prophets’ writings became part of the Hebrew
Scriptures and, later, the Christian canon. Part of the reason, I think,
is that the ancient Hebrews intuitively understood that “sacred”
violence is wrong, and that God wants compassion and righteousness.
“Great” artists aim to speak prophetic truth through their various
art media. Often, the public resists the messages of the most insightful
prophets. Communities usually reject revelation of the lies that the
community wants to keep hidden, for example the lies regarding the
scapegoating victim’s innocence. However, Jesus said, “The very stone
which the builders rejected has become the head of the corner” (Luke
20:17; see also Matthew 21:42 and Mark 12:10), and occasionally people
eventually hear the prophet’s message, when (possibly aided by the Holy
Spirit) they are ready.
Everyone has the potential to have a prophetic voice because life
invariably involves episodes of physical suffering, social rejection,
and psychological grief. Consequently, we have the potential to identify
with victims. In addition, nearly everyone can empathize with victims of
scapegoating because nearly everyone experiences scapegoating. Nearly
all of us have been falsely accused at some point in our lives, and we
often perceive that the accusation has a mimetic quality in that one
person’s accusation encourages other people to join the chorus. Many
people have experienced feeling impotent against a tidal wave of
accusations.
Another common form of victimization, which one may regard as
scapegoating, relates to one’s relationship to one’s parents. While
parents generally mean well for their children, they often wound their
children by trying to have their children be a vehicle for the parents’
self-esteem. For example, parents often hope that their children will
counterbalance the parents’ own failings or shortcomings. Through subtle
or explicit instructions, children gain an understanding that they
should try to “make their parents proud.” This often victimizes children
in at least two ways. The children naturally want their achievements to
be their own. If they sense that their parent’s love is conditional upon
their fulfilling their parents’ dreams, they will lose the sense of
accomplishment that comes from defining their own goals and achieving
them. Perhaps more poignantly, children can rarely live up to their
parents’ high hopes and expectations. This can readily lead to a sense
of shame and guilt, which often significantly damages self-esteem. With
lower self-esteem, the children are inclined to do exactly as their
parents had done – projecting their sense of shame and guilt onto their
own children. The prophet, perhaps inspired by the Holy Spirit, neither
internalizes the shame and guilt nor projects it onto others. The
prophet recognizes the process of victimization and rejects it.
Nearly all of us have had experiences that have helped us appreciate
the perspective of the victim, and this knowledge has helped prepare us
to join with Christ in defending scapegoats. Nevertheless, the
scapegoating process remains largely hidden. Consequently, even today,
we often find it necessary to communicate the deepest truths about human
existence and human community subtly and indirectly, such as fiction,
poetry, painting, or music. By analogy, Jesus needed to use parables to
communicate his radical ideas. I also think there is a place for prose,
and I would include this book as an attempt at prophetic witness, but I
think prose’s appeal is limited to those who are very ready for its
message. While fiction and other art forms can enter the resistant mind
more subtly, those unprepared for the prose-writer’s prophetic witness
tend to close their minds to the message.
The medium of prophecy may influence how widely the prophetic voice
is heard, but it has no bearing on the experience of prophetic witness.
While we all have the opportunity for prophetic witness, many of us
decline it, perhaps because we do not want to be rejected. However, our
greatest joy may come from a sense of fulfillment when we answer our
call to truth. This, I think, is one reason that “the truth will make
you free” (John 8:32).
Jesus did not seek immediate popularity. Rather, he envisioned his
ministry like a mustard tree that grows slowly and eventually has
branches for all the birds of the air (Matthew 13:31-32; Luke 13:19).
Will our creative efforts bear fruit? Some will, and most will not. The
Apostle Paul wrote, “. . . he who prophesies speaks to men for their
upbuilding and encouragement and consolation” (1 Corinthians 14:3), but
many resist our message. Indeed, we have little control over how people
will receive our attempts at prophetic witness. However, whatever we do
in service to God honors and glorifies God and gives our lives meaning,
purpose, and direction. When we aim to glorify ourselves with riches,
sensual pleasures, and status symbols, our lives may seem pleasant, but
such self-aggrandizement fails to address the universal human
psychological and spiritual needs for a sense of meaning in life. The
result is typically misery and despair.
Stephen R. Kaufman, M.D.