The Terror of Being Right

“Why do we need to feel virtuous?  When I feel self-righteous, am I in the mode that can produce terrorism?” ~Madeleine L’Engle, Bright Evening Star

Back to the question of being “right” again…I can’t get away from it.  When I need to be right, am I any better than anyone else who needs to be right?  Of course, I’m not, but it’s so easy in those moments to convince myself that because the causes I fight for are just and focused on inequality, it’s okay for me to close my mind to what anyone else has to say.  And it isn’t any better…but it’s so easy to just turn off that little voice that says that sometimes being right doesn’t make things any better…and it can definitely make things worse.

My friend K. writes a blog about parenting, and she wrote a few days ago about how people judge other parents by their own standards of parenting…and how this turns people against each other.  We all want so much to believe that we’re doing the right thing for ourselves, for our families, for our Gods, for our causes, that we convince ourselves by shutting out the rest of the arguments.  We try to yell louder than everyone else.

And so, when I read the quote from Madeleine L’Engle that opened this piece, it really hit me how true it is.  As I struggle with what it means to be right, I’m also struggling to find the balance between war and peace, destruction and creation.  So much of what destroys in this world comes not from the goal of destruction, but from the goal of proving once and for all who is right.  And I don’t want to be right if that’s the cost.

But in those moments of self-righteousness and indignant political/religious/social anger, it can be really hard to remember that…

“Hate has erased all the normal barriers…Hate is contagious.  We asked ourselves how immune we were…” ~Madeleine L’Engle, Bright Evening Star


Ask Mormon Girl: I'm Mormon. I'm Gay. I'm torn in two. Help?

Reblogged from Ask Mormon Girl:

The story this week, readers, is in the questions.

Dear AMG,

I am a 26-year-old returned missionary, have a temple recommend, serve in the Elder's Quorum presidency in my singles ward, and am attracted to men.  Without detailing the entire melodramatic saga, I've been dealing with this issue my entire life, but it has really consumed a lot of my attention, energy, and vitality in the last four years.  

Read more… 1,022 more words

Praying for a day when no one has to struggle with this question - no matter what God they believe in...

Wanting to Be Right

“There is a great temptation to suggest to myself or others where God is working and where not, when God is present and when not, but nobody, no Christian leader, priest, or pastor, no monk or nun, and no spiritual director has any ‘special’ knowledge about God.” ~Henri Nouwen

So, there’s an election going on.  And while my vocal, political, feminist voice wants to shout to the rooftops that certain candidates who claim to know what it means to be Christian, or right, or moral, are anything but, I’m learning that it’s more complicated than that.  My cousin commented one day on Facebook that she hates how Christian has become a word that people use as if it’s bad, tainted, ruined by those who are in the public eye and claim to speak on behalf of Christians.  And I want to say that they don’t speak for Christians, I do…but I can’t.  Because as much as I want to say that I’m right, I’m moral, I’m Christian, it would be just as untrue as when the other side says it.

No one can tell what mysteries God has planned for us.  Whether we call God by the name Allah or El, Inanna or Vishnu, Earth Mother or Adonai, or any other name, none of us has the answer.  None of us is right.  And yet we all are.

And the high-achiever, the A-student, the reader of books in me wants to rail against this.  Wants to scream and cry that there must be a right answer.  That’s why I like math so much – there’s a right answer.  But here, there is only being in the moment, listening, and exploring.   There’s no answer key for this.


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