Saturday, December 31, 2022

The Corrupting Influence of Power

 The Non-Prophet Corner


         “All power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”  This famous quote of Britan’s Lord Acton expresses a human phenomenon widely visible in the lives of many who hold & exercise political or economic power in our society. This tragic pattern in human behavior should not surprise us. Every human being, at some level of personal life, has experienced the soul corrupting temptations involved in exercising power over others.

         Of course, exercising power does not automatically or inevitably bring moral corruption into our lives. Rather, as in the biblical story of Adam & Eve in the Garden of Eden, the temptation to disregard our moral compass is always present when we exercise our God given power. The human power of choice is, in fact

 a gift of God for the very purpose of  developing our full creative potential. The factor of corruption enters our lives when we ignore our human values – love, compassion, truth-telling, justice, equality, forgiveness.  

         The claiming and exercise of power in human life is necessary for human development and fulfillment.  But the temptation to ignore our moral values or justify our immoral use of power is a constant temptation. When we use our power without moral choice it corrupts our lives and destroys a truly human trustful society.  


THE CHOICE IS ALWAYS OURS.

Friday, November 4, 2022

Marching Toward “1984”


          In his famous novel entitled “1984” first published in 1949, George Orwell attempted to imagine what the world would look like in 40 years if the global political trend toward authoritarianism accompanied by exclusive & total government control of communications technology were to dominate national and global politics.  There is one “hero” in the novel named Winston Smith who tries vainly to hold on to his independence in the face of this governmental system of total control.

         One writer describes the novel  this way: “Winston Smith wrestles with oppression in “Oceania” ( a fictional name for America), a place where the Party scrutinizes human actions with ever-watchful Big Brother. Defying a ban on individuality, Winston dares to express his thoughts in a diary and pursues a relationship with Julia. These criminal deeds bring Winston into the eye of the opposition, who then must reform the nonconformist.

         Today the rise of Authoritarianism in many parts of our world, including the growth of fascist-like forces in America,  including right-wing “Trumpism” pose threats to constitutional Democracy and give some substance to Orwell’s warning. Are we Americans unconcernedly “Marching toward “1984”?

Sunday, July 3, 2022

NOONERS REFLECTION


          Do not confuse spirituality with being psychic. It is far better to be spiritual than to be psychic.

         For example: Christ Jesus ---who, next to Buddha, was the most spiritual man ever to walk the earth---did not simply emerge as a great spiritual leader shortly before his thirtieth year. He spent much of his early life studying with the teachers and masters of the East. There is little in your Bible about his life between his fifteenth and thirtieth years, but you may be certain that he did not simply wander from mountain to mountain gathering spiritual strength. He spent much of this time being taught by learned ones of Africa and Egypt. And eventually this phase of Christ Jesus’ life will become known through the appearance of certain writings that will come to light by virtue of a great archaeological discovery in Egypt.

         Thus, Christ Jesus developed “divine consciousness” over a long period of time. So also Buddha meditated many years before he received the higher teachings. Neither of them were born with their spiritual and psychic powers fully developed. They chose to walk in the path of light, and they then worked in order to attain to a high degree of spirituality.

 

The Reluctant Prophet  

Daniel Logan

Sunday, March 13, 2022

NOONERS REFLECTION: 3-13-22

 It is strange to be here. 

The mystery never leaves you alone. 

Behind you images; below you worlds; above you your thoughts, the silence of another world waits. 

A world lives within you   

No one else can bring you news of this inner world. 

If we become addicted to the external, our interiority will haunt us. 

We will become hungry with a hunger no image, person or deed can still.  

To be wholesome we must remain truthful to our vulnerable complexity.  

In order to keep our balance, we need to hold the interior and exterior, visible and invisible, known and unknown, temporary and eternal, ancient and new, together. 

No one else can undertake this task for you.  

You are the one and only threshold of and inner world. 

This wholesomeness is holiness. 

To be holy is to be natural; to befriend the world that comes to balance in you.  

Behind the facade of image and distraction, each person is an artist in this primal and inescapable sense.  

Each one of us is doomed and privileged to be an inner artist who carries and shapes a unique world

 

Anam Cara
A Book of Celtic Wisdom

John O’Donohue

Tuesday, March 8, 2022

A Prayer for Today


          Loving God, you fill all things with a fullness and hope that we can never comprehend. Thank you for leading us from following leaders of falsehood and into a time where more of reality and truth are being unveiled for all to see.       

       We pray that you will take away our natural temptation for cynicism, denial, fear and despair. Help us have the courage to awaken to greater truth, greater humility and greater care for one another. May we place our hope in what matters and what lasts, trusting in your eternal presence and love.

       Listen to our hearts’ longings for the healing of our suffering world, and give us the wisdom to see and accept our responsibilities for this task.

       Knowing, good God, that you are hearing our hearts better than our words, we offer this prayer in all the holy names of God. Amen.

Darrell W. Yeaney, 

Saturday, January 8, 2022

Touched by COVID19 by Mazin Qumsiyeh

 

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Pushing 74 now and recovering from COVID19 omicron infection myself, I received this thoughtful message from a Palestinian friend to whom I have often looked for inspiration.  Mazin does not disappoint.

[HumanRights] Touched by COVID19 

Mazin Qumsiyeh

 For four days now my old body is fighting the COVID19. IN this I had joined
some 360 million fellow human beings. I was reluctant to write on this
for many reasons including that the experiences of many others is far more
poignant. Two faculty members at the university and two close relatives and
several friends lost their lives already tp this virus. Dozens of friends
and relatives also survived it and described the experience to me
in detail. I guess similar to the pandemic of racism and colonialism
which took and still takes so many lives.

However,  immersion in the experience of being infected is different from
imagining it and  emotions twirling in my head are unanticipated including
those on morality and mortality. Scientific background provides a more
predictable thought process and more certainty about knowledge than
philosophical/religious human experience. The former gives results more
predictable while the latter gives us a different perspective than with
academic knowledge:

1) The easy part: As a biologist and judging my situation and degrees of
interaction with others, I knew it was inevitable that I would get
infected. I had studied the molecular biology and mutation rates of this
virus (and taught some of this to masters students in molecular biology). I
have looked at rates of infection, epidemiology, immunology, and
symptomatology. I knew there was no going back to a pre-COVID19 world.
Vaccination only helps (hopefully) make mortality rates lower but the
availability of billions of humans provides ample opportunity for mutation
and evolution of this and other viruses. Health and survival are related to
variables like diet, immune strength, genetics. I have also written
extensively on the need for restructuring our politics and economy in
radical ways if we are to have a post-covid world that is sustainable.
These memes are easy to agree on based on laws and data gathered by fellow
scientists.

2)  The hard part: epidemiology (theory of knowledge) shifts with personal
experience.  There are the pains and aches of an ailing body exacerbated in
my case with an already aging body.  When the organ systems do not function
in a normal way, the brain is also affected. So we start to think of our
past more and the uncertainty of our future. How much have I donated of my
time and money? Have I left a good legacy and will it last (e.g. our
Palestine INstitute for Biodiversity and Sustainability palestinenature.org)?
Will I be able to finish the books that are pending? Did I allocate enough
time to young people? Did I do my best? Will I have a dignified end when it
comes whether soon or ten years from now? These are questions that a
scientific analytical mind does less well with than the graphs, figures and
projections of epidemiology and patient health indicators.

In making a judgment on anything including on our own lives, we take into
consideration complex variables and the result may not be clear cut. I and
my wife did contribute a significant amount of money (so far over $300,000)
towards sustainability in our community (of human and natural communities).
This is small compared to having left lucrative jobs in the US and devoting
full time volunteering for many years (value is in the hundreds of
thousands more). Yet, when ill, you reflect on whether this is enough. The
same thought process I noted with some friends at their deathbed. Have we
given of ourselves enough?
Khalil Gibran wrote " You give but little when you give of your possessions.
It is when you give of yourself that you truly give. For what are your
possessions but things you keep and guard for fear you may need them
tomorrow? And tomorrow, what shall tomorrow bring to the overprudent dog
burying bones in the trackless sand as he follows the pilgrims to the holy
city? And what is fear of need but need itself?"

I reflect on things I wrote years ago that shaped my own behavior. Things
like this article on enlightened self-interest
http://qumsiyeh.org/onenlightenedselfinterest/ and felt grateful that at
least I tried to reinvent myself and recheck my own morality frequently.
But also the need to keep striving to "have joyful participation in the
sorrows of this world."

So in these days of vulnerability and uncertainty, I ask myself: how much
fear I have shed? Is it enough? As always challenges provide opportunities
and I always grateful for challenges. Even breathing hard makes us
appreciate good clean air. I am grateful for everything and regret so
little. Grateful for having a kind loving wife.  Grateful for thousands of
friends, Grateful for animals and plans. Grateful for the rain. For mother
earth.

Thoughts are rumbled and humbled by a small (mean) virus. Thoughts of
departed friends and relatives. I miss my father, grandmother, grandfather,
uncles and aunts. I miss friends like Qavi. One strand remained clear:
needing to light more candles instead of cursing the darkness and
being grateful for all we have. Thank you for so many of you who continue
to help others and thus  continue to give us hope.  And yes, thank you to
all challenges in life oppression, injustice, occupation challenges and
even COVID19. My late professor Robert Baker used to tell me what does not
kill you only makes you stronger. I am grateful for the chance to reflect
on mortality and morality, strength and weakness, love and giving. If fate
has it that I get a few more years to live (I am 65) then this experience is
well worth it as it helps me reset even stronger along a steadier path..

With much love to all


Stay Human and keep Palestine alive

Mazin Qumsiyeh
A bedouin in cyberspace, a villager at home
Professor, Founder, and (volunteer) Director
Palestine Museum of Natural History
Palestine Institute of Biodiversity and Sustainability
Bethlehem University
Occupied Palestine
http://qumsiyeh.org
http://palestinenature.org
facebook pages
Personal https://www.facebook.com/mazin.qumsiyeh.9
Museum https://www.facebook.com/PIBS.PMNH

Palestinian woman.jpg
Palestinian woman in traditonal dress