From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org
Faith and Life commentary: Our faith during a time of trouble
From
NewsDesk <NewsDesk@UMCOM.UMC.ORG>
Date
01 Sep 1998 15:34:21
Sept. 1, 1998 Contact: Thomas S. McAnally*(615)742-5470*Nashville,
Tenn. {508}
NOTE: A head-and-shoulders photograph of Wogaman is available.
A UMNS Commentary
By the Rev. Phil Wogaman*
How can our faith help us address the national trauma surrounding
President Clinton?
I do not doubt that this very question is one with which millions of
Christians, along with people of other faiths, are struggling. I do not
know how much wisdom any of us can bring to bear, but it has occurred to
me more than once that we all should take a deep breath and stand back
from the immediate emotions for a while.
It also seems important for us not to take ourselves too seriously as we
seek insight. I know that persons of my profession, myself included,
violate that principle as much as anybody. Is it possible that media
commentators, lawyers and politicians should also watch themselves for
that tendency?
Most of us would agree that the behavior to which the president
confessed is wrong, as he has himself said. That acknowledgment is very
important. It is truly necessary for the healing process to occur.
Does our faith help us see why the conduct is wrong? The tendency is to
give a very moralistic or legalistic answer to that, and yet the true
answer is much deeper. The heart of our faith is the love of God.
"Wrong" is not just a violation of rules; it is actions and attitudes
that draw us away from love -- the love we have from God and our love
for one another. That mysterious and sometimes overwhelming power of
sex can be very hurtful when it is not an expression of caring and
committed love. People are also hurt by dishonesties and loss of trust.
We all know that, but our society still needs a renewed understanding of
that at many levels.
Perhaps there are even deeper faith insights. God's grace must be
central to our thinking. It is not "cheap grace." I would rather say it
is consuming grace -- a grace that takes hold of us and transforms us; a
grace that leads us into new levels of mutual caring and commitment; a
grace that brings forgiveness when we fail. People do not grow morally
when they are surrounded by moralistic judgment. If love is the essence
of the moral life - Jesus said it is - then moralism may be the
deadliest enemy of real morality. Love is what draws us out of sin and
toward moral maturity.
Where does that lead us? Surely it means we should be very slow to
resolve the crisis by forcing the president from office. What a trauma
that would inflict upon the nation, with divisions of bitterness
reaching across the years to afflict the national life. Perhaps there is
some way, short of that, by which the unacceptability of behavior can be
registered and by which the nation can really help Clinton himself.
But I want to say one thing more. Despite the failure, there is much
goodness in this gifted political leader. God's forgiving love helps us
see that.
In all this, I am reminded of an Arabian proverb: "A friend is one to
whom one may pour out all the contents of one's heart chaff and grain
together, knowing that the gentlest of hands will take and sift it, keep
what is worth keeping and with the breath of kindness blow the rest
away."
God is like that to all of us. We must be more like that to one another.
# # #
*Wogaman, pastor of Foundry United Methodist Church in Washington and a
seminary professor of Christian ethics, is the author of 13 books.
President Clinton and his family attend Foundry regularly. Wogaman is a
clergy member of the Baltimore-Washington United Methodist Annual
(regional) Conference.
United Methodist News Service
(615)742-5470
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