Saturday, June 28, 2014

Illusion-of-Truth-Effect


Studies have shown we are more likely to believe that a statement is true if we have heard it before---whether or not it is actually true: “illusion-of-truth effect.” Subjects rated the validity of plausible sentences every two weeks. Without letting on, the experimenters snuck in some repeat sentences (both true and false ones) across the testing sessions. And they found a clear result: if subjects had heard a sentence in previous weeks, they were more likely to now rate it as true, even if they swore they had never heard it before. This is the case even when the experimenter tells the subjects that the sentences they are about to hear are false: despite this, mere exposure to an idea is enough to boost its believability upon later contact. The illusion-of-truth effect highlights the potential danger for people who are repeatedly exposed to the same religious edicts or political slogans.

 

What do we believe only because we  have heard them all of their lives?

 

What do we believe because we have sung them in songs all of our lives; songs written by people we believe are going to Hell.






John Jenkins
865-803-8179  cell
Gatlinburg, TN




Email: jrjenki@gmail.com
Blogs: http://littlepigeon.blogspot.com/
         
http://alumcave.blogspot.com/



 

“There is plenty of research that indicates that every time Wal-mart enters a community, jobs disappear, businesses close, and the base of the town decays. That's okay, though, because you can get a jar of pickles the size of a Volkswagen for three dollars. “


Seth Godin, Linchpin


Prayer

  

 
Locally a five-year-old boy was murdered. For several weeks he was starved, except for being forced to eat cigarettes and soap, and beaten to death.  There are other examples such as a three-year-old girl being beaten to death as well as a baby who would not stop crying. Also a couple of boys were arrested for using kittens as baseballs.

What does it say about God who does nothing to protect his innocents but finds my neighbor a parking spot when she is in a hurry?


Friday, June 27, 2014

Jesus? Peace or Violence?

Many Christians believe Martin Luther King Jr. is the best example of Christianity. But this presents a serious problem. While King undoubtedly considered himself a devout Christian, he acquired his commitment to nonviolence primarily from the writings of Mohandas K, Gandhi. In 1959, he traveled to India to learn the principles of nonviolent social protest directly from Gandhi’s disciples. Where did Gandhi, a Hindu, get is doctrine of nonviolence? He got it from Jains.

 

If you think Jesus taught only the Golden Rule and love of one’s neighbor, read the New Testament and pay particular attention to the morality that will be on display when Jesus returns: 2 Thessalonians 1:6-9

 

…since indeed God considers it just to repay with affliction those who afflict you, and to grant relief to you who are afflicted as well as to us, when the Lord Jesus is revealed from heaven with his mighty angels in flaming fire, inflicting vengeance on those who do not know God and on those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus. They will suffer the punishment of eternal destruction, away fromb the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his might,

 

John 15:6

 

If anyone does not abide in me he is thrown away like a branch and withers; and the branches are gathered, thrown into the fire, and burned.

 

Revelation 6: 10

 

They cried out with a loud voice, “O Sovereign Lord, holy and true, how long before you will judge and avenge our blood on those who dwell on the earth?”

 

What it say about Heaven if those in it want revenge?

Friday, June 20, 2014

MARTIN LUTHER AND THE BEGINNING OF THE MONEY CULTURE


 

The Protestant Reformation permitted the explosion of commerce that led to the world we live in now. Once the Reformation began to spread, Martin Luther was heavily lobbied by powerful local interests. In response, he gave princes and landlords the moral authority to take over the commons and rent the land back to the people who lived on it.

The new church was looking for political support, and its embrace of mercantilism guaranteed that it would get that support from power brokers that had chafed under the Catholic Church’s opposition to the practice of charging interest and the commercialization of formerly common lands. (The Catholic Church wanted to keep local lords, princes, and kings weak, of course, because it was built around a strong universal leader, the pope.)

 

 

One of the factors in the growth of the Protestant Reformation was that commercial interests supported its spread because they needed the moral authority to lend and borrow money. It’s hard to overestimate how large of a shift this led to in the world’s culture and economics.

 

 

As Thomas Jefferson wrote, it created a world where “the merchant has no homeland.” If everyone is a stranger, it’s a lot easier to do business. If everyone is a stranger, then we can charge for things that used to be gifts. The merchant class was essential to imperialism and to the growth of the money culture, but it can’t exist without a culture that encourages money lending.

 

 

This thinking destroyed many traditional tribes, but permitted the growth of commerce-based organizations. The East India Company or the fashion houses of France or the banks of Italy could never have existed in a world that honored a ban on usury.

 

 

Martin Luther saw that embracing the needs of local power brokers could enhance the spread of Protestantism. With little alternative, the pope followed suit. The ban on usury was refined, double-talked, and eventually eliminated. The money flowed, investments were made, businesses grew, and productivity soared. People could view every transaction as a chance to lend or make money because they were independent agents. Everyone became a businessman, a borrower, or a lender.

 

 

Suddenly, your tribe was a profit center. If you knew a lot of people, you could make money from them. Social leadership magically translated into financial leadership.

 

 

For the last five hundred years, the best way to succeed has been to treat everyone as a stranger you could do business with. This is one reason that some multilevel marketers and insurance salesmen make people nervous. It seems to cross the tiny remaining gulf between business and the tribe. As the lines have crossed, we’ve abandoned the idea of a village as a tribe. Instead, we’re left with the tribe of our birth family and the tribe at work. We practically live with the people we work with, and we identify with them.



Now we live in a world where corporate tribe members are likely to be as important to us as family. Do you talk to your sister more often than you talk to your boss? What about the head of Midwest sales?

 

 

Human beings have a need for a tribe, but the makeup of that tribe has changed, probably forever. Now, the tribe is composed of our coworkers or our best customers, not only our family or our village or religious group.

 

 

This double shift means that the best professional entanglements aren’t with strangers; they are with the tribe. Given a choice between an insider and an outsider, we choose to work with insiders. But tribe members are family, and we shouldn’t be charging them interest! Tighter bonds produce better results, and so the gift culture returns. Full circle, from gift to usury and back to gift.

 

 

A loan without interest is a gift. A gift brings tribe members closer together. A gift can make you indispensable. The Forgotten Act of the Gift

 

 

For five hundred years, since the legalization of usury and the institutionalization of money, almost every element of our lives has been about commerce. If you did something, you did it for money, or because it would lead to money. Sure, you still don’t charge your kids for dinner, but you also don’t encourage your kids to sweep up at the supermarket for free. Why should they? It’s someone’s job.

 

All Things in Common

It is said that the early Christians “And all who believed were together and had all things in common.” For some religious groups it is the same today but generally not in Churches of Christ.

 

Luke wrote: “If you love those who love you, what benefit is that to you? For even sinners love those who love them. And if you do good to those who do good to you, what benefit is that to you? For even sinners do the same. And if you lend to those from whom you expect to receive, what credit is that to you? Even sinners lend to sinners, to get back the same amount. But love your enemies, and do good, and lend, expecting nothing in return, and your reward will be great, and you will be sons of the Most High, for he is kind to the ungrateful and the evil. Be merciful, even as your Father is merciful.”

 

In the Old Testament the Jews were prohibited from charging interest to fellow Jews.

It’s worth taking a minute to understands the reasoning here.

 

If money circulates freely within the tribe, the tribe will grow prosperous more quickly. I give you some money to buy sees, your farm flourishes, and now we both have money to give to someone else to invest. The faster the money circulates, the better the tribe does. The alternative is a tribe of hoarders, with most people struggling to find enough resources to improve productivity.

 

Obviously, there’s another force at work here. When I make an interest-free loan to you, I’m trusting you and giving you a gift at the same time. This interaction increases the quality of our bond and strengthens the community. Just as you would not charge your husband interest on a loan, you don’t charge a tribe member.

 

Strangers, on the other hand, are not to be trusted. Going further, strangers don’t deserve the bond that the gift brings. It would turn the stranger into a tribe member, and the tribe is already too big. If I loan money to a stranger, I’m doing it for one reason: to make money. I risk my money, if it goes well, we both profit. But there is no bond, no connection.

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

George Washington on religious toleration


“All possess alike liberty of conscience and immunities of citizenship. It is now no more that toleration is spoken of as if it was by the indulgence of one class of people that another enjoyed the exercise of their inherent natural rights.  For happily the government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance, requires only that they who live under its protection should demean themselves as good citizens … “



Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Pattern

Christians do not need churches preachers need churches. Christians can be Christian by themselves i.e. the Ethiopian Eunuch who went on his way rejoicing. But without churches who would pay preachers; who would pay for the edifice in which the preacher expounds?

Some believe we are to do things as they were done in the NT, that there is a pattern to be followed. Folks are pretty adamant that patterns must be followed and anyone who does otherwise is destined for Hell. When one “presides” at the Lord’s Supper they are playing Jesus’ part. I wonder if the “Gospels” left out the part where Jesus said, “Now separate and apart from the Passover we take this time as a matter of convenience to give back to God a portion of what he has given to us”?

In Exodus we have a record of the instructions God gave to Moses concerning the Passover menu and how they were to eat it.

“They shall eat the flesh that night, roasted on the fire; with unleavened bread and bitter herbs they shall eat it” … “In this manner you shall eat it: with your belt fastened, your sandals on your feet, and your staff in your hand. And you shall eat it in haste.”

On the other hand we have a record of how Jesus observed the Passover:

“When it was evening, he reclined at table with the twelve.  And as they were eating,”

It appears more like a meal in a restaurant. I believe “sop” was added which appears to be used to dip bread in, not mentioned in Exodus as well as the addition of a beverage.

Those who believe there is pattern would insist on following the instructions such as Jesus. If how things are done is important how do we reconcile Jesus attitude? Their explanation is changes were made but not recorded.

Illiterate People of the Book,

 

Christians were a people of the book—but they have grown illiterate.

A study in 2013 by the Barna Group concluded that 69% of adult Americans consider themselves Biblically literate and that 58% are not interested in Biblical insight on how to live their lives. The highest ranking topic about which we look to the Bible for wisdom is death. There is a disconnect between reading God’s Word and believing that God’s Word applies directly to our lives.

In addition the study concluded,  many churches don’t have Bible studies anymore. Instead, we have community groups and Sunday school classes, in which we talk about feelings, but rarely open the Bible. Even when we do attempt to study Scripture on Sunday mornings we boil God’s word into spiritual slogans like “God helps those who help themselves” (which is not in the Bible).

Worse, though, is the way Scripture is leaking out of our worship services. On any given Sunday morning in
America, pastors stuff sermons with personal anecdotes to make the Scripture text interesting and relevant. In our attempt to make worship approachable we’ve exchanged liturgy drawn from Scripture with extemporaneous speaking.

Challenged pastors on the number of personal anecdotes in their sermons, a common response is, “People need personal application. Without it, what’s the point?”

We’ve fooled ourselves into thinking we are a people of the book. Instead, we have become a people of words—but they are our words, made in our image, and if we’re not careful our faith will be too.

What might it look like to take Biblical literacy seriously?

Fewer words in our worship. This is counterintuitive, but worship is a time marked and set apart from the world, and the world is filled with words. From marketing to social media to basic conversation, we do not lack for chatter in our daily life. To take Biblical literacy seriously means to see God’s word as sacred and therefore different from every other word. It means allowing silence and music and other sensory experiences to fill our worship, instead of just normal talk.

 

Preaching to the text rather than to the application. When we take Biblical literacy, seriously we assert a belief in the work of the Holy Spirit. We believe that the Holy Spirit is active in our reading of God’s word. Biblical literacy requires us to forgo our own understanding and to practice listening to God by way of the text. Our preaching needs to begin and end in the stories of Scripture rather than personal anecdotes. The Bible does not need to be made interesting, relevant, or applicable by salesmanship. It is the job of the Holy Spirit to apply God’s word to our lives—not the other way around.

 

Learn how to read from our poets. Our modern impulse is to read quickly and efficiently. We like our lessons literal and our answers clear. Jesus taught in parables because they were an easy to remember in a nonliterate society. Those parables are still powerful today, but Scripture does not fit into a single genre. To take Biblical literacy seriously we must learn to read like poets, who are comfortable in ambiguity. A poet reads for the images language can evoke. Further, a poem never has one meaning or a single application. A poem refuses to be winnowed down like that and when we learn to read like poets we will stop treating Scripture in this manner. We can begin to hear God’s still, small voice from the whirlwind.

 

When we ignore the question of literacy we risk becoming unmoored from the reason we worship together in the first place. If we are Biblically illiterate then what is the point?

Jesus Christ is the point.

All our activity—the worship, mission trips, committee meetings, and personal devotions —has a single purpose: to love the Lord our God with all our hearts, souls, and minds.

 

The truth is simple: we cannot be God’s people unless we are a people of the Book.

Christian Nation? No!!

Christians are looking for government to enforce their moral values but our government works with the majority and the majority never has nor will it ever be the measure of what is right. Christians in the first century could tell you. The church grew under Roman persecution and shrinks under Democracy. When Christians ask God for help which do you think he will choose?

 

When folks talk about wanting our government to return to Christian principles upon which they believe this country was established I wonder to whom those principles were applied.

 

In 1837 President Martin Van Buren said, "No state can achieve proper culture, civilization, and progress as long as Indians are permitted to remain." .

 

In April 1850, the California legislature passed a law that stated "In no case shall a white man be convicted of any offense upon the testimony of an Indian" That meant the law mandated that crimes against native Americans would go unpunished.

 

Add to that the inalienable rights mentioned in the Declaration of Independence applied only to white-male landowners. The same people who bragged they would never be slaves to England owned slaves.

 

Recently a republican announced he has changed his position on the subject and now supports same-sex marriage as did Hillary Clinton. What I have suggested appears to be coming to be and that is when Christians depend upon government to promote their moral views they must understand what government prohibits government may permit.

 

Christians prayed in 2008 and in 2012 that God ensure the right person was elected and both times he gave them Obama. If Christians are going to ask God for something shouldn't they accept what he gives them? 

Light-Speed

universitytoday.com” says it takes about 8 minutes and 20 seconds for light from the sun to reach the Earth/

93,000,000: miles distance

186,411:     miles per second / speed of light

499:           seconds (miles divided by speed of light per second)

8:              minutes=seconds divided by 60

If the sun stopped it would take 8 minutes and 20 seconds for earth to experience it.

Doesn’t that make light-speed relative to time?

 

Reversing the process

Christianity or Marxism?

Christians are an odd bunch when President Obama talks about redistribution of wealth Christians immediately shout that it is not fair to take from the rich and give to the needy.

 

Karl Marx is quoted as saying, “From each according to his ability; to each according to his needs.”

 

Luke recorded in Acts 4: “Now the full number of those who believed were of one heart and soul, and no one said that any of the things that belonged to him was his own, but they had everything in common. …There was not a needy person among them, for as many as were owners of lands or houses sold them and brought the proceeds of what was sold and laid it at the apostles' feet, and it was distributed to each as any had need.

 

Some economists say the world has reached the end of economic growth. If they are correct are the poor to accept their poverty as permanent, since no more economic wealth can be created?

 

Accepting the principle of economic growth allows us to morally justify the poor. The Great American Dream, built upon the foundation of economic growth, suggests that anyone who works hard can improve himself and increase his wealth. In this context, many believe the poor are at least to some degree lazy or incompetent. They are poor by their own actions or lack thereof. I’ve heard Christians say this; I’ve heard GSMCOC elders say this.

 

Not only do we have to face the end of economic growth but now we have to consider the most heretical idea of all: redistribution.

 

Christians believe God has blessed them so they can have more stuff. Imagine how different things would have been if today’s Christians had been the church of the first-century?

 

In 2010, a Vietnamese monk, Thich Nhat Hanh commented on these issues saying. “The situation the Earth is in today has been created by unmindful production and unmindful consumption. We consume to forget our worries and our anxieties. Tranquilizing ourselves with over-consumption is not the way.”

 

we work harder to pay for our labor saving devices than if we would have performed the labor.

During the 1980s research studies showed that we work harder to pay for our labor saving devices than if we would have performed the labor.

 

When electricity became available to the public many women believed that new appliances like vacuum cleaners and washing machines would, as GE, advertising promised, transform their houses from places of labor into places of ease. The first widely purchased appliance designed specifically for housework, the electric iron, seemed to fulfill this expectation. Women no longer had to heat a heavy wedge of cast iron over a hot stove and then drag the red-hot chunk of metal over a piece of clothing, stopping frequently to heat it. They just had to plug a lightweight appliance into the wall.


As it turned out, the electric iron was not quite the blessing it first appeared to be. By making ironing “easier” the new appliance ended up producing a change in the prevailing social expectations about clothing. To appear respectable, men’s and women’s blouses and trousers had to be more frequently and meticulously pressed than was considered necessary before. Wrinkles became a sign of sloth. Even children’s school clothes were expected to be neatly ironed. While women didn’t have to work as hard to do their ironing, they had to do more of it, more often, and with more precision.


As other electric appliances flooded the home through the first half of the century---washing machines, vacuum cleaners, sewing machines, toasters, coffee-makers, egg beaters, hair curlers, and somewhat later refrigerators, dishwashers, and clothe dryers--- similar change in social norms played out. Clothes had to be changed more frequently, rugs had to be cleaner, curls in hair had to be bouncier, meals had to be more elaborate and the household china had to be more plentiful and gleam more brightly. Tasks that once had been done every few months now had to be performed every few days. When rugs had had to be carried outside to be cleaned, the job was done only a couple of times of year. With a vacuum cleaner handy, it became a weekly or even daily ritual.



At the same time, the easing of the physical demands of housework meant that many women no longer felt justified in keeping servants or hiring day workers. They felt able and obligated to do everything themselves. House wives lost the helping hands that had been provided by their husbands and sons, who, now that the work was “easy,” no longer felt obliged to pitch in. In middle-class households, the labor saved by labor-saving devices was that not of the housewife but of her helpers.


Genesis 1 and Enuma Elish

 

Beginning in 1847 and continuing for several decades, major archaeological excavations were performed in the library of King Ashurbanipal (668-627 BC) in the ancient city of Ninevah (the capital city of ancient Assyria). Archaeologists discovered thousands of clay tablets written in the language used by several Mesopotamian  peoples including the Babylonians and Assyrians and spanned the third, second, and first millennia BC. The language is considered a distant uncle of Hebrew.

 

Many different kinds of texts were found among the writings e.g. legal, economic, and historical, providing insights into what life was like in ancient Near East three and four thousand years ago. But what the archaeologists found most striking at the time ---and a bit unsettling were the religious texts found there. One of these texts bore clear similarities to Genesis 1. How people viewed Genesis would never be the same again.

 

The text is a Babylonian story of origins referred to as Enuma Elish its title taken from the opening words of the story "When on high." It is sometimes referred to as the "Babylonian Genesis" because of the similarities it bears to the biblical story. The versions found in Ashurbanipal's library consist of seven tablets and dates to the seventh century BC (just before Israel's captivity in Babylon). 

 

What bearing does the relationship between Genesis 1 and Enuma Elish have on the evolution issue? It means that any thought of Genesis 1 providing a scientifically or historically accurate account of cosmic origins and therefore being wholy distinct from the story in Enuma Elish cannot be presumed.

 

 

Reacting to Evil

Acts 4:23-31-- When they were released, they went to their friends and reported what the chief priests and the elders had said to them. And when they heard it, they lifted their voices together to God and said, “Sovereign Lord, who made the heaven and the earth and the sea and everything in them, who through the mouth of our father David, your servant, said by the Holy Spirit,

“‘Why did the Gentiles rage,
    and the peoples plot in vain?
    The kings of the earth set themselves,
    and the rulers were gathered together,
    against the Lord and against his Anointed’

for truly in this city there were gathered together against your holy servant Jesus, whom you anointed, both Herod and Pontius Pilate, along with the Gentiles and the peoples of Israel, to do whatever your hand and your plan had predestined to take place. And now, Lord, look upon their threats and grant to your servants to continue to speak your word with all boldness, while you stretch out your hand to heal, and signs and wonders are performed through the name of your holy servant Jesus.” And when they had prayed, the place in which they were gathered together was shaken, and they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and continued to speak the word of God with boldness.

This is how the first Christians faced uncertainty and danger We ask God to affect the results of the actions of others. He cannot do that without affecting their “free will” or the freedom he has given nature. Those first Christians asked God to help them face situations we ask God to protect us from them.

 


Pledge of Allegiance

On any subject involving the United States I like to look back at how it was in the beginning.  The “pledge” did not exist. The original pledge was written by Francis Bellamy, a Baptist preacher / Christian Socialist in 1892.

 

“I pledge allegiance to my Flag and the Republic for which it stands, one nation indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.”

 

In 1923, the words, "the Flag of the United States of America" replaced “my flag” some think to avoid confusion between the US flag and the flag of the country from which people were immigrating.

 

"I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America and to the Republic for which it stands, one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all."

 

When Congress adopted the pledge in 1942 the words “under God” were not part of it and did not appear until 1954. In an effort to sift out Communists in their midst they added these words.

 

The Pledge was designed to be recited in 15 seconds. As a socialist, Bellamy had considered using the words equality and fraternity but decided against it – knowing that the state superintendents of education on his committee were against equality for women and African Americans. I have never read anything concerning the reason for Bellamy to not include the words “under God” but I can speculate that some on the committee did not consider them appropriate.

 

For nearly 200 years citizens of the United States had no pledge.


 

John Jenkins
865-803-8179  cell
Gatlinburg, TN




Email: jrjenki@gmail.com
Blogs: http://littlepigeon.blogspot.com/
         http://alumcave.blogspot.com/

 

it is appalling that the most segregated hour of Christian America is eleven o'clock on Sunday morning." 


--- Martin Luther King, Jr.  

Teens' rising spirituality features a worrisome side

Kingsport Times-News

Teens' rising spirituality features a worrisome side
Tuesday, July 27, 2004

Contrary to the negative images often portrayed in national media, local religious leaders say area teens seem to be on the brink of a spiritual reawakening. That local impression is shared by many of their colleagues across the nation who report similar anecdotal evidence of increased teen involvement and interest in the search for spiritual fulfillment.

 

"Some of the things I see that have changed are the levels of spiritual maturity. Today's teens take church as a whole more seriously," says Kyle Mott, youth minister of Northeast Church of Christ.

 

Across the state line, Associate Pastor Jeff DeBoard at First Baptist Church of Gate City, Va., gives a similarly upbeat assessment.

 

"I feel that young people today are searching for absolute truth that can only come through a personal relationship with Jesus Christ," he says. "I believe God is raising up a very conservative generation of youth who have a sincere desire to worship God and search his word for direction and understanding."

 

Reports by the Barna Research Group, the gold standard in data about the nation's religious life, do, indeed, show that young adults are searching for spiritual meaning in their lives. But beneath the general spike in spirituality Barna documents, there also lurks some rather disturbing findings.

 

While a majority of teens continue to profess faith, George Barna's research shows it is definitely not the faith of their fathers. Indeed, the majority of Christian teens hold many beliefs that stand in stark contrast to mainline Christian orthodoxy.

 

While approximately 60 percent of teens agree with the statement, "The Bible is totally accurate in all of its teachings," and 56 percent say their religious faith is "very important" to them, slightly more than half of all teens also report believing that Jesus committed sins while he was on Earth. A clear majority - approximately 60 percent - also agree with the statement that "good works will get me to heaven." Such a belief, of course, is antithetical to the central theme of justification by grace through faith that is the central connecting theological thread of all Protestant belief since the Reformation.

 

Fire and brimstone isn't popular with teens either. Approximately two-thirds of teens say that Satan is "symbolic, not real."


On an even more alarming practical level, Barna finds that only 6 percent of all teens believe there are moral absolutes. Even among self-identified, "born-again" teens, only nine percent believe moral truth is absolute.

 

"When you ask even Christian kids, ‘How can you say A is true as well as B, which is the antithesis of A?' their typical response is, ‘I'm not sure how it works, but it works for me,' " says Barna, president of the Ventura, Calif.-based research company that bears his name. "It's personal, pragmatic and fairly superficial."

 

If adults wonder how so many Christian teens could possess these increasingly relativistic, even schizophrenic, spiritual values, they may want to look in the mirror.

 

George Barna also reports that the percentage of born-again Christians who have been divorced (27 percent) actually beats the national average by two percentage points. "While it may be alarming to discover that born-again Christians are more likely than others to experience a divorce, that pattern has been in place for quite some time."

 

The changing attitudes and conduct of the Christian community concerning divorce is but one example of the ripples of moral consequence affecting church membership and wider society. The acceptance or opposition to homosexual unions is another example of the moral dilemma facing more and more denominations.

 

It's encouraging to hear religious leaders praise teen interest in church activities. In a world where even fundamental values seem fleeting, a life dedicated to a purpose greater than ourselves can be an anchor against a rising tide of moral relativism. And, as Barna's research shows, the human temptation to drift with that tide, whether young or old, is enormous.

 

Copyright 2004 Kingsport Times-News.

Abilene Paradox

The Abilene paradox is a paradox in which a group of people collectively decide on a course of action that is counter to the preferences of many of the individuals in the group. It involves a common breakdown of group communication in which each member mistakenly believes that their own preferences are counter to the group's and, therefore, does not raise objections. A common phrase relating to the Abilene paradox is a desire to not "rock the boat".


Abilene Paradox -- Jerry B. Harvey

 

On a hot afternoon in Coleman, Texas, the story goes; a family is comfortably playing dominoes on a porch, until the father-in-law suggests they take a trip to Abilene, fifty-three miles north, for dinner. The wife says, "Sounds like a great idea." The husband, despite having reservations because the drive is long and hot, thinks that his preferences must be out of step with the group and says, "Sounds good to me. I just hope your mother wants to go." The mother-in-law then says, “Of course I want to go. I haven't been to Abilene in a long time." The drive is hot, dusty and long. When they arrive at the cafeteria, the food is bad. They arrive back home four hours later, exhausted. One of them dishonestly says, "It was a great trip, wasn't it?"

 

The mother-in-law says that, actually, she would rather have stayed home, but went along since the other three were so enthusiastic." The husband says, "I didn't want to go. I only went to satisfy the rest of you." The wife says, "I just went along to keep you happy. I would have to be crazy to want to go out in the heat like that." The father-in-law says that he only suggested it because he thought the others might be bored.

 

The group sits back, perplexed that they together decided to take a trip which none of them wanted. They each would have preferred to sit comfortably, but did not admit to it when they still had time to enjoy the afternoon.

 

This is a benign but dramatic illustration of the consequences of groupthink. Every member of the group agreed to do something they didn't want to do because they thought the others were committed to doing it. The result was that no one came away happy.

 

How many practices of the Church of Christ no one believes but not wanting to rock the boat remain quiet week after week after week?

 

Getting Another Perspective


In 2005 a group of researchers assembled sixty-three Coloradans to discuss three controversial issues: same sex marriage, affirmative action, and global warming. About half the participants were conservatives from Colorado Springs and the other half liberals living in Boulder.  After the participants completed, in private, questionnaires about their personal views on the three topics they were split into ten groups---five conservative and five liberal. Each group spent time discussing the issues with the goal of reaching a consensus on each one. After the discussion, the participants again filled out questionnaires.

The results showed the deliberations among like-minded people produced what researchers call “ideological amplification.” People's views became more extreme and more entrenched.

In 1996, Pope John Paul II wrote: "Science and religion are not in conflict, for their teachings occupy distinctly different domains…..The lack of conflict between science and religion arises from a lack of overlap between their respective domains of professional expertise---"

Accepting that the earth is 10,000 years-old requires reconciling that conclusion with the reports that scientists have found trees, whose rings they believe show are six-thousand-years-old and dead trees they believe are older; that lake beds have been found at the bottom of lakes suggesting layers as old as thirty-five-thousand years; and ice rings in glaciers that show ice 123,000 years old in Greenland and as old as 740,000 years in Antarctica?

There are those who profess to be Christian and accept evolution. You might consider having one come in as you had Brad Harrub and let him explain his reasons.

 “In matters that are so obscure and far beyond our vision, we find in Holy Scripture passages which can be interpreted in very different ways without prejudice to the faith we have received. In such cases, we should not rush in headlong and so firmly take our stand on one side that, if further progress in the search for truth justly undermines this position, we too fall with it.”  ---Augustine of Hippo 

Bernard Bailyn

The little-remembered century—1600 to 1700—began with the founding (and floundering) of the first permanent English settlement in America, the one called Jamestown. The century that saw all the disease-ridden, barely civilized successors to Jamestown slaughtering and getting slaughtered by the Original Inhabitants, hanging on by their fingernails to some fetid coastal swampland until Pocahontas saved Thanksgiving. No, that's not right, is it? It was a blur.

Enter Bernard Bailyn, the greatest historian of early America alive today. Bailyn has recently published, The Barbarous Years, casting a light on the darkness, filling in the blank canvas with what he's gleaned from what seems like every last scrap of crumbling diary page, every surviving chattel slave receipt and ship's passenger manifest of the living and dead, every fearful sermon about the Antichrist that survived in the blackened embers of the burned-out churches.

Bailyn has not painted a pretty picture. Little wonder he calls it The Barbarous Years and spares us no details of the terror, desperation, degradation and widespread torture—do you really know what being "flayed alive" means? (The skin is torn from the face and head and the prisoner is disemboweled while still alive.) And yet somehow amid the merciless massacres were elements that gave birth to the rudiments of civilization—or in Bailyn's evocative phrase, the fragile "integument of civility"—that would evolve 100 years later into a virtual Renaissance culture, a bustling string of self-governing, self-sufficient, defiantly expansionist colonies alive with an increasingly sophisticated and literate political and intellectual culture that would coalesce into the rationale for the birth of American independence. All the while shaping, and sometimes misshaping, the American character. It's a grand drama in which the glimmers of enlightenment barely survive the savagery, what Yeats called "the blood-dimmed tide," the brutal establishment of slavery, the race wars with the original inhabitants that Bailyn is not afraid to call "genocidal," the full, horrifying details of which have virtually been erased.

 "Look at the 'peaceful' Pilgrims. Our William Bradford. He goes to see the Pequot War battlefield and he is appalled. He said, 'The stink' [of heaps of dead bodies] was too much."

Bailyn is speaking of one of the early and bloodiest encounters, between our peaceful pumpkin pie-eating Pilgrims and the original inhabitants of the land they wanted to seize, the Pequots. But for Bailyn, the mercenary motive is less salient than the theological.

"The ferocity of that little war is just unbelievable," Bailyn says. "The butchering that went on cannot be explained by trying to get hold of a piece of land. They were really struggling with this central issue for them, of the advent of the Antichrist."

Suddenly, I felt a chill from the wintry New England air outside enter into the warmth of his study.

The Antichrist. The haunting figure presaging the Apocalypse from the Book of Revelation plays an important part in Bailyn's explanation of the European settlers' descent into unrestrained savagery. The key passage on this question comes late in his new book when Bailyn makes explicit a connection I had not seen before: between the physical savagery the radical dissenting Protestant settlers of America wreaked on the original inhabitants, and the intellectual savagery of their polemical attacks on the church and state authorities they fled from in Europe—and the savagery of vicious insult and vile denunciation they wreaked upon each other as well.

"The savagery of the [theological] struggle, the bitterness of the main contenders and the deep stain it left on the region's collective memory" were driven by "elemental fears peculiar to what was experienced as a barbarous environment—fears of what could happen to civilized people in an unimaginable wilderness...in which God's children [as they thought of themselves] were fated to struggle with pitiless agents of Satan, pagan Antichrists swarming in the world around them. The two [kinds of struggle, physical and metaphysical] were one: threats from within [to the soul] merged with threats from without to form a heated atmosphere of apocalyptic danger."

***



Bailyn could have coasted on that success, researching and publishing on the multitude of controversies still raging over the meaning of the Revolution and the Declaration and the Constitution. Going forward, the way most historians have done.

But instead, he did something unusual: He stepped backward, not just in time but in spatial perspective. He had what he would call his "cosmic eye" on a grand vision of the massive westward movement from Europe and Africa to North and South America that began before 1492, and he chronicled it in his subsequent book, Voyagers to the West. In examining the interactions of four continents bordering the Atlantic, and seeing them as a single, mutually interacting whole, he reshaped the modern history profession and helped create what is now known as "Atlantic history."

"From 1500," he wrote in an earlier book, "it has involved the displacement and resettlement of over fifty million people and it has affected indirectly the lives of uncountable millions more."

But Bailyn's "cosmic eye" saw even deeper. He wanted to capture not just physical movements but also "the interior experiences, the quality of their culture, the capacity of their minds, the patterns of their emotions." He wanted to look inside heads and read minds. Bailyn's voyage was a monumentally ambitious project, a voyage through unmapped oceans of data analo­gous to the Columbus-era explorers setting out on a vast uncharted ocean.

The opening section of his new book stands out for his profoundly sensitive appreciation of the sensibility of the original inhabitants whom he introduces simply as "Americans" rather than "Native Americans."

He captures that sensibility as well as any attempt I've read: "Their world was multitudinous, densely populated by active, sentient and sensitive spirits, spirits with consciences, memories and purposes, that surround them, instructed them, impinged on their lives at every turn. No less real for being invisible...the whole of life was a spiritual enterprise...the universe in all its movements and animations and nature was suffused with spiritual potency."

In person, Bailyn expresses an almost poetic admiration for this sort of spirituality.

"All the world was alive!" he exclaims. "And the wind is alive! The mountains are alive!"

Then, he adds: "But it's not a terribly peaceful world. They were always involved in warfare, partly because life would become imbalanced in a way that needed justification and response and reprisal. And reprisals, within their lives, are very important. But partly the onus is on the threats that they're under."

"Would both civilizations have been better off had they not been forced into contact," I ask, "or if all the colonies on the verge of failing had, in fact, failed and the two civilizations continued separately, merely as trading partners?"

"Well, the Indians were not genocidal on the whole. Their effort, even the 1622 massacre [which he calls "genocidal" in his book], was not to wipe the Europeans off the face of the map. It's the English after the massacre who write these letters saying 'wipe them off the map.'

"But the Indians had the view they wanted to use them [the Europeans]. They wanted the English there on the fringe so they would have the benefit of their treasure, their goods, even their advanced weapons. They wanted that, but under their control." It didn't exactly work out that way.

Bailyn does not let either of the two adversary cultures off the hook. He recounts little vignettes of the original inhabitants' behavior such as this: Following the ambush of four Dutch traders, Bailyn quotes a report, one "had been eaten after having [been] well roasted. The [other two] they burnt. The Indians carried a leg and an arm home to be divided amongst their families."

And, on the other side, consider that fixture of grade school Thanksgiving pageants, Miles Standish, an upstanding, godly Pilgrim stalwart who does not at all seem the sort of man who would have cut off the head of a chief and "brought it back to Plymouth in triumph [where] it was displayed on the blockhouse together with a flag made of a cloth soaked in the victim's blood." (Happy Thanksgiving!)

"What happened," Bailyn continues, "is a legacy of brutality in intercultural relations developed through this period of which, of course, the overwhelming legacy was slavery." Bailyn points out that although there were only "a few thousand" slaves in the colonies toward the end of King Philip's War in the 1670s, when he concludes The Barbarous Years, "The rules for chattel slavery were set."



And so the legacy of the barbarous years continued beyond the white male liberation of the Revolution.

Bailyn is fascinating when he speaks of questions of value. The day we talked was the peak of the fevered notion that the American government should settle its national debt by minting a platinum coin arbitrarily given a "trillion dollar" valuation. And it made me think of wampum, the original inhabitants' currency. I'd always wondered how you could found an entire centuries-long economics on beads and shells as these "Americans" did. And yet, isn't that what we've done since, basing our economics on shiny metal objects that have a declared, consensus value unrelated to their worth as a metal?

So I asked Bailyn why wampum was accepted in exchange for an obviously more highly valuable commodity, such as furs.

Bailyn: "They're little shells."

Me: But why should people massacre each other over these little shells?

Bailyn: Because they had great value.

Me: Because of their beauty?

Bailyn: No, because they're hard to make and they don't exist everywhere. You ever see how this was done?

Me: No.

He picks up an imaginary shell from his desk and says:

"OK, they have a shell like this and then they have to bore a hole all the way down through the middle of the thing in order to hitch it to the next one and do it with certain color regularities. It's hard to do! And it becomes of value."

Me (thinking of home-beading kits my mother had): Doesn't it seem arbitrary?

Bailyn concedes he's not up on "wampum literature."

"There's wampum literature?" I asked. "You think I'm kidding. There are wampum experts and they don't fool around!"

Our wampum discussion leads to the fascinating "fair price" controversy in the Puritan communities, the argument over how much profit a pious person should make on a given transaction.



Free market theory dictates there should be only one motive in economic culture: getting the max. But early colonists integrated piety and humility into their economic lives. Spiritual considerations. One of his favorite stories is about the English merchant who couldn't stop confessing the sin of overcharging.

"Robert Keayne," he recalls, "was a very, very proper Puritan tradesman from London who made it big and set up trade here and then got caught for overpricing."

"The guy who made a big apology?" I ask, recalling the peculiar episode from his book.

"He wrote endlessly, compulsively," of his remorse, Bailyn replies.

"50,000 words or so, right?"

"Unbelievable!," he exclaims, "A 50,000-word will which explores the whole business of revaluing, of cheating and so forth. And I published his will, the whole thing, 158 pages in the original. And the question is whether you could be a proper Christian and make money. See, they were caught in a double bind. Max Weber started all this out [with The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism]."

Weber argued that Protestants were driven to make money and create urban centers of wealth to display it because these were an external sign that one had been saved, chosen by God to enter into his grace and be redeemed. But in fact most of the Protestant heretics who settled America believed that salvation was a matter between God and the individual, no matter what their bank balance—and that too much wealth could signify the exact opposite of sanctification: greed and spiritual degradation. Thus the "fair price" controversy and what British economic historian R. H. Tawney called the Puritan "double bind," a theory Bailyn has adopted. "They were against exhibitionism," Bailyn tells me. "There were moral prohibitions against making as much as you possibly could—that's not good! You have to do it within constraints. There's a big literature about this."

It makes you think of the con­trast with our hedge fund wealth-worshiping culture, our conflicted attitude toward the "1 percent"—envy and moral disapproval. Perhaps judges should sentence insider traders to write 50,000-word apologies while in prison.

Speaking of price made me think of the overarching question of early America: whether the barbarism, torture, murder, massacre—the ethnic cleansing—that Bailyn describes in The Barbarous Years was the inevitable price we had to pay for the civilization that followed.

When I ask the question of whether there could have been another way for the races to interact than mutual massacre, he brings up one of the few figures who emerges with honor from his chronicle of this savage period: Roger Williams.

"There were people who tried to have amicable race relations," he says, "but it broke down again and again."

I had always admired Roger Williams for his belief in religious toleration, which was realized in his Rhode Island colony, a place where all the dissenters and the dissenters from the dissenters could find a home to worship the way they wanted. And I'd admired him for standing as a reminder to certain contemporary zealots that America was a refuge for people who believed there should be a separation between church and state—and that both church and state were better off for it, sentiments that entered into the First Amendment.

But in Bailyn's account, Williams becomes a great American character as well. Not only was he close to the original inhabitants, he could speak some of their languages and had the humility to recognize he could learn from them.

I told Bailyn what an admirable character his Williams came across as.

"Well, the people at the time didn't think he was. He was a perfectionist. And no form of Christianity was good enough for him. He started out in the Church of England. He was a very strange man. He was a zealot.