Prejudice causes pain for everyone. First Nations People know that. Women know that. So do so many others – both individuals who feel the pain caused by words and actions, and individuals whose words and actions cause the pain.
But there is an “Antidote for Prejudice”. The antidote for treating prejudiced ways of feeling the pain and also for unconsciously inflicting pain lies in broadening the spiritual ways we think of ourselves and each other. What all of us need is help in visioning the bigger picture.
In a sense, many of us who think about God often recognize the fact that the breadth of Godly understanding is bigger than any one can begin to comprehend.
Imagine ourselves to be blind people who are “seeing” an elephant for the first time. Some of us, along with our family / friends, may touch the elephant’s ear – so we feel we have a sense of what the elephant is like. Others brush against a leg … or smell the elephant’s droppings. If our little group examined the tail, we may talk with the group who described the trunk … Conversations take place. Each contributes and recognizes the elephant is really far bigger than we ever imagined.
That conversation would help us to push away the belief that there is only one correct way to think … Our knowledge about the elephant broadens our perspective.
In a small way the elephant image helps me think about spiritual things, about recognizing the much bigger picture that is involved. I am always keen to know more. God’s gift is to help me push my limited “blindness”, listen for what others have experienced, and feel the excitement of trying to answer additional questions that come to mind.
It is possible for us to stop putting limits on who we are and what we think. Changes are constantly happening all around us. Do we feel afraid … or hopeful? Do prejudices limit how we think and act, or can we enjoy the possibilities? We do have great capacity when we think spiritually!
At the moment I’m especially thinking about my friends whose lives are centred around our “oil-patch economy”. As changes come in the world and to the world, our carbon centred ecosphere is undergoing drastic changes. What happens to the thinking, the economy, the attitudes and understandings of the people in the carbon-centered world? How many prejudices affect our ways of thinking? Are there any antidotes? Are we able to give thanks for what has been … and not be afraid of anticipating NEW tomorrows? Where does Our Help come from?
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