Archive - 2016
March 6th
The Road to Lusaka: A Prologue
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 03/06/2016 - 09:10I’ve been writing this blog for around eight years. I started it as a place to gather my thoughts about a wide range of topics. I know a lot of people visit this blog looking for articles on technology, politics, media, and other random topics. I have every intention of writing more about these topics, but right now, I am especially interested in the idea of religious identity and so a lot of my writing is on this topic.
I also write in various styles on this blog. Sometimes I try to adopt a journalist tone and other times, I seek more of a journaling tone. In the struggle to define religious identity in the twenty-first century, I am a participant observer, so many of my posts along this line are likely to be a mixture of these tones.
Friday night, I went to Dinner for a Dollar at my church. You don’t really have to pay a dollar, you just give whatever you can. It might be nothing. It might be more than a dollar. It isn’t a soup kitchen where those who have give to those that don’t have, setting up unhelpful power dynamics. It isn’t a fundraiser, although Dinner for a Dollar often does take in more than in spends. Dinner for a dollar is a chance for everyone to gather for a good affordable meal. Some folks are food insecure and come for the food. Some folks are lonely and come for the companionship. Some folks have young kids and come for an opportunity to speak with other parents as their kids run around with each other. It is a vital ministry of our church that I don’t participate in as much as I would like.
I went to Dinner for a Dollar Friday night because I was going to spend the night in the undercroft of the church with others from the parish as well as some homeless guests. Every winter, Columbus House takes groups of homeless people to various faith communities around New Haven where they spend the night. Members of the faith community stay with the homeless guests, providing food, companionship and a warm, safe place to sleep.
This year, many of our homeless guests headed off to bed pretty early and the hosts sat around chatting, and heading off to sleep in one corner of the church or another. I sat on one of the couches and chatted, and as the hosts still up dwindled, I sprawled out on the couch and went to sleep.
At one point, one of the other hosts found a blanket which they put over me, thinking they could do it without even waking me up. I was in that half asleep, half awake phase, that I associate with the beginning of Remembrance of Things Past by Marcel Proust. I felt loved, cared for. I thought about when I was young and had drifted to that half awake state sitting around a campfire and my father picked me up, carried me into the tent, and put me in my sleeping bag. I thought of God’s Love, covering all of us in our spiritually half awake state.
I drifted in and out of sleep for the next few hours and then got up for breakfast. After our guests left, the hosts sat around and talked. There were two African American hosts, one Asian American host, one Hispanic American host, and two Caucasian American hosts. We are all hyphenated, and several, trying to make up for lack of sleep were trying to become caffeinated as well.
The discussion drifted towards racial justice, the differences between inter personal racism and systemic racism. By personal racism, I mean the kind you see represented by a confederate flag on the back of a pickup truck, or the kind you hear when someone uses the N word, or if you are more attuned here in micro aggressions.
For systemic racism, we talked mostly about education and black history month. The history we’ve grown up with is the history of the happy slave making desert for her master and the Europeans having a nice dinner in November with their Native American welcoming committee.
One of the things that often comes up is people asking why we need Black History Month. Shouldn’t Black History be taught every month? Well, yes, it should, but it isn’t. What we really need is Black History being taught every month as well as a special Black History month, to help everyone, students, and their parents and community, to catch up on the Black History that hasn’t been taught. It is a discussion about equality and equity. It is a discussion about fairness.
After breakfast and cleaning up, I drove home, where I quickly showered and then headed off to the annual Episcopal Church in Connecticut’s Mission conference, this year, entitled ‘Walking Together - Living God's Mission’.
I was tired. I was missing some of my normal Saturday activities, both chores and relaxation, but I believed it was an important event for me to attend, so I powered onward.
March 3rd
March 3
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 03/03/2016 - 21:35Another busy day and emotionally draining day has come to an end. It has been a good day; productive meetings, fruitful conversations. It has been a hard day. On the street I saw a homeless man I know who struggles with alcohol get arrested, I read comments to my recent blog post from people who just don’t seem to get it,and I thought about the disorderliness of our current civic life. It has been a day of uncertainty, and I wait and work towards various hopes and desires. It has been a day of being aware of being on a journey, of being in a different place from where I started and not yet being at the place where I’ll end up.
The next few days are going to be very busy. Too many things happening at the same time, and so I’ll have to miss a few of them. So, I’ll write this brief piece, try to get some sleep, and then head into my tasks tomorrow. I’ve sought to write daily, but I’ve missed a few days, and I may miss a few more this weekend. However, I continue to get lots of additional ideas to write about later.
March 2nd
The Gospel of Barry Dubya Drumpf
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 03/02/2016 - 21:22It may seem strange for a politician so liberal that he’s been called a communist by his political adversaries to quote a talk radio show host’s article in the National Review, but these aren’t normal times and perhaps I’m not your typical politician.
Dennis Prager wrote Gratuitous Hatred Is Destroying Republicans — Just as It Did the Ancient Israelites. There is plenty I can find to disagree with in Prager’s article, but his concern about gratuitous hatred is an important point, and it’s not just destroying Republicans, it is destroying all of us.
One example of this is the tendency to come up with names to disrespect our previous and current president, as well as one of the current candidates. As you can see by the title of this post, Republicans and Democrats alike do this. It is part of a larger problem, the vilification of those that are different from ourselves, that are ‘other’.
This is happening, not only in national politics, but in church politics as well. Today, I read a post by a senior Anglican bishop, which included, “Western liberal activists are not the least bit gracious. Actually, forgive me. That was judgmental. I have never met a Western liberal activist who was gracious”
Apparently these days even senior Bishops think it is acceptable to speak disrespectfully of those they disagree with, if the post ‘forgive me’.
The bigger problem is that hate now appears to be socially acceptable. We talk about ‘haters’ and shrug them off saying, ‘haters gonna hate’.
This isn’t new, and if we go back to great literature and to scripture, we find two important quotes. The first is from the Prince in the final scene of Romeo and Juliet
See, what a scourge is laid upon your hate,
That heaven finds means to kill your joys with love.
And I for winking at your discords too
Have lost a brace of kinsmen: all are punish'd.
It illustrates the passage from 1 John 3:15
Everyone who hates his brother is a murderer; and you know that no murderer has eternal life abiding in him.
and again in 1 John 4:20
If someone says, "I love God," and hates his brother, he is a liar; for the one who does not love his brother whom he has seen, cannot love God whom he has not seen.
I know that it can be enjoyable to poke fun at people we disagree with. At times it can be humorous, but too often it is just plain hateful. To my God fearing friends, I call on you to not only say, “forgive me” but to actually repent, to turn around and seek to love those you disagree with, those that are different from yourselves. To my secular friends, I’ll just refer back to the Prince’s speech at the end of Romeo and Juliet. We will all be punished, one way or another, if we don’t end this gratuitous hatred.
March 1st
Rabbits, Lions, and Lambs
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 03/01/2016 - 07:04Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit. March comes in like a lion. Doors closing and windows opening. Between strange dreams, now unfortunately forgotten, not much sleep, and things being in great flux. There is little that I can write about right now.
Easter is on the 27th and so March is likely to go out like a lamp, in multiple ways. I am waiting for Easter, but I’m trying to live each day in the present.
February 28th
Measurement
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 02/28/2016 - 19:20Yesterday, a friend posted on Facebook a link to an article, The Quantified Welp: A new study suggests that measuring an activity makes it less enjoyable. She asked, “What are the implications for outcomes measurement/management and evaluation in the nonprofit sector?”
I wrote several comments, which I’ll try to gather into a meaningful blog post.
First, the article, seems to contract itself saying the research “proposes that the more you quantify something that’s rewarding for its own sake, the less likely you are to enjoy it—and the less likely you are, too, to do more of it." Yet when you read further, you get "Those who got numerical feedback on their works in progress—'you have colored one shape,' etc.—colored more shapes but reported enjoying it less."
It seems like measuring something in fact makes people more productive, but less happy. If you want productive employees, measure them. If you want happy employees, don't. This, of course, illustrates the need for balance. Of course we want our employees to be as productive as possible, so meaningful measurements can be beneficial. However, if the measurements aren’t really meaningful, aren’t really helping the organization achieve its mission, then the measurements are detrimental. The challenge is to find the right level of meaningful measurements.
The research also doesn't appear to take into consideration the issue that one of the other people commenting on the post brought up about competition. The study does not seem to factor in the reward of competition. Not only would it be interesting to see how this changes for more competitive and less competitive people, but also how it changes if you have a leader board, badges, or other recognitions for measuring well. Would we then see people high on the leaderboard happier and those lower on the leader board less happy?
All of this seems to fit nicely with research on the demotivational effects of higher salaries. It also makes me think of the OpEd in the New York Times by Robert Wachter last month, How Measurement Fails Doctors and Teachers. I’m also interested in how this fits into discussions about the future of the church in the United States; church growth and the ‘slow church movement’.