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...of shoulders left un-shrugged...and crisis kept un-abandoned.

thougts from Dan Haseltine...

I received a wonderful email from a friend this week.  It was
timely. My life has gotten quite overwhelming: As Live Earth plays on t.v.
I’m wondering about environmental issues far more than ever before.  I’m
wrestling to know what it looks like to stay engaged with the political activities
going on in the U.S., and on top of this still keeping my hands dirty in the
relationships I am trying to grow in Africa.  And in certain moments, I have
wondered why I shouldn't simply, intentionally, forget a few of those things,
lighten the list... and choose not to care.

 

"...of shoulders left un-shrugged...and crisis kept un-abandoned."

dan_headshot

thoughts from Dan Haseltine...
 

I received a wonderful email from a friend this week.  It was timely.  My life has gotten quite overwhelming: As Live Earth plays on t.v., I’m wondering about environmental issues far more than ever before.  I’m wrestling to know what it looks like to stay engaged with the political activities going on in the U.S., and on top of this still keeping my hands dirty in the relationships I am trying to grow in Africa.  And in certain moments, I have  wondered why I shouldn't simply, intentionally, forget a few of those things, lighten the list... and choose not to care.

My good friend wanted to pass along a few words from Alexander
McCall Smith, through his character Precious Ramotswe, in the book,
"The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency."  Almost at the end, as she has reunited
an abducted boy to his family, McCall writes, "Mma Ramotswe walked
back towards her van, not wanting to intrude upon the intimate moments
of reunion. She was crying; for her child, too-- remembering the
minute hand that had grasped her own, so briefly, while it tried to
hold on to a strange world that was slipping away so quickly. There
was so much suffering in Africa that it was tempting just to shrug
your shoulders and walk away. But you can't do that, she thought. You
just can't."

I was quickly reminded that it is both a matter of choice, and a
matter of where God has placed me in the history of the world.   It
will always be tempting to slide away from the pressing stories of
injustice, suffering and devastation that crowd our minds, and seize
our hearts.   For those of us who have been given the curse of choice
in this area,  it will always be a hard decision...the one to press
inward, even as we sense that we just can not take anymore of the
reality.

As McCall reminds us, we simply can't do that.   We can not shrug our
shoulders,  not walk away.  There is no where to go that frees
us from the turns and developments in our own story.   And there will
never be a peace if we pull a Jonah, and run the other way.   To run,
is to lie to ourselves about what we know to be true.   Our story is
not our own.   Just as Mother Theresa so wonderfully illuminated, "
IF we have no peace, it is because we have forgotten that we belong
to each other."  We can try to usher in a willful forgetfulness, as a means to
breathe a little more easily,  but it will not end in peace.

This is why I choose to keep moving inward, this is why we all walk
closer to the flame.   As we consider this week, this next year, the
next decade... we are hopeful that God is orchestrating something
brilliant.  David Wilcox, a magnificent singer/songwriter gave us a
gift quite a few years ago.  It was a song called,  "Show the Way."
It is a musical declaration of what it means to live in the "already
and the not yet, " of the Kingdom of God... or what Paul Farmer
calls, "the long defeat."  Find and Listen to that song, and find hope, and
courage to walk with shoulders left un-shrugged and crisis kept
unabandoned.  Peace to you- Dan Haseltine

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...of shoulders left un-shrugged...and crisis kept un-abandoned. (3 comments)

It seems, as though, my wife has gotten to this topic first. I understand the moving toward ease, and shutting the brain off to the reality that is taking place. I worked security at your concert in Kalamazoo MI last winter. I checked out the Blood:Water booth and was from that point on no longer able to look away. That looks very different to my wife and I now. We lost quite a few friends do to the shift in priorities. It is not easy to sell people on this lifestyle. You are absolutely correct though. PEACE. It has been found. I know now we are on the right path. God bless you guys and Jena Lee, I am eternally grateful to the spark that was lit in my and my wife's soul.

posted by dhadaway at 12:19 PM on December 24, 2007

That was beautiful Dan. It's actually a little relieving to hear that even the best struggle with that same feeling from time to time. I know my friends don't get why I don't just do something to help once and then move on. But I figure there are enough people in the world who live by that philosophy. What the world really needs are people who are crazy enough to believe that they can actually change the world. 'Cause they're the ones who will likely do just that. Hardly any of us would have come to the conclusion that we could do something of this magnitude for these beautiful people in Africa, were it not for you laying the groundwork and setting the tone. God bless:)

posted by ahadaway at 7:43 PM on December 13, 2007

Well said, Dan. I very much appreciate what you guys are doing. Not only are you pushing forward with your heart and making a difference to many, many people, you're setting a great example.

posted by Jeff at 7:34 AM on August 7, 2007