A long-time good friend and I are having an ongoing
cyberspace discussion about same sex marriage. We both are Christians but he’s
pretty conservative and I am not. I’m all for it and he certainly is not. We
both are smart, articulate and thoughtful. And we both love each other. I’m
guessing neither one of us will change our mind, but – as he says – we are
discussing our sincere differences sincerely. And we both are better for it.
I know where he’s coming from because I used to believe
pretty much the same way. I’ve made those arguments; I’ve had those concerns. We’ve
both grown and changed since we were so close, but we’ve grown and changed in
different directions. Such is the human journey. Such is the way of relationships.
But for us, relationship is the key; being friends is more
important to us than being right. (Of course, we both think we are right.) I am
grateful this friendship means as much to him as it does to me because I have
other conservative friends who have broken off their relationships; they
unfriended me on Facebook a long time ago. It’s like some people are so
committed to a particular (peculiar) kind of integrity that agreeing to
disagree somehow compromises their core ethics. They seem to believe their
sworn duty is to fix me, to change me and if they can’t do that, then we can’t
be friends. This belief system makes me immensely sad because it contributes to
alienation and estrangement throughout the human community. Friends, families,
governments… minds set in stone, conversation in talking points, assassinating
character and impugning integrity, listening just enough to misunderstand…
I admit I don’t have these kinds of probing conversations
with very many of my conservative friends; most of us agree to disagree and then
agree not to talk about it. But this
friend is precious. Authentic community between human beings is always a
precious thing, but when community is not easy, when it calls for an extra dose
of patience and understanding and respect and compassion – that kind of
friendship is rare and beautiful and precious.
Our current American civilization is not very civil these
days. There are deep divides that separate us; strong differences of opinion
that keep pushing us further and further apart. But I think it’s not the
divides and the differences themselves that are the problem. We’ve always had
our differences and when we’re smart, we recognize that our diversity is part
of our strength. No, I don’t think it’s our differences that are the problem; I
think it’s the fear.
Now that Stephen Colbert is in between TV shows, he is free
to talk more publicly about his Catholic faith. In a recent interview, he was
asked his favorite Bible verse: “Do not worry about your life…” he quicklyreplied. And “do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will bring worries ofits own.” In order to stay mindful, Stephen believes, one cannot live in fear. It’s
a little like comedy, he explains: You can’t laugh and be afraid at the same
time.
“You can’t laugh and be afraid at the same time.”
There are plenty of things in our lives, in our world that
justifiably cause anxiety. Stephen Colbert knows that as well or better than
must of us. But we’re not going to solve any of our problems if we can’t talk
to each other, if we don’t participate in honest conversation and collaborate
in creative dreaming. We can’t hope to find our common connections if we don’t
discuss our sincere differences sincerely.
We can’t build bridges of
cooperation if we don’t come together across these deep divides. We can’t live
if we don’t laugh and love.
I’m not sure this will ever happen on Facebook - even though
I volunteer for Coffee Party USA and have high hopes that more and more people
will commit to civil public conversation around controversial issues. But I do
believe we can build these bridges one relationship at a time. “Anthropology
trumps ideology,” another friend likes to say. When I really come to know a
person - who they are, where they come from, what they value; when I really
grow to love a person – then my dogmas become less rigid and my boundaries
become more porous. One friend, one family member, one co-worker who sees the
world differently can be a great resource for expanding our understanding. One person’s
effort to listen and learn from another (especially one who has been “the
other”) can erode fear and cultivate love and laughter.
You may say I’m a dreamer.
But I’m not the only one.
© Charlotte Vaughan Coyle 2015
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