Be Still!. Gordon C. Stewart
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Название: Be Still!

Автор: Gordon C. Stewart

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Религия: прочее

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isbn: 9781532600661

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      In the current debate about guns, the life situations, cultural traditions, and life experiences of the hearers are “worlds” apart. Perhaps . . . perhaps . . . if we could find the space to listen more deeply to our different cries in the face of chaos, we would find the common ground of homo convictus, and move to something deeper than the shouting.

      Say the Word ‘Freedom’

      I may not be able to say all I think, but I am not going to say anything I do not think.And I would rather a thousand times be a free soul in jail than a sycophant or coward on the streets.

      My hearing continues to get worse. In the soundproof booth of the hearing test, the audiologist asks me to repeat the words I hear . . .

      “Say the word ‘good.’”

      “Wood.”

      “Say the word ‘cold.’”

      “Hold.”

      “Say the word ‘gold.’”

      “Goal.”

      It’s not easy inheriting my mother’s hearing loss. Getting the words wrong often separates me from normal conversation. But it also has its advantages. I listen more carefully, and the world of silence brings me to a deeper reflection about the words we hear every day.

      I’ve begun to listen more carefully when the word “freedom” is used.

      “Say the word ‘free.’”

      “Free,” we say. And something deep within us hears the national anthem: “land of the free, and the home of the brave.”

      We Americans love freedom.

      Future anthropologists will likely observe that freedom was the most treasured word in the American vocabulary. It is the most powerful word in our language.

      No one understands this better than the handlers of political candidates. They know that the word evokes an unspoken reverence and that perceived threats to freedom alarm us and cause us to get back in the ranks of freedom’s faithful. They know the nature of language and of word association.

      “Say the word ‘freedom,’” they say.

      “Democracy.”

      “Say the word ‘regulation.’”

      “Socialist.”

      “Say the word ‘socialist.’”

      “Un-American.”

      “Say the word ‘government.’”

      “Enemy.”

      “Say the word ‘American.’”

      “Free.”

      Freedom stands alone in the American pantheon.

      Ironically, in the hands of the unscrupulous, the word we associate with individual liberty can cause a collective stampede. It calls us from grazing freely in the pasture to joining a mindless herd.

      We don’t like heresy; we’re afraid of being heretics like Eugene Debs, convicted of sedition in 1918 for exercising his constitutional right to freedom in a speech at Canton, Ohio. Sentenced to ten years in federal prison, he exercised his right to make one final plea to the court.

      My hearing will continue to get worse. It will take me into a world of increasing silence. In a way, I wish the same for the rest of my countrymen. We could all use some time away from the word-association games.

      Reframing the Gun Debate

      We hold these truths to be self-evident,that all men are created equal,that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights,that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

      —American Declaration of Independence

      Today in America we continue to define, weigh, and measure these three “unalienable rights.”

      No matter whether the Declaration’s principal author, Thomas Jefferson, and the Committee of Five of the Second Continental Congress assumed these three rights to be mutually compatible or whether they saw them in tension with each other, today in America there is little agreement about the meaning of, or the relations among, “Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.” Instead, we are locked in a heated debate about one of the three—liberty—as it pertains to the Second Amendment to the US Constitution, adopted in 1791.

      Lost in the debate is the more reflective philosophical, moral, and religious pondering of the “unalienable rights,” which in the eyes of Jefferson and the Congress were essential virtues of a new republic. Then, as now, the way we understand life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness is shaped, to some extent, by different cultural experiences.

      A new cultural landscape

      At the time of the Declaration of Independence, the differences were often between northern and southern colonies. Today, the differences are still sectional, but perhaps even more, they are between rural and small town, urban and suburban cultures and settings.

      Rural and small-town populations, especially those that plow the fields and grow their food (and some of ours), tend to view guns as instruments that support life and the pursuit of happiness. A gun is used for hunting, protecting the animals from coyotes, or skeet shooting. The rifle by the back door is part of rural life, not meant to be used on another human being except in the unlikely event of a burglary. The right to own and use a gun is a matter not only of liberty but also of life and the ability to pursue happiness. The gun is a family СКАЧАТЬ