Oct 31, 2008

Barack Obama: Praying to Be 'An Instrument of God's Will' ...cont...

I do think that for the average Arab or Indonesian or Nigerian or Asian Muslim on the street that my familiarity with their culture would have an impact. I think that they would view America differently if I were president. Now, that is not just symbolic. That is something that could be used in a constructive way to open greater dialogue between the West and the Islamic world and that ultimately could make us more safe.
Q:
This is a delicate subject because there's been this smear campaign against you via email, alleging that you're Muslim. But do you think the fact that you attended a majority Muslim school in Indonesia or that your biological father was raised Muslim resonate with someone in the Arab street, a Muslim there?
Let me just sort of be as clear as possible in terms of what that background is. You know, I was raised basically by my mother, who came from a Christian background—small town, white, Midwesterner. But, she was not particularly religious. My father, who I did not know—I spent a month of my life in his presence, otherwise he was a stranger to me—was raised in a household where his father had converted to Islam. But my father, for all practical purposes, was agnostic. My mother remarried an Indonesian and we moved to Indonesia. But for two years I went to a Catholic school in Indonesia, and then for two years went to a secular school in Indonesia. The majority of children there were Muslim. But it wasn't a religious school. So almost all the facts that have been presented in the scurrilous emails are wrong. And I've been a member of my church now for almost 20 years and have never been a person of the Muslim faith. Now, having said all that, I absolutely believe that having lived in a country that was majority Muslim for a time and having distant relatives in Africa who are Muslim, that I'm less likely to demonize the Muslim faith and more likely to understand that they are ordinary folks who are trying to figure out how to live their lives and raise their kids and prosper just like anybody else. And I do think that that cultural understanding is something that could be extremely valuable.
Q:
Preaching in church last Sunday, your longtime pastor, Jeremiah Wright, said that Bill Clinton "Did the same thing to us that he did to Monica Lewinsky." And he was criticized recently for his church magazine's decision to give an award to Louis Farrakhan. Do you worry that the country is forming a certain impression of Jeremiah Wright that's a different than the man who brought you to Christianity?
It's a tricky thing, anybody's relationship with their pastor. Reverend Wright's about to retire in a month. He’s at the end of a long and distinguished career. People who are familiar with the black church tradition know that Reverend Wright's considered one of the greatest preachers in the country. Our church, Trinity United Church of Christ, even though it is part of a 95-, 97-percent white denomination, very much draws on the historical black church tradition and Reverend Wright's sermons do as well. And that means that sometimes he's provocative in ways that I'm not always comfortable with and in ways that I deeply disagree with occasionally. On the other hand, there are times where when he's talking about scripture and sort of our obligations as Christians to serve the least of these, he is right on target. And so, I think, like anybody else, I am proud of Reverend Wright and what he's done in his life and the people that he has drawn to Christ and the work that he's done in prison ministries, providing housing for seniors and all kinds of wonderful work in the church. But there are going to be times where we disagree. I think that's probably not unique to me.
Q:
You wrote in “The Audacity of Hope” about the role that faith and faith-based programs could play in confronting social ills. Isn’t your view on that similar to George W. Bush’s?
A:
No, I don't think so, because I am much more concerned with maintaining the line between church and state. And I believe that, for the most part, we can facilitate the excellent work that's done by faith-based institutions when it comes to substance abuse treatment or prison ministries…. I think much of this work can be done in a way that doesn't conflict with church and state. I think George Bush is less concerned about that. My general criteria is that if a congregation or a church or synagogue or a mosque or a temple wants to provide social services and use government funds, then they should be able to structure it in a way that all people are able to access those services and that we're not seeing government dollars used to proselytize. That, by the way, is a view based not just on my concern about the state or the apparatus of the state being captured by a particular religious faith, but it's also because I want the church protected from the state. And I don't think that we promote the incredible richness of our religious life and our religious institutions when the government starts getting too deeply entangled in their business. That's part of the reason why you don't have as rich a set of religious institutions and faith life in Europe. Part of that has to do with the fact that, traditionally, it was an extension of the state. And so there is less experimentation, less vitality, less responsiveness to the yearnings of people. It became a rigid institution that no longer served people's needs. Religious freedom in this country, I think, is precisely what makes religion so vital.
Q:
Your 2004 Democratic National Convention speech introduced you to the nation. And perhaps the most repeated line from that speech was, simply, “We worship an awesome God in the blue states.” Did you think that line would have as much resonance as it wound up having?
A:
Yeah, I did. That's why I put it in there. I thought it was an important message to send to the country as a whole, but also to my fellow Democrats that nobody has a monopoly on religious belief.

Oct 29, 2008

Barack Obama: Praying to Be 'An Instrument of God's Will'


This Saturday’s South Carolina primary could make or break Barack Obama's presidential aspirations. The Illinois Senator was interviewed by phone on Monday by Beliefnet politics editor Dan Gilgoff.
Listen to Barack Obama:

'I Felt God's Spirit Beckoning Me'
Prayers and Fair Play on the Campaign Trail
Muslims 'Would View America Differently'
A Childhood of Different Religions
'I Am Proud of Reverend Wright'
Q:
You spoke at Martin Luther King’s Ebenezer Baptist Church this week and speak regularly at other churches.
Is there a difference in speaking from a pulpit versus from behind a podium or at a political rally?
Do you have a different set of responsibilities?
A:
When I'm speaking behind a pulpit, I'm in church.
And what that means is that it's during a religious service. I'm there, mindful that the primary reason for being in church is to worship. And so I'm going to constrain myself in speaking on purely political issues and am more likely to broaden the theme to address broader issues—values and our ideals, how we can come together to solve the problems that we face as a nation and in the world. But I'm very sensitive to respecting the role that the church service plays and not wanting to abuse the privilege of addressing a congregation. In writing about your experience encountering church people as an organizer in Chicago, you said you saw “their ability to make a way out of no way, I could see the Word made manifest… I was finally able to walk down the aisle of Trinity United Church of Christ one day and be baptized.”
It sounds like a conversion or a born-again experience.
'I Felt God's Spirit Beckoning Me
'It wasn't an epiphany. I didn't “fall out,” as they say in the black church.
It was an emotional and spiritual progression, as well as an intellectual one. And it didn't happen overnight. What happened was that I felt drawn to the message of Jesus Christ and the power of the church to fortify people in their spiritual journeys. And, you know, in my heart, at least, I felt God's spirit beckoning me. So ultimately, as I write in [“The Audacity of Hope”], I submitted myself to his will, dedicated myself to discovering his truths. But it's an ongoing process for all of us in making sure that we are living out our faith every day. And, you know, it's something that I try to pray on at the beginning of every day and at the end of every day, whether I'm living my life in a way that's consistent with my faith.
Q:
Is it difficult in the rough and tumble of campaign politics to stick to that, to live out your faith? And can you talk about whether you have a favorite prayer or what you pray about?
Prayers and Fair Play on the Campaign Trail
A:
The prayer that I tell myself every night is a fairly simple one: I ask in the name of Jesus Christ that my sins are forgiven, that my family is protected and that I am an instrument of God's will. I'm constantly trying to align myself to what I think he calls on me to do. And sometimes you hear it strongly and sometimes that voice is more muted. In terms of on the political trail, I don't find it challenging to be respectful and courteous to people, including my political opponents. You know, the Golden Rule still applies in politics. I do think that being a Christian doesn't mean that you're passive or that you aren't going to confront injustice. What I think is important, though, and is important not just for me, but also for my team—I'm trying to always reinforce this within the culture of our organization, and I'm not always perfectly successful—is to at least be scrupulous and honest in how we present our disagreements with other people. I try to measure whether what I'm saying is fair by seeing how I would feel if I was at the receiving end of it. And, you know, there are a number of people—there have been a number of times where I've been criticized during the course of this campaign. And I say to myself, “Well, that's a fair criticism in the sense that I may disagree with the criticism, but it's substantive and there's a legitimate difference of opinion.” There are other times where I feel as if people are just distorting what I say to score cheap political points. And that gets you frustrated or weary or occasionally angry. And so, I try not to do that to other people.
Q:
Andrew Sullivan has written about your hypothetical inauguration through the eyes of a Pakistani Muslim who sees "This man, Barack Hussein Obama, is the new face of America, a brown-skinned man whose father was an African, who grew up in Indonesia and Hawaii, who attended a majority Muslim school for boys, is now the alleged enemy. If you wanted the crudest, but most effective weapon against the demonization of America that fuels Islamic ideology, Obama's face gets close. It proves them wrong about what America is in ways no words can." Do you agree that a Muslim in the Arab street could hate America less if they saw that you were elected, because of your faith background and your brushes with Islam in your past?
A:
I don't think that it would change the minds of the hard core ideologue of the Islamic militant movement. You know, I think they would view me as a Christian and an infidel and a Westerner and they wouldn't view me any differently, I think, than any other American president.

Oct 21, 2008

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Oct 17, 2008

FRIEND IN NEED...


"Wounds from a FRIEND can be TRUSTED, but an enemy mutiplies kisses."
~Proverbs 27:6 NIV

The Moores and the Lamberts have been friends for years. They went to some of the same schools. They had children about the same time. They've known each other through the important times and during the everyday events. They've served on PTA and played on softball leagues together.

It was Brenda Moore that let Coleen Lambert know that her oldest son was taking drugs. It was Ben Lambert that let Bob Moore know that his daughter was in trouble at school. They wouldn't have trusted the news from anyone else. They saw the pain in each other's eyes and knew they could TRUST the wounds of their friends.
Many people have come and gone in their town, but these families have remained friends and probably always will. They have stood by each other in every circumstance, and they have grieved their losses together.
That's the kind of friends we all NEED to have. That's the kind of friends we all NEED to BE-friends who can be TRUSTED in any kind of weather and with any kind of message.
BE A GOOD FRIEND TODAY...

A Friend is someone with
whom you
DARE to be URSELF.
IS THERE SOMEONE WHO NEED MY LOVING INTERCESSION TODAY?
~GLDJ





Oct 15, 2008

Tips for the Unemployed...#4

Stay Connected to Your Network.
You probably have a lot more friends, colleagues and supporters than you realize.
Survey your address books, PDA, business card files and social networks to see who's really in your inner circle and wider network and who might be able to help lead you to some new prospective opportunities.
Talk to friends and family and see who they know.
Then start reaching out to catch up with everyone you can.
Befriend old friends online, shoot out a bunch of emails, even invite a few for coffee or drinks.
Start talking to everyone you can! Ask your contacts who else you should be talking to, then reach out to them.
Update your online profiles with the latest news and let people know that you're actively exploring your options.
This is not the time to hide out and wallow.
Just make sure you force yourself to smile and at least appear to have a positive outlook for the future!
Repeat the mantra to yourself:
"onward and upward!"
...until you believe it.

Oct 14, 2008

Tips for the Unemployed...#3


Look at This As an Opportunity.
You know what they always say,
"It's not what happens to you, but what you do about it."
That might not be what you want to hear right now, but think about it: This sudden change could have a silver lining -- so commit yourself to finding it.
Take some time for yourself, even just a few quiet hours alone and reflect on all the things you truly liked and disliked about your job.What would you have done differently?
Were you there because you had to be, or because you wanted to be? Ask yourself how you can now take the next step learning from your past experience. Is there a chance to take a step up? Or to change industries or careers entirely if you weren't as happy as you wanted to be? So many times, abrupt changes like this are exactly what people need to get out of a rut and move on to something they'd really love to be doing

Oct 12, 2008

Tips for the Unemployed...#2


Audit Your Online Identity.
Start paying close attention to your reputation management, to the platform that you've built for yourself online (if any) and to what new people will perceive about you when they google you. If you don't like what you see online, or want to take control of that first impression you're giving off, build a professional identity you can be proud of with a PROJO - your professional mojo.

It's a next-generation resume/portfolio that you can share with contacts, add to/promote in your signature line, build out and keep up to date with your latest accomplishments to ensure that when someone searches for you, they find the "goods" on you, but the good!

Oct 11, 2008

Tips for the Suddenly Unemployed... #1

Breathe. Stay Calm.
The worst decisions are made under pressure, stress, or in a state of fear. Don't allow yourself to be rash or irrational; keep your wits about you and commit to making it through this in one piece. Get a sense for what this layoff really means to you and what the real repercussions will be.Assess your safety nets:

What are your back-up plans?
(All the way down to spending time with the folks in your worst case financial scenario.) Hopefully you've done enough to guard against that, and if so, take some solace in the fact that you're prepared to weather a little uncertainty.

Opportunities KNOCK!

Oct 8, 2008

Be your OWN LIFE COACH #8


What Would Make Me Genuinely Happy?
"Eudemonic" is a little-used word that means "happy-making."


What are all the eudemonic activities you can think of?
Make a list.
How many of these happy-makers did you do yesterday, last week, this year?
Which ones can you indulge in today?
When you're facing a challenge, ask what would make you happy in this situation.
And cast a wide net.
You may have "taking a cruise" on your list, but if you also remember that "hanging out at the library" and "playing with my dog" are eudemonic for you, you get to be happy every day--and that's important.
What would make you happy now (that wouldn't make you unhappy later)?
Do that

Oct 7, 2008

Be your OWN LIFE COACH #7


Where Should I Act and Where Should I Step Back?
Ask this to get a sense of what is yours to do and what isn't.
This is the advanced class in enlightened living. Countless times we've all acted too soon or without sufficient information, or we've stepped in where our input wasn't needed and muddied circumstances that were already working themselves out.
When you ask yourself, quietly and confidently, what your part is in a given situation, and where to wait (or exit entirely), you'll get a clear idea of your role.
If you ask the question and still want to act against the advice of your internal coach, remind yourself that, although life is a series of little dramas, none of them needs a drama queen (or king).

Oct 6, 2008

Be your OWN LIFE COACH #6

What Really Matters Here?
In his classic of the spiritual life, "At the Feet of the Master," Krishnamurti writes that as we grow spiritually, it is essential to discern not just right from wrong, but more important from less important.
Whether it's prioritizing your to-do list or figuring out which demands you can tend to today and which ones will wait, you need to ask yourself what really matters.
Generally speaking, things with feelings--i.e., living beings, particularly those closest to you--will take precedence. No matter the answer, you'll learn what's of greatest consequence to you in this instance.

Oct 5, 2008

Be your OWN LIFE COACH #5

What Am I Not Seeing?
We all live with blinders on. They come with having a personal vantage point. And yet the answer to a dilemma may lie in seeing just another millimeter of the situation.

Ask, then,
"What am I not seeing here?"
Often, what we're not seeing is what we don't want to see. Let's say you're feeling uncomfortable in your job for no apparent reason. If you were to see just a bit more of the picture, you might learn (or remember) that the problem is not the role per se, it's that it isn't using a talent you're yearning to express. Once you see that, you can take appropriate action.

Oct 4, 2008

Be your OWN LIFE COACH #4

What Would Jesus (Buddha, Sai Baba, My Grandmother) Do?

Thinking of a role model, whether a great spiritual teacher or a sweet spiritual person, is like having a mentor on-call.
Ask yourself what this person would do in your situation.
A technique for tapping their wisdom is to write out the question and the answer.
This doesn't mean that you're channeling a spirit or writing a new gospel: you're simply tapping into the wisdom that knowing this person (or knowing of this person) has given you.
Your questioning on paper can become a fascinating conversation that yields surprising insights. And it gives the phrase "friends in high places" a whole new meaning.

Oct 3, 2008

Be your OWN LIFE COACH #3



What Are My Values?
This is an important question to ask yourself periodically--on your birthday perhaps, or at the New Year.

It's both liberating and motivating to be so well acquainted with your values that you could recite them on demand.
My husband was working with this question and announced, "My values spell ditch: discretion, integrity, tolerance, civility, humility."
He was so pleased with his discovery that he had a bracelet made with his values engraved on it. You may want to do something similar, but as long as your values are engraved on your psyche and acted on in your life, that's enough

Oct 2, 2008

Be your OWN LIFE COACH #2

What Does My Body Have to Say About This?
Our culture has long mistrusted the body.
It's been seen as a confusing blend of God's handiwork and the devil's playground.
It is, rather, a vortex of intelligence.
Every cell comes equipped with awareness.
Your body has something in the neighborhood of 40 trillion cells
--quite a consulting committee.
Call on it when you're confused or undecided.
Relax quietly and ask your body what it has to say.
Then note any sensations.
Around your heart, are you picking up excitement that says
"Yes!" even if there's also a little anxiety about doing something new?
Or in your belly, are you feeling dread, a "gut reaction" telling you to take another path?

Oct 1, 2008

Be Your Own Life Coach #1

Though we often seek advice from others, many spiritual traditions teach that the answer lies within.
In this gallery, Victoria Moran, inspirational speaker, spiritual life coach, and author, offers us the top 10 questions she asks her coaching clients.
By asking them of yourself,
they can help you gain clarity in almost any situation.
Just pick a challenge you're dealing with, and apply one or more of the following questions. Then, be willing to act on what your inner wisdom reveals.
Is This Good For Me?
This question needs to underlie every personal decision--from how to respond to a job offer or what to chose from a menu.
So many of our choices are either snap decisions or belabored:
We ask a friend (and another and another), make a pros and cons list, throw the "I Ching."
While such processes have a place, you can simplify things by
asking
yourself if this is genuinely good for you--
physically, mentally, and spiritually, today and next week and in 10 years.
Because your inner being looks after your true interests--not just your ego cravings--
you'll get the guidance you're looking for.

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Prov. 31:17 She sets about her work vigorously

Prov. 31:17 She sets about her work vigorously

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