Saturday, October 23, 2010

The Terrible Cost of War


"The Costs of War", is the focus of the peace activist coalition in which I take part, here in the western Chicago suburbs. It's dedicated members are everyday citizens, just like you and I, who each take the struggles of our national life and routine seriously, and who also struggle together recognizing the tragic consequences of our actions, personally and as a nation, as we all relate, in one degree or another, to the ongoing military dilemma in both Afghanistan and Iraq. And the consequences of which we address  do carry a tremendously heavy burden for us all, individually and as a country.

Too often when we hear of the costs of doing war we, without even fully engaging our minds, focus almost exclusively upon those costs only through the lenses of the financial burdens. However, the real costs extend well beyond this redirection of our country's resources.

In an article in today's New York Times ( The Way We Treat Our Troops - NYTimes.com ), columnist Bob Herbert brings to light an even more foreboding cost of our engagement in these decade-long wars, so far from our own home turf. His reporting, in fact, brings home to our soil the devastating aftermath of trauma that our troops must continually fight against, long after leaving the fields of combat. And "this' fight is one which is raging right here, now, within our very neighborhoods, all across the country.

We as a country cannot survive much longer under this present cost of doing war. The battles and dying may be thousands of miles from the roads we walk each day. But those roads of war are now leading back to our front doors, and we must now squarely face and deal with that which we all have created.

The "Cost of War" is becoming more monumental for us all - personally and collectively - with each passing day, and we must come to grips with what we are allowing, and bring an end to all these collateral costs which are destroying us as a nation, and as a moral society.





From the UCC Network - Devotion 10/23 "Singing Ahead of Time"

Daily Devotional August
Singing Ahead of Time 
Excerpt from Luke 1: 46 – 47 
“And Mary said, ‘My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior.’” 
Reflection by Anthony B. Robinson 
As a liturgically correct sort of guy, I am puzzled by today’s reading. It’s the Magnificat. After hearing from Gabriel that she would be the mother of Jesus, Mary lets go with this song of ecstatic praise. 
But what’s it doing here, now? We sing this in December, right? Or maybe late November. But today is October 23. It’s not Advent. It’s not Christmas. It’s just plain old October 23. It’s not even a Sunday. It is, for heaven’s sake, a Saturday: errands, soccer, raking leaves, fixing a leak at the sink. It’s too soon for the Magnificat. It’s too early to sing. 
Somewhere in the writings of Anne Morrow Lindbergh, she tells a story of visiting a garden in Japan. Her guide was explaining the symbolic significance of various trees, including bamboo, pine and the plum tree. The bamboo stands, said the guide, for long life, the pine for prosperity and the plum for courage. Lindbergh said that she could understand the bamboo and pine readily enough. “But why does the plum signify courage?” “Because,” said her guide, “the plum puts forth its flowers while there is still snow on the ground.”  
The plum, like Mary, sings ahead of time. Faith sings ahead of time. Faith sings on Saturday. 
Prayer 
When we want things to stick to the plan and when we want you, God, to stick to the schedule, surprise us. Set us singing on the wrong day. Set us singing ahead of time. Amen.
About the Author

Tony Robinson, a United Church of Christ minister, is a speaker, teacher and writer. His most recent book is Changing the Conversation: A Third Way for Congregations. Read his weekly reflections on the current lectionary texts atwww.anthonybrobinson.com.