About Rich's Work

Home  >  About Rich's Work  >  Rich's Blog: Redeeming Hope     Printable Version Tell a friend

Add a comment

Return to thread Civic spirituality    Main blog
  Send me an email when someone posts a comment on this thread.
Type the letters and numbers you see in the image.
click here if you can't read the image.
 
    
 

Civic spirituality

When I was speaking at the LBJ Presidential Library last week, a woman rose from her chair to ask me if I had links on our Web site to various spiritual and religious thinkers. I had mentioned earlier in my talk that I believe America is in desperate need of a new kind of “civic spirituality.” I responded by saying that we didn’t have links to such thinkers – and I didn’t think we would. I noted that such thinkers are important and that many Americans look to them for guidance. (See “Can religion bring us together?”) My belief is that we need a civic spirituality in America. The two words placed together – almost an oxymoron these days – is the power and currency I’m looking for. Civic spirituality calls us to belong to the civic realm; it asks us to see ourselves as belonging to something larger than ourselves; it would have us hold a belief in the innate goodness of people – even, maybe especially, as we see and experience evil and unfettered materialism and corruption around us. The civic spirituality I have in mind – no, the civic spirituality that I can feel in my heart – would have us know of the progress we have made in our collective past, and thus provide us with a sense of possibility about our common future. This civic spirituality would call on us to know, as the author Kathleen Norris has so eloquently written about, the “necessary other” – that we must hear and see and come to know that which is different from ourselves … that we purposefully test our thinking and our passions before locking into a fit of certitude. The civic spirituality I am thinking about would cultivate our sense of humility – and remind us that humility is vital to any common experience. It would engage us to live with a sense of grace, in which we are willing to leave room for the unimaginable or inexplicable to occur – and that we do not close ourselves off in our attempts to squeeze out ambiguity, uncertainty, and fear. The civic spirituality I ask us to consider will require at least one more element: courage. But here I do not mean the modern-day courage of beating our breasts with bravado or of raising our voices to intimidate one another. No, while I may mean many things, let me suffice to say here that I am referring to the courage it takes to step forward and be seen and to engage. My personal dream is to write a book about civic spirituality. It is the other half of the story of public innovation about which I wrote two weeks ago. We need both: public innovation and civic spirituality – for today, we are in short supply of both. It doesn’t have to be that way. We can create new pathways in public life and politics that offer authentic hope. I know that’s what many of you who read this blog are already doing. So, I thank the woman who rose from her chair to ask me the question.

Untitled Document

 




Get Hope


Share Hope


3As


 

 

At The Harwood Institute,we seek nothing less than to spark fundamental change in American public life - so that people can tap their own potential to make a difference and join together to  build a common future


Blogs and Other Sites

 

 

Powered by Orchid Suites
Orchid ver. 4.7.5.