Election time is coming, the media is crowded with politicians trying to prove they are right and their opponents wrong. How we love to hate them, but how they are like us! Don't most of us hold strong opinions, think ourselves in the right, the other fellow wrong?
Watching the blues haranguing the reds (or was it vice-versa?) got me thinking about our human need to take sides, to prefer unambiguous choices, more – our need to simply be in the right; that maybe being “right” in the competition of life places us a step higher on the podium, that bit closer to God.
Perhaps from an existential point-of-view being “right” is simply another way to avoid confronting death – being “right” gives us a taste of eternal truth, a kind of affirmation.
Equally, each time we are “wrong” our existence is nullified, we die a little. Bullcrap? Well consider rejection: by a partner, for a job, that proposal, book or poem you’ve just submitted and the feelings that can accompany it.
You didn’t make the grade, you were not good enough – in a way, you do not have value. You do not matter enough in the eyes of the other.
I’ve certainly mourned the end of a relationship before; quite literally because part of me expired with it – in the present, future and (the meaning of our) past, now tinged with what had been lost.
To be accepted on the other hand, is to belong. To belong is to live, which also makes evolutionary sense if you think about it.
It would be tough out there, alone in the wilderness. Rejected by the community, you wouldn’t stand much chance of survival. Get things wrong – take the wrong turn, misjudge a danger, and you wouldn’t last long either.
So we compensate, we rationalize: we tell ourselves the person who rejected us was the wrong one; actually it was our employer who was at fault; that in fact we are a misunderstood genius (look at Van Gogh!).
And little by little, we come to life again, resuscitating ourselves with life-affirming rightness.
But despite our human needs, right is rarely 100 per cent right, and wrong totally wrong. Nature is not black and white. Life is in Technicolor.
God is full spectrum; especially in the doubt, ambiguity, commonality that fills the space between: the crossing in Jericho where, during the last World Cup, the Israeli border guard checked my partner's passport and exclaimed “Italia! Football!”; the Arab kid who approached us after we had parked and went “England! Manchester United!” For all their protestations to the contrary, the over-riding impression most of us are left of our politicians (and their politics) is probably the most accurate - they are all the same.
This week Islington and Newington Green Unitarians were featured in the national press for standing up for what they (we!) believe is right - marriage equality. But note that word - equality: perhaps it should help us discriminate between the kinds of truth, or rightness, that contain values I would call divine, and those based on more humble, human anxieties; that invariably contain the kernel of inequality and division.







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