This
blog returns to its regular programing. For the last several weeks we indulged in the respite of light, hope, and
music of the Winter holiday season. This
morning we awake from those pleasant revels
to the dark and dangerous world that took no break.
Australia—a whole continent—is an inferno. A feckless leader pushes the world to the
brink—or maybe already passed the
brink—of cataclysm. All the while our country slides towards despotism
as the puny Sisyphuses in Congress labor to push the pebbles of impeachment up an avalanching mountain.
Despair, rage, and exhaustion overwhelm the best of us. Many of the Unitarian Universalist ministers and leaders who I admire and
follow were just as stricken and bewildered as the rest of us struggling mightily to find a way to
offer some dim hope or a way forward to their congregations.
At
the Tree of Life UU Congregation in McHenry, Illinois last Sunday guest preacher Rev. Michelle Lattanzio, one
of our former ministerial interns,
evoked William Butler Yeats’ bleak assessment
of the world 100 years ago.
The Second
Coming
Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and
everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the
worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
Surely some revelation is at hand;
Surely the Second Coming is at hand.
The Second Coming! Hardly are those words
out
When a vast image out of Spiritus Mundi
Troubles my sight: somewhere in sands of the
desert
A shape with lion body and the head of a
man,
A gaze blank and pitiless as the sun,
Is moving its slow thighs, while all about
it
Reel shadows of the indignant desert
birds.
The darkness drops again; but now I know
That twenty centuries of stony sleep
Were vexed to nightmare by a rocking
cradle,
And what rough beast, its hour come round at
last,
Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?
—W.B. Yeats, 1919
She reminded us that the poem—perhaps
Yeats’ most famous and greatest—was written in the grim
aftermath of The Great War which had
shredded and spit out a generation of
young men and left Europe a
smoldering carnal house and a ticking time bomb of revenge and retribution. His own country
was embroiled in a bitter War of
Independence from Britain that
would eventually slide into a fratricidal
civil war between former Republican
brothers.
Yeats—an avowed Irish Patriot—dared not publish his despair in his own
country. Neither the British who still
occupied Dublin or his own
revolutionary allies would have permitted it.
Instead he sent it across the Atlantic
to be first published in The
Dial, the literary magazine founded in part by Ralph Waldo Emerson and once edited by Margaret Fuller as the voice of the Transcendental movement now reinvented
as a literary magazine and
showcase for modernism.
However bleak the prospects of 1919
were, somehow the world muddled through
and slid into normalcy. Yeats’s verse seemed then clever hyperbole. But at each new crisis—world-wide Depression, World War II, the impending Armageddon of nuclear war, and now on the brink of catastrophic climate change, the poem seems more
prophetic than ever.
But what can we do with such an assessment? Does it disarm
us with despair, or is there a way to grapple with it and even struggle
against the possibly inevitable?
In a possible answer Rev. Lattanzio
offered us the vision of Margaret Fuller’s grandnephew,
R. Buckmaster Fuller. In 1927 his life seemed in shambles, his career had gone off the rails.
He lived in poverty in a Chicago tenement with his wife and infant. He contemplated suicide and spent a year in self-imposed silence hoping to find his
true voice. One day walking the shores of Lake Michigan and considering throwing
himself in the water, he had a vision. A voice
seemed to tell him:
You do not have the right to eliminate yourself, you do not
belong to you. You belong to the universe. The significance of you will forever
remain obscure to you…you may assume that you are fulfilling your significance
if you apply yourself to converting all your experience to highest advantage of
others. You and all men are here for the sake of other men.
In an essay on Fuller’ life Celeste Adams wrote:
Fuller decided to devote the rest of his earthly existence
to discovering what he, as one man, could do to benefit all of humanity. This
decision was the beginning of a 50-year experiment to find the principles that
ruled the universe. He wanted to apply these same principles to solving the
problems that troubled humankind.
Although he had neither money of his own nor the support of
corporate or government financing, he was determined to redirect the focus of
humanity away from utilizing its most important resources for creating weapons
of destruction. He was determined to teach us how to use these resources for “livingry,”
which he described as the betterment of all human beings.
Fuller felt that if technology were used with this
intention, it could create a radical change in society and “raise 100% of
humanity to a level of previously unimagined success.”
A brilliant polymath Fuller
did just that. He innovated endlessly
hoping that technology as expressed
in things like his famous geodesic domes
could make life better for all.
Eventually he expanded on that to advocate a new city based on what he called synergy—behaviors of whole
systems, unpredicted by
behaviors of their parts. By 1980
Fuller issued his great challenge:
We know now what we could never have known before — that we
now have the option for all humanity to “make
it” successfully on this planet in this lifetime. Whether it is to be utopia or oblivion will be a touch-and-go relay race right up to the final
moment.
Almost none of us can command Bucky
Fuller’s genius. But we can assess our own tools and gifts and
apply them to the same great tasks. If
enough of us do so, there is perhaps hope after all.
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