Monday, January 12, 2009

What's a person to do?

The older I get the more reality infers that there are seemingly fewer things aging provides for one to get all worked up about. (The throbbing pain in my shoulder that woke me up at 4:30 this morning immediately comes to mind.) Add to that the threatening onset of imminent global recession, the ever rising instances of natural disasters pummeling our planet, increasing news coverage of man’s inhumanity toward mankind and now I’ve very recently heard of a label being attributed to our current era as the “me-first” generation. Undoubtedly these are all concepts for consternation indeed.

You might expect all this would tend to give an old codger, like me, a moment’s pause. (That is, if I hadn’t already lived through a whole bunch of stuff like it in the past.) You see, there is a particular truth in the statement made by the ancient King Solomon to the effect that “History merely repeats itself. It has all been done before. Nothing under the sun is truly new.” That’s from Ecclesiastes chapter 1 verse 9 of the New Living Translation of the Bible.

Essentially the question comes to mind…are any of these catastrophic life circumstances really real? That certainly depends on your perspective, doesn’t it?

Even now, with all these threatening clouds on the horizon, things don’t seem as desperate to me as they did back in the late 1970’s. (Remember, most of perceived reality is based on perspective.) Back in those days of yore the United States was facing another of our recurring economic crises. We were experiencing the first ever energy issues (were they really the first-ever? well, gasoline was being rationed and the price per gallon was going over a dollar for the first time ever), inflation was in the double digit range, home mortgages were carrying a 16% interest rate, Americans were being held hostage by an Iranian government that nobody had ever thought to pay attention to before, and a guy named Ronald Reagan was challenging the incumbent Jimmy Carter for president. I had voted for Jimmy Carter in 1976 solely based on his open claim that he was a “born-again” Christian. To this day that would be reason enough for me to cast a vote for anybody. I know what a person means when they describe themselves as “born-again.” It’s essentially the only reason I voted for George W. Bush twice. But back in 1980 I voted for Ronald Reagan…because the U.S. needed change and I thought the U.S. president was a person who could bring that sort of change about…I don’t hold an opinion like that anymore.

I do remember in particular though a speech given by Ronald Reagan wherein he made the now famous statement, “A recession is when your neighbor loses his job. A depression is when you lose your job. And a recovery is when Jimmy Carter loses his job.” – you just have to tip your hat to great speech writing.

Well, eventually change did occur. Not just in the United States but all across the world stage. The U.S. hostages were released from Iran…even as the radical government remained in power (the effectiveness of modern day terrorism had been born), indications suggested that the U.S. economy began stabilizing amid the proposed “trickle-down” economics of the Reagan era, only during his second term mind you, and the once mighty and fearsome Soviet Union came crashing down quicker than the Berlin Wall would. Yeah…those were the days back then, weren’t they? It seemingly would make what we’re hearing about today pale in comparison, wouldn’t it?

Over the past three decades now, I’ve gotten older (some might contend wiser) nevertheless my viewpoint on world affairs has matured toward a deeper understanding and embracing of the Christian worldview. I’d like to go more in depth on that topic except I’ve written way too long already this time…well, that’ll be where I’ll pick up this blog next time a nagging pain wakes me up in the wee hours of the morning.

Until then, I remain ever yours regardlessly,

the old-man at the mike-ro-phone

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