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Hope Will Get Us Through
Townhall.com ^ | September 26, 2020 | Kathryn Lopez

Posted on 09/26/2020 5:24:36 AM PDT by Kaslin

Walking the streets of lower Manhattan for the first time in a long time, I was talking with a friend a few days ago. Over the course of 20 blocks or so, I would occasionally play with my facemask, to get a little extra air. Not take it off, not to pull it down, but pull it outward. I suspect that when I did that, my nose could have become exposed. The point of this story is, a woman coming toward us, but still quite far, started screaming at me. At first, I had no idea what was going on. When I figured it out, I apologized. Profusely, even.

"You think this is a joke!" she wailed. She added that she'd recently had surgery. I shouldn't have played with my mask -- it's true that we live in a dangerous time, especially for vulnerable people, and everyone's on edge. On the other hand, that outburst that continued as she walked past us had to be about way more than my infraction. My friend and I had been talking at some point in our walk about the obvious deepening darkness in the city. "This is life without God," he observed after the screaming incident.

Obviously, neither of us have any idea what the woman believes, but this is what we're drowning in -- the consequences of widespread unbelief. I find myself wanting to apologize to people I don't even know who can't even conceal their miseries. If Christians weren't often so busy with internal conflicts and corruption, we'd be making God's love unmistakably clear.

There's a lot of dismissing of "thoughts and prayers" in our culture. And I certainly agree that a sentiment in a tweet or a press release doesn't do much for the world. It's close to meaningless if it isn't accompanied by some real pleading with God. I recently saw the HBO series "The Young Pope with Jude Law as the pontiff, and there's an episode in which he declares "God, we have to talk!" He gets on his knees, expands his arms, and gives his prayer everything that is in him and then some. That's what some real prayer is about. God gets us there if we give Him time.

At the same time as my encounter on the city streets, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in the Vatican released a document, "Samaritanus Bonus," on the care of persons in the critical and terminal phases of life." I am taken -- drawn in by -- so many passages, including this one: "(E)specially in hospitals and clinics committed to Christian values, it is vital to create space for relationships built on the recognition of the fragility and vulnerability of the sick person. Weakness makes us conscious of our dependence on God and invites us to respond with the respect due to our neighbor." It talks about "a contemplative gaze that beholds in one's own existence and that of others a unique and unrepeatable wonder, received and welcomed as a gift. This is the gaze of the one who does not pretend to take possession of the reality of life but welcomes it as it is, with its difficulties and sufferings, and, guided by faith, finds in illness the readiness to abandon oneself to the Lord of life who is manifest therein."

Imagine if we always looked at each other with such a gaze, letting weakness be an entryway for God?

Christians owe it to the world to live with overflowing hope. Hope is contagious, and it needs to spread now, at a time when it's so often hidden. COVID-19 and the stresses of shutdown have increased people's anxiety. We must show hope together, people of all faiths and none, to those who are gravely suffering and on the brink -- or beyond -- of despair. There is a lot of anger in the world right now, and it will only increase as the election nears. Don't get distracted from the necessary mission of hope. Listen to the cries -- in the protests and the riots and the violence and the sadness and anxiety -- they are from people longing for hope. Make that your campaign -- to show it.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: christianity; faith; godblessamerica; hope; lopez

1 posted on 09/26/2020 5:24:36 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Lopez writes for National Review.

She could write the same story about herself and her colleagues, but with someone with a MAGA hat walking down the street, and the National Review idiots coming at that person screaming “NEVER TRUMP! NEVER TRUMP!!!”


2 posted on 09/26/2020 5:31:46 AM PDT by oldbill
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To: Kaslin

30+ years ago? Sure.

Today? Good luck. They’re burning their own house down while standing inside, wondering why it’s so warm.

Keep your powder dry, your faith strong, and your belly full.


3 posted on 09/26/2020 5:34:23 AM PDT by TheZMan (I am a secessionist.)
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To: Kaslin
Here's how I would have written this article:

I was adjusting my mask. Then this idiot lady starts screaming at me. I told her go F yourself, you old bag and kept walking. Later, me and my friend had a beer.

4 posted on 09/26/2020 5:45:02 AM PDT by McBuff (To be, rather than to seem)
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To: TheZMan
Over the course of 20 blocks or so, I would occasionally play with my facemask, to get a little extra air. Not take it off, not to pull it down, but pull it outward. I suspect that when I did that, my nose could have become exposed. The point of this story is, a woman coming toward us, but still quite far, started screaming at me. At first, I had no idea what was going on. When I figured it out, I apologized. Profusely, even.

Q: Who wears their face diaper outside?

A: idgits who have been hipmotized by the Main Stürmer Media...

5 posted on 09/26/2020 5:45:28 AM PDT by kiryandil (Chris Wallace: Because someone has to drive the Clown Car)
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To: Kaslin

Those who seem to have the most fear and anxiety also seem to have no relationship with God through having a personal relationship with Jesus as their savior.


6 posted on 09/26/2020 5:46:19 AM PDT by Tudorfly (All things are possible within the will of God.)
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To: McBuff

Or told her cross the street stupid


7 posted on 09/26/2020 5:46:47 AM PDT by italianquaker
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To: Kaslin
"...a woman coming toward us, but still quite far, started screaming at me. At first, I had no idea what was going on. When I figured it out, I apologized. Profusely, even.

Apologized? For trying to breathe? The correct if not impolitic response would have been, "Take a hike you ignorant Liberal twat"

8 posted on 09/26/2020 5:59:07 AM PDT by billyboy15
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To: oldbill

Give it a rest and forget about politics for once. She made some good points.

People are freaked out and need to get back to a sane view of life, which can only be done if they go back to God and stop listening to the preachers of fear.

The churches, by and large, are failing in this. I hope Franklin Graham’s March in DC goes well today, because people need to see this.


9 posted on 09/26/2020 6:05:30 AM PDT by livius
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To: kiryandil

Just spent a day in hospital, and almost everyone I spoke with is sick of this nonsense... but who is going to stand up and confront this spooky, scary, beast of fear?

As with the woman in this story, she has been filled with fear and it will take who-knows-how-long before she returns to normal... if ever.

Who wants to go out for a carefree evening? In the cities, there is no such thing. They are planning on performing The Nutcracker this Christmas outside, in something like a drive-in setting. Completely absurd.

The kicker on this is that for many/most, this pandemic has cost us little or nothing. Inconvenienced maybe, but my income hasn’t been affected and the same goes for the majority. What we don’t seem to acknowledge yet, is that this has financially ruined many of our most productive citizens. People who invested their entire lives and fortune into a small business, only to see the State take it away. These are wounds that won’t heal for a long time, and I contend it was almost all unnecessary.


10 posted on 09/26/2020 6:09:32 AM PDT by Not_Who_U_Think
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To: Kaslin

“I can’t breathe.”

George Floyd


11 posted on 09/26/2020 6:27:25 AM PDT by Brian Griffin
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To: McBuff

LOL! Agree.


12 posted on 09/26/2020 7:45:08 AM PDT by Auntie Mame (Fear not tomorrow. God is already there.)
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