When I was in high school, some students and faculty started a club called the Welcoming Diversity Club. The purpose of this club was to reach out to all members of the student body in an effort to bridge any cultural gaps between groups of students. This club focused on creating an organization full of people from different races, backgrounds, cultures, etc. Groups like the Welcoming Diversity Club are great opportunities for us to remember that we live in a world full of people that cover the spectrum in terms of skin color, eye color, hair color, height, weight, language, eating habits, drinking habits, recreational practices, religions, socioeconomic status, and on goes the list.
My point for mentioning this is that while I live in a country that seems to pride itself on its diversity, and while I profess a faith and claim a church that is supposed to accept all people regardless of life circumstances and cultural backgrounds, I can't help but look around myself and notice a whole lot of the same thing. This "same thing" in my case is primarily an all-white, middle class society. While this is not bad in an of itself by any means, I sometimes find myself wondering where I might find a larger Spirit of diversity. Before reading further, take a minute to think about a normal week for you. Is there a majority of people who look, act, and dress a certain way? Is there a clear minority of people who look, act, and dress a certain way? How does this make you feel? Ok, now you can keep reading.
Well, last week, I found one such place that may be the best source of social diversity I have ever seen: the Department of Motor Vehicles. I made this trip to the DMV in order to get new license plates for my car. In the four hours that I had to wait to accomplish my task for the day, I had quite a bit of time to take in my surroundings. What I saw (other than an inefficient way of doing business) were a couple hundred people ranging in all of the diversity criteria mentioned in the first paragraph. Some folks kept to themselves (as I did) while others made conversation with each other to pass the time. These interactions were encouraging to see, I must say. However, as I continued to gaze upon this extremely diverse crowd, my intrigue turned more toward dismay. I realized how unfortunate it is that it takes a place like the DMV and the necessity for people to have ID's, Driver's Licenses, and vehicle registrations to gather people together from all walks of life. Shouldn't my church be a place where I see this diversity? How about my neighborhood or local grocery store? I mean, sure there are exceptions to this situation, but on the whole, in my daily goings-on, I see way more people that look like me than not. Why is this? Why in the year 2013 is much of our society still divided according to class and culture rather than united in spite of those things? If God created all of us with equal love, then why is there seemingly so much lack of inclusion among different social/cultural groups?
I wish I had the answers to these questions. However, I do not. All I have is all that any of us can have and that is a heart of love and compassion for our fellow humans. I am very thankful that Pope Francis seems to be encouraging all people regardless of their belief systems to care for God's creation and one another. If we can honestly try to extend ourselves outside of our comfort zones and diversify our lives to include others not like ourselves, then we will make some headway. I'd like to think that this headway will look a lot better than the scene at the DMV. Haha. I guess this just goes to show that even the local DMV, while both dismal and frustrating, is not above the ability of the Spirit to work in our lives and teach us something about the joy that comes from the love that God has for all people.
Throughout the next week, I'd like to challenge you to be extra cognizant of the people around whom you find yourself in every situation. Do you notice a trend? Reflect on this for a while and see what the Spirit has to tell you about things.
May we be ever-faithful, ever-mindful, and ever-joyful.
The Roman Catholic Church sure could use some DIVERSITY in its hierarchy, Drew.
ReplyDeleteWhat a good ol' boys club, if you will.
Afterall, it's the 21st century; time to stop being such a misogynistic organization.
Sure hope Pope Francis does a heckuva lot of shaking up of that dinosaur organization that has long passed it "best if used by date" many moons ago.
*its
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