
Leonard Cohen’s song, “Anthem,” states in the refrain: “There is a crack in everything. That’s how the light gets in.” That is a much more poetic way of naming what we unfortunately called “original sin”—a poor choice of words because the word sin implies fault and culpability, and that is precisely not the point! Original sin was trying to warn us that the flaw at the heart of all reality is nothing we did personally, but that there is simply “a crack in everything” and so we should not be surprised when it shows itself in us or in everything else. The deep intuitions of most church doctrines are invariably profound and correct, but they are often expressed in mechanical and limited language that everybody stumbles over, denies, or fights. Hold on for a while till you get to the real meaning. That allows you to creatively critique things—without becoming oppositional, hateful, arrogant, and bitter yourself. Some call this “appreciative inquiry” and it has an entirely different tone that does not invite or create “an equal and opposite reaction.” The opposite of contemplation is not action; it is reaction. Much of the inconsistent ethic of life, in my opinion, is based on ideological reactions and groupthink, not humble discernment of “how the light gets in.” Think about that for a while. Adapted from Spiral of Violence: The World, the Flesh, and the Devil |
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