Tag Archive for 'donald-miller'

Donald Miller’s Prayer at the DNC

Yesterday (August 25, 2008) Christian writer Donald Miller (author of Blue Like Jazz) said a prayer at the Democratic National Convention. His website has the transcript:

Father God,

This week, as the world looks on, help the leaders in this room create a civil dialogue about our future.

We need you, God, as individuals and also as a nation.

We need you to protect us from our enemies, but also from ourselves, because we are easily tempted toward apathy.

Give us a passion to advance opportunities for the least of these, for widows and orphans, for single moms and children whose fathers have left.

Give us the eyes to see them, and the ears to hear them, and hands willing to serve them.

Help us serve people, not just causes. And stand up to specific injustices rather than vague notions.

Give those in this room who have power, along with those who will meet next week, the courage to work together to finally provide health care to those who don’t have any, and a living wage so families can thrive rather than struggle.

Hep us figure out how to pay teachers what they deserve and give children an equal opportunity to get a college education.

Help us figure out the balance between economic opportunity and corporate gluttony.

We have tried to solve these problems ourselves but they are still there. We need your help.

Father, will you restore our moral standing in the world.

A lot of people don’t like us but that’s because they don’t know the heart of the average American.

Will you give us favor and forgiveness, along with our allies around the world.

Help us be an example of humility and strength once again.

Lastly, father, unify us.

Even in our diversity help us see how much we have in common.

And unify us not just in our ideas and in our sentiments—but in our actions, as we look around and figure out something we can do to help create an America even greater than the one we have come to cherish.

God we know that you are good.

Thank you for blessing us in so many ways as Americans.

I make these requests in the name of your son, Jesus, who gave his own life against the forces of injustice.

Let Him be our example.

Amen.

“Heart of the average American”
Now, I disagree with a lot of what Miller said in that prayer (e.g., the presumption that teachers are underpaid, and the idea that government is responsible for providing healthcare to all) but those are political disagreements. Setting aside my political principles, the first statement in Miller’s prayer that bothers me is this: “Father, will you restore our moral standing in the world. A lot of people don’t like us but that’s because they don’t know the heart of the average American.”

The heart of the average American is wicked and sinful, just like the heart of the average Indian or the average German or the average human being. I don’t know much about Miller’s theological convictions, but if America’s moral standing in this world is based upon the “heart of the average American” then the whole world is in trouble.

“Against the forces of injustice”
The second statement that bothers me almost escaped my attention. It is this: “I make these requests in the name of your son, Jesus, who gave his own life against the forces of injustice. Let Him be our example.” Actually, Jesus gave his life not to combat injustice, but to satisfy justice. It is Jesus Christ who sacrificed his life to pay the penalty for my sins and yours, in order that God’s wrath might be satisfied and a pardon extended.

Donald Miller’s Lifeboat Theory

One of the main ideas in Searching For God Knows What, is an idea I’ll call the Lifeboat Theory. It serves as a sort of personality theory, or an alternative or addition to something like Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs.

The Lifeboat Theory’s name comes from the classic lifeboat scenario which is an exercise in “values clarification” that is sometimes used in schools. The scenario pictures a number of different people who have different backgrounds, belief systems, attributes, capabilities, etc. It’s also revealed that there’s not enough room or supplies for everyone, and that a person (or people) have to be selected to leave the lifeboat (and presumably be left to their death). The class then discusses who should be ejected from the lifeboat and why.

The basic idea of Miller’s theory is that people have the need for something outside themselves to tell them who they are, and that this thing seems to be gone. Because this something seems to be gone, people often let other people tell them what their identity and purpose are. Miller found this idea to be of much greater use than the other personality theories he had studied:

It explained why I wanted to be seen as smart, why religious people wanted so desperately to be right, why Shirley MaClaine wanted to be God, and just about everything else a human did.

All of us are in the lifeboat, if we weren’t, feelings like pride, jealousy, and embarrassment would be foreign to us. We also wouldn’t get so upset when we feel we are disrespected. We get upset because when someone disrespects us, it’s a message that they think they we are less important than they are. That really shouldn’t matter, but it often feels to us that there is some sort of punishment for being thought less of; we fear that if people regard us as less important we’ll be thrown out of the lifeboat.

This is why cliques and the battle for popularity in schools and workplaces can be so vicious; it’s the establishment of a hierarchy with a punishment for those at the bottom. It’s why people like to associate with winners. Miller notes that some people (as he did) will say “we won” when their favorite team wins, but say “they lost” when they lose. People do not want to be associated with a loser. It’s why arguments over such silly things as if a movie is good or not can become heated, having wrong opinions can also be dangerous in the lifeboat.

This commercial reminded me of this idea:

Why does the driver care that his passenger may find he has “uncool” music? It’s because he’s operating in a lifeboat mentality.

There are ways to make sure you survive in the lifeboat: be an athlete, have good looks, be intelligent, have lots of money, be right. Basically, it’s to have or be something that the people of the world value. Another way is to participate in racism or other types of discrimination, that way there’s a whole group of people on the list to get thrown out of the lifeboat before you.

Miller says that this situation, this being in the lifeboat, is a result of the Fall. God had given Adam and Eve their meaning, but now separated from Him, people are desperately scrambling for something to tell them who they are. As Miller puts in:

All this is to say that when the Bible indicates life comes from God, and death comes from separation from God, it makes complete sense, and this truth serves as an explanation for all of our feelings, for the ways in which we entertain ourselves, and for the general precepts of the human plot. Without Him, we feel that we are being thrown out of a boat.


Archives

You are currently browsing the Zeal For Truth weblog archives for 'donald-miller' tag.

You are currently browsing the Zeal For Truth weblog archives for 'donald-miller' tag.

December 2008
M T W T F S S
« Nov    
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  

You are currently browsing the Zeal For Truth weblog archives for 'donald-miller' tag.