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Three Worlds One Vision

Monthly Archives: January 2025

Thought for Today: How the Truth Can Save Us from Tribalism

26 Sunday Jan 2025

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Religion, United States

≈ 63 Comments

Tags

American Evangelicals, American tribalism, Losing Our Religion: An Altar Call for Evangelical America by Russell Moore (USA 2023), Politicized Christianity

Front Cover: Losing Our Religion: An Altar Call for Evangelical America by Russell Moore
Photo Credit: Penguin Random House (USA, 2023)

Increasingly, in this sort of American culture, it is not just that we are divided about what we value about the way things should be, but what we are allowed to say about the way things actually are. Now, notice, what I wrote here is not what we see about the way things are, but what we are allowed to say. This is because we live in a time in which “truth” is seen as a means to tribal belonging, rather than a reality that exists outside of us…. Our passions and experiences and intuitions often warp the way we see things, especially the most important things, which is why we need grace. People are going to have—from now till the Apocalypse—arguments about what is true and what is false, what is real and what is fake. Our problem now, though, is that, increasingly, we are called not just to argue about what is true, but to say things that we know to be false, just to prove that we are part of the tribe to which we belong.  

Excerpt from Losing Our Religion: An Altar Call for Evangelical America by Russell Moore, Penguin Random House LLC, USA, 2023 (p. 69).

Note: This excerpt is taken from “Chapter Two: Losing Our Authority” in which Russell Moore addresses the radicalization of many evangelicals, following the controversies regarding the global COVID-19 pandemic and the January 6, 2021, insurrection.


Russell Moore is an evangelical Christian theologian and ordained minister. He is Editor in Chief of Christianity Today and previously served as President of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission (2013-2021). Prior to that role, Moore served as provost and dean of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky, where he also taught theology and ethics.

“Truths” – Poem by California Poet Laureate Lee Herrick

19 Sunday Jan 2025

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Poetry

≈ 56 Comments

Tags

Asian American poet, California Poet Laureate (2022-2024), Fresno Poet Laureate (2015-2017), Fresno/San Joaquin Valley/Northern California, Poem “Truths” by Lee Herrick, Poetry Collection Scar and Flower by Lee Herrick

Korean American Poet Lee Herrick
Official Author Photo by Curtis Messer
Source: The Poet’s Official Website

My Poetry Corner January 2025 features the poem “Truths” from the poetry collection Scar and Flower (USA, 2019) by poet Lee Herrick, the first Asian American to serve as the tenth California Poet Laureate (2022-2024). Born in 1970 in Daejeon, South Korea, he was adopted at ten months old by an American couple. He grew up in Northern California where he attended Modesto Junior College and received his BA in English and MA in Composition and Rhetoric from the California State University, Stanislaus.

He lives with his wife and daughter in Fresno, Northern California, where he is an English professor at Fresno City College since 1997. He also teaches in the low-residency MFA program at the University of Nevada, Reno at Lake Tahoe.

“Adoption is seen through Hollywood’s lens as purely and essentially as a blessing and a gift. Which in some way may be true, however adoption is also wrapped in trauma,” Herrick told Sara Ohler during an interview in May 2023 for The Rampage literary magazine.

Though blessed with a warm and loving family, he was struck with anxiety in 1989, during his senior year in high school and throughout most of college. Growing up among family members in the creative arts—his mother is a visual artist—he found relief in music and poetry. “You kind of just had to make do or things weren’t very helpful,” Herrick said. “‘Handle your business or be a man,’ so the arts and music was a great outlet for me.”

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The Writer’s Life: Year 2024 in Review

05 Sunday Jan 2025

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in The Writer's Life

≈ 69 Comments

Tags

Being judgmental, Change in Focus, Creative Nonfiction, Dragon Fruit Cactus, Failure to meet writing goal, Grief and Loss, Mother Earth under assault, Shift in Being and Doing, Succulent Garden Los Angeles/California, Violence against humanity, Web of Life, Year 2024

Neighbor’s Succulent Garden – Los Angeles – Southern California – December 1, 2024

To embark on writing a full-length novel (80,000 to 90,000 words) demands a long-term commitment that may take several years. Happy the writer who can complete such a project in one to two years! As with my first two novels, I estimated a four-year period for the completion of my creative nonfiction work-in-progress. Since writing the first draft in 2020, I had planned for revision and publication in 2024. Sad to say, things didn’t go according to my goal. Due to both personal and external forces, shared with readers over the past four years, my focus stalled (writer’s block), wavered, and changed.

The unrelenting violence against the Palestinians in Gaza, especially the children, continue to disturb my sleep. Only a god created in men’s image of oppression, conquest, and colonization would sanction such violence against humanity.

Even more consequential is humankind’s ongoing violence inflicted on the Web of Life together with the interconnected atmospheric and oceanic systems that sustain all lifeforms, including our own, on Mother Earth.

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