Wednesday, June 20, 2018

Never Send To Know For Whom the Bell Tolls; It Tolls For Thee

G R Stolpe
E Stolpe
G R Erikson
A J Erikson

With all the other things overloading my emotions right now, I don’t have the energy for the debate on immigration right now, as much as it shreds my heart. Besides my personal and family concerns I still care about violence in which guns are a lightning rod, racial justice and harmony, sexual harassment and assault, climate change and environmental quality, compassion and justice for people who are poor and weak. I am grieved that rather than addressing these urgent issues, each one seems to push the others out of public consciousness before anything meaningful is accomplished. I have no illusions that my voice influences any of these things, but expressing my convictions gives my heart some relief so I can proceed with my immediate responsibilities.


I am in favor of immigration reform that provides a way to welcome new people into this country that is simple, accessible, compassionate, and just, so that those who are seeking to share life with us have no reason to end run the system. Of course, we need to do the best we can to protect the country from crime, but not from ethnicities or religions we don’t understand.

To me, the overall impact of the things being presented for non-negotiation, of which the wall is the most blatant symbol, are not so subtle efforts to post a huge sign that says, “Keep Out! This Means You!” Much as pre-adolescent boys used to post (maybe still do) “No Girls Allowed!” signs on their clubhouses.

I am only the second generation born in this country to immigrants, so the issue feels rather immediate to me. My understanding from family lore (which I know takes on a life of its own) is that they each had a unique immigration journey. For me, immigrants are neither history figures, nor anonymous figures in the news; I knew and loved these immigrants and empathize with today’s immigrants as real people, just as my recent ancestors were real people for me.

  • ·         My mother’s father ran away to sea from Marstrand, Sweden at 16 years old and never looked back. After considerable seafaring adventures, he jumped ship in California and was for some time a troublemaker. Jesus found him through the Salvation Army and he married a young Salvation Army woman, which is how he got through the process of becoming what we would call “legal” today. She and their six year old son died in the flu epidemics.
  • ·         My mother’s mother was the first child born to her parents who had recently immigrated from Sweden to escape abject poverty. Her father was a cobbler. They settled in Oakland, Nebraska and moved to California, where they moved frequently seeking employment opportunities. Her parents never learned to speak English. She was older when she met my grandfather at the First Swedish Baptist Church. My mother was their only child. With a bit of poetic irony, my grandmother died in Oakland, California.
  • ·         My father’s father emigrated from Sweden at 16 years old largely to escape poverty in Lapland and avoided military conscription. As Baptists and not Lutherans in Sweden, they were considered nonconformist and avoided government involvement. His older sister already lived in Connecticut and facilitated his coming to the US. His siblings followed him. My grandfather learned English and to become a tool and die maker by reading a large set of technical books (I still have the math volume). At some point along the way all of his brothers and the husband of their younger sister all worked for the same tool and die shop in Detroit, Michigan, which became their home base. Eventually their father came to the US as well, but never learned to speak English.
  • ·         My father’s mother came to the US from Stockholm, Sweden. Much earlier some of her forbearers had come from France to Sweden but fully identified as Swedish. I know little else about her other than that she met my grandfather in the Swedish Baptist community with which both sides of the family have identified in the US.

Monday, June 18, 2018

Until Every Drop of Blood Drawn Shall Be Paid By Another



On March 4, 1865, shortly before the Civil War/War Between the States ended, in his Second Inaugural Address, Abraham Lincoln said, “If God wills that it (the war) continue until all the wealth piled by the bondsman's two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said ‘the judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether.’" After living in Texas for 17 years, I know that Lincoln is not universally regarded as belonging among the greats, and I know that he did not espouse a conventional, orthodox Christian faith. However, I do think the line “until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another” gets at a basic moral principle. It echoes the prophet Habakkuk who saw a dynamic, relentless balance of justice. I know the rampant individualism of our society resists communal responsibility, but it permeates Scriptures such as Psalm 106 [both we and our ancestors have sinned] and Daniel 9 [we have sinned and done wrong, acted wickedly]. I alluded to this in my recent meditation on the plural pronouns in the Lord’s Prayer. http://nstolpepilgrim.blogspot.com/2018/06/plural-pronouns-in-lords-prayer.html I have never claimed the spiritual gift of prophecy, but with several life-and-death justice issues swirling about in recent public discourse, I do believe that injustices perpetuated in our time will bring on us and our descendants judgment that will persist until every drop of blood drawn shall be paid by another.