Decades ago, I was challenged by a fellow student in acting school to read the New Testament. It was a kind of “double-dog-dare;” he said any great actress should have a working knowledge of this text. He laid one proviso before me: read it the way we were instructed to read play scripts with this preamble: “if this were true” and make no judgments before reaching the end.
And so it was on December 24, 1973, after much gift giving and good cheer at my brother’s townhouse, that I read the last words of the Book of Revelation, “Even so, come, Lord Jesus. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen.” [I quote the King James Version as that was the translation I had at hand, a Gideon Bible, snatched from a hotel room by my roommate at the time.]
What was my answer? Was this text the truth or a lie? Certainly, I didn’t agree with every word. I had been living a cavalier life, like so many of us at that time in New York (drugs, sex and alcohol). But, was the essence, the core of what I read, true? Even Paul, in the 9th chapter of Romans caught me with plain speaking, “I say the truth in Christ, I lie not, my conscience also bearing me witness in the Holy Ghost–”
I surrendered to this core truth; I trusted that the stuff I didn’t understand would be made clear in the future. But for that moment, I put my faith in Christ and promised to follow Jesus and his words, and as best I could, his example. When I told my mother of my decision the next morning, Christmas morning, she laughed and said, “this too will pass.” But it didn’t. I am still here, in the arms of Christ.
I share this story again because our country is at an impasse. We are living in a time of hyperbole (extravagant exaggeration) and name calling. People use terms for concepts they barely understand and make accusations based on inference and media commentary. Both sides of our political sphere claim to speak the truth while the other side lies. How is this possible? I have personally been lambasted for my opinions or, at best, implicated as a dupe. And, honestly, I am equally guilty of doing the same.
With a palpable fear, I project a picture of our nation’s fate in November and December. If we continue on this path, no matter who wins the 2020 presidential election, there will be civil unrest and undoubtedly, much violence and innocent deaths. We will make the stories of the McCoys and Hatfields or the families of Romeo and Juliet, merely charming. Is this what we, as a people, really want?

Christmas Truce 1914
“On December 7, 1914, Pope Benedict XV suggested a temporary hiatus of the war for the celebration of Christmas. The warring countries refused to create any official cease-fire, but on Christmas the soldiers in the trenches declared their own unofficial truce.” [https://www.history.com/topics/world-war-i/christmas-truce-of-1914] This cease-fire was done by the troops on the front lines, not the generals or politicians.
If we want to survive, we must, as Americans all, call for a truce and cross no-man’s land with a dove. What do we share in common? How are we alike? Love can still win, but we must choose to engage civilly, to remember that we are on the front lines and it is we who will suffer the most if this war of words continues to escalate beyond reason.
Most of us know how we will vote by now. Let us use our time and energy to pray for one another, not to accuse or badger. Choose your understanding of truth, but remember, the “devil is in the details.”
Irm I agree completely with your thoughts and heart and have shared the same fears for the near future. So Debby and pray more and more for the whole country, Lord have mercy.
(So we’ll said sister. Thank you for your calm, conversational tone and reasonable content.)
I meant “so well said sister…”. (Drat that spell-checker!). JDW
Thank you, Irm! White flags for all….. along with the Stars and Stripes Forever. ‘Oh, Holy Night’ comes to mind!