December’s Friends Journal is online and looks at “Spiritual Optimism vs. Spiritual Pessimism.” I wrote the opening column this month and explained why I wanted to see Quakers tackle this. It seems to me that hope and pessimism are attitudes that transcend typical religious and political divisions. Pick a topic or dissect a social group and you can usually find among them people who are undaunted by the challenges ahead and others worried to the point of paralysis. Our reactions to Covid these past five years have exposed these fault lines, as is our responses to the recent presidential election. I wrote:
Has there ever been an age in human history in which we could be purely optimistic or purely pessimistic? Quaker founder George Fox wrote that his ministry arose “when all my hopes in [preachers and experienced people] were gone, so that I had nothing outwardly to help me, nor could tell what to do.” He famously found inspiration, guidance, and courage in “one, even Christ Jesus,” who could speak to his condition. What keeps us going today in a world always ready to implode or blossom?
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