The Power of the Powerless
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How did the communist system sustain itself in Russia and much of Eastern Europe for three decades?
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney answered
this question with a short story in his recent address to the World Economic
Forum in Davos, Switzerland. The story comes from an essay by Czech dissident
Vaclav Havel, who later became the country’s president, called “The Power of
the Powerless.” The setting of the story is Communist Czechoslovakia, predecessor to the Czech Republic.
“Every morning, a shopkeeper places a sign in his window:
"Workers of the world, unite!" He doesn't believe it. No one does.
But he places the sign anyway to avoid trouble, to signal compliance, to get
along. And because every shopkeeper on every street does the same, the system
persists.”
"Living Within a Lie"
So, says Carney (no relation), it’s not only through violence
that communism sustained itself, but “through the participation of ordinary
people in rituals they privately know to be false. Havel called this 'living within a lie.' The system's power comes not from its truth
but from everyone's willingness to perform as if it were true.
“It seems that every day we're reminded that we live in an
era of great power rivalry, said Carney. "That the rules-based order is fading. That the
strong can do what they can, and the weak must suffer what they must.”
This, seems to me, is playing out on a national and
international level. The phrases “Right makes right” and “the end justifies the
means” sums it up.
So, how does all this affect people who are searching for
God?
If we're trying to "do God's will," we must understand that God is not about power, even though we often refer
to the “all-powerful God.” How do we know this? Because the principal way
Christians know God is through his Son and that God was so powerless that he
allowed himself to be executed in the cruelest manner.
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No, in my view,
power – at least in the way the world understands it – is not a good way to
describe an attribute of God. So, is there a way to understand power apart from
the way the world understands it? If that includes being able to persuade
people through faith-filled, rational arguments, I believe so.
Cardinal Joseph Tobin of Newark, NJ recently encouraged religious
believers not to turn away from current events and to raise their voices
in opposition. He called on faith communities to speak out
more forcefully against injustice. He urged Catholics to contact their
representatives to oppose additional funding for ICE.
It comes after the fatal shooting of anti-ICE protester Alex Pretti, who was killed in Minneapolis, just a mile from where another protester, Renee Good, was killed earlier this month.
"Moral Vision"
Tobin’s statement comes a week or so after he was joined by two other cardinals, Blase Cupich of Chicago and Robert McElroy of Washington, D.C., who warned that the U.S. needs a “moral vision” in its domestic and international affairs.
Many religious leaders of various faiths have issued similar statements.
Is this merely fluff from people who have no real power? That
would echo the famous cynical question that Joseph Stalin is said to have put
to Winston Churchill, “How many (military) divisions does the Pope have?” indicating that
in his view, the pope was powerless.
Fortunately, the pope and other religious and organizational
leaders have moral authority and often the platform to use it. And all of us
have the power to work for change – such as taking Cardinal Tobin’s suggestion
to contact our representative – and through our votes.


I thought Prime Minister Carney's was speech very powerful and welcomed by many of us who hope for a change in the direction of our own country. Thank you, Tom Gerald
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