“ALL SAINTS IN THE LAND OF AFFLUENZA”
As we pass
through All Hallows Eve and All Saints Day, I give thanks for all those saints
who have nurtured and challenged me and loved me. If you have not already done so, I hope that
you will take time to name and give thanks for the saints in your life. Buddy and Anne Hughes became part of Oakhurst
Presbyterian when they retired from the PCUSA in the 1990’s, with their most
recent position being in Nicaragua. They
quickly became our teachers in the land of “affluenza.”
In one of
his first sermons at Oakhurst entitled “Affluenza,” Buddy told a story about
taking a walk with his young granddaughter in a comfortable, white Decatur
neighborhood. As they were walking, the
city garbage collectors were going through the neighborhood doing their
work. As they passed Buddy and his
granddaughter, Buddy said “hello” to the man collecting the garbage and thanked
him for his work. After they passed the
collectors, his young granddaughter asked him:
“Granddaddy, did you know that man?”
When Buddy said “No,” she admonished him: “Grandaddy, you should never speak to
strangers.” While he understood her
perspective on one level, he was
saddened by her comments, because it meant that the sense of community was
broken. He also noted that it was
symptomatic of what he and Anne had discovered had happened in America in their
absence: we had come down with a disease
that Buddy called “affluenza.” Buddy
defined it as the power of materialism to overtake us and make us think that we
did not need one another.
We give
thanks that Anne is still with us, but Buddy died in 2010. The Oakhurst sanctuary was filled for his
memorial service, and we noted in both joy and sadness the powerful love that
Buddy had shared with so many of us. I
recalled a Jewish legend that fit in with my Calvinist sense of total
depravity. Along the lines of Abraham’s
argument with God over Sodom and Gomorrah in Genesis 18, the legend indicated
that most of us were fitfully captured by the power of sinfulness. Because of
this, God’s wrath was great that we had messed up Her creation so much. Yet, the legend indicates that God lets the
world survive because there are forty “saints” whose lives reflect the glory,
love, and justice of God. I noted on that day that someone would have to
step up, because with Buddy’s passing, we had just dropped to 39 saints.
Buddy’s
emphasis on “affluenza” reminded me of the idolatrous belief that we have in
America in the power of materialism to make us somebody. It causes us to use people as slaves and to
pollute the air and water and land – we are driven by a desire for “stuff.” It makes us believe that we do not need one
another, that indeed we are enemies to one another because we are competing for
the same stuff, the stuff that we believe will give our lives meaning. The drive for less taxes in the new proposal
in Congress reflects this belief – the more money we have, the less we will need
the community and one another.
It is this
belief that made us easy targets for a narcissist like Donald Trump. His belief in his own power and ability has
gathered a tribe around him, and we have seen the power of that tribal
belief. He wants to reign over the USA,
and our institutions will be sorely tested during his presidency. He is “affluenza” to the nth degree,” and the
question for us is whether we can regroup and build an authentic community
based on the values of equity and justice and love. Right now the tribal view of exclusion,
revenge, and wrath seems to be prevailing.
We’ll need more folk to step up like Buddy and Anne and many other
saints. Will we join the saints in
marching in?
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