Someone once said that “everything has a voice if we just listen.”
That’s the key . . . are we listening?
Theodor Seuss Geisel was an American children’s author known for his work writing and illustrating more than 60 books. Everyone knows him as Dr. Seuss. Before becoming a children’s book author, he was an illustrator and cartoonist—political cartoonist. Surprisingly one of my favorite Dr. Suess books reflects the fact that he never could completely step away from the moral and political issues of his day. The book? Horton Hears a Who.
Prior to World War II, during and afterwards, Geisel harbored strong anti-Japanese sentiments. That changed after he visited post-war Japan. After his visit he began to view the Japanese as fellow human beings worthy of acknowledgement, respect, and acceptance. Everyone belongs. Everyone has a voice. If you listen, you can hear. Horton Hears a Who is Geisel’s allegory for the United States occupation of post-war Japan. On his visit he witnessed the atrocious aftermath of the Hiroshima bomb. It changed his heart. He dedicated the book to his friend: “My Great Friend, Mitsugi Nakamura of Kyoto, Japan.”
The story is simple. Horton, the elephant, finds a speck of dust floating in the jungle of Nool. Inspecting the dust speck, Horton discovers the tiny city of Who-ville and its residents. He can hear them but cannot see them. They are too small to see, but they can be heard. Forming a relationship with the Who-ville mayor, Horton promises to transport the tiny city to safety. The problem? No one else in the jungle believes Horton and create all sorts of opposition to the point that they are about to “boil that dust speck.” Horton pleads for them to listen.
The famous line from the book?
“A person is a person, no matter how small.”
We are living in a time in which the silence around us is deafening. I doubt anyone would argue that these are not divisive times, not only in our nation but across the world. Yet, this is not new to our times . . . it has always been across the full spectrum of history. It is a struggle for power . . . struggle for control. In that struggle you are either “with us or against us.” Unfortunately, such a mindset creates huge chasms of separation and casts the “unwanted” into the shadows . . . to the outside . . . longing and wanting to be accepted and to belong . . . to be acknowledged. They go by many names . . . the poor . . . different cultures, races, and nations other than our own . . . women . . . the disabled . . . the LGBTQIQ . . . religions other than our own . . . liberal/conservative . . . minorities . . . political parties . . . skin color . . . the naked, oppressed, imprisoned, forgotten. Anyone who is not like us. The intolerance of the world we live in has silenced those who have been thrown to the shadows . . . and that silence is deafening. We are all slowly inching our way into that shadowland . . . into that silence. We are slowly becoming the outsiders.
And it is not new.
It has always been there.
Remember these words written by Pastor Martin Niemoller? His is a complicated story, and like Geisel he had a change of heart, thus these famous words written in 1947:
First they came for the Communists
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a Communist
Then they came for the Socialists
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a Socialist
Then they came for the trade unionists
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a trade unionist
Then they came for the Jews
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a Jew
Then they came for me
And there was no one left
To speak out for me
Everything has a voice if you just listen.
We need to listen. That deafening silence echoes with the voices of those on the outside . . . those thrown out . . . those deemed not “worthy” . . . the expendables. Are we listening? There are so many voices crying out to be heard . . . and, yet, it seems that they are not being heard. Which is a lie. The voices are being heard. They are being heard and ignored.
Why?
I can’t speak for anyone else, but I will go out on a limb and venture that the silence of response is grounded in fear. Fear that if one speaks out that he or she will be cast aside like those they are speaking for. That in speaking and standing for those on the outside will get you ostracized as being one of those who need to be removed. Retaliation and mudslinging is an effective tool in our day and age of silencing those who would rise up to speak for those who are not being heard. Don’t believe it? Check out the political world we are living in and tell me it is not true. The silence only grows.
It is scary to speak up. Ask Horton. Again, I can not speak for everyone, nor can I speak for the “church” with a capital “C”. I can only speak as one follower of Jesus Christ. My understanding is that Jesus calls those who follow his ways to listen and to speak out for those who are on the outside and in the shadows. I am not sure that the “church” with a capital “C” does that as its factions are busy trying to survive. Yet Jesus calls those who believe in his ways to listen and speak out . . . to love . . . the outsider. To bring them to the table and let them take their God-given place at the table no matter who they are. That is God’s kingdom.
Remember Matthew 25:31-46? It is a classic case of “were you listening” straight out of the mouth of Jesus.
As I have said before, this is not something new. We probably have been dealing with this since the beginning of time. For some reason, though, it seems worse today. Maybe it is the innocents who are killed in the wars waged between nations and political ideologies. Maybe it is in the political battles that are stripping human rights from those within our own families, within our own nation, laying waste to so many lives. Maybe it is the way that those who are different are so easily disregarded and marginalized . . . thrown away. Maybe it is the blatant downward spiral of human decency that cannot acknowledge and accept those who are different despite them all being created in the image of God. It just feels worse and the future does not look bright . . . especially those who are on the outside looking in. And believe it or not, more of us are joining that group.
Everything has a voice and if we listen, we can hear.
And if we listen, will we respond . . . will we act? Isn’t that the question that we need to answer? “Prayers and thoughts” are no longer good enough. When I hear that someone offers “prayers and thoughts”, I think that is taking the easy way out and making oneself look good in the eyes of others. It is cop out. If we really cared, then we should act . . . we should do something . . . speak out. We should stand by those who are silenced and be their voice.
We should not compound the silence of the world screaming out to be heard by adding our own to it. We should speak out . . . even if it is one voice at a time. Others will hear it and find strength to join. Truth and love cannot be silenced. Everyone and everything deserves to be heard . . . deserves to be accepted . . . deserves to be love . . . just as God created them.
God or whatever you want to call the higher power or spirit is the keeper of the table . . . not us.
Let us listen and hear before it is too late. Before there is no one to hear and speak for us.
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