[Mb-civic] The legacy of William Sloane Coffin - Scotty McLennan - Boston Globe Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Sat Apr 15 07:51:42 PDT 2006
The legacy of William Sloane Coffin
By Scotty McLennan | April 15, 2006 | The Boston Globe
THERE WAS a great biblical prophet holding forth on campus, it seemed,
when I arrived at Yale in 1966. The Rev. William Sloane Coffin Jr., who
died this week, was a giant of a man -- physically, intellectually, and
spiritually. It was impossible not to notice him and be affected by him.
I took a life-changing ''Seminar for Friendly Disbelievers" with him in
my freshman year, learned about deep religious confrontation with racism
and war in my sophomore and junior years, and by senior year was a
student deacon of Battell Chapel at Yale and on my way to divinity
school. ''Justice, not charity," was one of Coffin's constant refrains,
which I now try to teach to a community service-oriented college
generation that often seems politically unaware and inactive.
Coffin's contention was: ''Many of us are eager to respond to injustice,
as long as we can do so without having to confront the causes of it.
There's the great pitfall of charity. Handouts to needy individuals are
genuine, necessary responses to injustice, but they do not necessarily
face the reason for injustice. And that is why so many business and
governmental leaders today are promoting charity; it is desperately
needed in an economy whose prosperity is based on growing inequality.
First these leaders proclaim themselves experts on matters economic, and
prove it by taking the most out of the economy! Then they promote
charity as if it were the work of the church, finally telling us
troubled clergy to shut up and bless the economy as once we blessed the
battleships."
It was Coffin's inspiration that led me to develop a ''legal ministry"
for low-income residents of Dorchester, under the auspices of the
Unitarian Universalist Urban Ministry, after I graduated from divinity
school and law school in 1975. I started practicing housing law at a
time when there was virtually no homelessness problem in Boston or
anywhere else in the nation. Then a political decision was made in the
early 1980s as part of a tax-cut regime to reduce the federal housing
budget from $33 billion annually to $7 billion.
This was accompanied by political decisions nationwide to
de-institutionalize mental patients in state hospitals, without
fulfilling the promise to fund community mental health centers to house
them. A lot of mentally ill people were simply discharged to the
streets. As a direct result of these two decisions -- now largely
forgotten, it seems, especially by this generation of college students
-- homeless people began appearing in Boston and all over America,
sleeping in subways, in parks, or on heating grates.
Strangely, this was all happening at the same time as new governmental
incentives were being implemented for business, along with general tax
reductions -- helping fuel an economic boom that resulted in enormous
increases in wealth for the already well-to-do, but not for the poor,
who lost ground during the 1980s. Churches and other charitable
organizations were asked to step in, provide shelters and food pantries,
and help the homeless and hungry at dramatic new levels.
Coffin's response was: ''The churches have to feed the hungry, clothe
the naked, and shelter the homeless. But they have also to remember that
the answer to homelessness is homes, not shelters. What the poor and
downtrodden need is not piecemeal charity but wholesale justice." He
taught that they need political action and structural change in society,
not just a warm meal and a bed in a church basement.
Coffin quoted the biblical prophet Amos regularly: ''Ah, you that turn
justice to wormwood, and bring righteousness to the ground. You who
trample on the poor and take from them levies of grain. Hate evil and
love good, and establish justice in the gate." Justice, not charity. Not
trickle-down economics or faith-based social services, ''but," in Amos's
words, ''let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like an
everflowing stream."
Coffin called the church to translate its moral teachings into politics:
''In Scripture, there is no purely spiritual answer to slavery; no
purely spiritual answer to the pain of the poor. . . . In times of
oppression, if you don't translate choices of faith into political
choices, you run the danger of washing your hands, like Pilate."
A different and much more conservative religious vision holds sway today
of how religion should affect politics, starting in the White House.
Coffin, the man, will be deeply missed by many of us. It is our duty,
however, never to let his biblical vision die.
Scotty McLennan is dean for religious life at Stanford University. This
article was adapted from a sermon at Stanford Memorial Church.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2006/04/15/the_legacy_of_william_sloane_coffin/
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