Grant S. Shockley - "The Art of Human Relations" (February 19, 1984)
Loading the media player...
Transcript
Transcripts may contain inaccuracies.
| (organ music) | 0:03 | |
| (choir music) | 8:23 | |
| (organ music) | 9:27 | |
| (congregation sings) | 10:03 | |
| - | God, whom we gather to worship this day, | 13:23 |
| takes gregarious carbon, | 13:26 | |
| sturdy iron, | 13:29 | |
| precious gold, | 13:31 | |
| fluctuating mercury, | 13:34 | |
| volatile phosphorus, | 13:36 | |
| scarce argon, | 13:39 | |
| nurturing nitrogen, | 13:41 | |
| and a multitude of other wonderfully diverse elements | 13:44 | |
| and forms with them an astonishing, | 13:48 | |
| fruitful, enduring universe. | 13:51 | |
| Come, let us worship God. | 13:56 | |
| And to God let us make our confession. | 13:58 | |
| Oh, God, author of eternal light, | 14:15 | |
| we confess to You our desire to turn away | 14:19 | |
| from the brightness of Your presence, | 14:23 | |
| to cling to the security of life as we know it, | 14:25 | |
| to stop our ears to the call, follow me. | 14:30 | |
| Forgive our hesitancy. | 14:34 | |
| Speak to us yet another time. | 14:36 | |
| Show to us once more the presence which promises life, | 14:39 | |
| for we pray, trusting as little children | 14:45 | |
| in the light of Your love. | 14:48 | |
| Amen. | 14:51 | |
| My sisters and brothers, | 15:24 | |
| hear and believe the good news. | 15:26 | |
| Nothing can separate us from the love of God | 15:30 | |
| in Christ Jesus our Lord. | 15:32 | |
| In Jesus, the Christ, you and I | 15:35 | |
| are forgiven. | 15:41 | |
| Let us give thanks | 15:44 | |
| for God is good | 15:46 | |
| and God's love is everlasting. | 15:47 | |
| Thanks be to God, | 15:51 | |
| whose love creates us. | 15:52 | |
| Thanks be to God, | 15:55 | |
| whose mercy redeems us. | 15:56 | |
| Thanks be to God, | 15:59 | |
| whose grace leads us into the future. | 16:01 | |
| It is the seventh Sunday after Epiphany, | 16:08 | |
| and I am glad to be able to welcome each of you | 16:12 | |
| to this special service of worship | 16:14 | |
| in the Duke University Chapel. | 16:17 | |
| I would remind you that there will be | 16:20 | |
| the celebration of the Eucharist in Memorial Chapel | 16:22 | |
| following this service. | 16:25 | |
| And I encourage you to stay for that brief service. | 16:27 | |
| I am pleased to introduce our guest preacher | 16:32 | |
| of the morning, the Reverend Doctor Grant Shockley | 16:36 | |
| and to welcome Dr. Shockley to the Duke Chapel pulpit. | 16:39 | |
| A man of immense warmth and energy, | 16:45 | |
| Dr. Shockley is presently | 16:48 | |
| Duke Divinity School Professor of Christian Education | 16:50 | |
| and Director of Black Church Affairs. | 16:54 | |
| A United Methodist minister, he has served parishes | 16:57 | |
| in New York City, | 17:01 | |
| in Brooklyn, | 17:03 | |
| and in Dover, Delaware. | 17:05 | |
| Dr. Shockley is also recognized as an able writer, | 17:08 | |
| teacher, lecturer, and administrator. | 17:12 | |
| In addition to several distinguished professorships, | 17:16 | |
| he served also as president | 17:20 | |
| of the Interdenominational Theological Center | 17:21 | |
| in Atlanta, Georgia, | 17:24 | |
| and Philander Smith College in Little Rock, Arkansas. | 17:25 | |
| A native of Philadelphia, Dr. Shockley is married | 17:30 | |
| to Doris Taylor Shockley. | 17:33 | |
| And I am delighted to welcome both of these gracious people | 17:36 | |
| to Duke Chapel and to this service. | 17:39 | |
| The Art of Human Relations is the title | 17:43 | |
| of Dr. Shockley's sermon. | 17:46 | |
| - | Let us pray. | 17:57 |
| Almighty God, in whom are hid all the treasures | 18:00 | |
| of wisdom and knowledge, open our eyes | 18:04 | |
| that we may behold wondrous things out of Your word. | 18:09 | |
| And give us grace that we may clearly understand | 18:13 | |
| and heartily choose the way of Your love. | 18:17 | |
| Through Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen. | 18:22 | |
| The Old Testament message is from Genesis chapter four, | 18:29 | |
| verses eight through 16. | 18:34 | |
| Cain said to Abel his brother, | 18:38 | |
| let us go out into the field. | 18:41 | |
| And when they were in the field, | 18:44 | |
| Cain rose up against his brother Abel and killed him. | 18:46 | |
| Then the Lord said to Cain, | 18:51 | |
| "Where is Abel, your brother?" | 18:55 | |
| He said, "I do not know. | 18:58 | |
| "Am I my brother's keeper?" | 19:01 | |
| And the Lord said, "What have you done? | 19:04 | |
| "The voice of your brother's blood is crying | 19:08 | |
| "to me from the ground. | 19:11 | |
| "And now you are cursed from the ground, | 19:13 | |
| "which has opened its mouth to receive | 19:16 | |
| "your brother's blood from your hand. | 19:19 | |
| "When you till the ground, | 19:23 | |
| "it shall no longer yield to you its strength. | 19:25 | |
| "You shall be a fugitive and a wanderer on this earth." | 19:29 | |
| Cain said to the Lord, | 19:34 | |
| "My punishment is greater than I can bear. | 19:37 | |
| "Behold, thou has driven me today away from the ground, | 19:41 | |
| "and from the face I shall be hidden. | 19:46 | |
| "I shall be a fugitive and a wanderer on the earth, | 19:50 | |
| "and whoever finds me will slay me." | 19:55 | |
| Then the Lord said to him, "Not so. | 19:59 | |
| "If anyone slays Cain, | 20:04 | |
| "vengeance shall be taken on him sevenfold." | 20:06 | |
| And the Lord put a mark on Cain, | 20:10 | |
| lest any who came upon him should kill him. | 20:13 | |
| Then Cain went away from the presence of the Lord | 20:18 | |
| and dwelt in the land of Nod, east of Eden. | 20:22 | |
| Here ends the reading of the Old Testament. | 20:28 | |
| (organ music) | 20:39 | |
| (choir music) | 20:48 | |
| Will the congregation please stand | 22:33 | |
| for the reading of the Gospel lesson? | 22:36 | |
| The Gospel lesson is from Luke chapter 10, | 22:45 | |
| verses 25 through 37. | 22:50 | |
| And behold, a lawyer stood up to put him to the test, | 22:54 | |
| saying, "Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?" | 22:59 | |
| He said to him, "What is written in the Law? | 23:05 | |
| "How do you read?" | 23:09 | |
| And he answered, "You shall love the Lord your God | 23:11 | |
| "with all your heart and with all your soul | 23:15 | |
| "and with all your strength and with all your mind, | 23:19 | |
| "and your neighbor as yourself." | 23:23 | |
| And he said to him, "You have answered right. | 23:27 | |
| "Do this, and you will live." | 23:31 | |
| But he, desiring to justify himself, | 23:34 | |
| said to Jesus, "And who is my neighbor?" | 23:38 | |
| Jesus replied, "A man was going down from Jerusalem | 23:43 | |
| "to Jericho, and fell among robbers, | 23:48 | |
| "who stripped him and beat him and departed, | 23:51 | |
| "leaving him half dead. | 23:56 | |
| "Now by chance a priest was going down that road, | 23:59 | |
| "and when he saw him he passed by on the other side. | 24:05 | |
| "So likewise a Levite, | 24:11 | |
| "when he came to the place and saw him, | 24:14 | |
| "passed on the other side. | 24:17 | |
| "But a Samaritan, as he journeyed, | 24:21 | |
| "came to where he was, and when he saw him, | 24:24 | |
| "he had compassion and went to him and bound up his wounds, | 24:28 | |
| "pouring on oil and wine. | 24:34 | |
| "Then he set him on his own beast and brought him to an inn | 24:38 | |
| "and took care of him. | 24:43 | |
| "And the next day he took out two denari | 24:45 | |
| "and gave them to the innkeeper, saying, | 24:49 | |
| ""Take care of him, and whatever more you spend, | 24:52 | |
| ""I will repay you when I come back." | 24:56 | |
| "Which of these three, do you think, | 25:01 | |
| "proved neighbor to the man who fell among the robbers?" | 25:04 | |
| He said, "The one who showed him mercy on him." | 25:08 | |
| And Jesus said to him, "Go, and do likewise." | 25:13 | |
| Here ends the reading of the Gospel lesson. | 25:18 | |
| Amen. | 25:22 | |
| (organ music) | 25:24 | |
| (congregation sings) | 25:32 | |
| - | Let us pray. | 26:32 |
| May the words of my mouth | 26:37 | |
| and the meditations of our hearts | 26:41 | |
| be acceptable in Thy sight, | 26:45 | |
| oh, Lord, our strength and our redeemer. | 26:49 | |
| Amen. | 26:55 | |
| For more than 50 years, | 27:01 | |
| American churches have observed | 27:05 | |
| Race Relations Sunday. | 27:08 | |
| It was a time to reflect upon the ideal | 27:12 | |
| of the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of humankind. | 27:16 | |
| It was a time to sing with great lust | 27:24 | |
| in Christ there is no east or west. | 27:28 | |
| In Him no south or north. | 27:33 | |
| The words of the prophet Malachi | 27:39 | |
| would ring out from our pulpits. | 27:43 | |
| Have we not all one father? | 27:47 | |
| Has not one God created us? | 27:51 | |
| Why then are we faithless to one another, | 27:56 | |
| profaning his covenant? | 28:00 | |
| We would also listen to the words of Luke | 28:04 | |
| in the book of Acts. | 28:08 | |
| And he made from one every nation to live | 28:11 | |
| on the face of the earth that they should seek God | 28:16 | |
| and find Him. | 28:22 | |
| Now I am well aware of this great heritage. | 28:26 | |
| I know the many very positive things that have been done | 28:32 | |
| to sensitize insensitive people | 28:37 | |
| in the area of better race relations, | 28:41 | |
| To encourage others and not to be weary in their well doing, | 28:47 | |
| and to remind still others that there is yet | 28:53 | |
| so much to be done in black-white relations | 28:57 | |
| in our churches, in our communities, | 29:03 | |
| on our campuses, and in our nation. | 29:07 | |
| This morning, however, | 29:14 | |
| I would like us to look at race relations | 29:17 | |
| from a different and with a deeper perspective. | 29:22 | |
| Very simply, I want us to view it | 29:28 | |
| in the wider and more inclusive context | 29:33 | |
| of the desperate need for improved human relations | 29:38 | |
| on interpersonal, inter-group, | 29:43 | |
| international and global levels. | 29:48 | |
| For here lies the root and stem of the problem. | 29:54 | |
| And here, latently at least, | 30:00 | |
| is the hope for solving | 30:04 | |
| what the renowned black scholar W.E.B. Du Bois | 30:07 | |
| called the critical problem of the 20th century, | 30:12 | |
| namely the color line. | 30:17 | |
| Now we need not look too far to understand | 30:21 | |
| the urgent necessity for this expanded view | 30:26 | |
| of race relations into a scene of human relations. | 30:30 | |
| Consider, if you will, this scenario | 30:37 | |
| for the 21st century, which is less than 20 years away. | 30:40 | |
| By the year 2000, the earth's population | 30:47 | |
| will be closer to 8 billion than anything else. | 30:52 | |
| Almost two thirds of whom | 30:58 | |
| will be none-white. | 31:01 | |
| In America, the population will be about 300 million, | 31:04 | |
| at least 33rd percent of those | 31:10 | |
| will be non-white. | 31:15 | |
| The balance of world power | 31:17 | |
| and the centers of decision making | 31:21 | |
| have already shifted dramatically | 31:24 | |
| in the second half of this century | 31:28 | |
| in terms of continents and nations | 31:31 | |
| and classes and races. | 31:34 | |
| We are at the end of an era of domination | 31:38 | |
| by and Anglo-European ethos. | 31:42 | |
| Western ascendancy has declined and that seriously. | 31:45 | |
| With the advent of nuclear weaponry, | 31:52 | |
| the day is gone when right can be sustained by might. | 31:56 | |
| Or orthodoxy by power. | 32:01 | |
| Or supremacy by threat. | 32:04 | |
| The rising expectations of more than 50 new nations | 32:09 | |
| in the last two decades | 32:13 | |
| and their new-found political muscle | 32:16 | |
| in the United Nations have changed forever | 32:19 | |
| the power equations between east and west. | 32:22 | |
| The revolutions for food, for civil rights, | 32:27 | |
| for women's rights, for human rights, | 32:31 | |
| and for national liberations are still vibrant | 32:34 | |
| and they indeed are irreversible. | 32:39 | |
| The eminent late historian Arnold Toynbee | 32:43 | |
| was quite right when he said, and I quote, | 32:47 | |
| "the revolution through which we are living today | 32:52 | |
| "is world wide, penetrating to the cultural | 32:56 | |
| "and spiritual depths. | 33:01 | |
| "Living together as a single family is the only future | 33:04 | |
| "that mankind can have. | 33:09 | |
| "The alternative is mass suicide. | 33:12 | |
| "Yet learning how to live together | 33:17 | |
| "is going to be very difficult. | 33:20 | |
| "We have suddenly become one another's next door neighbors, | 33:23 | |
| "physically, that is, while our hearts | 33:29 | |
| and minds "remain far apart." | 33:34 | |
| He goes on to say that ignorance breeds fear. | 33:39 | |
| And fear breeds hostility. | 33:44 | |
| Human beings have had 6,000 years | 33:49 | |
| to become strangers to one another. | 33:52 | |
| And now we hardly have any time at all | 33:55 | |
| for learning the most difficult art | 33:59 | |
| of dwelling together in unity. | 34:02 | |
| Now in the face of this situation, | 34:06 | |
| those who are leaders and those who aspire to leadership | 34:10 | |
| might well feel like Hamlet, who said, | 34:16 | |
| "the time is out of joint. | 34:19 | |
| "Oh, cursed spite that ever | 34:22 | |
| I was born to set it right." | 34:25 | |
| But this is our time. | 34:29 | |
| There is no other time in which | 34:31 | |
| we can live or shall live. | 34:34 | |
| This is the day which the Lord has made. | 34:38 | |
| Let us rejoice and be glad in it. | 34:42 | |
| You and I are His leadership, | 34:46 | |
| His present leadership and His future leadership. | 34:50 | |
| And perhaps both of our generations had better hear | 34:55 | |
| what Benjamin Disraeli once said when he told us | 34:59 | |
| that, "now God be thanked who matched us | 35:04 | |
| "with this fateful hour." | 35:09 | |
| Now what seems to be the word of the Lord in all of this? | 35:15 | |
| What do scriptures say? | 35:21 | |
| The word may be found in the two well known stories | 35:25 | |
| that you have just heard, | 35:30 | |
| Cain and Abel and the Samaritan. | 35:33 | |
| The Cain and Abel story in Genesis is well known. | 35:38 | |
| Cain rose up against his brother, Abel, | 35:44 | |
| and killed him. | 35:48 | |
| Then the Lord said to Cain, "Where is Abel, your brother?" | 35:50 | |
| Cain said, "I do not know. | 35:56 | |
| "Am I my brother's keeper?" | 35:59 | |
| The Samaritan story in Luke | 36:04 | |
| is in the Samaritan parable. | 36:07 | |
| Note we did not say the good Samaritan. | 36:11 | |
| We are assuming that there were more than one | 36:14 | |
| of the Samaritans who were good. | 36:17 | |
| But nevertheless, the story is this. | 36:20 | |
| A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho | 36:24 | |
| and fell among robbers. | 36:29 | |
| They beat him and stripped him and departed, | 36:32 | |
| leaving him half dead. | 36:36 | |
| But a Samaritan came to where he was, | 36:38 | |
| and he did four things. | 36:44 | |
| He stopped and had compassion. | 36:47 | |
| He went to him. | 36:51 | |
| He bound up his wounds, | 36:53 | |
| and he set him upon his own beast | 36:55 | |
| and took him to an inn. | 36:59 | |
| Now there are many sayings in the Bible | 37:03 | |
| that speak about human relations. | 37:06 | |
| In Deuteronomy and Leviticus, | 37:10 | |
| we read, "You shall love the Lord your God | 37:12 | |
| "with all your mind and with all your strength | 37:16 | |
| "and with all your soul, | 37:20 | |
| "and your neighbor as yourself." | 37:22 | |
| In Matthew, we read, "I was hungry and you fed me, | 37:25 | |
| "thirsty and you gave me drink. | 37:30 | |
| "I was a stranger and you received me in your homes, | 37:34 | |
| "naked and you clothed me. | 37:38 | |
| "I was sick and you took care of me, | 37:41 | |
| "in prison and you visited me." | 37:44 | |
| But none of these passages speaks as vividly | 37:48 | |
| to the human relations theme of our day | 37:52 | |
| than these stories in Genesis and Luke. | 37:56 | |
| These stories challenge us as people of faith | 38:00 | |
| and as Christians to love, | 38:05 | |
| to respect, and to respond | 38:10 | |
| to people as individuals and to people as groups | 38:14 | |
| or to people as nations | 38:19 | |
| or to people who have dominion | 38:22 | |
| in various parts of the world. | 38:25 | |
| People who are the brothers and sisters | 38:28 | |
| of our common Father Mother God. | 38:31 | |
| What then is the art of human relations | 38:36 | |
| as we ponder these two stories? | 38:39 | |
| It is people skilled in relating to people | 38:43 | |
| in ways that are caring, meaningful, | 38:47 | |
| helpful and responsible, | 38:51 | |
| irrespective of differences in circumstance | 38:54 | |
| or advantage or color | 38:59 | |
| or religion or time and place. | 39:02 | |
| The art of human relations is the cultivation | 39:06 | |
| of the capacity to act toward others | 39:10 | |
| as God in Christ has already | 39:14 | |
| acted toward us. | 39:18 | |
| Now there are particular challenges | 39:21 | |
| in the two stories that were read | 39:24 | |
| by our lector this morning. | 39:26 | |
| But first a brief analysis of our stories. | 39:30 | |
| It is more than of passing interest that a Samaritan | 39:34 | |
| offered aid to the one who fell among the robbers. | 39:38 | |
| A Samaritan, mind you, | 39:42 | |
| one whose race was often cursed, | 39:45 | |
| whose word was unacceptable in any court of law, | 39:49 | |
| who could not co-mingle | 39:54 | |
| with other religious people of his time. | 39:56 | |
| A Samaritan saw him and had compassion. | 40:00 | |
| A Samaritan went to him and bound up his wounds. | 40:04 | |
| A Samaritan took him to a hotel and provided | 40:09 | |
| for his future care. | 40:14 | |
| The story on Cain and Abel and the parable | 40:18 | |
| of the Samaritan are very clear, | 40:21 | |
| very direct and very simple statements | 40:24 | |
| about Christian human relations. | 40:28 | |
| And they say two things. | 40:31 | |
| We are our brother's keeper. | 40:33 | |
| We are our neighbor's neighbor. | 40:36 | |
| The revolutionary nature of these statements | 40:41 | |
| must be understood against a background | 40:45 | |
| of that period of time. | 40:48 | |
| In the Old Testament, neighbor clearly referred | 40:51 | |
| only to Israelites. | 40:55 | |
| In the time of Jesus, neighbor referred only to Jews. | 40:57 | |
| Neighbor did not include Romans. | 41:02 | |
| Neighbor did not include Greeks or Syrians. | 41:05 | |
| Most of all, it did not include Samaritans. | 41:09 | |
| Not a single hero of that parable failed | 41:13 | |
| to get that message. | 41:16 | |
| Here Jesus was laying bare the barriers | 41:19 | |
| to good human relations, | 41:23 | |
| which include racial exclusiveness, | 41:26 | |
| which include social snobbery, | 41:30 | |
| which include cultural conceit | 41:33 | |
| and spiritual arrogance. | 41:36 | |
| He was getting, therefore, at the very basic principles | 41:39 | |
| of good human relations. | 41:43 | |
| Care, respect, and responsibility. | 41:45 | |
| It is this word care then that Erik Erikson tells us | 41:51 | |
| is "a deep concern for the life | 41:55 | |
| and development of persons." | 41:59 | |
| It comes from the word charis which means love | 42:02 | |
| of a deep kind. | 42:05 | |
| Cain did not care about his brother, Abel. | 42:09 | |
| Some friends do not care for each other. | 42:14 | |
| They simply want to use each other. | 42:18 | |
| This is an example of poor human relations. | 42:21 | |
| Some couples are going together | 42:26 | |
| who are supposedly in love, | 42:30 | |
| but their relationship is simply one | 42:32 | |
| of mutual exploitation. | 42:35 | |
| Some husbands and wives after they do not care | 42:38 | |
| for each other enough, do not extend their marriages | 42:42 | |
| to seek every possible recourse before taking | 42:46 | |
| the easy course of divorce. | 42:50 | |
| These are poor human relations. | 42:54 | |
| Parents sometimes do not really care enough | 42:57 | |
| for their children to give their lives for them. | 43:00 | |
| Often they view them as burdens, as troublesome. | 43:05 | |
| The result, therefore, could easily be child abuse. | 43:09 | |
| This is an example of a poor human relationship. | 43:14 | |
| The second foundation of good relationships is respect. | 43:21 | |
| It is a way of looking at people | 43:27 | |
| from their inside situation outward. | 43:29 | |
| Not just a sense of muted awe in the presence | 43:34 | |
| of some person we respect, but a concern | 43:37 | |
| that people become who they are. | 43:41 | |
| Respect is the absence of the need to change people | 43:45 | |
| before we can love them. | 43:50 | |
| We love people for what they are | 43:53 | |
| and not for how they could be if we could remake them. | 43:56 | |
| We love people for what they can be | 44:02 | |
| and we help them to become that. | 44:05 | |
| This is respect. | 44:08 | |
| This is looking at them until we see | 44:10 | |
| what God has truly placed within them | 44:13 | |
| that it is our task to bring out. | 44:16 | |
| If we could see the peoples of our world | 44:20 | |
| in terms of what God's intention was for them, | 44:24 | |
| we could indeed be for them | 44:28 | |
| as the Samaritan was to the robber. | 44:31 | |
| In keeping with this then, Christians and others, | 44:34 | |
| all people of good will, | 44:39 | |
| should engage those issues of human rights | 44:42 | |
| in our world that affect good human relations. | 44:45 | |
| We become concerned, therefore, about, | 44:51 | |
| and we become involved in programs to resolve | 44:54 | |
| the inequity syndrome affecting the poor people | 44:58 | |
| and the hungry people of our world. | 45:02 | |
| Our planet earth is really divisible | 45:06 | |
| into two large segments. | 45:09 | |
| One is very rich, and one is very poor. | 45:11 | |
| On the rich side are two dozen or so industrialized states | 45:17 | |
| whose one billion people control and produce | 45:23 | |
| and consume most of the world's resources. | 45:28 | |
| On the other side, | 45:32 | |
| about 100 so-called underdeveloped states and nations | 45:33 | |
| comprising three billion people control very little, | 45:39 | |
| produce very little, and consume very little. | 45:44 | |
| They consequently exist in the shadow of death | 45:50 | |
| and starvation and deprivation | 45:54 | |
| almost 24 hours a day. | 45:58 | |
| Respect then means seeing these as children of God | 46:01 | |
| for what they can become with our help | 46:07 | |
| and through our sharing. | 46:10 | |
| Helping them to become that is our mission. | 46:13 | |
| This is the person we encounter on our Jericho road. | 46:16 | |
| Helping them at our level of competence, | 46:22 | |
| whether it is person to person, | 46:26 | |
| whether it is as a citizen, | 46:28 | |
| whether it is as a Christian or a religious person of faith, | 46:31 | |
| or whether it is simply as a member of the human community. | 46:35 | |
| The third keystone for good human relations | 46:42 | |
| is responsibility. | 46:45 | |
| Basic to the word of responsibility | 46:48 | |
| is the word to respond. | 46:51 | |
| The root meaning then means to discover the needs of others | 46:54 | |
| and do something about them. | 46:59 | |
| This was Cain's sickness, | 47:02 | |
| and often it is ours. | 47:06 | |
| After murdering his brother | 47:08 | |
| and being called to account for it, | 47:11 | |
| he asks a very stupid question. | 47:14 | |
| Am I my brother's keeper? | 47:17 | |
| Well, of course, he was his brother's keeper. | 47:19 | |
| And the Lord made that quite plain to him, | 47:23 | |
| but he wanted to cop out of the situation. | 47:26 |
| Male Speaker | As we so often do. | 0:03 |
| Now how does this relate itself | 0:06 | |
| to the distribution of wealth for example | 0:11 | |
| especially in America, | 0:13 | |
| how does this relate itself to the plants | 0:16 | |
| that close almost each month? | 0:19 | |
| And in their wake we find unemployment, | 0:23 | |
| social chaos, the ruination of whole communities. | 0:27 | |
| How does this relate to oppressive labor | 0:32 | |
| and or management practices? | 0:35 | |
| How does this relate to the arrogance of power | 0:38 | |
| and the inordinate national pride | 0:41 | |
| which is leading us headlong in many cases | 0:44 | |
| into a third world war? | 0:47 | |
| The life and welfare of our brothers and sisters | 0:51 | |
| is not their problem only. | 0:55 | |
| It is our problem, and we forget this | 0:58 | |
| at the peril of our own souls, and at the peril | 1:03 | |
| of the displacement and disappearance | 1:07 | |
| of the planet Earth. | 1:10 | |
| The art of human relations is understanding | 1:14 | |
| what it means to be created in God's image, | 1:18 | |
| and to seek to actualize that image in persons. | 1:21 | |
| The art of human relations is celebrating the uniqueness | 1:25 | |
| of every person, and creating the environment | 1:29 | |
| in which all people and all kinds of people | 1:34 | |
| can grow and develop and become | 1:38 | |
| who they were intended to be, regardless | 1:42 | |
| of race or color or class. | 1:46 | |
| The art of human relations is doing all we can | 1:50 | |
| to see to it that our Earth home | 1:53 | |
| is not obliterated by a nuclear bomb, | 1:57 | |
| which would bring to zero minus | 2:00 | |
| both humans and relationships. | 2:03 | |
| In closing, let us remember the words | 2:08 | |
| of Walt Whitman, in his famous salute to the world. | 2:10 | |
| All you continentals of Asia, Africa, Europe, | 2:17 | |
| Australia, and different places, | 2:21 | |
| all you on the numberless islands | 2:25 | |
| and archipelagos of the sea, and you | 2:28 | |
| of the centuries hence, when you listen to me, | 2:31 | |
| and you each and every where who I specify not, | 2:36 | |
| but include just the same, health to you | 2:40 | |
| and goodwill to you all. | 2:44 | |
| Each of us is inevitable. | 2:47 | |
| Each of us limitless. | 2:50 | |
| Each of us with his own right upon the Earth. | 2:53 | |
| Each of us allowed the eternal support of the Earth. | 2:58 | |
| Each of us here as | 3:03 | |
| divinely ordained as any is here. | 3:05 | |
| We may not always see eye to eye | 3:11 | |
| on all issues, but we must learn | 3:13 | |
| that we can walk hand in hand toward | 3:17 | |
| a common goal, and that goal is goodwill | 3:20 | |
| and peace, and justice, and righteousness | 3:24 | |
| and truth for all people, all communities, | 3:27 | |
| and all nations, let us pray. | 3:31 | |
| All people of the Earth, | 3:40 | |
| share but one common birth, one destiny. | 3:43 | |
| One sun shines o'er us all. | 3:50 | |
| Alike we rise and fall. | 3:54 | |
| One night shall spread its pall eternally. | 3:58 | |
| Great God of all the Earth, teach us | 4:04 | |
| to know the worth of sympathy. | 4:08 | |
| Let fellowship increase, let all contention cease. | 4:11 | |
| Oh may we dwell in peace and unity, | 4:17 | |
| Amen. | 4:22 | |
| (church organ playing) | 4:33 | |
| (congregation singing with organ) | 5:24 | |
| (congregation singing with organ) | 6:04 | |
| (congregation singing with organ) | 6:52 | |
| (congregation singing with organ) | 7:45 | |
| Male Speaker | We have been challenged. | 8:17 |
| Let us now affirm what we believe. | 8:20 | |
| Congregation | We believe in God, | 8:24 |
| who has created and is creating, | 8:26 | |
| who has come in the truly human Jesus, | 8:29 | |
| to reconcile and make new, who works in us | 8:32 | |
| and others by the spirit. | 8:36 | |
| We trust God, who calls us to be the church, | 8:39 | |
| to celebrate life and its fullness, | 8:44 | |
| to love and serve others, to seek justice | 8:47 | |
| and resist evil, to proclaim Jesus crucified and risen, | 8:50 | |
| our judge and our hope. | 8:56 | |
| In life, in death, in life beyond death, | 8:59 | |
| God is with us, we are not alone, | 9:04 | |
| thanks be to God. | 9:08 | |
| Male Speaker | The Lord be with you. | 9:11 |
| Congregation | And also with you. | 9:13 |
| Male Speaker | Let us pray. | 9:14 |
| Praise to you, oh Lord of us all, | 9:25 | |
| the holy one who presides among the stars, | 9:29 | |
| yet teaches the human heart, | 9:33 | |
| who gives the seasons that both flesh and nations | 9:36 | |
| shall know their mortal boundaries, | 9:40 | |
| who authors the mystery of our freedom, | 9:44 | |
| and risks the divine love among our human choices. | 9:47 | |
| Who intends that each one of us | 9:52 | |
| shall go without fear, and that all | 9:54 | |
| shall share the music of the deep heavens. | 9:59 | |
| Who gathers us to this moment, to discover together | 10:03 | |
| who we are in your presence. | 10:08 | |
| Praise to you oh lord, our health, and our salvation. | 10:11 | |
| Oh creator God, who wills for your creation | 10:20 | |
| wholeness of spirit and health of body, | 10:24 | |
| hear our intercessions for all who need your blessing, | 10:28 | |
| for those chronically ill, to whom no hope | 10:33 | |
| of bodily strength can be given, | 10:36 | |
| bless them with your presence, and the strength | 10:40 | |
| to rise above their reasons for despair | 10:43 | |
| into a higher hope. | 10:46 | |
| For all who seek in earnest but do not find you, | 10:49 | |
| help them to perceive you in the common things around them, | 10:53 | |
| that in these things, | 10:58 | |
| they begin their journey to meet the Christ. | 11:00 | |
| For all who lack food and shelter, | 11:04 | |
| may our daily comforts chafe us, | 11:07 | |
| and move us to share more and more. | 11:10 | |
| Oh God of hope, may the vision of a new Jerusalem infect us, | 11:15 | |
| and move us to undertake its building in our own lives, | 11:21 | |
| and in our own society. | 11:25 | |
| Make us firm against all arguments from despair, | 11:28 | |
| that our enemies are less than human, | 11:33 | |
| that the poor are poor because they are lazy, | 11:37 | |
| that military force is the only language | 11:41 | |
| that nations understand, that all other leopards | 11:43 | |
| will never change their spots, | 11:48 | |
| grant lord God the deep understanding | 11:52 | |
| that we were not born to die, | 11:56 | |
| but to begin, to interrupt the flow of despair, | 11:59 | |
| to start something new, for God's sake. | 12:05 | |
| Oh Yahweh, we seek a new dedication | 12:12 | |
| to your will in our lives. | 12:16 | |
| Grant that we have no lower estimate of humanity | 12:20 | |
| than you showed by your passion on the cross, | 12:23 | |
| and seeing anew how precious is the life you create in us, | 12:27 | |
| grant us the courage to measure ourselves | 12:32 | |
| by the stature that you have given us. | 12:35 | |
| Do not allow us to concede to cynicism. | 12:39 | |
| Keep alive in us such courage of faith | 12:43 | |
| that our eyes will not wander from the cross, | 12:46 | |
| though many about us brood | 12:50 | |
| on the prospect of an empty heaven, | 12:51 | |
| and a soulless humanity, and grant | 12:54 | |
| oh magnificent one, that we will not think ourselves | 12:58 | |
| more virtuous than we are, nor imagine ourselves | 13:03 | |
| less worthy than you regard us, in Christ's name. | 13:08 | |
| let us now pray together, our Lord's prayer. | 13:15 | |
| Congregation | Our father, who art in heaven, | 13:20 |
| hallowed be thy name. | 13:24 | |
| Thy kingdom come, thy will be done | 13:26 | |
| on Earth as it is in heaven. | 13:30 | |
| Give us this day our daily bread, | 13:33 | |
| and forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those | 13:36 | |
| who trespass against us, and lead us not | 13:39 | |
| into temptation, but deliver us from evil, | 13:42 | |
| for thine is the kingdom, and the power, | 13:47 | |
| and the glory, forever, Amen. | 13:50 | |
| (church organ) | 14:10 | |
| (church organ) | 15:37 | |
| (church organ) | 16:41 | |
| (choir singing over organ) | 16:53 | |
| (choir singing over organ) | 17:40 | |
| (choir singing over organ) | 17:41 | |
| (choir singing over organ) | 18:52 | |
| (choir singing over organ) | 20:37 | |
| (choir singing over organ) | 22:01 | |
| Male Speaker | Oh merciful one, | 22:41 |
| on this week's first day, day of resurrection, | 22:44 | |
| day of soul's replenishment, | 22:47 | |
| receive now these gifts of money. | 22:50 | |
| If we have been charitable, thank you | 22:54 | |
| for teaching us such virtue. | 22:56 | |
| If we have been stingy, forgive us | 22:58 | |
| and enable us to be more generous. | 23:02 | |
| And now by your holy spirit, be with us | 23:05 | |
| in our use of these offerings, that despair | 23:08 | |
| will give way to hope, pain and suffering | 23:11 | |
| to healing, evil to goodness, sin to redemption. | 23:14 | |
| That all people shall experience your evangel. | 23:20 | |
| In your son's name, Amen. | 23:24 | |
| (church organ) | 23:38 | |
| (congregation singing over organ) | 24:01 | |
| (congregation singing over organ) | 25:31 | |
| (church organ) | 26:55 | |
| And now, may grace, mercy and peace | 27:07 | |
| from God the father, son, and holy spirit | 27:11 | |
| be with you and with all whom you love. | 27:14 | |
| Go out in joy, and remember, by the goodness of God | 27:17 | |
| you were born, by the providence of God | 27:21 | |
| you are kept all the day long, | 27:24 | |
| by the love of God fully revealed to us | 27:27 | |
| through Jesus Christ our living lord, | 27:29 | |
| you are being redeemed. | 27:32 | |
| (choir singing) | 27:43 | |
| (church organ) | 28:46 | |
| (church organ) | 30:58 | |
| (church organ) | 32:21 | |
| (church organ) | 33:25 | |
| (church organ) | 34:49 | |
| (congregation chatting amongst themselves) | 35:35 |
Item Info
The preservation of the Duke University Libraries Digital Collections and the Duke Digital Repository programs are supported in part by the Lowell and Eileen Aptman Digital Preservation Fund
