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by
The Reverend Charles F. Harper
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We human beings are entrusted with a very special place in creation.
A place that calls us to embrace and live by certain values including
kindness, generosity, forgiveness, joy, peace and so on. Heroes help
us define, develop and live by those values. Without such examples
we can be led to embrace false values and the balance of creation
is lost; the teeter totter totters and all can become chaos and disharmony.
The ancient Greeks said, "Tell me who you admire and I'll tell you
who you are." According to this logic the choosing of heroes, therefore,
is a very important thing. Because who you choose as a hero often
determines the character of a person and a people. The greatest conquerors
in history knew this. Replace the Dalai Lama with Mao and you have
a subsidiary of China. Replace the Czar and Czarina along with the
icons of the Russian Orthodox Church with Lenin and you have Soviet
Union. All of them knew that to deprive a people of a hero or the
opportunity to choose one is the ultimate form of conquest. All of
them knew if you take away a culture's heroes you have conquered them
one and all.
Judging by the fanfare of television programs, magazines, movies and
tell all biographies and autobiographies, it would seem that heroes
are in short supply. Yet, we are in need of heroes more than ever.
Collectively and individually we continue to be a people in search
of sages; anxious and eager to find people worthy of our love and
loyalty.
The question is not whether or not we need or should have heroes,
we are a hero hungry people, the question is what kind of heroes should
we embrace? When we embrace the "wrong" kind of hero this has the
potential of fracturing the sacred bonds of society. When absent of
positive heroes, a society will choose others as it did in Nazi Germany
and Serbia. The choice of the wrong heroes, then, sets in motion a
negative energy more powerful than nuclear fission. The wrong choice
of heroes can split the nucleus of the human family and can set off
a veritable chain reaction of sexism, racism, hate, violence, greed,
jealousy, resentment and corruption.
An Illustration
During the 2000 baseball playoffs, a pitcher threw a ball, the batter
took a swing and his bat broke into a dozen pieces. One of the pieces
came precariously close to the pitcher. The pitcher picked up the
piece and threw it at the batter. Now you couldn't hear it, but you
know the argument that took place. The batter took a few steps toward
the mound, the umpire ran to get between the batter and the pitcher
and the benches and bullpens emptied. And everyone was jumping around
as if they had a bee in their baseball bonnet. The pitcher said "I
was just trying to get the broken bat off the field." And the batter
said, "He was just trying to knock me back to Queens." Wouldn't it
be nice if the pitcher had gone up to the batter and said, "Gee I'm
sorry. I just got carried away. I'm so excited about being in the
series and about being so close to winning that I just lost control.
Well, I sure didn't mean for it to come so close to knocking you to
kingdom come. Let me get you another bat and pitch you another, maybe
a slider this time." And wouldn't it be nice if the batter said, "Oh
well it's part of the game. Sorry I got so mad. I know this is an
emotional time for all of us. But do me a favor can you keep your
next pitch away from my head." You know what would happen if that
was the conversation that took place? The pitcher and the batter would
have become the laughing stock of the league. Maybe the nation. Maybe
the world. The facts are that: behavior doesn't matter. Results matter.
Winning matters. Outs matter. Intimidating the batter matters. Home
runs matter. It's one of the rules of the game of life. And the person
with the best record, the most money, the most votes, the most toys,
the most fame, becomes our hero.
In today's culture, from rock stars to movie stars, from sports stars
to politicians we have substituted celebrities for heroes. Celebrities
from whom we expect little and sometimes get less. Celebrities, after
all, are a part of our throwaway culture. By definition, they are
simply here today and gone tomorrow and replaced by new celebrities.
So anxious are we as a culture to find someone we can place our love
and loyalty with that we place our love and loyalty from time to time
and instant to instant in the riotous parade of the newly famous and
the already nearly forgotten. And when we lose them nothing is really
lost, for their successors have already taken over the next fifteen
minutes of fame. The celebrity can only attract curiosity and imitation
of him/her self where the real hero sends us to the source and end
of his vision and dreams. This search for heroes is especially true
in times of anxiety and uncertainty. And anxiety and uncertainty is
a natural and integral part of the childhood and adolescent experience.
Our problem is that we often look at celebrities to find out what
our values should be and when we do, we don't look high enough.
Heroes don't go for the perishable trophies - they go for the imperishable
trophies. Their rules and their goals are different. They live and
work in the world, but they embrace and live by the eternal values
of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, humility,
self control. While fame, fortune, power et al may come their way,
accumulating such is not their goal. A real hero, a hero who deserves
biography, autobiography or memoir is someone who may attract attention
but directs that attention beyond himself or herself and reflects
in their daily lives everlasting values. Heroes help us embrace and
aspire to values that we thought we might not be able to live up to.
Heroes can be found in the daily stuff of life. They range from parents
to teachers from counselors to that unexpected angel who helps you
change the tire during a dark and rainy night. They can be found in
our religious and historical traditions. They can be found among the
unsung activists and brave politicians who have stood above the status
quo. As one historian wrote: "No great man lives in vain. The history
of the world is but the biography of great men." The history of the
world is the biography of great men and women. We'll find heroes in
the biographies, sometimes in the autobiographies and memoirs that
are written not to create a personality cult but rather in those that
reveal lives that have taken us one more step forward toward fulfilling
our human potential. The need for an organization that identifies
and promotes the values of heroes. Therefore, there is a need for
an international organization that identifies, spotlights and promotes
past and present local, community, national and international heroes
who personify values that strengthen the fabric of the global village
in which we live.
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