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November
3, 2008
Dear
Friends,
The
memorial service for my friend and colleague, Dick Drinon, went nicely; he
would have approved; he would have been touched, and maybe even a little
surprised at the depth and variety of expressions of appreciation for the ways
he touched so many lives.
His
daughter, Sarah, delivered an exceptionally moving tribute, talking about the
values with which he raised her, on his own, from age two. She spoke about his emphasis on ‘the
inherent worth and dignity of every person.’ She talked about the special relationship they had during
her growing up years and his ongoing influence which she’ll carry, always.
The
several clergy who participated each spoke about their appreciation for
Dick. Toward the end of the
service we invited folks to come forward to light a candle and share a
remembrance. A line formed and,
again, people spoke movingly about Dick’s influence on them and their families. Several in that line were young
people—about 6 years old and up.
One,
a young man about seventeen, said, “I was always a trouble maker in Sunday
school – I had a bad reputation. One Sunday after church my mother brought me in to Rev. Dick’s office
and left me there to talk with him. He didn’t yell at me or anything like that. He listened to me and I got the feeling that he liked
me. He respected me. From that day on whenever I saw him and
we said hello I knew that he respected me…he accepted me and I’ll never forget
that, and I’ll never forget him.”
As
he spoke, I remembered Erich Fromm’s four ingredients of mature love: knowledge, care, responsibility and
respect. Fromm talked about how
the word respect shares the same root as the word spectacles – specere, to look at, to notice.
Fromm said, “Mature love is union
under the condition of preserving one's integrity, one's individuality. Love is
an active power in man, a power which breaks through the walls which separate
man from his fellow men, which unites him with others; love makes him overcome
the sense of isolation and separateness, yet permits him to be himself, to
retain his integrity. In love the paradox occurs that two beings become one and
yet remain two.”
On Saturday night, when our
twenty-seven Coming of Agers stood at the front of the sanctuary with their
parents, expressing appreciation, one for the other, I was reminded of Fromm’s
idea of ‘mature love.’ This moving
ceremony puts flesh on the bones of our statement of affirmation: love is the spirit.
The fourteen year old Coming of Agers
are asked to come up with a distilled statement of belief, a credo. They said some important things, but most importantly, they
were listened to; they felt respected – that what they had to
say was important. .
I tell them my definition of religion,
from the Latin ligare, to connect;
reminding them of the reason they have a belly button -- the sign of their
physical connection to mother, un-connected at birth, they spend their separate
lives re-connecting to other people, to their own ever-changing self, and to
Nature. That’s generic religion,
visible in our COA service.
Yours,
Frank
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