Updates from the Dartmouth Chaplaincy. Thoughts from Dartmouth College Chaplain and Dean of the Tucker Foundation, Richard Crocker on life, faith, the academy and everything else.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012
The Courage to Be Mortal - Irene Kacandes
Rollins Chapel
Sunday May 27, 2012
John 13:36-14:7*
I felt honored and a bit nervous to have been asked to speak at one of these ecumenical Sunday services of the Dartmouth Christian Chaplaincy. I became even more nervous when I read the homilies that had come before me in this series on “courage.” Like Grace Johnson, I started from the point of view that I didn’t know anything about courage and was not myself particularly drawn to the idea of courage. When I read her remarks, she helped me warm up to the idea of speaking about courage through her connection of courage to trust and faith. I was similarly very moved by Michelle Domingue’s comments about the courage to love and the portrait of Mother Henriette DeLille he shared with us. I found myself continuing to shake my head in agreement as I continued on to read Kurt Nelson’s remarks on courage and ambiguity. All these great speakers left me in the position of not being sure I had something worthwhile to add to this exploration. With exemplary Christian charity, Kurt urged me to speak from experience and to widen the topic’s scope if I felt I wanted to. This opened up the deep desire in me to share with you something of the extended thinking I have been doing about mortality. Once I got on this track it felt like the appropriate one, even more so when I realized that Dartmouth and in specific Rollins Chapel have been the backdrop for some of my most difficult encounters with mortality. However, I get ahead of myself. Let’s go back to Peter.
Monday, May 21, 2012
It’s Not About Courage - Grace Johnson '11
Rollins Chapel, 5/20/12
Matthew 14:22-32, Matthew 16:24-25, Acts 4:13
I am finding courage to be rather scary to talk about. When Kurt first asked if I might be
interested in speaking in the chapel series on courage, my first thought was,
“Courage?! I don’t know anything about courage -- I don’t actually think
about courage that much -- it’s not a virtue I’ve found particularly
captivating in the past, like love and truth and beauty -- and I definitely
don’t feel like a particularly courageous person. What on earth could I
say about courage?” But I decided to think about it a bit, and thinking
about Jesus and the stories about him seemed like a good place to start, and as
I looked through the gospels I began to notice that people seemed to do a lot
of courageous things when they crossed paths with Jesus. And yet it
seemed to me that something more than courage was the key to their brave
actions. What do you suppose it
was?
Think about it a moment as we look at a few of the
stories. The one we just read is a big
one, as getting out of a boat in the middle of a very windy lake clearly requires
a great deal of courage. There’s also
the woman who suffered from bleeding for twelve years – she crept up behind
Jesus in a crowd and touched His cloak and was healed. That was an audacious thing to do, and she
trembled with fear as she fell at His feet to confess what she’d done. But she had the courage to do it. Then there’s the disciple Matthew, another
good example. He was sitting at his tax
collector’s booth and Jesus saw him and said “Follow me,” and Matthew got up
and followed him. What courage that must have taken, to get up from his
livelihood – walk away from the familiar – and go after Jesus.
Undeniably these people had courage. But do you know what the “something more” is
that I think gave rise to their courage?
Monday, May 14, 2012
The Courage to Love - Michelle Domingue II, '12
St.
John 13:34-35
I give you a new commandment, that you love one
another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you
are my disciples, if you have love for one another.’
2 Timothy 1:7
for God did not give us a spirit of cowardice,
but rather a spirit of power and of love and of self-discipline.
Back
in 2000, Vanessa Williams starred in a film, entitled The Courage to Love. I actually hadn’t watched the movie until last
year when conducting research on the woman she portrayed in the film—the
Venerable Mother Henriette DeLille. The film provided a general overview of DeLille’s
life, making known her piety, devotion to God, but most of all her courage to love all people, regardless of their
status—as enslaved or free, of African or European descent, man, woman,
American or French.
There’s
a lesson to be learned from this saintly woman’s life. Her commitment to the
teachings of Christ, virtually summarized in the passage from St. John 13,
enabled her to radically love despite the ridicule, the humiliation, and the
antagonism she encountered from others. DeLille knew that her salvation was
bound up in that of others, so she dedicated her life to loving others, and
thereby she shared her experiences with Christ.
Before committing her life to the
service of others, DeLille penned a prayer she created in her journal, in 1836.
It read, “I believe in God. I hope in God. I
love. I wish to live and die for God.”
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
Courage and Ambiguity - Kurt Nelson
Rollins Chapel, 5.6.12
Romans 14: 1-8
Courage is something of a second-rate virtue,
if you think about it.
It’s not like love.
Not like beauty.
Or wisdom.
Which are all rooted entirely in
the good.
But there’s no courage without
fear.
No courage without the
possibility of failure.
No courage without the
possibility of
bad things being true,
or real.
Courage necessitates a shadow
side.
It is, as I said,
second rate. And ambiguous
as virtues go.
And there are, of course,
many ways around it.
Three in particular come to mind:
We can simply deny the good,
and succumb to the idea of
nothing,
or of nothing mattering.
We can go the way of Nietzsche,
or nihilism,
and simply try to get what we
can,
while we can,
for little else matters.
And thus make courage
unnecessary.
On the other end of the spectrum,
we can, and do, try to deny the
negative.
We can pursue adamantly,
ideas like security,
and comfort.
And we can distract ourselves to
the extreme.
Monday, April 30, 2012
The Wisdom to Know the Difference - Richard R. Crocker
The Wisdom to know the Difference
Richard R. Crocker
Rollins Chapel
April 29, 2012
Psalm 27
This is the last word on wisdom and the first word on courage. I will try to speak about both of them, briefly. My comments are intended to provoke thought and discussion, so I hope many of you will be able to attend the dinner discussion following worship.
I may surprise you to know that while the word “wisdom” (Sophia, logos) occurs very frequently in the Bible, the word courage (ometz) occurs very rarely. We might well wonder why? Is it that wisdom is more important than courage? I think not. I think, rather, that wisdom is a larger category; that one who is wise is also, necessarily, courageous, but that one can be courageous without necessarily being wise.
Perhaps the most common conjunction of these two words occurs in the prayer written, we think, by the very famous 20th century theologian, Reinhold Niebuhr. I am sure you have heard it. It is also called the Serenity prayer, and its popularity shows how deeply helpful it is to many people. It is: “Lord, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.” This prayer has penetrated into many lives through the agency of Alcoholics Anonymous – a group that has made the recitation of this prayer a part of almost every meeting. It is both popular and profound. Indeed, it speaks to every one of us.
Richard R. Crocker
Rollins Chapel
April 29, 2012
Psalm 27
This is the last word on wisdom and the first word on courage. I will try to speak about both of them, briefly. My comments are intended to provoke thought and discussion, so I hope many of you will be able to attend the dinner discussion following worship.
I may surprise you to know that while the word “wisdom” (Sophia, logos) occurs very frequently in the Bible, the word courage (ometz) occurs very rarely. We might well wonder why? Is it that wisdom is more important than courage? I think not. I think, rather, that wisdom is a larger category; that one who is wise is also, necessarily, courageous, but that one can be courageous without necessarily being wise.
Perhaps the most common conjunction of these two words occurs in the prayer written, we think, by the very famous 20th century theologian, Reinhold Niebuhr. I am sure you have heard it. It is also called the Serenity prayer, and its popularity shows how deeply helpful it is to many people. It is: “Lord, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.” This prayer has penetrated into many lives through the agency of Alcoholics Anonymous – a group that has made the recitation of this prayer a part of almost every meeting. It is both popular and profound. Indeed, it speaks to every one of us.
Monday, April 23, 2012
Sustainability Matters, Still - Kurt Nelson
Delivered at the 2nd Annual Sustainability and Social
Justice Dinner at Dartmouth College.
Dedicated especially to those born in or after 1991…
My sincere thanks to the organizers of this fine event,
it’s a pleasure to be back.
Thanks to the panelists so far.
And thanks especially to all of you for listening.
I want to tell you a story,
because I think it’s relevant.
But it’s also perhaps a bit odd.
So I’d like those of you who were here last year,
to take a minute,
and explain to your table mates,
just how great and trustworthy I am.
We’ll wait...
So I went down to Washington DC this summer,
and I was one of about 1300 people arrested,
in front of the white house,
for participating in civil disobedience,
around the keystone XL pipeline.
Which was, I’ll admit,
a pretty awesome thing to participate in.
In a few short months
we went from public ignorance
and “no brainer” approval,
to massive media coverage,
a widespread movement,
and complicated victory.
It’s a pretty amazing – if imperfect –
story about the efficacy of demonstration and organizing.
But I’m not going to tell you that story tonight.
Old and Foolish … Young and Wise - Steve Swayne
Steve Swayne
22 April 2012
1 Kings
3:3–15
Wisdom has long been
associated with age. Many believe, to shorten the oft-told joke, that it takes
lots of bad decisions to garner the experience that leads to good decisions,
which, in turn, ripens into wisdom.
Yet we also know that age is
not guarantor of wisdom. Each one of us can name people in our lives —
relatives, friends, perhaps ourselves — for whom age has not brought an
increase in wisdom. Evidence exists all around us that it is possible to be old
and foolish.
The evidence is less apparent
that it is possible to be young and wise, in part because of the association I
mentioned at the outset. We are inclined to believe that being young and being
wise is oxymoronic.
Thinking of things oxymoronic
makes me think of my own college years, not because they were oxymoronic but
because they took place at Occidental College, affectionately known as Oxy. I
majored in music, focusing on piano performance and composition. In my senior
year, I wrote a series of songs on poems from the 1896 collection A Shropshire Lad by A. E. Housman.
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