Okay, so usually I avoid the serious topics because…well, because it’s nice to just have a blog where I can be silly and occassionally make people chortle because of the stupid things I do or say (although I know I’ve been a bit boring lately!)
Anyway, there is something that is REALLY irking me. I’m talking REALLY getting under my skin. It’s controversial because it has to do with the very fabric and nature of the country from which I come.
It’s the American Dream.
Now don’t read this as a debate on the presidential election. I assure you, it’s not. It’s just my response to the types of conversations I’ve heard in the lead up to the election.
Here it is as I understand it: If all the American Dream means is work as hard as I can so I can get a top-dollar education, own a really big house, luxury cars, the most fashionable designers brands, the showiest breed of dog, the 2nd holiday home near the ocean….and it goes on…
Then I don’t want anything to do with it.
It is making me really angry that people are SO convinced that their reward for working hard is to hoarde it for themselves, but if there is a man or woman or child who has had less opportunities, who has grown up in a neighborhood where it’s hard to get away from crime, who has had say 1 door where we have had 20, then in our eyes, they don’t deserve our “hard-earned money.”
This is callous.
And especially, ESPECIALLY if we love and follow Jesus–is this how he’d want us to use our money or think of others? Well, you and I…we might be reading about different Jesus’, but the one I read about says care for the poor, feed the hungry, that loving our money more than we love God or others leads to evil, that our treasure is in heaven, that it’s not in everything we store up because we worked really hard to own it. He’s the Jesus that challenges us with the question, “Who is YOUR neighbor?”
The guy next door…he’s your neighbor. The guy down the street, he is your neighbor. The guy that lives in the next subdivision, he is your neighbor. And guess what? The guy on the rough side of town, he is your neighbor. The guy that lives on the streets, he is your neighbor. The guy who has made a lot of mistakes, he is your neighbor. And the guy who you think doesn’t deserve your help or hard-earned money, HE is your neighbor.
And Jesus says, “Love your neighbor, as yourself.” So America, how are we doing with loving our neighbor?
Just to clarify, what I’m not saying is that we should sacrifice getting a decent education or a good job because others are down and out. What I am saying is that we should be thinking about how we can responsibly use the great educational and financial opportunities we’ve been given to help others. What I am saying is Love. Your. Neighbor. I’ll say it again, and it may really get your goat, my friend, but your neighbor includes the people you don’t really want to help.
Even after living abroad for four years, I love being American. I love our undying optimism and our patriotism. I love that I was raised in a country that believes the best is possible. Even so, maybe the American Dream needs to be redefined. What if our country wasn’t defined by individuals who work really hard and so store up their money to buy a certain type of lifestyle for themselves, while others need medical treatment, clothes on their backs, and food in their stomachs. What if the American dream was defined more by the fact that we, as a country, work hard so we can bless others? Wouldn’t that be a country of which we’re all, rich and poor, proud to say that we are American?