This article is superb: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/31/opinion/31douthat.html
There is a kind of imperialistic arrogance that exists in the U.S. on both the left and the right. Each side criticizes the other for allegedly allowing some international event or crisis to take place: “If only the U.S. had done things our way, not yours, then all would have turned out well.”
Yet the reality is different. We have much less control of events than we think. The U.S. cannot determine what others do, especially when social media and internet technology allow open information flow. We need to take a more humble approach to foreign policy and stop assuming that we are omnipotent.
Here is the link to my original comment at the New York Times: http://community.nytimes.com/comments/www.nytimes.com/2011/01/31/opinion/31douthat.html?sort=oldest
Ex 13:19: Just as Moses carried the bones of Joseph out of Egypt, we all carry our ancestors with us wherever we go.
Who are the Egyptians in the Exodus story? They are not only outside us, but inside us. Most of the time we enslave ouirselves. That’s why the Jewish people wanted to return to Egypt rather than deal with uncertainty and choices in the wildnerness (Ex 14.12).
After Jacob and Joseph died, Jews became slaves in Egypt. Why? Because they lost track of their ancestors, their home, their Source. Roots let us grow and thrive. They are the ties that both bind and liberate. We cannot help but be products of generations past to the beginning of time. The question is: Do we sever ourselves from the past, simply reuse the past by forgetting that we are each born anew, or integrate the past into a new creation?
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