We live in such an individualistic society. We may be part of a church, club, or family but it is easy for many to disown the group when things are not as they should be. In our first reading, Daniel cries out to God. Daniel is a captive in Babylon because of the sins of the nation. He himself has done nothing wrong. He is described as a thoroughly righteous man. It might have been easy for him to distance himself from his people but notice how he identifies with them:
It can be fairly easy to get mad at our family or our church and begin to rail against "they" and "them." However, I have seen bishops apologize for the sins of the diocese, a diocese they weren't even in when those sins occurred. That is what a righteous person does. We are in this together and when any of us sins it falls upon all of us to own it and work to change what is happening. Quitting or ranting against them wasn't for Daniel. He can teach us a lot about how to be better community members.
Clyde Thompson was doomed to death. He murdered several people before he was caught and sent to prison where he awaited execution in the electric chair. Although his sentence was later commuted to life in prison, he was doomed to a slow and painful death. While in prison, he killed two others. The warden nicknamed him "the meanest man in Texas." The prison chaplain called him "a man without a soul." He was too dangerous to keep in the general population of the prison so they made a solitary confinement unit out of an old morgue and placed him in it. The only thing they would give him to read was a Bible. It was a cruel joke but eventually he started to read it to prove how anyone who believed any of it was a fool. He became one of those fools. It transformed his life. He took correspondence courses in religion and journalism from Lee College, in Baytown, Texas, and wrote articles for religious publications. Eventually even his worst detractors saw the radical change in his life. He was removed from solitary confinement and began to work with the other prisoners. After almost thirty years of confinement, Clyde was paroled from prison. He spent the remaining years of his life working with prisoners and serving as a minister, teacher, and superintendent of a Navajo Indian Children's home. This prisoner's sighing came before God and, doomed to death, the Lord's great power freed him. The Meanest Man in Texas, Clyde's biography, was published in 1984, five years after his death. "The meanest man in Texas" led hundreds, if not thousands, to reform their lives and live by faith in Jesus Christ. I am so happy that the Lord does not deal with us according to our sins. |