dwivian: (Dwiv Inside)
dwivian ([personal profile] dwivian) wrote2007-05-16 11:12 am
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Deaths.....

By now you've probably read that Jerry Falwell died in his office at Liberty University.

Many people were exultant that his influence in the world was at an end. Alas, it isn't that simple. Larger-than-life people exceed death for many years, and will have their ideas and projects continue for generations. The Moral Majority and Liberty University aren't going to close their doors anytime soon.

I will not claim happiness at his death, for this reason:

By dying, Mr. Falwell never got the opportunity (though doubtful that he'd take it) to redeem himself for all the negativity and damage he did. He never fixed the world he broke. That, alone, makes me mourn his passing. We have an obligation to leave the world better than we entered it. He failed. I mourn the lost opportunity to be a good and faithful steward, to use his talents to the benefit of his creator, to give a strong example of how to live the lessons and examples of Jesus Christ, and not of the Pharisees.

Tammy Faye (Bakker) Messner took the last years of her life and has done amazing things to undo the damage of her husband Jim, and to extend good will and grace to those in need. She will die of cancer soon, but worked hard to be the best person she could be. I will mourn her loss, but I praise her works.

Yolanda King died today, and left behind a legacy of human rights advocacy and an acting career in which she played strong black roles including Rosa Parks in a miniseries about the early civil rights movement. I now mourn the loss of such a young person (she was 51), but give credit to her for working to further her father's message, despite the efforts of Sharpton and Jackson to perpetuate racial disharmony.

Two good, one not-so-much. All deserve mourning, of some kind.

[identity profile] herbpixie.livejournal.com 2007-05-16 04:50 pm (UTC)(link)
I can't celebrate the loss of life, no matter how much I might disagree with someone's views. I certainly understand why the animosity is there. I wish he had seen things differently, and I wish that he had used his influence in other ways. But I am not going to play judge and jury. Right or wrong, people mourn him. I will not laugh in the face of their grief. I will not spew hate about a dead man.

You and I differ in our spiritual paths, but I have great respect for the high esteem you place on life. Thank you for presenting a different point of view when people who are less than revered have passed on. This is not the first time you've done it, and I appreciate your posts on the subject.