Thursday, April 26, 2012

It all turns on affection


Wendell Berry’s 2012 Jefferson Lecture in the Humanities, sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities earlier this week was titled: “It All Turns on Affection.” 

You can find it here, and while it is long, it is worth the time it will take to read:

In it he tells stories and offers some explanation for the times we live in – stories of his family’s land, an explanation of what an economy really is, and stories of what happens when people, over time, disconnect their “light within” from their practices, their business, their learning and their economies.  These are tragic stories, difficult explanations, and they only leave a very thin thread of hope for humanity.  But Berry very intentionally and very clearly leaves room for hope.  And for that I am grateful.

The hope that Wendell Berry offers and imagines comes from people he calls “stickers.”  For Berry, borrowing from his mentor and teacher Wallace Stegner, stickers are people who settle in and “love the life they have made and the place they have made it in.”  He paints a picture of his family over the past several generations, and its relationship with a particular local landscape and its challenges and beauty.

My sense is that what this “poet, essayist, novelist, farmer and conservationist” is saying to me in my daily work and life is that things are connected, and it matters that we learn to love the world and all that is in it.  When we have forgotten affection, or how to care for the whole, we have brought tragedy and destruction, violence and poverty on ourselves and our world.  I think he is right here.  And I think I am to keep working on helping people figure out how to care – to plant seeds of affection in my own heart and in the lives of others.

Thanks Wendell Berry and all of my co-laborers in this field of affection.

Indeed, as Berry concludes, “this has not been inevitable.  And we do not have to live as if we are alone.”

2 comments:

Janelle and Daniel said...

Jeff, this comment was deeply resonant to me:
"When we have forgotten affection, or how to care for the whole, we have brought tragedy and destruction, violence and poverty on ourselves and our world."
Thank you. - Janelle

robinh said...

Jeff, I so appreciate your thoughtful insights. I find that some days, most days, in our family's whirlwind of lfe, that I have little time to think and reflect. I find myself doing and doing...work at our local community college, raising our daughters, laundry, keepinng a wonderful marriage strong...trying to keep ever in the forefront that all of these activities are acts of worship and arenas in which Imworkmout my faith with fear and trembling. I pray that as I read words from you, from our friend Steve Garber, from others that my spirit is challenged and shaped. It is a joy to see how younhave grown from our Grove City CCO days!