I don’t get into TV
series very often because there are a lot of evening meetings that, as a
minister, I need to attend. It’s frustrating to get interested in a show
and then not be able to follow it.
“West Wing” was an
exception. I hadn’t intended to get started; but I did, and it quickly became
perhaps my all-time favorite series—moving ahead of the original “Star Trek”
and the original “Boston Legal”. True to form, however, I missed more episodes
than I watched. By the third season I just gave up.
When the series
ended, Jo Lynn gave me the DVD set of the whole series. Yesterday morning I
finally watched the last episode, and actually found myself grieving that it
was done.
Martin Sheen played
the part of President Josiah Bartlett, a liberal Democrat from New Hampshire.
I, too, am a liberal Democrat; so perhaps that’s why I was so attracted to the
show. On the other hand, Aaron Sorkin’s well-written scripts and the “walk and
talk” technique of director, Thomas Schlamme can’t be ignored. The whole scenario—the
sets, the characters, the plots and the political interplay—came across as
believable.
Believable or not;
realistic or not, the show has left me with an appreciation for the pressures
and the agonizing choices that confront a United States President and his (and
someday her) staff. President Bartlett made decision after decision that impacted
people and entire nations, and often was forced to make those decisions on a
moment’s notice. He then often agonized over whether it was the right decision.
It was that
agonizing—that ongoing moral struggle with his own values—that perhaps most
endeared me to the character of Bartlett. I hope every President struggles with
the moral dimension of his/her decisions as much as did the fictional character
in “West Wing.”
I often wondered what
my conservative friends thought of the show, and whether they avoided it and
condemned it with the same bitterness that some of them often display in
reference to real-life Democrats. Then I realized that I was too often reacting
toward most Republicans with the same level of bitter condemnation.
It long has been my
belief that between me and any other person there are infinitely more
similarities than differences. We all want pretty much the same things for ourselves,
our families and our nation. We just disagree about how to actualize those
desires.
But, if there are
more similarities than differences between us, then there must be some good,
even in those whom I least admire and with whom I most bitterly disagree. So back in September of 2012 I
launched a research project to look for the good in the Presidents I
least admired.
I started with
President George W. Bush. By golly! The man did a lot of really good things while in office!
My previous image of him basically as a buffoon mellowed, and I came to
appreciate his vision for our nation. I still disagree with his strategy for realize
his vision; but I came to admire and respect the vision, nonetheless.
Long story short: I
ended up doing the same research on every President beginning with President
Harry S. Truman. It was a worthwhile project for me, and I commend it as a
worthy challenge for all Americans. The final results of my research were
summarized in a blog (connect here) I posted September 10, 2012. Each President has positive accomplishments to his credit.
Anyway, yesterday morning
as I finished watching the final episode of “West Wing,” I thought of that blog
and looked it up. In the thoughts that followed my review of the blog I
wondered what might happen if a large number of us would devote significant
time and energy to looking for the good in everyone.
I passionately
believe that no person is totally good and not person is totally bad. There is
good in each of us, if we but seek to find it. For that matter, how many of us
really know and acknowledge the good in ourselves?
What might happen
if we identify and affirm the goodness we see
in each other, and then work together to pool that goodness? We seem to have no qualms about identifying the bad in
everybody, and hammering away at it. If violence breeds violence, is it
possible that mutual respect and affirmation might reproduce itself?
What if?
Together in the
Walk,
Jim
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