Wednesday, May 30

Do we call it a grey area?

Hello again good people. I sometimes think how nice it would be if life was always black and white. But then again I now what happens when people try to deal with life in absolutes. Right now there is a discussion going on about 144 S. Mason. And the talk has to do with the bulletin board. In the tiny hallway that leads to our restrooms we have a bulletin board for the community to use. As of late the content of what goes up on that board as been in question.

The questions have to do with a coffee shop started by a Christian church having announcements about yoga, meditation, and the like up. As the steward of this space I take the questions very seriously and have not come to any conclusions yet. I also try my best to think objectively and not with my own personal beliefs.

But being that I am human and not a machine my personal ideas and beliefs are going to effect the thought process. I believe ignorance can be a huge factory in this area. And of course fear. The two almost always go together. I wonder if a person who is against yoga has ever taken a yoga class from one of the places that puts up a poster? What information are they basing their opinion of yoga on? The same questions could be applied to any of the posters that are up that often receive a knee jerk negative reaction.

Something else I have noticed here is that when people criticize the art or a poster it is always vague, rarely is it dealt with in specifics. So let me bring up a specific example. (If I dare.)

A few months ago we had an art show that had a painting of the Ying Yang. The main opponent of this piece claimed it should not hang because it is a Buddhist symbol. This is that ignorance thing I mentioned. The Ying Yang is not Buddhist, it is Taoism. Taoism is a form of Chinese philosophy. The Symbol represents the ancient Chinese understanding of how things work. The outer circle represents "everything", while the black and white shapes within the circle represent the interaction of two energies, called "yin" (black) and "yang" (white), which cause everything to happen. They are not completely black or white, just as things in life are not completely black or white, and they cannot exist without each other. And based on that the painting stayed up.

What about the rainbow? Readers of the Old Testament think it means something different than our culture thinks now. Can a church hang the colors of the rainbow?

I like the discussion and I like that people care enough to question what happens here. I just wish they would do their homework first. This is one topic I would love to have people chime in on.

4 comments:

Alexander said...

A gray area? I suppose so.

There wouldn't be much point to a long comment here, as I agree with what you've written - Objections to the board might be best handled in a case-to-case basis.

Shari Schwarz said...

I agree with what you've written too. Unfortunately we get caught up in these details--icons, symbols etc... and forget about loving people. Thank you for your thoughtfullness on these issues.

Shari

Anonymous said...

So let me ask - what is the actual criteria used in determining whether a particular item should be on the board, rather than commenting on what should not be on there. I guess the question that I have often had about many things relating to Joes and TOT are more about what has been set in place to govern activity. c.S.

Unknown said...

As of yet there is no official document or written guidelines for what goes on the board. Though this is something the leadership of the church and coffee house are working on. In the four years Everyday Joe's has been open it has not been an issue. But I guess it is part of growing.