In case you hadn’t heard, Mike Pence went to see Hamilton last
week, and it turns out that the people who star in Hamilton and
buy tickets for Hamilton are not a natural constituency for
Donald Trump.
What this says about Broadway and Main Street, or Red States and
Blue States, I’ll leave for others to dissect.
And whether lecturing the Vice
President-Elect was an act of courageous resistance or blinkered rudeness is
not what this post is about.
Instead, I want to talk about an old fashioned
word: magnanimity.
What is magnanimity? Merriam-Webster defines it as
“loftiness of spirit enabling one to bear trouble calmly, to disdain meanness
and pettiness,
and to display a noble generosity.”
In other words, view Mike
Pence’s response to Hamilton-gate (and not so much Donald
Trump’s tweets).
I understand there
is a time to fight, a time to stand your ground, a time to give as good as you
get. But this was not one of those times. We must not confuse personal pique
with national security. In fact, for most of us, most of the time, we would do
well to take Pence’s approach: minimize our own offendedness and praise what we
can, even in those who oppose us.
In September 1775, and in again in September 1787, the
founding father John Witherspoon preached a sermon to the senior class at
Princeton titled “Christian Magnanimity.” He listed five principles of
magnanimity:
1. To attempt great and difficult things.
2. To aspire after great and valuable possessions.
3. To encounter dangers with resolution.
4. To struggle against difficulties with perseverance.
5. To bear sufferings with fortitude and patience.
2. To aspire after great and valuable possessions.
3. To encounter dangers with resolution.
4. To struggle against difficulties with perseverance.
5. To bear sufferings with fortitude and patience.
This last point shapes the way we use the word today. The
magnanimous person does not bear petty grudges, does not wallow in self-pity,
does not demand penance, does not advertise his suffering and does not stoop to settle every score. In an age where everyone is scrambling to be more aggrieved
than everyone else, where we think nothing of retweeting praise and retweeting
insults (to prove our aggrieved status), where apologies are routinely demanded
and offendedness is next to godliness, surely we have much to learn about
magnanimity.
It’s not only the right thing to do. It’s the smart thing
to do. While we
certainly want to stand up to real physical violence and insist on all the
rights accorded us by God and by the laws of the land, when it comes
to insults, rudeness and social media scrappiness, killing them with
kindness is usually the way to go. Whatever you think of the commentary
from the cast of Hamilton, the post-play lecturing is apt to look brave
when the President-elect demands an apology, and rudely self-important
when the Vice President-elect says the show was terrific. We would do
well to be more like David pardoning Shimei than the sons of Zeruiah
looking for the next enemy to execute. Magnanimity is often its own reward.
certainly want to stand up to real physical violence and insist on all the
rights accorded us by God and by the laws of the land, when it comes
to insults, rudeness and social media scrappiness, killing them with
kindness is usually the way to go. Whatever you think of the commentary
from the cast of Hamilton, the post-play lecturing is apt to look brave
when the President-elect demands an apology, and rudely self-important
when the Vice President-elect says the show was terrific. We would do
well to be more like David pardoning Shimei than the sons of Zeruiah
looking for the next enemy to execute. Magnanimity is often its own reward.
Pastors, parents, politicians, pundits, Internet
pugilists—where can we
show the sort of Christian magnanimity our world needs but rarely
displays? For bearing burdens, eschewing meanness and setting an
example of noble generosity is not simply the way to win friends and
influence people. It is the way of the cross. And the way of the One
who hung there saying,
“Father forgive them, for they know not what they do.”
Source: Kevin DeYoung
show the sort of Christian magnanimity our world needs but rarely
displays? For bearing burdens, eschewing meanness and setting an
example of noble generosity is not simply the way to win friends and
influence people. It is the way of the cross. And the way of the One
who hung there saying,
“Father forgive them, for they know not what they do.”
Source: Kevin DeYoung
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