Psst, don’t pass it on
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SOUL FOOD
When I was in grade school, there was a common game we played at
birthday parties, Brownie Girl Scout meetings and vacation Bible
schools. The game went by a variety of names: Grapevine, Telephone,
Telegraph, Gossip.
We’d all gather in a circle and an adult would whisper a sentence
into one child’s ear. That child would then whisper the words into
the ear of the child next to them and so on, until the sentence
finally arrived in the ear of the last child in the circle, who said
aloud what they had heard.
The sentence heard at the end, depending on how faithfully,
quickly or carelessly the words had been passed around, was quite
different than the original sentence. It was a game, but it was also
a lesson.
When the game was over, we would talk about how easy it is to
misunderstand what someone says and how hard it can be to repeat what
we hear, word for word. We would talk about the harm that can be done
when we don’t get it right.
In Bible school, it was impressed upon us that putting words in
someone’s mouth, whether by intent or recklessness, breached the
ninth commandment, “Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy
neighbor.” We were reminded to do our best to live by the Golden
Rule, to treat others the way we want to be treated ourselves.
A few weeks ago, I received an e-mail message that flew in the
face of the wisdom that came from playing Telephone. Since then, as
it happens all too often, I have received the same message again and
again.
I’d like to revive Telephone, call it Internet and play it among
adults.
The subject line of the e-mail read, “Ann (sic) Graham and 911.”
The message began, “Billy Graham’s daughter was interviewed on the
Early Show and Jane Clayson asked her, ‘How could God let something
like this happen?’” (This being the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist
attacks.)
“Anne Graham,” the story continues, “gave an extremely profound
and insightful response. She said, ‘I believe God is deeply saddened
by this, just as we are, but for years, we’ve been telling God to get
out of our schools, to get out of our government and to get out of
our lives.
“‘And being the gentleman He is, I believe He has calmly backed
out,’” Graham is quoted as saying. “‘How can we expect God to give us
His blessing and His protection if we demand He leave us alone?’”
Some of the messages began with “Finally, The Truth on National
TV.” Some said it was Bryant Gumbel or Jane Pauley or Katie Couric
who had interviewed Anne Graham Lotz. But each message quoted Clayson
(or Gumbel or Pauley or Couric) and Graham Lotz the same way.
The trouble is, the quotes in the e-mail are roughly, but not
really, what either one said. It took about 30 seconds, searching
with Google, to find a transcript of the interview on cbsnews.com.
Worse than the misquotes, however, is a long invective of a dozen
statements that follows. The statements are written in the first
person and merged with the one, single misquote from Graham Lotz so
that the people who sent me this e-mail believed she made them, too.
They were statements like:
“I think it started when Madeleine Murray O’Hare (she was
murdered, her body found recently) complained she didn’t want prayer
in our schools, and we said OK.”
“Then someone said let’s print magazines with pictures of nude
women and call it wholesome, down-to-earth appreciation for the
beauty of the female body. And we said OK.”
“And then someone took that appreciation a step further and
published pictures of nude children and then further again by making
them available on the Internet. And we said OK, they’re entitled to
free speech.”
“Probably, if we think about it long and hard enough, we can
figure it out. I think it has a great deal to do with ‘we reap what
we sow.’”
The message ends, like so much of this kind of e-mail, with a
little guilt-trip to encourage recipients to pass it on, “Funny how
when you forward this message, you will not send it to many on your
address list. ... Funny how we can be more worried about what other
people think of us than what God thinks.”
A Web site, BreaktheChain.org, encourages those who receive
e-mails like this to “break the chain” by researching every chain
letter they get before hitting the “forward” button. The Web site
offers excellent tips and information on how to do this.
We can’t defend truth, virtue or justice with half-truths,
falsehoods and deception, but we can stop passing it on.
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