Imagine 2050
Life in 2050
Let’s touch down on our Earth in the year 2050. It’s clear there are tons of changes. The most obvious change is the absence of
Cars. What we do see are hundreds of these
electric powered 12 passenger driverless taxis like little trolley cars which
stop at every intersection. If we need
to change directions we just jump off with our market shopping cart and jump on the
next one going the other direction. We
can easily stop them with our cell phones.
Our cost is tabulated just like EZ pass 40 years ago.
Solar Panels on every roof have dramatically changed the
architecture of new construction as every building built today is built with
the Sun in mind. Since oil has become
such a scarce commodity it is saved primarily for food production and
distribution. The good news is that with
this high reliance on the tide, wind and solar, the ozone hole has closed and
our planet has cooled 2 degrees from its high and the rains have begun to fall
on the plains with predictable regularity.
Our ocean levels have even
dropped 4 inches as the polar ice fields are growing.
The most obvious change we see in this new world is our
population diversity. During the past 40
years the Spanish presence is now seen in every part of our village life. Like every other immigrant movement they
first occupied the cities but now every community is thoroughly integrated, even traffic signals are now
bilingual. While a few English complain
about losing the Mexican War, secretly even the most harden right wing conservatives
are grateful because the immigrants presence has stabilized our economy,
maintaining the value of our home real estate and for providing workers who
are dearly needed in all our industries.
Since energy comes at such a premium price many machines have been
replaced by human labor. When we turn on
our TV we are surprised to see 30 percent of the programming is in Spanish, 35 percent
in English, 15 percent Chinese, 5 percent Portuguese and 15 percent
Arabic. This programming seems to mirror
the population makeup of our country.
Agricultural preservation is guarded intensely as we become
more village conscience, consuming locally grown produce. Urban high risers are common now even in
small towns as people cluster more leaving space open farming or gardening. Land
and water is an extremely valuable commodity.
Necessity also has helped us streamline health care into a
one payer system for everyone. I try to
tell the story of how it was back at the beginning to this century where I paid
the price of a small car every year for a family health plan with a $5,000
deductible. I paid my premium to one
company who then would process my claim through another company. Our doctor employed staff to make up a
bill 3 times higher then they knew they would receive so when the processing
company would get the bill they would downsize it to what the doctor was hoping
to receive, then the paper work would come back to me and I would need
to make the payment as my totals did not yet reach my deductible. I could tell they could not understand what
I was talking about. Just as well. Everyone likes their system.
The Amish now number well over a million in population as
they continue to grow colony by colony across the nation providing the country with fresh
produce. They have revitalized the
countryside of our nation’s bread basket as large section farms are purchased
and divided up into their original 40 or 80 acre subdivisions creating
diversified subsistence farms. Even many
English from urban areas are attracted to the sustainable farming practices of
these hearty people and come to try their hand living off the land. The Amish certainly did not expect to be the
people everyone looks to for leadership in energy conservation as they have.
The Catholic Church also has seen a huge increase in numbers
especially strengthened by immigrations from South America. Their message of Peace with God, justice for
the oppressed, sitting with neighbor whoever that may be, communion with God,
with leadership who emulate Christ with a vow of poverty has created a strong
Catholic revival while the evangelical church enterprise movement sputters to its
end in just one generation.
It took 15 years for US to recover from their costly
intervention into Middle Eastern Affairs at the beginning of this century, US
was forced to make the hard decisions withdrawing support from Israel
for their own economic survival. US
simply could not continue to spend so much money in constant military
preparedness. After a bloodbath in 2023 where millions of
Arabs were slaughtered, Israel
was isolated from all its neighbors. US could not afford to support this apartheid
nation any longer. Most evident is Russian and China’s blunt opposition showing
the strength they play in our economic stability. Additional opposition came from our own youth
population who flatly refused to participate any further military missions. The European
Jews were forced to scatter once more, the walls came down and the Arab Muslims,
Arab Christians, and Indigenous Jews reclaimed their country for themselves,
sharing Jerusalem
once again. Surprisingly they now live together relatively peaceful as they had
back in the days of the Ottoman Empire. All
this proved what the Muslim world has been saying for generations; they were
not opposed to Jews but the western occupation that Israel was. As a
result the whole of the Muslim world is far more relaxed. The women are allowed to take off their
veils in large areas of the middle east including, Egypt,
Iraq, and Iran and live and as they lived prior to Khomeini’s
rise to power in Iran. Afghanistan is still wrestling with
Taliban’s concern of Western moral corruption but their opposition is primarily
directed toward the western entertainment world and not western
governments.
The largest religious change in the US is the role of the evangelical
Churches. Since one of the strong
convictions of evangelical churches was the teaching that it was God’s work to
establish the nation of Israel.
These churches had become politically
aligned, so much so, Israel
could do no wrong. They became
identified with a racist, apartheid, self serving, power consuming
nationalistic movement. They ignored the criticism of all other
historic churches which emphasized that Jesus and his bride the Church is God’s
kingdom and not some nation attached to a particular piece of land. By identifying so closely with political Zionism for almost 100 years which caused so much human bloodshed and
suffering, these independent politically aligned evangelical churches now seem
pretty foolish and irrelevant.
Another of the problems which led to the demise of the
evangelical churches was the competitive enterprising spirit among ambitious church leaders. The only thing worse than
denominations is when leaders claim their own apostolic authority creating
churches unto themselves. These churches
created the illusion of strength as they were well funded by the founding
generation. Large churches like
convention centers grew up where people came from miles around to take in a very
professional scripted video enhanced performances. Pastors became more distant from the people,
sometimes replaced by live streaming from some other location. Teaching was primary focused on belief or
faith alone or psychological self help images based on stories from the Bible,
and mission work became two week vacations doing work projects combined with tourism. Very few built long term relations with the Global
South or East as the denominational mission boards have done for years. However even the intense dramatic programming has became
accepted as routine by the younger generation.
It soon became apparent that these large churches lost their appeal to their children. Studies showed that 70
percent of children raised in the mega church left the church leaving the
churches with an aging peer group who could not sustain the religious empire they
sought to build.
Churches such as the Amish or Catholic which emphasized
attending the church closest to you,
sitting with your neighbor whoever that may be in the pew, walking with each other
faithfully are flourishing. Even though most described their services as kind of quiet, predictable, even boring with volunteer leadership; these churches continue as strong communities of faith. With long traditions of children seeing their
grandparents in church, children feel a strong sense of spiritual
accountability to their faith community and become engaged themselves. The Catholic Church survived moral scandals
of the turn of the century becoming a repentant church of past sins. They became the natural home for such a
large influx of immigrant families from South America and the Philippines.
A significant part of evangelical Church on the other hand did not disappear
but was also taken over also by Hispanic, Asian, and especially Chinese
immigrants. These people carried with
them none of the political baggage of the historic fundamentalists. They tended to be economically poor but
strong in their passion to support each other in whatever need would
arise. The theological understanding
that our love for Jesus is expressed when we sit/eat with the person who most
needs us; the one next to us. Of course this practice of walking in step
with the one who needs you is born of necessity for sheer survival and not from
instruction. These new immigrants were
embraced by historic peace churches who came to this country as poor refugees
themselves, and by mainline Protestant groups who were quick to respond to
persons in need. The immigrants
revitalized aging and lonely churches with energy, inspiration, and
children. The older members gained so
much joy in relationship with the new arrivals simply by sharing a cup of water in
Jesus name. Their simple presence among
these aging congregations vaporized the most destructive long term tradition; the tradition of dividing the
church in every generation creating peer group churches with the most recent pop theology.
How good it is to step into the future drinking pure water,
fresh air, riding bicycle, experiencing the community of this new diversity of
people, a more relaxed political environment, living small, living well, and
living in community, Thank you Jesus