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Center for Action and Contemplation
The Psalms: Songs of Exile
The Psalms: Songs of Exile

Discovering Our Shadows in Exile

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Beside the streams of Babylon, we sat and wept.
—Psalm 137:1

Father Richard Rohr reflects on the fear, violence, and oppression that empires and nation-states continue to create, challenging us to respond:

Few would deny that there’s a palpable and growing fear and anger in our country. This fear is felt deeply by those who are most vulnerable. As a follower of both Jesus and Saint Francis of Assisi, my primary moral viewpoint is not centered on the wellbeing of those who are on top, but first in those who are at the bottom. For the vulnerable who have now been rendered more vulnerable, I lament and pray and promise to stand with you.

A time of national introspection must begin with self-introspection. Without our own inner searching, any of our quests for solutions and policy fixes will be based in shifting sands.

I suspect that we get the leaders who mirror what we have become as a nation. They are our shadow self for all to see. That is what the Hebrew prophets told Israel both before and during their painful and long exile (596–538 BCE).

Yet the Exile was the very time when the ancient Jewish people went deep and discovered their prophetic voices—Isaiah, Jeremiah, and others—speaking truth to power, calling for justice from their own political and religious leaders. Their experience laid the solid foundation for Jesus’s teaching and his solidarity with the poor and the outcast.

Maybe some of us have naively thought that we could or should place our loyalty in one political agenda or party. Remember, Yahweh told the people of Israel that they should never put their trust in “princes, horses, or chariots” (Psalms 20:7, 33:16–17), but only in the love of God. We must not imagine that political changes of themselves will ever bring about the goodness, charity, or transformation that the gospel offers the world.

We must not be afraid to allow conventional wisdom to fail and disappoint us. This is often the only path to wisdom. Imperial thinking focuses on judging who is worthy and who is unworthy, who is in and who is out. We who know about universal belonging and identity in God have a different form of power: Love (even of enemies) is our habitat, not the “powers and principalities,” the kingdoms of this world.

The present disorder is our time of exile and has solidified in us an urgent commitment to our work of action and contemplation. It seems needed more than ever before! Grounding social action in contemplative consciousness is not a luxury for a few, but surely a cultural necessity. Both the Christian religion and the American psyche need deep healing, and I do not say that lightly.

Only a contemplative mind can hold our fear, confusion, vulnerability, and anger and guide us toward love. Those who allow themselves to be challenged and changed will be the new cultural creative voices of the next period of history after this purifying exile.

Reference:
Adapted from “Rebuilding from the Bottom Up: A Reflection Following the Election,” Daily Meditations, November 11, 2016.

Image credit and inspiration: Michael Sturgeon, untitled (detail), 2020, photo, Ukraine, Unsplash. Click here to enlarge image. The drummer holds on to the inner rhythm that exile cannot erase—a rhythm echoed in the Psalms—the power of music to name oppression, remember home, and resist forgetting.

Story from Our Community:  

“Be still and know that I am God” (Psalm 46:10). This verse is one that I’ve used for many years when I am overwhelmed by my internal self or the world around me. It provides me the opportunity to let go and simply “be,” after which I’m able to understand my role in a situation or my total lack of ability to influence it, thereby “letting God.”
—Barbara B.

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