It would be fair to say that we have been dealing with questions about "abundance" (or the lack thereof) from the very start. In 2020, I wrote a blog posting that I titled, "Sent Forth With Nothing." That blog posting talked about God's expulsion of humans from the Garden of Eden, and that Garden of Eden story is certainly one way of thinking about our current relationship with "abundance." We "had it all," didn't we? But then we lost it all, too - and it was our own, damn fault. Now, returning to "abundance" is our major occupation.
A need to "achieve" abundance is the way this topic is being presented to the public by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson. Their book, published a year ago, last March, is titled, quite directly: Abundance. If you are not already familiar with this book, you can click right here for a Wikipedia write-up. The following link will allow you to buy the book, should you want to do that. I, personally, suggest that you visit the library, first.
As you might deduce from that comment about not spending good money for a book that you can read for free, I do not count myself as a big fan of the Klein-Thompson book. Below, I am providing a link to what the "Frontier Group" has to say about it. The Frontier Group identifies itself as a "non-profit research and policy organization that provides information and ideas to build a healthier, more sustainable America." What follows is a brief excerpt from the Frontier Group's critique of Abundance (the book):
Scarcity may be the enemy, [Klein and Thompson] argue, but it is one that we can vanquish – if government fully commits to the task. Klein and Thompson envision a federal government that invests in outside-the-box scientific research, takes timely action to scale up critical new technologies, and eliminates regulations – including pesky laws intended to protect the environment – that limit the speed with which we can “solve our problems with supply.”
For the last 50 years, [Klein and Thompson] argue, both the right and left sides of the political spectrum have been insufficiently committed to using the tools of government to overcome scarcity, creating a struggle between “a right that fought the government and a left that hobbled it" (emphasis added).
After summarizing the Klein-Thompson argument, the Frontier Group goes on to suggest that Klein and Thompson are making their recommendations based on a faulty diagnosis:
Scarcity is not, by and large, America’s problem. It is, rather, the problems that result from our abundance – the ecological impacts of a high-throughput consumer economy; our failure to replace the sense of meaning and purpose once drawn from work that has since been automated away; the tech-driven stratification of society and accelerating concentration of wealth – that threaten to do us in.These are problems that cannot be “solved with supply.” And failing to keep those problems front of mind in a renewed quest for “more” could wind up making them even worse.
I think the Frontier Group, not Klein and Thompson, is on the right track.
So, too, is Richard Rohr, an American Franciscan priest and a writer on spirituality based in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Rohr was ordained to the priesthood in the Roman Catholic Church in 1970, founded the New Jerusalem Community in Cincinnati in 1971, and then went on to found the Center for Action and Contemplation in Albuquerque in 1987. Rohr publishes daily meditations on spiritual (and secular) subjects, in case you're interested. Click the following link to read his meditation published on February 5th - "There Is More Than Enough."
I agree with this comment. There is, I do believe, "more than enough." But to see that, we would have to understand our situation not "individually," but as we exist with all others. The idea that "we're in this together" would have to be the idea that we understand best defines our place in the world.
In this together? What a concept! How did John Lennon put it? "Sharing all the world."
Imagine that! Lennon must have thought that there was enough to go around.
Me, too!
Image Credit:
https://cac.org/daily-meditations/there-is-more-than-enough/












