A note Bob Bellah wrote to a mutual friend mourning his
father's death. - sent by Steve Tipton soon after Bellah's
death.
**************
Mon., Feb. 3, 2006
Subject: Death
Dear Sam:
Where were you before you were born? That's where you will go after you
die.
Well before I was born, I was in the sperm of my father and the egg of my
mother, I had within me the earliest beginnings of the components of a
billion or more years of life, the genes that I share with worms (a lot)
and with mold (some), and the atoms that I share with the universe all the
way back to the big bang. So returning to all that isn't so bad. Further,
I will join the company of saints, of all those whose cultural work has
made it possible for me to have been a half-way decent person, and what I
have added to the cultural pool, even when I am long forgotten, will go on
having an influence (unless we become extinct soon, which is also
possible) for a long, perhaps an immeasurable time. As for eternal life,
that is now. If we don't see eternity in a grain of sand, when will we
ever see it. As for resurrection, as Tillich said, dead men don't walk.
But Christ was surely resurrected in the consciousness of his disciples
and is more alive today than the day he was crucified, in the faces of all
those who follow his example and who keep him alive. Many wonder workers
have resurrected the dead. I never understood those who think the truth of
Christianity hinges on the physical resurrection of Jesus. If that is the
test then a lot of nutty religions are also true. Eternal life is here and
now. Christians have hardly come to a consensus on life after death.
Augustine thought we would join the choir of angels in singing an eternal
Hallelujah. Fine with me. But most Americans who believe in life after
death think they will rejoin their dead family members and live happily
ever after. A very modern, bourgeois, kind of afterlife, hardly what
traditional Christians thought. But I have no interest in destroying the
beliefs of others. If thinking one will rejoin one's loved ones helps bear
the pain of death then I'm all for it. I have to look elsewhere, and, with
Heraclitus, declare that life and death are one.
Best,
Bob
posted 8-10-13
8-09-13 - Robert Bellah died unexpectedly last Tuesday night, July
30, a day after coming through heart surgery.
He was a true teacher, and a true friend of the sangha,
with deep appreciation for Shunryu Suzuki.
Bellah's funeral will be held at 2 PM, Tuesday, August 20,
at All Souls Episcopal Parish in Berkeley, with a reception afterward at
the church.
Please come, if you can, and invite others in and around
Zen Center to join us.
The GTU will hold a memorial service for Bob with the UC
Sociology Department this fall, and a related session is being planned for
the annual meetings of the American Academy of Religion in November.
Below is a link to yesterday's NY Times obituary. In
a moment I'll send along a note Bob wrote on the oneness of life and
death, which you can find elaborated online at the UC News Center.
Gratefully,
Steve [Tipton]
NY Times obit on Bellah
cuke
interview with Steve Tipton
Robert Bellah was a good friend to the SF Zen Center. I
was honored to serve on the SFZC board with this wise man back in 1987. -
DC