Photography as a Spiritual Practice: Lewis Hines

Photography as a Spiritual Practice: Lewis Hines

“He arrived at the coal mines, textile mills, and industrial factories dressed in a three-piece suit. He was just a humble Bible salesman, he claimed, who wanted to spread the good word to the laborers inside. What Lewis Hines actually wanted was to take photos of those laborers—and show the world what it looked like when children were put to work.”—Jessica Contrera, “The Searing Photos That Helped End Child Labor in America” in The Washington Post (9/3/2018).

This important article by Jessica Contrera in The Washington Post reminds us how art can change the world. Most of us know the story. Hines was a photographer in the early 1900s who photographed the horrendous working conditions of young children laboring in mines, factories, and any business that employed unskilled workers. He could enter these places by saying he was a Bible salesman!

Our hearts break when we see these young girls and boys, slightly older than toddlers, working long shifts in dangerous conditions. Their faces are dull. There are few smiles. They were, in essence, slave labor.

I love seafood, but almost every time I eat oysters, I see this childish girl photographed by Hines of maybe six or seven, with her yellow hair pulled back, standing on a stool to reach the table to shuck oysters with the older women. If you have ever shucked oysters, you know it is a dirty task that sprays mud all over you and includes the hazard of cuts from a slip of the oyster knife. It is not an easy job for adults, much less for children.

Oyster shells form the floor of the bleak room. The young girl’s apron is almost as big as she is. We do not see her face. That might be too much to bear. We do observe the women’s faces—perhaps relatives—working beside her. They look older than their presumed ages, with hapless expressions on their faces.

Photographic exposure to such scenes mobilizes our country and leads to labor laws for children. Hines not only shares dramatic pictures of children doing dangerous tasks, even for adults, but he also reveals the children’s ages and tells us their stories. For example, Hines’ story that accompanies this image is of “seven-year-old Rosie. Regular shucker. Her second year at it. Illiterate. Works all day. Only shucks a few pots a day. Varn & Platt Canning Co., Bluffton, South Carolina, published February 1913” (Library of Congress Photographs Online Catalog).

Hines’ work reminds us that art, photography, music, writing, and stories are as influential as guns and cannons in the revolutions of history. So when I talk to people about how they want to change the world, I remind them of how this one person with one camera and maybe a Bible in hand made a difference.

We are not all Lewis Hines, but we have been created with talents that can make a difference in others’ lives just as he did—with no threat of violence.

We discover and activate the difference we can make by connecting to the Christ within us and the Christ in our neighbor. We become the person God created us to be and lead others to help our neighbors become the people God created them to be.

Joanna. https://www.joannaseibert.com/

 

 

 

 

 

God Callings

God Callings

“The many things we have to do, the hundred and one calls on our time and attention, don’t get between ourselves and God. On the contrary, they are to us in truth, his Body and his Blood.”—H. A. Williams in The Joy of God (Templegate, 1992).

Mary, Martha, Lazarus, and Jesus

Well, this is a novel idea! Of course, we anticipate the quiet time when we will write, walk, or practice Centering Prayer during the day. Still, our interactions with people during the day and at work are as much a part of our relationship with God!

The God within us is meeting with the God in our neighbor or the patients we work with, our co-workers or partners, the children we teach, or our fellow students. This is like turning on a switch in our brains. Our life is not divided into parts. Every part of our being is an offering. Every second, every hour, is an opportunity to share the love we have been so freely given. We should tape this Williams quote to the back of our cell phones to read whenever we get that last-minute phone call just as we leave our office.

My experience has been that such calls actually become some of the most important ones we receive. It could be a novel idea to imagine God is calling each time.

Such awareness is a blending of the doing and the being aspects of our lives, our Martha and Mary parts. Perhaps we are called into a state of being; at other times, we are led to concentrate on doing. Williams asks us to consider both of these states as offerings to God.

I wonder if Jesus’ story of his visit to Mary and Martha would have been different if Martha had believed her doing was just as important, but not more important, than Mary’s being?

Joanna. https://www.joannaseibert.com/

 

Nouwen: Beloved for All Eternity

Nouwen: Beloved for All Eternity

“God loved you before you were born. God will love you after you die. God says, ‘I have loved you with an everlasting love.’ You belong to God from eternity to eternity. Life is just a little opportunity during a few years to say, ‘I love you, too.’”—Henri Nouwen in You Are the Beloved: Daily Meditations for Spiritual Living (Convergent Books, 2017).

Nouwen reminds us that we were loved before our birth and will be loved after we die. Love never dies. We brought love into the world, and we have the opportunity to enlarge and multiply it and give thanks for it. Yet, in some mysterious way, we also leave part of love behind and take love with us when we die.

Love is the inheritance, the legacy we leave behind in the world. Death has no power over love. If only we could keep remembering that our true vocation on this earth is to love: to let members of our family know they are loved; to let our neighbors know they are loved; to let those in our city, those in our state, those in our country, and those in our world know they are loved. This is a monumental job, but we will be given daily times and places to do this. Love may not always be on our agenda, but we will find opportunities to respond if we are open to it. David G. Benner1 calls this awareness enlightenment—seeing with the eyes of the heart. He also believes this is a gift of the Spirit readily available to all.

Because of some of my mobility issues, I now sit in a special elevated chair. Some of the fantastic people I work with at my church made a sign for my chair to let me know that I will always have a reserved place, and that we are all still loved even, with our handicaps. I treasure their act of love and share it and pass their act of love on to you.

1 David G. Benner Spirituality and the Awakening Self: The Sacred Journey of Transformation (Brazos Press, 2012), pp. 144-146.

Joanna   https://www.joannaseibert.com/