
By: Jim Taylor
This weekend, we will be treated - if that's the
right word - to endless coverage of the Oscars. We've already had the Golden
Globe awards, the Genies, and the East Coast Music awards. Western Music awards
and television Emmies are, mercifully, not due until
fall. The Juno awards will be presented April 1.
Do you ever get
the feeling that if what you're doing doesn't qualify for some kind of an
award, it's not worth trying?
A few months ago,
Joan and I went to a piano recital by Sarah Davis Beuchner,
a native of the
In that context,
we were clearly applauding the performer.
About a year
earlier, I listened to massed choirs performing J.S. Bach's St. Matthew
Passion, considered one of the greatest sacred choral works ever composed. I
didn't enjoy it as much as Gershwin - the multiple melodic lines felt like a
wall of sound falling on me.
But I was
overwhelmed with awe at an intellect that could hold all those elements in his
mind and weave them together at the end.
In that context,
we were applauding the virtuosity of the composer.
We have awards for
arts. We have awards for science. We have awards for sports.
Why, I wonder, do
we not have any awards for life? For outstanding examples of what it means to
live life fully, sensitively, compassionately, neither being a steamroller nor
a doormat?
It's not the same
thing as the Nobel Peace Prize, although a number of winners might qualify -
the Dalai Lama, Desmond Tutu, Dag Hammerskold.
But
not all of them. Mother Theresa of
And certainly the
recent nomination of Rush Limbaugh would not qualify. Limbaugh, in case you
missed it on his syndicated broadcasts, claims that women didn't do as well as
men on multiple-choice tests, because God gave Eve a choice "between
multiple choice or multiple orgasms."
He also declared,
"Feminism was established to allow unattractive women easier access to the
mainstream of society."
And in case you're
thinking he limited his scorn to women: "Why should Blacks be heard?
They're 12% of the population. Who the hell cares?"
Most of us will
never excel in chemistry or mathematics, in literature or drama - let alone in
insults. We will never be Oscar Peterson or Meryl Streep.
But every one of
us has the opportunity to live our own lives to the best of our ability -
bringing out the finest in ourselves and in those around us.
Maybe we need an
award that celebrates something we can all emulate in our own small corner of
the world - virtuosity in living.
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Copyright © 2007 by Jim Taylor. Non-profit use in congregations and study
groups permitted; all other rights reserved.
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