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Psalm 20 and the Massey Mining Disaster

Posted: 05/19/10 09:29 PM ET

On Monday, I read through psalm after psalm searching for the "right" one to read at the opening of the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) protest near the Massey Energy shareholders meeting. The search took a while because there were too many choices -- too many psalms that spoke directly to the anger, frustration, and betrayal felt by mine workers who've watched 52 fellow miners killed in Massey Energy coal mines over the last ten years, 29 of them in the April 5 disaster at Upper Branch Mine in Montcoal, West Virginia.

The one I finally chose was Psalm 20, verses 1-8. It reads:

May the Lord answer you when you are in distress; may the name of the God of Jacob protect you.

May he send you help from the sanctuary and grant you support from Zion.

May he remember all your sacrifices and accept your burnt offerings.

May he give you the desires of your heart and make all your plans succeed.

We will shout for joy when you are victorious and will lift up our banners in the name of our God.

May the Lord grant all your requests.

Now I know that the Lord saves his anointed; he answers him from his holy heaven with the saving power of his right hand.

Some trust in chariots and some in horses, but we trust in the name of the Lord our God.

They are brought to their knees and fall, but we rise up and stand firm.

Mine workers are in distress. How could they not be? More than 100,000 miners have lost their lives digging coal from the ground. Another 100,000 have died from lung diseases caused by working in the mines. When companies like Massey, with over 500 health and safety citations and orders in the last year, is allowed to continue operating, workers are distressed. Workers cry out to God to see them in their distress.

The desires of the hearts of the men and women who converged on the Massey shareholders' meeting was clear: fire Massey's CEO, Don Blankenship. Blankenship, who earned $19.7 million in 2008 for his outrageous health and safety record, was clear on his priorities. When confronted with health and safety problems that needed to be addressed, he told the supervisors to "run coal." Forget the workers safety, run coal. And run coal he did, resulting in 29 miners' deaths.

The miners wanted action. They wanted Blankenship fired. To do this, they organized votes opposing the three board members up for re-election. In the meeting, the company refused to report the actual vote count, but it appears that the vote is one of the largest votes against current board members held at a shareholders meeting this year. Blankenship may not have been fired -- yet. But the shareholders have sent a strong message of discontent.

The psalm says that "some trust in chariots, and some in horses." Some trust in BMWs and mega-mansions. CEO Blankenship clearly cared more for bottom-line short-term profits than he did for workers' safety.

The mine workers clearly see themselves as the ones who trust in God. They hope Blankenship will be brought to his knees and that they, the miners of this nation, will rise up and stand firm.

Throughout the morning, as we waited outside the shareholders meeting, alternating between chanting UMWA slogans and chit-chatting with one another, miners came up to me and shared their favorite Scriptures of how God is with the little guy and will bring down the rich and powerful, like Blankenship.

When UMWA President Cecil Roberts spoke to the crowd, he likened United Mine Workers of America members to the Israelites confronting Pharaoh, clearly personified in Blankenship. The Biblical imagery is fitting for this struggle. The righteousness of the miners' cause is evident even if you only know a little about Massey's history. The Book of Psalms is jam-packed with prayers or songs offering clear themes of oppressed people, calling out for God's help, and claiming victory of the downtrodden over the rich and haughty.

If you want to help workers, connect with the local Interfaith Worker Justice affiliate in your community (consult the national directory). The Scriptures are clear in their support for the downtrodden and offer clear warnings to the wealthy and powerful. Psalm 20 speaks to the issues at Massey, but hundreds of others psalms and passages would have worked as well. No wonder the choice was hard.

 
 
 
On Monday, I read through psalm after psalm searching for the "right" one to read at the opening of the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) protest near the Massey Energy shareholders meeting. The s...
On Monday, I read through psalm after psalm searching for the "right" one to read at the opening of the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) protest near the Massey Energy shareholders meeting. The s...
 
 
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01:15 PM on 05/22/2010
May he give you the desires of your heart and make all your plans succeed.

Seems god is blind to BP and their plans. Maybe big oil isn't so christian after all.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
rf dude
Just an average Man of Bronze
10:48 PM on 05/21/2010
Similar sign outside the Vatican Embassy in Washington: " Pray for our Minors"...
;;
05:46 PM on 05/21/2010
Bucket - you are a professional writer then?
08:52 AM on 05/22/2010
Awww... Hell no...

I had a REAL job. Field Service Technician. IT Networking and junk.

The company I worked for... well you can't spell the words CheAP... or CrAP... without them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
noeffect
12:09 PM on 05/21/2010
Since it's now a page down, I thought I'd repost a reply I made to "financemajor."

@ financemajor: Why does it not surprise me, even a little bit, that you appear to fancy yourself Christian and yet child labor "doesn't affect you in any way."

Further, you appear to have no problem with the commoditizing of human life in the service of corporate efficiency in spite of a New Testament which tells you to abjure the accumulation of wealth and to help the poor. The command to help the poor only appears some forty times or so. It's probably not important.

Perhaps the poor can lap up the blood that trickles out from under your future business endeavors, and that will help them. You should fit right in, in the C street house.
07:08 AM on 05/24/2010
Dear noeffect.

I am delighted to see you, my friend, scolding bigoted religionists who value rituals and dogma more than reason and human rights.
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kadene
wordsmith
10:47 PM on 05/20/2010
To each his own. I like the poetry of Ecclesiastes and the Song of Solomon. And sometimes I read Shakespeare, Aexander Pope, Edward Thomas or T.S. Eliot.
10:15 PM on 05/20/2010
Really? That's the psalm you chose? A bunch of fanciful garble in an attempt to salve the soul? For real? How about something other than ridiculous religious imagery that someone can actually grasp onto in this time of grief and terrible injustice instead of a bunch of angels and trumpets and rainbows and unicorns and a bunch of 'may all your dreams come true' nonsense? Seriously.
06:40 PM on 05/20/2010
I wonder, did your verse bring any of the dead back?
These miners would do better to go on a national strike until mines are made safe, and the lawbreakers are not fined, but put in jail.
05:38 PM on 05/20/2010
"Religion is regarded by the common man as true, the wise man as false, and the rulers as useful."

~Seneca the Younger 4 b.c.- 65 a.d
05:15 PM on 05/20/2010
No CEO seems to have much a conscience about anything. Collectively, they have the traits of a psychopath. That's the reason they do so well. Same with many of our publicly elected officials. They use the name of God as they go about their atrocities.
03:30 PM on 05/20/2010
Warned told thousands of years ago, are we now in our labor pains, if so this is nothing yet. I love all and pray for all, for all have been dearly loved.
03:28 PM on 05/20/2010
Mans own greed destroy mankind and the earth, all the natural resources we need to just exist upon it. Earth was created first to, nourish the needs and care for man, then man was created to cultivate and care for the earth. Both earth and man are to serve one another. If not and greed steps in for self interest, both earth and man are destroyed. For one does not exist without the other. Sad sad man causes his own suffering and down fall, we destroy ourselves. All is pure greed. Like Issiah said. Shepherds dogs, never have enough.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
03:26 PM on 05/20/2010
Since I make political contributions in the shadow of the valley of the regulator, I shall fear no sanction.
03:23 PM on 05/20/2010
Just my opinion, such men are called sons of darkness whom in the end the greatest battle war will be won by God not any man. For he says he is coming with his heavenly hosts to do the final battle against the sons of darkness. Greed is the real enemy against man kind. Why all great empires Nations fell since the beginning of time. because of greed, jealousy, their wars, they all forgot God is first in all things. We were to live off the land. Never was about making money or the products produced, all are idols. Human beings for thousands of generations lived without oil cars etc Told beware of idols, for we become slaves to them all.
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gal416
is a Bible verse † † †
01:37 PM on 05/20/2010
The path of the righteous man is beset on all sides by the iniquities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men. Blessed is he, who in the name of charity and good will, shepherds the weak through the valley of darkness, for he is truly his brother's keeper and the finder of lost children. And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who would attempt to poison and destroy my brothers. And you will know my name is the Lord when I lay my vengeance upon thee.

Jules from Pulp Fiction
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JM817
12:28 PM on 05/20/2010
Maybe as more and more of these kinds of tragedies occur (unfortunately), Americans may yet remember why their grandparents formed unions and struggled mightily for the right to do so.
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12:52 AM on 05/23/2010
Amen!