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Faith & Spirit Quote by Wynton Marsalis

"When did we begin to lose faith in our ability to effect change?"

About this Quote

Marsalis frames despair as a historical development, not a natural condition. The question doesn’t just mourn a loss of hope; it indicts the moment we started treating powerlessness as sophistication. “When did we begin” implies a collective drift, a cultural habit picked up gradually: cynicism dressed as realism, resignation marketed as maturity. It’s a musician’s move, too - the kind of line you can riff on, because it invites a call-and-response. He’s not giving a lecture; he’s setting up a groove for accountability.

The phrase “faith in our ability” is doing double duty. Faith suggests something more than data or strategy; it’s the psychological fuel that makes action thinkable before it’s provably effective. Marsalis isn’t naïve about change being hard. He’s pointing at the precondition for any progress: the belief that our choices matter. Once that belief erodes, politics becomes spectator sport, community becomes branding, and activism becomes content.

Context matters. Marsalis has long argued for jazz as a civic practice: disciplined improvisation, individual voice inside shared structure. In that worldview, agency isn’t a slogan; it’s rehearsal. You show up, you listen, you respond, you build something that didn’t exist a moment ago. The subtext is sharp: if we’ve lost faith, we didn’t just misplace it. We were taught to trade it for comfort, convenience, and the addictive relief of thinking nothing can be done. Marsalis is asking us to name the transaction - and reverse it.

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When Did We Begin to Lose Faith in Our Ability to Effect Change
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Wynton Marsalis (born October 18, 1961) is a Musician from USA.

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