Read this reflection then view video below
Discussions on race and white supremacy will continue to be difficult until both Black and white people realize they are infected by the disease of white supremacy.
Discussions on race and white supremacy will continue to be difficult until both Black and white people realize they are infected by the disease of white supremacy.
While the disease impacts each VERY
differently, the humanity of both continues to be debilitated as this corrosive
evil denies the omnipresent God within Black people who like white people are
created in the image of God.
To dismantle the ravages of this
disease (white supremacy), it will take courage from white Christians to do
some soul searching and began to reevaluate their understanding of God, Jesus
and the Gospel. All too often "well meaning" white Christians – even
clergy sound more like a political party than the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
Jesus doesn't accept injustice
enacted against God's creation, Jesus doesn't sleep with and isn't in cahoots
with the Empire! Jesus doesn't attempt
to gain favor with the political or powerful oligarchs; rather, Jesus disrupts
and challenges their actions and points them to the Kingdom of God!
Jesus' purpose (salvation plan)
isn't to leave people dreaming about a heaven in the sky while living in hell
on earth – Jesus modeled his intention – "thy
(God's) will be done on earth as it is in heaven". Do Christians believe that God's heaven is
racially divided? Will God have lesser kingdoms in heaven for the poor and
oppressed? Will God have a portion of heaven for people having darker pigmentation or those in
lesser white robes to dwell?
Seemingly, God works through
those who believe in a Gospel of inclusiveness to bring about love, justice,
mercy, grace and a restored Hope in God. God created human beings in the image
of God with the purpose of Oneness. We the human family were destined to live entangled in the oneness of love – loving God and each other in Shalom. Shalom meaning
peace but more importantly the absence of war, the absence of injustice, and the absence of violence
(spiritual, physical, emotional).
Yet, this oneness is
evidently anemic in the church, in culture and throughout society.
Certainly, anyone even with
limited awareness knows we live in a divided world of despair vs, prosperity,
white vs. Black, rich vs. poor, white privilege vs. discarded, Christian vs. Muslim,
American vs, Other, Christopher Columbus vs. Terrorist, quality education vs. denied education,
prison vs. college, and minimum wage vs. the top 1%, among others.
How do Christians reconcile this world with the one Jesus speaks? Jesus says: "The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly" (John 10:10).
How do Christians reconcile this world with the one Jesus speaks? Jesus says: "The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly" (John 10:10).
The continued silence
of Christians on issues of
oppression and white supremacy emboldens the
thief.
While it's normative (in American
culture) to accept that Christopher Columbus discovered "occupied
land" but once reevaluated and examined, its validity is rejected as a lie. Thus, everyone is challenged to embrace the truth that Native people (already residents of the
land) were terrorized and are victims of genocide. Hence, "the
thief" is exposed limiting the ability to kill, steal and destroy
people (the image of God).
If all people are created in the
image of God, through evaluating how we love and treat one another, we discover that
we are often an enemy – a murderer of God. As we are awakened, hatred and vitriol against
Blacks and other people groups ceases and becomes unacceptable because it's not
of God!
How can we say we follow and love Jesus, when we participate in,
condone and even promote systems that oppress people
(created by God in the
image of God) whom God loves?
So why will it take courage from
white Christians? Admitting the existence of a pernicious system of which one
is a willing or unwilling benefactor is borne only through courage.
Furthermore, courage is imperative to expose the system of white supremacy and
requires reexamining history and the Gospel from the margins versus from
privilege.
For instance, how would one
understand: "We hold these truths to
be self-evident that all men are created equal that they are endowed by their
Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and
the pursuit of Happiness" (Declaration of Independence), if you were a
Black person and it's illegal for you to vote and you are are denied access to home ownership (even present day attempts continue to circumvent said Rights)?
Upon reading Jesus say: “Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one
of the least of these who are members of my family,*you did it to me” (Matthew
25:40, 31-45), how would one respond to issues of race, poverty, and justice (i.e.
prison industrial complex) in a society that "thingafies" Black people and poor people as monsters and takers, thereby labeling them the Least of our
great Union?
To experience Shalom – not just
peace – but the absence of war/injustice, courage is required and re-imagining
the world through God's point of view. If
white Christians are stirred by courage, the disease of white supremacy can be
cured/eradicated resulting with Black people, Brown people, Native people, White
people, Yellow people – all people healed and restored in the image of God, [perfect(ed) love].
But let justice roll down like waters,
and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream.
If we fail to develop courage –
the image of God is endangered!
“Courage,
do not stumble…
Perish
policy and cunning,
Perish all that fears the light!
Whether losing, whether winning,
Trust in God and do the right.
Trust no party, sect, or faction;
Trust no leaders in the fight;
Put in every word or action…
Perish all that fears the light!
Whether losing, whether winning,
Trust in God and do the right.
Trust no party, sect, or faction;
Trust no leaders in the fight;
Put in every word or action…
Trust in God, trust in God,
Trust in God and do the right.”
Trust in God and do the right.”
--
INSPIRED BY LOVE,
Pastor Marcus J. Singleton
Pastor Singleton@gmail.com
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