race

Anti-Patient Anti-Racism Soap Box

Luke 18:1-8

Then Jesus told them a parable about their need to pray always and not to lose heart. He said, “In a certain city there was a judge who neither feared God nor had respect for people. In that city there was a widow who kept coming to him and saying, ‘Grant me justice against my opponent.’ For a while he refused; but later he said to himself, ‘Though I have no fear of God and no respect for anyone, yet because this widow keeps bothering me, I will grant her justice, so that she may not wear me out by continually coming.’”

And the Lord said, “Listen to what the unjust judge says. And will not God grant justice to his chosen ones who cry to him day and night? Will he delay long in helping them? I tell you, he will quickly grant justice to them. And yet, when the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on earth?”


(I seriously considered finding an actual soap box to stand on for this morning’s sermon, which might make sense to some of you in a minute.)

Last week, I preached something about John Lennon and the song “Imagine” – arguably Lennon’s most well-known and most beautiful creation. It’s full of what seem like pie-in-the-sky hopes and dreams about what the world would, could, should be like if humanity could get its act together. “No countries… No possessions… Nothing to kill or die for,” remember. “No need for greed or hunger… A brotherhood of man… All the people sharing all the world, living as one, living in peace…” Yada, yada, yada.

Sadly, it feels like we’ve “yada, yada, yada-d” right over all of that goodness, grace, beauty and hope since then, for lots of reasons.

Since then, I learned about Kanye West going viral for promising – by way of Twitter – to go “death con 3 on Jewish people.”

On Sunday, recordings leaked of the Los Angeles City Council President, Nury Martinez, griping and gossiping on a hot mic about another city council member – a white guy named Mike Bonin who has a Black son. Martinez said something about Bonin treating his Black son like an “accessory” and that the child looked or acted like a monkey.

Then on Tuesday, every family in our school district, right here in New Palestine, got an e-mail letting us know that allegations were made by students and coaches up at Pike High School that one of the girls on our volleyball team had “behaved inappropriately” during a match on the other side of town. If it’s true, this child, took what the LA City Council President did to the next level … she teased, taunted and tried to humiliate her Black peers … to their faces… in public… on their home court, by mimicking a monkey.

Imagine.

“Then Jesus told them a parable about their need to pray always and not to lose heart.”

And then he tells this story about a nagging, persistent, “importunate” widow (that’s what they called her in my grandma’s old Bible, anyway). This widow was nagging and persistent about the justice she craved in ways that weren’t well-received, or welcomed, or respected, or acknowledged, as far as we can tell. Had she been any of those things – well-received, welcomed or respected, I mean – she wouldn’t have had to keep coming back, right? She wouldn’t have had to be such a nag, or so “importunate,” would she?

And she was nagging a judge, looking for justice, even though this particular judge couldn’t have cared any less about her concerns – he neither feared God or had respect for people, we’re told. But he gives her the justice she seeks, just to get her off of his back; just to remove her from his docket; just to get her out of his hair and out of his business.

And Jesus seems to be saying that if a corrupt, uncaring, unjust, faithless judge like that can be made to do the right thing every once in a while, then we should trust and expect the God of all creation to respond with goodness and grace, just the same, and without delay, to the prayers of justice we continue to offer, day after day.

Well, I expect it. I trust it will come. I have faith that God is good for it, in the end. But it’s the delay, that gets me – and Jesus’ suggestion that justice is coming quickly. Which is why I’m here – on my proverbial soap box, which can be pretty awkward and uncomfortable, to be honest – to play the role of the nagging, persistent, importunate widow … yet again … this morning.

See, I get accused of beating this anti-racism stuff into the ground… People wonder if I really need to keep talking about this… People ask me if it really is as much of a problem as I – and others – make it out to be. And this week – from near and far – I was reminded that it is. But if you still don’t believe me…

I would say ask your Jewish friends, neighbors and co-workers what a Tweet like Kanye West’s does to them – especially if they or their children or their neighbor’s children love and listen to his music, which they very likely do. (And then watch that PBS documentary I also mentioned last week called “The US and The Holocaust,” too.)

And I would say listen to the pain in Mike Bonin’s voice – that LA City Councilman with the Black son – when he describes what’s happened to his child and to his family. He said those racist, hateful words about his kid “cut” and they “stung.” And, because he’s a white man, he said, “I know that I can never really know or comprehend or feel the weight of the daily relentless racism, anti-Black racism, that my son is going to face. But man, I know the fire that you feel when someone tries to destroy Black boy joy.” He feels it like a rage, he said.

And I would say listen to those girls up at Pike High School – and their parents – and imagine what it must be like to welcome that ugliness into your own backyard; to become another one of these stories on the evening news, in the local paper, in the ever-present, inescapable world of social media, in which our young people live these days; and to know so many people are going to minimize, dismiss, deflect and doubt the Truth of their experience.

And I would say, imagine what it must feel like to be one of the very few Black kids in our town who has to show up for class tomorrow, after fall break, in light of it all.

And I would suggest that in just these three examples, taken from the local and national news, over the course of just the last week, we see how this sin of racism permeates so many levels and layers of our lives:

Entertainment - and entertainment for and by a younger generation than mine, which we all pretend is supposed to be evolving beyond our racist ways;

Politics - and by a woman … a woman of color, herself … and a Democrat, in arguably the most liberal state of our union, to boot;

Athletics - something as important in the lives of young people and families in our culture as anything, these days;

Education - one place – besides Church – where we would, could and should be teaching our kids more and better and differently about all of this, in my opinion. (And I’m glad to know our schools have been and continue to be working on this, I have to say.)

But it’s everywhere, people. And it’s not going anywhere all on its own. That is clear.

You can’t drive into New Palestine from the east on US 40, or from the west on US 52, without seeing a Confederate flag, many days. There are people who have hung nooses from trees as Halloween decorations in my neighborhood. And there are people who tell me this is not something I need to keep harping on.

So, thinking about today’s Gospel – and Jesus’ parable about our need to pray always and not to lose heart – it seems like all we have left, sometimes, are our prayers and our persistence and whatever hope we can muster when it comes to fighting the racism around us. We keep talking about it. We keep coming forward to acknowledge and educate about it. We keep preaching and teaching and speaking out against it. We stop it when we see it. We don’t allow it to live and move and breathe in our presence for one more moment.

And I’m praying that, if you don’t have the courage or the conviction or the energy; if you don’t have the passion or the patience or the hope enough to be persistent about this injustice from where you sit, that at least you’ll listen to and allow those who do to do their thing. And pray for them, in the meantime…

…so that someone might hear.

… so that those with the power to respond might do something different for a change – whether they want to or understand why or mean it, or not.

… so that justice might be granted, finally.

… so that change will come, finally.

… so that when the Son of Man shows up, he might – finally, finally, finally – find faith on earth.

Amen

Of Whom Shall I Fear?

Matthew 10:24-39

"A disciple is not above the teacher, nor a slave above the master; it is enough for the disciple to be like the teacher, and the slave like the master. If they have called the master of the house Beelzebul, how much more will they malign those of his household! 

"So have no fear of them; for nothing is covered up that will not be uncovered, and nothing secret that will not become known. What I say to you in the dark, tell in the light; and what you hear whispered, proclaim from the housetops. Do not fear those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul; rather fear him who can destroy both soul and body in hell. Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? Yet not one of them will fall to the ground apart from your Father. And even the hairs of your head are all counted. So do not be afraid; you are of more value than many sparrows. 

"Everyone therefore who acknowledges me before others, I also will acknowledge before my Father in heaven; but whoever denies me before others, I also will deny before my Father in heaven. 

"Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth; I have not come to bring peace, but a sword. For I have come to set a man against his father, and a daughter against her mother, and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law; and one's foes will be members of one's own household. Whoever loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me; and whoever loves son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me; and whoever does not take up the cross and follow me is not worthy of me. Those who find their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake will find it.


There are any number of directions to take a message based on today’s gospel text, but what I felt most compelled to address are Jesus’ words about fear. 

The concept of fear was present to my family in several instances over a 12-hour period this week. The first example happened as I read to my children before bed. We are reading the book Woodsong by Gary Paulsen, about his experiences with sled dogs and the Iditarod race. The first couple chapters include several accounts of fear, particularly his account of a doe being chased by a pack of wolves and his story about the time he threw a stick at a bear and nearly lost his life when that bear attacked him. His writing on fear is gripping and palpable. 

Next there was the case of my child who could not fall asleep. By midnight a sobbing boy was admitting to us that the reason he could not sleep was that he was afraid of something. Perhaps out of shame or embarrassment, he initially didn’t want to tell us what he was afraid of. I tried to explain to him that the way our fears get out of control is when we fail to put words to them and keep them locked inside us. Eventually he told us what he was afraid of...and no, it wasn’t anything to do with the Gary Paulsen book we had read together (which was my first assumption). His specific fear is not important to the story, but suffice to say I think it helped for him to tell us about his fear. 

The next morning, during a family walk through the woods at Southeastway Park, my other son jumped over a large stick stretched across the path and screamed as he landed on the other side. What he noticed, while in mid-air, was that the large stick he was jumping over was actually a large snake! Not only was he terrified and shocked from the sight of a snake (an experience I know all too well and have struggled with my whole life), but now that snake was separating him from the safety of his family, as he was not about to jump over the snake again. 

In some respects, these experiences with fear are minor. Certainly there are other things in the world more terrifying than snakes or the thoughts that pop in our heads as we try to sleep. But on the other hand, fear is fear. You can’t experience only a little bit of fear. There isn’t a spectrum to fear as we feel it pulse through our bodies. And we cannot look objectively or rationalize our fear in the moment. The work of teaching ourselves how to overcome fear has to be done preemptively. 

It is tempting to think that the way to deal with fear is to avoid the experiences about which we know we are afraid. For example, my family could stop walking through the woods to avoid more snakes; much the same way that I have avoided swimming or surfing in the ocean because I’m terrified (and convinced) I would get attacked by a shark. This is far from an ideal solution. Not only does it end up limiting one’s life experiences but it’s entirely impractical to most situations. For example, I don’t think it would be in anyone’s interest for my son to avoid going to sleep ever again! 

Jesus never taught his disciples the ways of fear-avoidance. He did not comfort them with the words, “Do only what makes you comfortable, for as long as you follow me you will have a safe life.” Instead, Jesus warned his disciples that to follow him meant to make the same enemies as him, to endure the same afflictions and punishments as him, and to ultimately lose their life like him. Jesus’ command for his disciples to not be afraid is less an invitation to avoid fear than it is to run headlong into the things they think would be terrifying and have faith that God’s ultimate goodness will prevail through it all.

Jesus instructs his followers that the ones who profess to have power in the world have only the illusion of power. These illusions of power will be uncovered and exposed in the light of the gospel. Jesus says it would be right to fear only one thing: the one who wields absolute power over our soul and our body--that is, God; but even God is not to be feared because the one who wields absolute power over our soul and body will never harm us. Never ever...for we are too valuable. God is not in the business of destroying what God has created and redeemed. 

The quote “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself” doesn’t belong to Jesus, but it is a Christ-affirmed conviction nonetheless. Only fear will prevent us from following in the footsteps of the Christ. Only fear will prevent us from sharing the good news of God’s redemption of all creation. Only fear will prevent us from seeing our diverse brothers and sisters as God’s children. Only fear will prevent us from critiquing the systems and structures that diminish peoples’ livelihoods and claim their very lives. Those systems and structures do not have ultimate divinely-ordained power and therefore we should not fear them. 

The three examples of fear I mentioned earlier are not the only ways in which I have learned about fear lately. I have also gleaned much from the work of African-American professor, author, activist, and theologian Howard Thurman and his book published in 1949 titled Jesus and the Disinherited.

In his chapter on the topic of fear, he posits that fear prevents us from having a meaningful and formative answer to the question at the core of each person’s life, which is: “Who am I?” He explains, 

“There are few things more devastating than to have it burned into you that you do not count and that no provisions are made for the literal protection of your person. The threat of violence is ever present, and there is no way to determine precisely when it may come crashing down upon you...The underprivileged in any society are the victims of a perpetual war of nerves” (29).

I don’t know what it is like to be underprivileged in society. My answer to the question “Who am I?” has not been shaped by the fear of violence against me or my people. But even for the underprivileged who live assaulted by the perpetual war of nerves, Howard Thurman insists The answer to “Who am I?” has to point to God. His grandmother, who was enslaved in Florida, would recount to him the constant message from the preacher of secret religious meetings who would triumphantly proclaim, “You–you are not slaves. You are God’s children.” 

Howard Thurman goes on to write, “This [identity in God] established for them the ground of personal dignity, so that a profound sense of personal worth could absorb the fear reaction. This alone is not enough, but without it, nothing else is of value” (39-40). In other words, only after a person understands they are inherently valued and cared for by God, can they then demand, bravely, in the face of oppression, to be treated by others as a child of God…which is exactly what is happening throughout the world right now.

My friends, God commissions you to be the beautiful hands and feet of Christ that bear the good news for all people that they are God’s beloved children. As we see throughout history, and still today, too many people stand in direct opposition of this inclusive message. But do not fear in your proclamation of the good news. Nothing is more important for God’s followers today, than to be fearless. To borrow the words of Howard Thurman once more, “Nothing less than a great daring in the face of overwhelming odds can achieve the inner security in which fear cannot possibly survive” (45). 

May you be fearless in your proclamation of the good news. Amen.