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A Call To Remember

5/30/2020

4 Comments

 
PictureThe National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery, Alabama, built by the Equal Justice Initiative to commemorate the victims of lynchings in the United States.
The events unfolding in Minneapolis and other cities around the country this week in response to the death of George Floyd, and following on the deaths of Ahmaud Arbery and Breonna Taylor have reignited arguments over racism and justice in our society.  As we have seen before, while these debates will capture our attention for a brief intensity, all too quickly we will return to our “regularly scheduled programming”…until the next time.  That is to say, we as a people are quick to forget, and this goes for both our recent history as well as our deeper history.  Scripture frequently enjoins us to “remember” and so in that vein, I would like to call to our remembrance some of our story that I believe will shed light on our present strife.

Before I entered seminary, I pursued a career in history and realized that my teenage hobby (yes I was a nerd) was a powerful tool for understanding the world around me and not just useful for keeping up on “Jeopardy”.  The reason is that studying the past can reveal the cause-and-effect chain of events that created the present we currently inhabit.  Following my foray into history, I completed a seminary degree and realized that the gospel that proclaims the possibility of my individual salvation also proclaims a reclamation and restoration of this fallen world with all of its systems and institutions by Jesus when he establishes the Kingdom of God.  This means the mission of the church is not just about saving individual souls, but about testifying to the redemption of societies, institutions, and cultures.

Remember: God Has Always Cared About Systemic Injustice and Abuse of Power

At this point, I know some of you will be concerned that I am pursuing a “social justice” agenda that distracts from the gospel.  Let me be clear that I am not doing that.  I am pursuing a return to a gospel that is not so distracted by a focus on individual spirituality that it is distracted from issues of social justice that are central to its work.  When God redeemed Israel from slavery in Egypt, it was a response to systemic injustice.  God’s redemption had as its focal point the giving of a law that created a standard for a just society for the people to establish.  When the people failed to adhere to that standard, a monarchy was instituted to establish justice and when the kings failed to uphold it, prophets were sent to decry the injustice they saw.  Often the prophets were calling people to account not for things they had personally done, but things which their society had done around them or which previous generations had done.  When the prophets were killed by the kings and their religious-political establishment, God ended the existence of Israel as a political entity in exile but promised to establish a new kingdom under a true “Messiah” (anointed one).

On the eve of the appearance of that Messiah, John came proclaiming repentance and once again confronted those in power, kings and priests, with their exploitation of the people based in part on their ethnic identity (“do not say to yourselves, ‘We have Abraham as our father’”) and called tax collectors and soldiers to cease their abuse of power as a condition of their baptism.  Then when Jesus appeared on the scene he echoed John’s message of repentance and proclaimed that his kingdom was good news for the poor, the prisoner, the blind and the oppressed.  In his ministry he consistently pushed against the powerful (priests and kings) and was ultimately killed because after his demonstration against systematized extortion in the temple, they feared losing “their place and their nation”.  The subsequent history of the early church shows a concern for justice and equity and a pursuit of unity and equality between Jews and Gentiles that had never been seen before, as a hallmark of the effectiveness of Jesus’ work on the cross.

So the gospel speaks consistently and directly to societal and systemic ills and injustices with the redemptive power of the cross and the resurrection.  Such ills and injustices do not arise overnight but are the product of histories.  So for instance, Hitler did not create anti-semitism in Germany and persuade otherwise justice-minded people to slaughter 6 million of their neighbors.  He built on centuries of prejudice, hate and injustice.  Likewise, when people of color in America experience injustice, it is not an isolated incident of lone racists, it is the residue of a legacy that has not been dealt with.  

If we would see an end to these events, we must remember and deal redemptively with our past.  That begins with telling the truth about it.  As someone who grew up in the white evangelical church, I have come to realize that I was not always told the whole truth about this country’s past.  So let me briefly recount some of the salient points as it pertains to what we see taking place around us today.

Remember: Our Global and National History Is Stained
Over 500 years ago the first Europeans arrived in North and South America with a belief, fully endorsed by the church, that they were permitted by God to lay claim to any lands inhabited by non-Christians.  Over the subsequent 3 centuries, all of these two continents were under the control of various European monarchs as colonies to be exploited for the good of the mother countries in Europe.  The original inhabitants were slaughtered, enslaved, pushed aside onto barely inhabitable lands, or, most commonly, died of disease brought by the Europeans.  In any other context we would call this unjust conquest and genocide.  In our history books it is the “age of exploration and colonization”.

With the demise of the native populations, Europeans began kidnapping and bringing Africans to their American colonies to provide labor.  Over the 300 years of the Atlantic slave trade, an estimated 12 million Africans were kidnapped and put aboard slave ships.  Ten percent of them perished on the journey and the other 10 million served as slaves on plantations from Argentina to Delaware.  They were classified as chattel and could be bought or sold at a whim, any children born to them were also property of their owners and there were few laws governing their treatment and even fewer that were enforced.  Again, all of this was with the church misusing Scripture to justify these practices.


When Britain’s colonies secured independence (following a war that was precipitated by rioting against unjust British laws and policies that led to martial law and armed rebellion), they enshrined in their founding documents a racial caste system in which non-whites counted as 3/5 of a person and indigenous peoples counted not at all.  Slavery persisted, and native Americans saw more and more of their lands taken as the U.S. expanded, conquering and acquiring territory through war and purchase until it reached the Pacific Ocean.  This was in pursuit of what was termed "Manifest Destiny" an idea that often had religious overtones and was seen as a divine mission that America was pursuing as part of God's work.
 

While slavery ended following the Civil War, it was replaced by an unjust economic and legal system (known as Jim Crow) that eventually prompted 6 million African-Americans to migrate to the North and West between 1915 and 1970.  It has been observed that migration is the last desperate recourse of people experiencing hardship.  These were refugees within our own borders.  The socially sanctioned violence of lynching propped up the economic and legal system and resulted in at least 4,000 public murders between 1880-1940.  Upon arriving in cities in the North and West, riots of white people against their arrival were common.  Of special note are the Tulsa riots of May 31-June 1, 1921 in which black residents and businesses were attacked by white mobs on the ground and from the air resulting in dozens of deaths, thousands injured and 35 city blocks of what had been known as “Black Wall Street” being destroyed.
 

The Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and 60s sought to address these injustices and saw some legislation passed, but was often controversial and either ignored or outright opposed by white churches.  In the minds of many white people, this is where the story ends.  Laws were passed that assured African-Americans of their rights, so the problem had supposedly been solved.  Any racism present today is in individual hearts and cannot be attributed to the system and certainly cannot have anything to do with me.  Yet in spite of the legislation of the 1960s, African-Americans continue to experience drastically different outcomes economically and in the legal system.  Metrics like home ownership, unemployment and sentencing and incarceration rates are staggeringly disproportionate in favor of whites.

When I ask why this is, there are certainly policy components that must be considered.  But given what I see in Scripture and as I consider our history, there is striking reality that I am confronted with.  Racism is a deeply embedded national and generational sin of which our country has been guilty.  It has never repented in any meaningful way or acknowledged the scandal that this sin represents.  There is a spiritual root to our current strife that must be addressed.  If there is doubt that this is the case, consider a few things.  We have a national monument in our nation’s capital to mark Germany’s crime of the Holocaust.  It is a deeply moving experience to visit it and to confront the horror of that unspeakable outrage.  Yet we have no national monument anywhere to the equally unspeakable horrors that have been visited on Native Americans or African-Americans by our forebears.  Consider also, the flag that was a symbol of armed rebellion against the government is accorded honor in many parts of the country, even until recently flying over the Capitols of some states.  Furthermore, three states still observe “Robert E. Lee Day” on the same day as MLK Day, celebrating as a hero someone who any rational person would have to consider as a traitor, leading an armed rebellion against the government.  Meanwhile, when athletes symbolically protested police brutality against African-Americans by kneeling during the national anthem, they were derided as unpatriotic.  

Clearly, we have not reckoned adequately with our history when these realities exist side by side.
I am not suggesting that erecting a national monument would solve our struggles related to the sin of racism in this country.  Nor am I in a position to call on Congress to commission such a project, although I would certainly approve of them doing it.  My point is that such a monument would reflect a nation that had reckoned with its past in a serious and meaningful way.  We memorialize what matters to us and what we memorialize speaks volumes about us as a people.  The people of God throughout the Old Testament, when they experienced God’s redemptive acts, or dealt with national sin, often built monuments to remember the occasion throughout their generations.

Remember: The Church Is (or Should Be) The Monument
What I am suggesting is that the church itself is designed to be a monument to remember the redemptive work of God in Christ and to showcase that sin has been dealt with.  The New Testament speaks of the church as a temple being built to the glory of God.  Specifically, in Ephesians Paul says that the existence of a church, being made up of reconciled Jews and Gentiles, serves as a witness to the “powers and principalities” that the work of God in Christ has undone the systems that held humans in bondage to hatred and violence.  

So the question is, does the church, as presently constituted in America, bear witness to that reality?  I would answer that it does not.
So I am suggesting that the church strive to become such a monument to grace.  We can, by God’s spirit, deal truthfully with our past, no longer forgetting our national sins, but bringing them into the light so that they no longer have dominion over us.  We can, by God’s power, see a church emerge that is united by faith, rather than divided by race.  This is not just about where we attend on Sunday, but who we identify with and listen to.  In God’s view there is a single church in America (and indeed the world).  Who are the historic African-American Christian figures you are aware of or have learned from?  If we know of Edwards and Finney and Graham, are we equally acquainted with Richard Allen (founder of the AME church), Sojourner Truth (Methodist abolitionist and advocate for women’s rights), and William Seymour (leader of the Azusa Street revivals)?  Who are the spiritual siblings of color we are listening to and learning from in fellowship today?

We, the church, are a people formed by the one who came proclaiming a message of repentance and forgiveness of sins.  Repentance means agreeing with God about our rebellions and crimes against the just society we are meant to live in in God’s world and turning from them to seek the good of our neighbors.  Until our nation can confront its past, seeking God’s forgiveness and renewal, we will continue to see events like these unfold.  
As a church we need to remember, call our nation to remembrance, and experience God’s redemption that will leave us as a monument to his grace.

If you are curious to learn more, here are some resources I have found helpful: 
  • Bryan Stevenson’s book “Just Mercy” and his organization’s study on the history of lynching in the US (find it at https://eji.org/reports/lynching-in-america/); 
  • Isabel Wilkerson’s book “The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America’s Great Migration”; 
  • John Perkins’ book “One Blood” and 
  • Tim Gombis’ book “The Drama of Ephesians”.  
  • Also worthy of note is the book “Flyboys” by James Bradley which, while a story of 8 pilots in WW2 in the Pacific, sets the context in the wide sweep of America’s and Japan’s histories that highlights some of the problematic aspects of the “Manifest Destiny" narrative many of us have been given. 

4 Comments
Renee Hoffman
6/5/2020 01:14:53 pm

Thank you for all you said in this blog. I heartily agree with you and plan to share what you wrote with others. Also thank you for your series on Ecclesiastes which I have been reading, as I receive it weekly by mail. God bless you and help us all to live out the way of the kingdom ofJesus.

Reply
Mary Buffham
7/25/2020 10:13:36 am

I carefullly read your blog & would like to leave areply.I agree with much that you have said & find it to be historically true. I would like to reply in this way, Individuals repent , not countries. Salvation changes hearts and causes the individual to repent. So our goal, as a church should be to reach individual hearts, then our country will change. That's our mission.

Reply
Marcus Little
7/27/2020 11:52:46 am

Hi Mary, thanks for the thoughtful reply to my article. Regarding individual vs. corporate repentance, I see both modeled and called for in Scripture. We tend to emphasize individual repentance, but Scripture has much to say about corporate repentance as well. Someone shared this article on that subject with me and I found it helpful.
https://hebraicthought.org/repenting-intergenerational-racist-ideology-scripture-intergenerational-sin/
I'd love your thoughts on it.

Reply
Bhargava Ji link
10/26/2020 03:00:51 am

It is a great blog post.I am always read your blog helpful and informative tips. I like it thanks for sharing this information with us

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    Marcus Little is the Senior Pastor of Berean Baptist Church.  This blog is a place where he can share  his thoughts and reflections on how Scripture intersects with life, work, community, culture and the events of our times.

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Berean Baptist Church​
1574 Coit Ave. NE
​Grand Rapids, MI, 49505
(616) 363-9824
  • About
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