Another young Black person shot
down. How can this keep happening? I
ask myself. Will we never understand how
precious our children are? That every child we damage damages our own future?
I wonder if that is not part of the
madness. I wonder if some people actually fear a future where everyone is
equally accepted and equally valued. It seems incomprehensible that such a vision
might unconsciously be motivating humanity’s violence against our
children. But I can’t help but wonder.
In the ancient biblical story, the
Pharaoh of Egypt ordered that all the male children of the Israelite people
should be murdered at the moment they were born; Pharaoh didn’t want anymore of
“those kinds” of people in his kingdom. The Gospel of Matthew tells another
story about King Herod sending soldiers to Bethlehem to kill all the male
children of the Israelite villagers. Throughout the human story, this violence
is repeated again and again. Within the American story, all too often it has
been our children who have borne the brunt of our national sins. When
reflecting on some of these horrors, the Old Testament prophet Jeremiah and the
New Testament theologian Matthew both borrowed the image of their ancestor Rachel:
“wailing with loud lamentation, weeping for her children and refusing to be
comforted because they are no more.” How
can this keep happening? I ask myself.
Losing our children is much more
than even the heart breaking, gut wrenching loss of any one of these unique and
precious individuals; it is also the loss of a future. For most of us, our
children give us hope for the future. But for others – I wonder – is their
vision of the future so clouded with fear that they may see the Michael Browns as
some sort of threat to their entrenched systems of power? Of course none of us
knows the whole story of what happened the day Michael Brown was killed, but we
do know this: he was shot while he was unarmed; he was shot at least six times;
he was shot by a police officer. In the collective consciousness of the
establishment, do the Michael Browns conjure fear because they represent “too
many of those kind of people” in this American “kingdom”?
As a Christian minister, I see both
fear and hope everywhere I turn and I recognize this is nothing new. Herod sent
the soldiers to Bethlehem because he feared the child Jesus was a threat to his
power. And he was right: his power was at risk. The “kingdom” God is
bringing into being does threaten the power of all the kings and pharoahs
among us. When the reign of peace, justice and respect gains more ground in the
attitudes and actions of more and more people, then the status quo of
oppression, intimidation and inequity must lose ground. The status quo IS
changing. And I say “Thank God.”
I firmly believe that God is
birthing into our midst a new multivalent rainbow community that will finally
end the power of white, male, straight privilege. I believe God’s upside down
power of grace and love will finally bring about a future of hope where every
life matters, where each one is valued for who they are, where all our children are able to grow up to
become the people God created them to be. This kind of vision for the future
gives many of us great hope.
But for others this vision fosters great
fear. When fear and prejudice is given a gun, it’s not just our children who
are in danger; it’s all of us. But when this kind of fear is given both a gun and
a badge then – yes - it is high time for prophetic challenge and peaceful
protest. Each of us individually and all of us together must raise our voice
and stand with our hands in the air – open, vulnerable and powerful in the upside
down way of God’s life-changing power.
And so in the meantime, while we watch
and wait for the vision to become reality, things continue to be painful, messy
and chaotic. Maybe one reason why is because the oil and water of fear and hope
continue to keep us fragmented - both within our society and within each of us.
Maybe because we are all at the same time good and bad, light and dark, hopeful
and fearful.
We are Rachel, weeping for our children. And let us remember that all these children are all our children.
We are Rachel, weeping for our children. And let us remember that all these children are all our children.
Well said!
ReplyDeleteI recommend you read The More Beautiful World Our Hearts Know Is Possible by Charles Eisenstein. It should help you on your path.
ReplyDelete