Can I suggest that most of us “white
people” have a problem with history. There, I have said it. Now if
you are still listening or reading let me explain.
I don't know of any, any, Caucasian who
lives like Colonists did before the War for Independence. That is to
say, they continued to give their allegiance to King George and the
British Empire. I don't know of any Caucasian who freely surrenders
the rights articulated in the Bill of Rights. The point is we have
absolutely no problem with reveling in the freedom secured,
enumerated, and protected down through the years by law and blood. It
never occurred to us to say, “Well, because I didn't do anything
but be born in America I am not going to enjoy the freedom handed
down to me and those I love.” We don't really feel like we have to
secure our own freedom. We just live the privilege and think little
about it.
However, when it comes to our racist
past, our oppression of African Americans, our history of tolerating
slavery not just in the South but literally throughout the United
States, we sing a different song. We say, I did not do that. I did
not have slaves. I did not oppress or discriminate. Those are not my
sins, and I refuse to have anything to do with the idea that I am a
bearer of the sins of the American past. We could for good measure
throw in the Native Americans. I didn't wage war on them, or move
them into reservations, or slaughter the tribes. It was not my doing.
I refuse to accept responsibility.
So, we can accept the liberty purchased
by the will, determination and blood of our founding fathers without
hesitation or remorse. What is not to like about where many Caucasian
folks find themselves. Freedom, opportunity, life, liberty and the
pursuit of happiness. We could even update our liberty by living in
the security after a war called WWII for which most of us were not
even born.
See this is the problem. We pick and
choose what we will welcome and take responsibility for. And because
of that, we shall never really end this deep poison of racism which
has diminished us from the beginning.
I work with some teens and one of the
features of their struggle is trying to break free and enjoy their
emerging adulthood. So they are in conflict with their parents. They
don't do their best in school, they are angry and really not
enjoyable to be around. Each seems to be trapped in a web from which
they cannot free themselves.
It is there I begin to cast a different
perspective for them. William Glasser's “Reality Therapy” was
actually tested in the juvenile detention centers of California. Most
of all it works. What does it do? It give the person a chance to take
responsibility and from that make positive plans, with positive
attitudes, supported by positive behaviors.
That is the therapy which is needed for
our time and for us Caucasians who are so helpless and unsympathetic
for our brothers and sisters who are tired of a life which from birth
is stacked against them every day even today.
We have to take responsibility and say
that racism as is practiced covertly or overtly by Caucasian
institutions and systems fostering structural racism has got to end.
It has to end now. We are willing to see the problem and as it is
within our power, end it now. Church houses, State Houses, and
National government institutions which turn a blind eye to racism
will be called to account by those who have the power to change it.
The problem with African Americans changing these institutions is
simply the inability to amass the power to do so. However, if we
Caucasians, who day in and day out control these institutions would
see, repent, and change existing forms of ongoing oppression, it will
happen. However, we must humble ourselves and be schooled by our
People of Color about the problem and how it is entrenched in our
culture and society.
We must also grieve over the way
criminal justice works for Caucasians but not people of color. In a
short conversation with my oldest son, I told him my experience
working in prison was an awakening of sorts for me. 70% of our 3,000
offenders were Black. I told him, “There is no way you can tell me
that crime in America is done by only blacks. However, Whites well,
we get the best lawyers, and they get public defenders who are
overworked and unprepared.
I also believe that law enforcement in
America has to come to terms with the racial issues (especially in
the South) where law enforcement was the face of keeping slaves in
their place and later keeping them scared and oppressed. In the same
way law enforcement today did not do that, we still have to look at
ourselves with a humility searching for the components which suppress
the rights of some while respecting the rights of others. I support
and deeply appreciate law enforcement and not just those in my family
who have made that commitment. However, we cannot move forward unless
and until we are willing to see what People of Color see inherent in
the threat of law enforcement toward them. Frankly, I do not remember
a time with the presence of a uniformed officer of the law has given
me the slightest concern. But, I don't see what a person of color
sees.
I believe White Churches should step up
and help a culture sift through the issues, the unseen barriers, the
pride that would not allow for equality, and most of all the Gospel
of change that is our greatest contribution to life today. I was
outside our small home this afternoon doing my “yard therapy” and
found myself thinking about anything I might change from my past
leadership as a pastor if I were leading today. I smiled at the
difficult task I inherited at all the churches I served where we were
organized into too many committees which did too little work. The
silliest committee I found was in my third church where they had a
“host committee.” I kept throwing them opportunities to “host”
and they would throw them back. “Not our job.” After about four
refusals, I got the bylaws down and started reading them. Yep, there
was the Host committee. Seven couples(14) people with a simple
responsibility: clean the oven in the kitchen. It was a continuous
cleaning oven. And it was dirty!
If I were leading today, I believe I
might consider a “Racial Response Team” which would monitor
events, activities and the area news for opportunities to help bring
progress to the never ending fight for equality. This team would lead
the church in an appropriate, compassionate response which would
honor the heart of God and His love for all His Children. Tragically,
so many evangelical churches have been captured by Christian
nationalism that has placed America over God. However, not every knee
has bowed to Caesar or been swept up in panic created by a false fear
of losing something America never was.
All I know is inequality between races
in this country have gone on too long. We have passed on the
malignant hatred however subtle, however covered for far too long.
Let's end this in our time.
Wash your hands, please wear your mask,
mind the gap, and be kind. We have a distance yet to go with COVID
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