Archives for posts with tag: politics

Jesus wept

One of the ways we can grieve God is where we decide to put our faith and hope. Too often we put it in politicians, money, family members, education, and religion. Yesterday was the start of  Holy Week, where the focus is to remember to put our faith and hope in Christ. Let me share a project the church where I am a member at is participating in that reminds us of this truth.

We all know there is a vibrant debate going on about gun control in our country. I pay attention to it and offer my 2 cents to the debate but I don’t put my hope in legislative solutions. For the record I am in favor of anything that keeps guns out of hands of people who obviously don’t need to have them. However my focus is on something much more important.

My hope is in Christ and his followers. For me the more important debate is what role could the Church play in being part of the gun control solution?  The first role is to weep for the city.

While pundits are debating what to do and politicians drag their feet more people who don’t need to have a gun are getting them – which leads to more violence in our city streets – which leads to no peace for the city. That is what I care about and weep over. I think this is what Jesus weeps over too:

41 And when he drew near and saw the city, he wept over it, 42 saying, “Would that you, even you, had known on this day the things that make for peace! But now they are hidden from your eyes. 43 For the days will come upon you, when your enemies will set up a barricade around you and surround you and hem you in on every side 44 and tear you down to the ground, you and your children within you. And they will not leave one stone upon another in you, because you did not know the time of your visitation.” - Luke 19:41-44 (ESV)

Jesus wept over Jerusalem because he knew it was doomed. He knew the key to peace in the city was the ability of the spiritual leaders to accept him and his ways. He cried because those leaders chose to put their hope in something other than him. This rejection meant there would be no peace for those who lived there. Tragic.

After we weep we need to attempt to be part of the solution. My church is participating in a “Gifts for Guns” buy-back program. The campaign aims “to combat and address the senseless gun violence that is plaguing the city of Cincinnati,” according to a press release. We hope people show up to turn in guns in exchange for gift cards for things they need in their household.

So far in 2 previous neighborhoods over 200 guns were collected. But here is another thing that happens that rarely gets reported in the media. Oftentimes many of the people who show up at these events are also looking for spiritual help. That is one reason why police departments often team up with churches to do events like this.

Here is what I need from you blogosphere. Regardless of where you stand politically on the gun control issue, would you take some time this week to pray for this event? It takes place on Good Friday, March 29 at the River of Life Church. You can learn more about it here.

conflictI’ll never forget years ago a situation that happened when I was pastoring. The week the Bush/Gore election results were final at Bible study I did our normal go around the circle and ask for prayer and praise requests.

One of my white members stated as a praise that God put His man in the White House. About 5 minutes later an African American woman arrived. As she sat down I asked her what her praises/prayer requests were. She said with passion “we need to pray for God’s protection because the devil is in the White House!”

Talk about a potentially volatile situation. In a multi-ethnic ministry minefields like that are all around. A big part of leading multi-ethnic ministry is our ability to relate to others. With the reality of racialization, having high relational skills is a must. It is the key to a healthy multi-ethnic ministry.

What does it mean to relate in a healthy way across racial lines? It means to be comfortable with cultural negotiation, ok with agreeing to disagree, becoming a master of keeping your own emotions in check, and being willing to forgive. If we do not master these skills we will not be able to diffuse potentially potent situations like the one I described in my story.

You will have people who want you to take up their cause and lead you into their emotional issues that are based on their racial, social class, and/or gender identity. As leaders we must be wary of this and make sure we approach things with an even keel. Our leadership must not cater to the whims of people.

It must be acknowledged that we will think differently at times based on our racial identity, and that is ok. It is the emotionally immature that demand that everyone thinks the same way about all things. As leaders we can’t give in to this type of demand.

Bad relational skills have the potential to drag the whole ministry into divisiveness. It makes people pick a side. This leads to a simmering racial tension that if not addressed will lie just beneath the surface, always ready to explode.

To diffuse potential volatile situations I believe it is best to talk candidly. As leaders we need to model how people can disagree and yet still honor one another in the Lord. We need to build an environment that allows space for racial differences about issues to be navigated.

Here is the rest of the story. Before we started Bible study, as a group we talked about why one person thought Bush was God’s anointed and another thought he was the devil. We hashed out why different racial groups supported different political parties.

Then we prayed and studied the word together in unity.

circle of protection

If you pay attention to politics you know the big deal our country is facing is balancing the budget. The National Association of Evangelicals believes that budgets are moral documents and in partnership with others have put together a statement as to why we need to protect programs for the poor.  Here are 8 principles they have outlined:

  1. The nation needs to substantially reduce future deficits, but not at the expense of hungry and poor people.
  2. Funding focused on reducing poverty should not be cut. It should be made as effective as possible, but not cut.
  3. We urge our leaders to protect and improve poverty-focused development and humanitarian assistance to promote a better, safer world.
  4. National leaders must review and consider tax revenues, military spending, and entitlements in the search for ways to share sacrifice and cut deficits.
  5. A fundamental task is to create jobs and spur economic growth. Decent jobs at decent wages are the best path out of poverty, and restoring growth is a powerful way to reduce deficits.
  6. The budget debate has a central moral dimension. Christians are asking how we protect “the least of these.” “What would Jesus cut?” “How do we share sacrifice?”
  7. As believers, we turn to God with prayer and fasting, to ask for guidance as our nation makes decisions about our priorities as a people.
  8. God continues to shower our nation and the world with blessings. As Christians, we are rooted in the love of God in Jesus Christ. Our task is to share these blessings with love and justice and with a special priority for those who are poor.

See the full statement here and join me in signing it.

Friends here is a challenge that I hope goes viral. It is called – Take the “I was a stranger” challenge: 40 Days of Scripture and Prayer. Several key evangelical leaders were interviewed and EFCA President Bill Hamel was featured.

The goal is to have Christians — including politicians involved in the immigration debate — reflect on what the Bible teaches about immigrants. “I missed the civil rights movement, I watched and did nothing and for decades I have regretted those days,” President Hamel said. “I’m committed not to sit this one out.” Join him with your commitment.

I’m prompted to write this post as a reaction to all the hand-wringing, doomsday predictions, and fear of the future that I have observed over the last 2 days. Let me stress this is not a political commentary. Rather its me playing missiologist about the 3rd largest mission field called the United States of America.

As I watched both the political conventions this summer and the speeches given Tuesday night by the respective candidates, I was struck by the vast difference of who made up the audiences. One was a picture of a vast array of people of color. The other was a picture that lacked any color at all.

I won’t delve into why it seems most ethnics vote one way and most whites vote another. I’ll leave that to the sociologists and political pundits. For Kingdom citizens, there is a bigger question on the table – which audience do we want the evangelical church to look like?

For 20 years I have beat the drum telling evangelicals that they need to get their institutional house in order because diversity is coming. That line no longer is accurate. Ladies and gentlemen, diversity is here.

And as demonstrated Tuesday night, the organizations that figure out how to express their values, attitudes, and beliefs in a diverse manner will be the ones that come out on top.  The ones that don’t will slowly and steadily lose their impact.

Here are the facts. Our country is browner, is more female, and is well on its way to becoming an ethnic minority/majority country. If we can’t figure out how to speak to this reality evangelical institutions will be completely marginalized.

We need a modernization of the Church as a whole. If our gospel message is to be heard it cannot be held captive by the traditions and rituals of one ethnic group. We cannot run our Christian organizations as niche marketers if we truly want to reach the mission field the Lord has put in front of us.

  1. We know who is going to win. A flawed man working in a faulty system living in a broken world. Guarantee you that is who is going to win.
  2. We also know that neither candidate made the sun come up this morning or will make it set this evening.
  3. And I am pretty sure that if your personal choice does not win, you are not in charge of deciding if the world is going to come to an end!

Check out my sermon on Mark 8:27-33, “Who Do You Say I Am?”  An important thing to reflect on this election day.

http://www.riveroflifecincy.org/media/sermons/?sermon_id=84

The following article appeared in the San Antonio Express Thursday, August 30, 2012.  What do you think? 

Woodlawn Christian Church, which once had 500 active members, is down to about 15 — and on Sept. 9, they will vote on a proposal to do what many other mainline Protestant churches in older San Antonio neighborhoods have done. Shut the doors, sell the property and send the cash to charitable causes, their denomination or some combination of the two.

But in this case, the decision has sparked accusations of racism and a battle for control. A church board member claims those who want to close the 76-year-old church simply are trying to avoid handing the reigns to a capable Hispanic congregation already renting space there.

“It’s just blatant racism,” said Larry Polinard, the board’s property chairman who, like the rest of the dwindling congregation, is Anglo.

“I think it stinks. We have a group of eight to 10 people who just don’t want ‘those people’ in their church. They’re going to take the brick and mortar with them to their grave.” Just who qualifies as a voting member is in dispute.

After the vote was scheduled, dozens from the Hispanic congregation and some Anglos from the neighborhood applied for membership this month but the board declared Aug. 5 the deadline for joining. Pastor Bill Howden denies racism is at work and laments the elderly remnant must endure such charges after years of service.

“It’s an effort to distract from the real issues being debated, which is that the integrity of the rule of the congregation not be taken over by outsiders in a power play,” he said.

At stake are the church and nearly an acre at 1744 W. Gramercy Place appraised at almost $900,000, plus an estimated $180,000 bank account.

Woodlawn Christian thrived when the Jefferson area on the near Northwest Side was a newer, middle-class and mostly Anglo community. Today, lower-income Hispanic households predominate.

A recent sidewalk protest by the League of United Latin American Citizens decried the possible end of a food and clothing pantry, recovery programs and free community breakfasts, among other outreach at the church. “It’s a house of praise, and they need to open it up to any and everyone,” said Henry Rodriguez, state civil rights chairman for LULAC. “It belongs to the community.”

The church is two blocks from the historic Woodlawn Theatre, a centerpiece in an effort to revitalize the Deco District along Fredericksburg Road. It currently serves as an area office for 75 Disciples of Christ congregations across South-Central Texas.

Churches in the denomination are led by their congregations. Members vote on property, clergy and for a governing board. The proposed closure requires a two-thirds majority.

Polinard said the deadline to prevent new members from joining — and voting — violates the church’s own rules requiring a congregational vote for such a policy change.

Howden questioned the timing of the new membership applications, arguing the deadline preserves the membership in place when the proposed closure was announced. If the deadline stands, the measure is expected to pass.

That would disrupt nearly two years of ministry to the neighborhood by Centro Cristiano Tiempo de Restauracion, said its pastor, Frank Avila. His congregation, about 60 people, long had wanted to merge with Woodlawn Christian and the two groups held fellowship dinners together, though the Anglo members resisted, he said.

“We’re not here to try to take advantage of them,” Avila said. “Why not let it continue to grow here in this community for years to come? The building is not something you are going to take with you.”

The older members harbor no hostility and “did not ever anticipate that this would be such a difficult decision” — but they have the right to decide the fate of their church, said the Rev. Dani Loving Cartwright, the denomination’s regional minister and president, based in Fort Worth.

“They did not bring any ill will to the community,” she said. “They are just older people who are at the end of their ministry energy, and I think they are trying to do the right thing.” — Reported by Abe Levy

I use the terms race and ethnicity interchangeably even though technically race is categorizing people genetically and ethnicity is categorizing people by shared history, cultural roots, and a sense of shared identity. I do so because in popular culture most view them as the same thing, even though categorizing people by biological race has been scientifically refuted. The only people who quibble over the definition and how to properly use the terms are academic nerds like me.

Regardless of the academic debate and definitions, we must accept the fact of race being an influencer of American life. Historically racial discrimination became a way of life within our foundational institutions. American historical record suggests we should start with the premise race influences everything we do in society, including leading Christian organizations. Sociologists call this phenomena racialization.

According to sociologist Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, a racialized society is a society wherein race matters profoundly for differences in life experiences, life opportunities, and social relationships. It is one that allocates different economic, political, social, and psychological rewards to groups along racial lines. Basically it is the process in which people impose a racial element into a social situation oftentimes to oppress people.

As leaders we must morally manage and define what this means within our personal lives and the organizations we lead.It is impossible to overestimate the importance of this basic realization. Possessing a different moral compass from society is what is supposed to set us apart as Christians. Because we live in a racialized society dismissing ethnic identity through colorblindness is akin to taking an immoral action.

For centuries race has been a cause for a tremendous amount of human conflict. Some have no idea how their racial profile naturally forms a basis for historical distrust. And it is almost unavoidable to at least partly misjudge the actions of people based on falsely learned racial expectations. Therefore to successfully lead people to manage the meaning of race we must be intentional.

Ethnic groups are outgrowing our white population, mainly because of immigration and birthrates. The trend may be new to you but it is not new to demographers. They have been observing this development for years. For years I have told Christian organizations they need to prepare because racial diversity is coming. That is no longer accurate – racial diversity is here. In light of this fact, here are some principles to follow for having civil conversations about race:

Humility. It is significant to consider what I mean by being humble when we see color. Unchecked racially arrogant attitudes are the quickest way to destructive stereotyping. People tend to frame humility as denigrating their self and that is not what I mean. Real humility is to decline the temptation to put ourselves God’s place. It is to take the lesson of Job and figure out our submitted existence in God’s world.

Truth-telling. With people we truly care about, we’re honest about what matters, regardless of how potentially offensive the situation may seem. I contend for most people politeness is not the real reason they skirt acknowledging racialization. The real reason is they want to protect themselves from conflict.

This natural reluctance must be overcome if you and your organization are going to make serious strides. In many cases, the fear of being uncomfortable is what most hinders reconciliation efforts. We must own the fact if we refuse to speak the truth because of fear, we are operating as hypocrites. We may be polite hypocrites, but still hypocrites.

Patience. A big reason people don’t discuss race is because it can quickly become emotional. It is ok to be emotional, but not in a destructive, all-consuming way. This requires we work hard on keeping our emotions in check. When it comes to racial issues it takes time to “get it.” None of us “got it” overnight. If we keep this in mind it will go a long way in helping others realize the significance of racialization.

One thing that has helped me is the realization people can make honest racial mistakes. They really don’t know what they said or did was harmful. It is possible for someone to perform racist actions but not be a racist. I work hard on giving people the benefit of the doubt, marking them innocent until proven guilty.

Encouragement. Too much time is spent on the negative side of racial dynamics. There is a term called “jaundice eye.” It means to approach people with caution. I am contrarian on this. We have to work hard to suspend our root assumptions about people. If we don’t it will lead to stereotyping, which is not good.

We need to be careful to not build an atmosphere filled with a constant diatribe on what is wrong and short-changing spending time on what is right or how to move forward. I won’t end a conversation about bad racial dynamics until the other party and I have some dialog about proposed solutions.

Respect. All ethnic groups need to be treated with dignity. One killer of reconciliation efforts is paternalism — the intrusion of one group on another against its will. The intrusion is justified by a claim that the group intruded upon will be “better off.” What results is a one-sided relationship.

In light of the Supreme Court’s ruling on the Arizona immigration law and President Obama’s implementation of parts of the Dream Act, I would like to take a stab at encouraging Christians when it comes to this volatile issue.

Really, to take off the partisan political lens and provide a space of understanding. If you haven’t already, please watch the above video to gain a sense of the human consequences wrapped up around such decisions.

As the EFCA movement seriously embraces a multi-ethnic focus, we encounter complex issues. Virtually everybody concurs that there is a quandary in the United States concerning undocumented immigrants. The exact problem, however, is being passionately debated. It is an issue that can be described by one word: messy.

Take the story of Juan and Maria Alvarado (not their real names). Their patchwork life in their native Mexico consisted of working long hours at whatever jobs they could find. When their first child was born, crossing the border illegally seemed the most logical move for a better life.

After all, American companies were begging for workers. But a legal work visa took years to obtain, and the baby didn’t have years to wait for food, clothing, and shelter. The Alvarados chose to slip into California, find jobs and start anew.

Soon, friends in their new land invited them to church, where Juan and Maria met Christ. Salvation changed their worldview, and not having legal documentation bothered them. So they entered the process to become documented, legal workers. 

As the process grinded on, two more children came along, and a cousin’s invitation prompted a move to the Midwest, where they found a new church family. But a routine traffic stop changed everything.

When police checked Juan’s identification card, his name matched that of a wanted felon. By the time his innocence was clarified, the Immigration and Naturalization Service had been called, and within a few days Juan was deported back to Mexico.

Maria is struggling, to say the least. The baby who inspired them to cross the border is now a teen who has traded her dreams of college for the reality of working and helping to parent her siblings.

Who’s at fault? The Alvarados, for immigrating? The companies that lured them? The two churches involved in their lives? Government bureaucrats? Whatever your position we need to hope that economic and civil law are reconciled soon.

Unlike politicians and “talking heads” on television, as Christians we don’t have the convenience of making immigration a zero sum game. We should realize that any answer applied to the Alvarados’ situation will be imprecise.

But as the body of Christ, we must provide a merciful one. Let’s pray that these recent political flurries will lead to comprehensive immigration reform so that people like the Alvarado’s do not continue fall between the cracks.

For guidance on how we can take a biblical stand, please read the official National Association of Evangelicals stance on this issue. 

Fred Luter – SBC President? 

Note: This article originally appeared in the Summer issue ofSouthern Seminary Magazine. The full issue can be accessed here.

As I write this, news reports tell us that we just might see, by the time you read this, the election of the first African-American president of the Southern Baptist Convention. This is significant for all sorts of reasons: one being, of course, that the SBC was founded, partly, to protect the “right” of slaveholders to be missionaries. It’s important also because it’s a test for whether the SBC will go forward with the gospel and mission we say we believe.

One of my earliest memories is of a substitute Sunday school teacher in my Southern Baptist church chastening me for putting a coin in my mouth. “That’s filthy,” she said. “Why, you don’t know if a colored man might have held that.” It might just be my imagination playing tricks on me, but it seems as though she immediately followed this up with, “Alright children, let’s sing ‘Jesus Loves the Little Children, All the Children of the World.’”

Now, this lady probably didn’t consciously think of herself as a white supremacist. She almost certainly didn’t think of herself as subversive of the gospel itself. She never thought about the hypocrisy of holding the two contradictory worldviews together in her mind. She probably didn’t see how her dehumanizing of African-Americans was a twisted form of Darwinism rather than biblical Christianity.

She wasn’t alone.

On the question of civil rights in the American Christian context, there is little question that, with few exceptions, the “progressives” were right, often heroically right, and the “conservatives” were wrong, often satanically wrong. In the narrative of the dismantling of Jim Crow, conservatives were often the villains and progressives were most often on the side of the angels, indeed on the side of Jesus.

The question is not whether the progressives won the argument or whether they should have won the argument; the question is why they were persuasive, ultimately, on this point (and almost no other) to their more conservative brothers and sisters. The turnaround is striking, perhaps nowhere more clearly than in my denomination, the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC), where a generation ago most conservative leaders were segregationists.

Some, of course, will claim cynically that conservative evangelical leaders, like some national politicians, don’t play with racial demagogy anymore because such appeals don’t “work” anymore in 21st century America. Nobody wants to be seen as a racist. Well, okay, but, even if one accepts that argument, why is it true that a segregationist would be barred (and rightly so) from speaking at the SBC Pastors’ Conference of 2010 and wouldn’t be at the SBC Pastors’ Conference of 1950? Isn’t it because the people wouldn’t tolerate it? Well, why the change? It must be more than just changing American culture since conservative evangelicals have been in the throes of a much-hyped “culture war” on all sorts of issues since the 1960s?

Why is civil rights no longer a “culture war” issue? Why were the voices of the civil rights pioneers persuasive, not only to mainstream America but to conservative Christians as well? Some might argue it is because the culture has changed. But the culture has changed just as much (if not more so) on the question of gender and sexual issues, after three waves of feminism and a sexual revolution, but not so for traditionalist Catholics and confessional Protestants.

The reason SBC progressives, and the larger civil rights movement, were persuasive was because of the mode of their argument. The progressives, as scholar David Chappell shows in his book Stone of Hope: Prophetic Religion and the Death of Jim Crow, appealed to biblical orthodoxy and missionary zeal, in their arguments, not simply to the arc of historical progress.

This is true at the macro level (think of the King James Version of the Bible woven so intricately into the themes of Martin Luther King’s speeches and sermons). It is also true at the micro level. SBC civil rights advocates–from Foy Valentine to T.B. Maston to Henlee Barnette–argued from decidedly conservative biblical concepts.

The civil rights movement struggled on multiple fronts. In the political sphere, leaders such as King pointed out how the American system was inconsistent with Jeffersonian principles of the “self-evident” truth that “all men are created equal and endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights.” Politically, Americans had to choose: be American (as defined in the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence) or be white supremacist; you can’t be both. King and his compatriots were right.

But the civil rights movement was, at core, also an ecclesial movement. King was, after all, “Rev. King” and many of those marching with him, singing before him, listening to him, were Christian clergy and laity. To the churches, especially the churches of the South, the civil rights pioneers sent a similar message to the one they sent to the governmental powers. You have to choose: be a Christian (as defined by the Scripture and the small “c” catholic apostolic tradition) or be a white supremacist; you can’t be both. They were right here too.

How can white supremacy be true, they would argue, if humanity is made from “one blood” in the creation of Adam? How can one segregate evangelistic crusades if the cross of Christ atones for all people, both white and black? If God personally regenerates repentant sinners, both white and black, how can we see people in terms of “race” rather than in terms of the person? If we send missionaries across the seas to evangelize Africa, how is it not hypocrisy not to admit African-Americans into church membership?

The biblical power of the argument is true, regardless of whether all the civil rights pioneers, in the SBC and out of it, believed in biblical orthodoxy.

Many did. See the faithful heroine Fannie Lou Hamer of Sunflower County, Mississippi, for example. If Baptists had a means of canonization, I’d support it for her. But regardless of personal faith, the civil rights heroes indicted conservative hypocrites, prophetically, with the conservatives’ own convictional claims. And, as Jesus promised, “My sheep hear my voice and they follow me.”

The Post Civil Rights Era 

The arguments for racial reconciliation were persuasive, ultimately, to orthodox Christians because they appealed to a higher authority than the cultural captivity of white supremacy. These arguments appealed to the authority of Scripture and the historic Christian tradition.

This authority couldn’t easily be muted by a claim to a “different interpretation” because racial equality was built on premises conservatives already heartily endorsed: the universal love of God, the unity of the race in Adam, the Great Commission and the church as the household of God.

With this the case, the legitimacy of segregation crumbled just as the legitimacy of slavery had in the century before, and for precisely the same reasons. Segregation, like slavery, was shown to be what all human consciences already knew it to be: not just a political injustice or a social inequity (although certainly that) but also a sin against God and neighbor and a repudiation of the gospel. Regenerate hearts ultimately melted before such arguments because in them they heard the voice of their Christ, a voice they’d heard in the Scriptures themselves.

Conservative Christians, and especially Southern Baptists, must be careful to remember the ways in which our cultural anthropology perverted our soteriology and ecclesiology. It is to our shame that we ignored our own doctrines to advance something as clearly demonic as racial pride. And it is a shame that sometimes it took theological liberals to remind us of what we claimed to believe in an inerrant Bible, what we claimed to be doing in a Great Commission.

I’m thrilled about where God might be taking the SBC. A denomination formed to protect slavery led by a descendant of slaves, that’s just the kind of providential irony our God loves. Maybe it will prompt our denomination to stop seeing non-white people as opportunities for “ethnic ministry,” and prompt us to see there opportunities to find our leaders. Maybe seeing a non-white face with the gavel of the SBC might remind us that the Man we’ll see on the Judgment Seat, well, he isn’t a white guy either. – Russell D. Moore

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