Monday, July 9, 2018

"BLACK JESUS AND FREEDOM TO THE PRISONERS"


“BLACK JESUS AND FREEDOM TO THE PRISONERS”

            When we moved from Norfolk to Nashville late in 1980, I began working for the Southern Coalition on Jails and Prisons(SCJP), whose purpose it was to work on prison reform.   I also wanted to transfer my ministerial membership from Norfolk Presbytery to Middle Tennessee Presbytery (both have since changed names).  Middle Tennessee Presbytery was deeply divided at that time, much like the country is now, with only a few votes making a difference in each important issue.  This was also prior to reunion with the former UPCUSA (1983), so I expected and got an extensive grilling on the floor of the Presbytery meeting.  One of the opponents to my being received into the Presbytery read a quote at the meeting from the brochures of the SCJP to the effect that our ultimate goal was the abolition of prisons in the USA.

            He asked me (lots of “he’s” at that point) if SCJP really believed that prisons should be abolished, and if I believed it.  I wanted to keep my answer simple and persuasive at the same time, so I said that it was biblical, that Jesus had said in his first sermon in Luke 4, that he come to free the prisoners.  So, yes, I believed in the Bible, and I believed that Jesus was being literal when he said that.   He had come to free the prisoners.  There was a fair amount of murmuring in response, but I did squeak into the Presbytery by a few votes.

            I was reminded of that episode this week when a multiracial (African/Hispanic) friend of mine wrote me to ask about the mass incarceration rate in the USA.  In specific, he was wondering about Jesus and prisons.  He had noticed that Jesus talked about prisoners a lot, and he remembered Jesus’ sermon from Luke 4 about bringing liberty to the captives.  He was noting that most people believe that the purpose of prisons is a response to crime, and did Jesus want to abolish prisons?  He was wondering why Jesus and the Bible itself looked at prisons and the judicial system in such a different way, ending with this note:  “They seemed to have no trust in the judicial system.”

            My response was that we must remember that Jesus was an oppressed and marginalized person, born into imperial Rome.  He had no rights as a citizen and from Rome’s point of view, he was merely a commodity to be used by Rome.   In this sense, I usually refer to the Black Jesus, not because of the color of his skin or even his racial classification, but because of his socio-economic status at the margins of Roman society.  It is no accident that the historian of the four Gospel writers, Luke, places the birth of Jesus squarely in the shadow of the Roman Empire.  Black Jesus would understand that the Roman prisons did not exist as a response to crime but as a tool of social control.  Jesus’ view of prisons was similar to the views of those people held as slaves – they would have no trust in the judicial systems of the masters.

            It is in this context that we must reflect on the imprisonment of the children of immigrants, separating them from their families, no matter what their age.  Even the proponents of this horrid doctrine defend it not as a response to crime but as a deterrent to certain behaviors.  Multiply this by a thousand times, and you will get a sense of the mass incarceration of millions of African-Americans and Hispanic-Americans.  Prisons are not a response to crime in the United States – if they were, there would be so many more people classified as “white” held in our jails and prisons.  If they were, there would be so many fewer people of color held in our jails and prisons. 

            I grew up with Jesus as a white, middle class man, and because of that context, it was easy for my forbears to take a passage like Isaiah 61:1-4 and spiritualize it and individualize it.  They made it into a passage about becoming free from sin and getting into heaven when I died, and I believed that teaching.  Seeing the Black Jesus, however, has helped me understand that the Bible and Jesus did not mean for this idea to be spiritualized.  They meant for Roman (and Babylonian and Egyptian) prisons to be emptied of their brothers and sisters so that justice could be done. 

            Would I abolish prisons if I could?  Absolutely.  What would I put in their place?  A system where those who have been oppressed and marginalized could be brought into the center of life and society, a system involving recognition and repentance and reparations and recovery.   Would there be any prisons left?  Yes, likely, for those rich and others whose core beliefs seem to involve robbing and hurting others, but even the goal for them would be rehabilitation.  To quote the Apostle Paul from the beginning of the 5th chapter of his famous letter to the Galatians:  “Freedom is what we have.  Christ Jesus has set us free – stand then as free people, and do not allow yourselves to become slaves again.”  As long as we have prisons, we will have slaves, and we all will be slaves.

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