Monday, July 17, 2017

THE CHURCH: A FIRE FOR JUSTICE


THE CHURCH:  A FIRE FOR JUSTICE

            Today (July 16) is Ida B. Wells’ birthday.  She was born a slave in Marshall County, Mississippi, the county in which all my forebears were born.  Over the next 69 years, she would be a powerful voice and activist for justice for people of African-American descent, for women, and for those who were poor.   She was an “intersectionalist”  long before that term came into vogue.  She did all of this work as she experienced white society strip away from African-Americans the hard-won rights of the Civil War.  Because of her lifelong work for justice and mercy on so many levels under such difficult circumstances, she is a woman for our time and indeed for all times.  I’ll be writing more about her in another forum, but if you do not know much about her, check her out!

            She learned this fire for justice from her church and from her family.   She obviously grew up in the black church, because many of the white churches in her time were fleeing from the idea of justice, hoping to avoid any need for confrontation with the powers who were re-instituting slavery and oppression under another name:  Jim Crow, or “neo-slavery,” as Doug Blackmon named it.  I grew up in one of those churches.  I experienced love in my home church, as I noted in last week’s blog, but I was not taught to have a fire for justice.  Teaching our church members to have a fire for justice is a dangerous thing, so in Ida Wells’ time, in my time, and in the current time, most churches of all colors now settle for teaching a weak version of love at best.

            In the 10th chapter of Mark, a rich man comes to Jesus to ask him what he must do to find the meaning of his life.  This engagement is an important one because it is included in all 3 synoptic gospels.  Like the church, he has lived a good life in his area, but he has missed the overall point of a life with God at the center.  Jesus tells him that in order to find his definition as a child of God, he must sell all his possessions and give the money to the poor.  At that moment, he hears, perhaps for the first time, that money is the center of his life.  Jesus offers him the opportunity to find his center, his true north.  Like so many of us, he is unable to do make that move, and he goes away sad.

            One of the great legacies of the Jewish tradition, - a tradition in which Jesus the Jew lived and breathed and had his being - is the idea that justice must be at the center of life of the people of God.  The prophet Micah put it bluntly as he wondered what God required of humanity and especially of the people of God.  In Chapter 6, he goes through a litany of liturgical and ecclesiastical requirements that God might require, but then he proclaims the requirement that he believes is central:  do justice, love mercy, walk humbly.  

            The church faces this same dilemma in every age.  We are asked to center our life together on building an inclusive and welcoming community, on strong love, and on teaching and doing justice.  As I experienced, we have done OK on love;  we have waffled on building a welcoming community;  we have failed pretty miserably on centering on justice.  It is sad to say that when people think of the church, not many  think: “a place where people learn about the importance of justice.”   In our current time, we as church seem to be going in the other direction.  Indeed some of us are afraid that we are currently building a road to a theocracy. It would be one thing if that theocracy were built on the road to justice, but as always seems to be the case, the road to theocracy is usually built on meanness and repression and injustice.

            Justice requires that we consider others to be possibilities rather than problems.  Justice requires that we consider our own participation in the structures of injustice and seek to change that participation.   Justice requires that when we look at the community of faith known as the church, we delight in saying:  “it’s the place where I learn about equity and justice and love.”  

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