“THE DAYS OF MY LIFE”
Last week I
wrote brief synopses of what Caroline and Fahed Abu-Akel shared of their
journeys at the Church Women United Luncheon where we all were honored with
their Human Rights Award on September 8.
I noted that their perspective came from those who are oppressed –
Caroline as a woman, Fahed as an Arab Christian. Today I’ll share part of what I shared of my
story at the CWU Luncheon. I come from
the perspective of the white male, of the oppressor. While they had neighbors and interventionists
help them recognize their captivity to internalized oppression, God sent similar
folks to me to help me recognize my internalized superiority. This is some of what I shared.
I grew up
in the white, segregated South – segregated schools, segregated churches, segregated
everything. I was taught the love and
grace of God by wonderful white people, including my spectacular mom, who
raised me as a single, working, poor mother.
All of these white people also taught me captivity to what the Bible
calls “the Powers,” systemic things like racism and sexism and materialism and
homophobia and militarism. [At this
point, I got many more “Amens” from the mostly black women CWU gathering than I
wanted!!!} I believed that white people
were superior, that men should dominate women, that money brings life, that
LGBTQ people were not human like me, and that redemptive violence brought
peace. They taught me well – it wasn’t
that I believed in equality and was in rebellion – I believed that white
supremacy was true, was God’s will.
Fortunately
for me, I was blessed to have God send people to be neighbors to me, to
intervene in my life and to reveal my captivity to me, so that I could begin to
see this whole new world that God is calling into being. There are too many of those people to name,
but some of them are in this room today, and I thank you!
It reminds
me of the passage in Matt 15:21-28, where Jesus encounters a Palestinian
woman. Now, I’m no Jesus, but I
understand this story very well. Jesus
is tired, and he’s a Jewish man, and this Palestinian woman is not in his
circle. But she bugs him and begs him to
heal her daughter. But, Jesus ends up
calling her a dog and telling her that she is not worthy of being with the
Jews. She then stuns Jesus by saying:
“Yes, Lord, but even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from the Master’s table.” She reminds Jesus that she’s in the
house! Though Jesus doesn’t think so,
she BELONGS to the household of God.
God sent
this woman as neighbor to Jesus, to let him know that his mission was deeper
and wider than even He thought it was – AND, it worked! By the end of Matthew’s Gospel, when the
Resurrected Jesus sends out his disciples before he leaves, he doesn’t tell
them to go only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. Rather, he tells them
to go to everybody, to go to the entire world to proclaim this widening,
inclusive, justice-seeking, love-bearing Beloved Community of God.
And that’s
how it works – we’re asked to be neighbors and interventionists with one
another. AND to listen when God sends
neighbors to intervene in our lives. To speak
up and act up for justice, to seek equity and equality, and to remain humble in
our approach, because we all have captivity to the powers in us – there are no
exceptions. We need people to intervene
in our lives.
I thank Church Women United for being
some of those neighbors, some of those interventionists, for your continuing
witness over these years. I thank all of
the neighbors God has sent to intervene in my life and who God will continue to
send. We are called to share with one
another, bear with one another, love one another, challenge one another,
support one another – that’s who we are, and that’s what brings us together
today. Thank you!
So, let us
reflect on this need for neighbors and interventionists in our lives. Let us give thanks for our journeys and for
those who have nurtured in us the idea that we are children of God, rather than
children of the Powers of the world. And
let us resolve to be witnesses to one another in that way. Speaking of that kind of witness, here’s a reminder
of how the Powers work when we are not able to do what we need to do as
neighbors and interventionists. This
past Saturday, September 15, was the 55th anniversary of Birmingham
Sunday, when white men planted dynamite in Sixteenth Street Baptist Church, and
when it exploded, 4 little girls going to Sunday school were killed. Rhiannon Giddens has a great cover of the
song that Richard Farina wrote about that killing, and here’s the link to it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4_T5KlTpvoM&feature=youtu.be
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