Thursday, August 27, 2015

Confessions of a Pharisee

Pentectost 14

I have been a student of sociology since my college days.  Sociology examines the ways we all are shaped and impacted – for good and for ill -- by the social systems in which we participate.  Some of these impacts are conscious.  Many of them are not.  The fact that I was born a white male, in a middle class, blue collar, Lutheran family with a German heritage, in Wisconsin in the United States significantly shapes who I am and how I look at the world.  These realities impacted the opportunities that I had, the challenges I faced and privileges I enjoyed growing up.  The human systems I was born into provided me, and still provide me, with traditions, customs, perspectives and practices that I simply take for granted.  That is true for all of us.

It is very important for all of us to be aware of the way the systems in which we participate affect our lives.  I think this is especially true for people of faith.  As Christians, we need to ask ourselves if the human traditions, customs, perspectives and practices we take for granted actually conflict with God’s expectations and the way of Jesus we claim to follow.  These can be hard and sobering questions to wrestle with.  Jesus boils God’s expectations down to two:  “…you shall love the Lord you God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind and with all your strength.”  And, “…you shall love your neighbor as yourself.”  (Mark 12:29-31).  In Mark 7, Jesus challenges the Pharisees, and us, to measure all our human traditions against God’s command, and to understand that, where they conflict, God’s command always takes precedence.  Always.  Frequently, I have learned, that’s not easy, or comfortable or convenient.  

Over the past eighteen months, a group of us in the Arkansas-Oklahoma Synod have been meeting together to discuss and learn and confess the reality of racism in our society and, even more, in our lives.  We have read together, talked and listened to one another, prayed with one another and shared our stories with one another.  For me, it has been both enlightening and difficult.  I am exceedingly grateful for the brothers and sisters who have been my companions on this journey.  Through those conversations, I have come to understand that we all participate in systems that perpetuate racism and privilege those who, like me, are white and male.  There are things in my life that I just take for granted, that a person of color needs to think about continually.  There are opportunities in my life that I have enjoyed that persons of color have to struggle to achieve.  One simple, but telling, example:  I have never once had to stop and ask whether the fact that I am white and male would be a determining factor in receiving a call to minister in a particular place.  Rarely, have I needed to consider my race or gender as  I carry out my ministry after I received the call.  My colleagues and friends who are persons of color and/or female have to consider daily how their gender and/or the color of their skin will impact their ministry.   The human traditions which shape this reality are not in line with God’s command.  Unexamined, they do untold amounts of damage in our communities, in our churches and in our lives.

Rev. Elizabeth Eaton, the Presiding  Bishop of the  Evangelical Lutheran Church in America has called upon our church to join  the African Methodist Episcopal Church to recognize Sunday, September 6 as “Confession, Repentance and Commitment to End Racism Sunday”.   I join her in that call.   We all need to join the conversation.  We all need to find ways to combat both the blatant and often violent racism that is still alive and well in our Land, and also the much more insidious systemic racism in which we all participate.  To love our neighbor as God commands demands nothing less.

Peace,

Bishop Mike. 

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