Thursday, July 2, 2015

The Faith of "Mother Emmanuel"

My “home” state of South Carolina has been in the news lately. I use quotation marks around home for a good reason. Although I am South Carolina born, on a July morning in the hot and humid city of Columbia, only eight weeks later my mother, brother, and I made our way north to our new home in New Jersey. My South Carolina born and raised father had already begun work in his new job with a corporation based in Manhattan. He never brought his family back. Aside from our daughter’s college stay, our relocation to South Carolina barely five years ago in order for me to become pastor of Seneca Presbyterian Church represents the only sojourn of my immediate family in the Palmetto state since that departure. Yet the fascination of late with my home state of South Carolina fascinates me.
                Growing up far away from the deep south, yet with southern roots, South Carolina was the ancestral home for my father’s family, our Myrtle Beach vacation destination every August, the source of some of the world’s best music, and producer of the world’s finest peaches, which by the way are just now coming into season. God is good!
                Yet up until about two weeks ago, the world saw South Carolina as the birthplace of the confederacy and home to those who celebrate white supremacy. That impression was painfully and sorrowfully captured in the person of Dylann Roof as he took the lives of the nine children of God who welcomed him into their church sanctuary as they were gathered around the Word. He thought his act of evil would ignite a racial war, divide a nation, and empower racial bigotry. Instead, it brought the races together and likely will bring down what has become the symbol of hate that seemed to motivate his actions. Dylann thought the world worked one way; God’s people showed him another way.
                How did everything change so rapidly? It’s a fascinating question with no simple answer.
                First, we must acknowledge that what seems rapid is actually a culmination, the sudden burst of light that is the fruit of long faithful work and diligent faithful witness. I do not think that the legislature of the state of South Carolina would have been moved to secure the 2/3 majority needed to remove the flag were it not for the person of Clementa Pinckney. They knew him. He had been their colleague in the house and senate for 18 years. They knew his calm but persistent voice along with his compassionate and embracing heart. And they know how profoundly he will be missed. So they know it’s time for the flag to come down – in honor of their friend and in opposition to the hate and violence that took his life.
                Second, I think change has come so rapidly because Dylann Roof crossed the line. Of course, he crossed the line of violence in the taking of innocent lives. Yet others have died before. Dylann crossed the church line; he violated a sacred southern space. He abused God-breathed hospitality. It was a hospitality that even almost stayed the killer’s hand. “They were so nice to me.”
                The witness of those lives and the testimony of their families continue to change hearts. Many have been astounded at the words of forgiveness spoken when grief was only a few days young. Many question how that could happen and know they could never overcome the anger that understandably dwells within a human heart at such a tremendous loss. They wonder if such rapid grace is a vestige of the racial divide that always placed our Black brothers and sisters in a position of deference.
                For me, it is a vestige of our racial divide, but one less insidious. It is a reminder to me of the power of faith known and lived by our Black brothers and sisters. When you live in a world that treats you as second-class and unworthy then come into God’s house where the message of grace is preached with power, you absorb that grace in amazing ways. Not to enable deference to power but in order to be a witness to power – a witness to the heart of Christian faith.
                Forgiveness doesn’t negate justice; it enables it. It breaks the cycle of violence. It sees the guilty one with God’s eyes. They are the same eyes that see us as just as guilty and just as much in need of grace. Yes - we still pay the human price for our sins. Yes - we are still accountable for our actions. Atonement is still the pathway toward reconciliation, but forgiveness becomes the first step; not the last.  
                I discovered recently that one of my ministerial friends knew Rev. Pinckney. They shared a CPE (Clinical Pastoral Education) experience together. She says he was in life everything everyone is saying about him in death. A man who walked the talk. I know that must be true. His people are living proof. They are the ultimate testimony to the effectiveness of pastoral leadership; a witness every pastor would covet.
                 It remains to be seen what lasting legacy will come from this terrible loss of life. Will the flag actually come down? But more important still, will we begin the hard journey of acknowledging our past and claiming our future across the divisions that still own us?
                Our president said it eloquently: “God helped us to see where we were blind.” Let us not be blind to the heritage of history. Slavery was evil. That truth is self-evident today. Yet my ancestors who owned slaves were not evil people. They were good people who were blind to the evil that existed all around them.  In like manner, let us not be blind to the truth of our reality. Racism is evil and it exists all around us, even if we who are not its targets can just as easily be blind to its power.

                Let’s move beyond taking down a flag. Let’s work together to bring life out of death – abundant life for all God’s children. 

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