lifeseek.org Preparing a Power Generation

6Apr/120

Racism, Race, and Religion

April 2012: Featured Post

On a monthly basis, lifeseek.org will be featuring a thought-provoking essay that is designed to stimulate healthy dialogue and a collective resolve to seek the face of God for answers of some of the most pressing issues of our age. Your participation and feedback is very important to us and we encourage you to leave your comments, facebook or tweet this post after reading.


“Then Miriam and Aaron spoke against Moses because of the Cushite woman whom he had married (for he had married a Cushite woman)” (Numbers 12:1)

Zimmerman & TrayvoneWith the current climate surrounding issues of racism in America, the above scripture would probably be taken as being racist in nature. When you look at convergent definitions of racism, however, that particular description wouldn’t apply. Racism properly defined highlights the element of power. This power (institutional, physical force, political, etc.) is used intentionally, or unintentionally, to impose an unfair ideology that exploits or demeans people. This can be based on color, worldview, socio-economic status, etc. Expressed in the above account we see several things: national pride, prejudice, jealousy, discrimination, and envy, but not racism. Most people regard prejudice as synonymous with racism, but it is not. Prejudice is referent of personal choice or preference. Discrimination is referent of the capacity or ability to be selective based on various criteria…these are not racism. These things in and of themselves are not negative, but when they are used for coercive or exclusionary purposes, then they become problematic. When dissecting racial issues it is important to look at history, current facts surrounding racial climate, statistics, sociology, psychology, personal experience, and the experiences of others. From here, general principles of engaging racial issues can be produced, but it is usually not wise to make conclusive statements. Where does that leave us?

Well, if you are Christian, the above should be a point of reference for interaction. This and other scriptures show us that racism is

justice

justice

really not the issue, but sin most certainly is. The Lord judged Miriam and Aaron for the accusatory picketnature of their statements towards Moses, not for being prejudiced against Miriam. Their hearts had envious, jealous, self-righteous, and condemning thoughts toward other human beings- therein lies the heart of the issue of racism. Sin is the nature of man that is broken and refuses fellowship with God. Our hearts shake and angry fist at God and refuse to pledge allegiance to one who is greater; we refuse to be ruled by one who has our best interest in mind, and we choose to be our own ruler. As a result, we become separated from God, and consequently we cannot see the imprint of God on other human beings…his breath of life actually becomes a relational irritant. With no one to rule our hearts, we put faith in our own ability to rule; we who cannot rule our own selves justly, then decide that we should rule well over others, but sin makes a cruel master. Not only do we find ourselves enslaved to our own pseudo-virtuous philosophies, but we as our own rulers now, we unjustly judge the philosophies, lifestyles, and the humanity of others.

Sin

Sin

Therein lies the heart of racism- we shun God and consequently shun his image in others. Ruling over ourselves and respectfully loving others is a result of having the heart of the one who rules in total love,bobby-rush-hoodie in total justice, and in perfect judgment. If you are Christian, we should be angry at injustice in the world, but most of all, we should be angry at how marred our society is because of sin. Before we toe the picket line, make phone calls, blog our minds, and jump on the bandwagon…we should pray. We should ask God to give us his heart and mind for both victim and aggressor: to love each with his love, to hate violence and all associated attitudes, to have justice brought to each situation, to face our own prejudices with conviction and courage, that the light of God’s love would reach the darkest places, and for wisdom for law giving and law enforcing individuals.

Seminars, rallies, and courses are great to attend but these things in and of themselves do not change the human heart…only God can do that. And that is why with in all of the philanthropic, political, and social efforts that we push for, the main agenda….the main agenda…is that God be glorified.

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20Mar/120

To Be Young, Gifted, and Called

March 2012: Featured Post

On a monthly basis, lifeseek.org will be featuring a thought-provoking essay that is designed to stimulate healthy dialogue and a collective resolve to seek the face of God for answers of some of the most pressing issues of our age. Your participation and feedback is very important to us and we encourage you to leave your comments, facebook or tweet this post after reading.


raisin in the sun

raisin in the sun

In 1964 Lorraine Hansberry, the award winning playwright of “Raisin in the Sun” addressed an audience of young African American writers at a United Negro College Fund banquet.  She spoke of the responsibility of being young gifted and black, “surrounded by the whirling elements of this world….neither on the fringe or utterly involved: the prime observer waiting poised for inclusion”.1  She encourages these young writers to pen the wisdom excavated from the despair, life, and love they have experienced living in a nation that has despised their color and was afraid to acknowledge their humanity.  To write about the world as it is and out how they dream it should be.

Although I was not in that crowd of young African American writers that day, and wasn’t even thought of for that matter, Lorraine’s words to be young gifted and black…and to dream about how the world should be… still ring in my ears 50 years later, but in a slightly different way. The challenge and gift I face is not only being

 Lorraine Hansberry

Lorraine Hansberry

young gifted and black, but being young gifted and called.  At the age of 20, I received what people in religious circles refer to as “the call”. I was several months away from graduating from college with my Bachelors of Social Work, and was making plans to continue my education (Master’s of Social Work) at the University of Maryland, when “it” came.  The “it” was a feeling that the plans I had so meticulously intended for myself were now being interrupted by a Force greater than me, a Force that I could run from…but not for too long.  Although my plans to obtain a Master’s were “good” and the most logical next step in my educational journey, I was feeling compelled to do something that seemed bigger than my most wildest dreams and aspirations for myself.  This “thing” seemed to be linked to a grander picture, than me and “MySpace” and required me to trust the Voice of the one who knew my very being before I was born and created me with a purpose in mind.

pediatrician

pediatrician

Up until this point, I knew I wanted to help people.  As a little girl I wanted to be a pediatrician because I liked babies, and wanted to make a lot of money.  Then as a teenager, I thought I would become an interior decorator because I loved art and fashion.  By the time I got to college, I turned my attention back to the helping profession and decided to declare social work as my major.  It seemed like a good fit; my friends were always coming to me for someone to listen to them, I found gratification in helping people, and I enjoyed being around people.  I initially enjoyed my social work classes and by my junior year I had decided to pursue the Master’s of Social work degree, and possibly a JD.  But it wasn’t until I started my internships that I began to see a disconnect in the social service world.  Having grown up in a Christian home, I started to wonder why the social service world seemed to completely focus on the material needs of clients, not even assessing their spiritual needs.  We were told we could not talk about religion or spirituality unless the client initiated it.  It almost felt like a taboo subject.  So here I was three years into my program, wondering how the gap between the “spiritual” and the “secular” would be bridged or if it could be bridged, asking God where God was in the midst of my clients’ crisis and in their dire need of basic life necessities.

You may be wondering what does all this have to do with what it means to be young, gifted, and called.  As my dad says, “I’m glad you asked”!  I believe my story as a young 20 year old trying to figure out my career path and finding myself asking questions that I cannot solve by myself, points to what Sharon Parks describes as the central work of young adults, to ask big questions and discover worthy dreams.  It was in the midst of asking these questions when I heard a “call” to embark on a journey and a way of being in the world that looked beyond myself and recognized that there were questions to be asked, and answers sought that would impact families, communities, and institutions.  At first I thought this call would confine me to the church, and if this was so, I felt too young to be so serious about God and the church.  I also felt ill-equipped.  What possibly could I share with people older than I or younger that they would want to hear?  I was “neither on the fringe or utterly involved” in adulthood or childhood.

As these anxieties sought to filter in I was reminded of Paul’s admonition to Timothy, “Don’t let anyone despise your youth”.  To be young is to have an energy and strength that one doesn't have to work at obtaining.  When one is a child you have the energy but not necessarily the strength.  On the other hand when one is an adult or older adult you may have strength but not the vigor and energy you once had as a young adult.  There is something about this in-between or liminal space between childhood and adulthood that I believe God wants us to hone into.  I want to begin this conversation about what it means to be young gifted and called by first addressing what it means to be young.

Previously, I described young adulthood as a liminal moment in one’s life cycle, not a child nor an adult.  This concept of liminality was developed by Arnold van Gennep to describe the structure of rites of passage rituals in different cultures.  The structure involved preliminal rites (rites of separation), liminal rites (rites of transitions), and post-liminal rites (rites of incorporation).  It was in the “liminal rites” phase where the initiand becomes a blank slate “through the removal of previously taken-for-granted forms and limits” and the intiand experiences “considerable changes” to his or her identity, and passes “through the threshold that marks the boundary between” the separation rite and the incorporation rite.2  Like the structure of rites of passages, it is in the liminal space of young adulthood, which can span from 20-40 years of age, where considerable changes to one’s identity, belief systems, and support networks begins to take place.  Parks states that is it in the beginning of young adulthood where, “the experience of the birth of critical awareness and the dissolution and recomposition of the meaning of self, other, world, and “God” takes place.3

In some ways there are removals of what Gennep described as “previously taken for granted forms and limits”.  In young adulthood we are re-evaluating the values that were once taught us, we are questioning those in authority and striving to make the answers our own (not because grandma told me so).  We are coming into our own, and getting comfortable in our own skin.  Furthermore, we are experiencing some of the greatest transitions we will experience in our life time (leaving college, starting careers, establishing homes, getting married, having children etc.).  It is precisely in these critical moments when our dreams of what the world ought-to-be like begin to form, and we have the energy and strength to make it so.  I believe it is in this critical moment of young adulthood when we begin to hear and even search for that call, which will give our life greater meaning and purpose.

To be continued…..

What does it mean to be gifted and called?


1. http://www.duboislc.org/html/YoungGiftedBlack.html
2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liminality

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9Aug/110

Suffering in the World

July 2011: Featured Post

On a monthly basis, lifeseek.org will be featuring a thought-provoking essay that is designed to stimulate healthy dialogue and a collective resolve to seek the face of God for answers of some of the most pressing issues of our age. Your participation and feedback is very important to us and we encourage you to leave your comments, facebook or tweet this post after reading.

Holy Bible

Holy Bible

Today, my wife showed me the video of Brianna Lopez and our hearts broke at the suffering she endured.  Simultaneously, we were also angry at the fact that her uncle, father, and mother were able to do this to her.  My wife then reminded me that one of the most common hindrances that people have in believing in God, is that if he is really a good God, then he should prevent suffering.  This thought also brings into view the omnipotence of God.

I thought about her statement, and this roadblock of suffering that people encounter.  I also thought about the Bible in it's entirety, and took into consideration that many people who make this statement, don't read the Bible...or if they do...they remember the parts that they agree with.  God becomes an ethereal checkerboard where you can jump over things that prevent one from understanding things fully.  Consequently, Biblical doctrine becomes a bag of Skittles where people get to pick and choose the flavors that satisfy their palette.

As I thought about it a little more, I didn't come up with an exhaustive commentary or a thorough exegesis, but I did have some points I wanted to share.  As I thought about this  poor little girl, her family, the Bible, and all of questions that come along with similar situations, I came to a simple conclusion.  This is not so much an argument, but statements based on my observations, conversations, and the suffering we witness firsthand or otherwise.  As I thought about these things, I was forced to conclude that the same people who don't understand why God would allow suffering in the world, are the same people who don't understand why God HAD to send his Son into the world to suffer. The answer to suffering, and why Christ had to suffer is one in the same: a true understanding of SIN, precludes by necessity, that someone has to pay for transgression, and that every individual is capable of the most heinous of crimes.

suffering

suffering

In other words, people don't deserve to suffer because most people are not criminals.  In this line of thinking, that "only bad people deserve to get punished", we can conclude that there are degrees to "good" and to "bad."  By default, many people who ask this question, have already decided that they know what is truly good, that evil is defined by our limited perspective of right and wrong, and even that our ideas of what punishment are, should be considered just via the consensus of the masses.  We are so hellbent on defining our own reality, that we fail to see that what we think of as right and wrong, changes with every generation, with the reshaping of old ideas/philosophies, and with the increased acceptance of lifestyles that are centered on the pursuit of pleasure.

We fail to see that we might be better than a person on death row, but we are not better than a perfect God.  He alone is the supreme judge, and he alone can execute perfect judgment.  He alone allows suffering to accomplish his perfect will, and he alone gave us the most accurate description of our human condition; that sin would have such a devastating effect on the UNIVERSE, that Christ had to come to reverse our irreversible dilemma.  Suffering is not only the result of sin, but until Christ returns again, it will be a reality of our shattered existence...but he is the Master Potter.  There has never been anything broken that he has not, or could not fix.  Whether he chooses to do it on this side of eternity or not, is his choice alone.

God never said that there would be no suffering in the world.  He never said that suffering would be only for the wicked and skip over his own children. He never said that our time on Earth would be easy and that he would keep us from painful situations.  He did say that he would be with us in suffering, that he would never leave us or forsake us, and that one day all things will be made new.  That's the God of the Bible, that is the God who tells us he has overcome the world, and will give us strength when MANY tribulations would test our commitment to him.

In closing, I want to say that if you don't know Christ he is waiting for you to discover his person and his heart for you.  He has already displayed ultimate love on the cross, and by dying, he pays the price for all of our wrongdoing towards God, and secures us a place in eternity with him.  Furthermore, he offers his presence and help to those who have decided to call on his name and accept the gift of salvation.  Without a proper understanding of who the God of the Bible really is, and what he says about suffering; God becomes a tyrant, a villain, and life's problems are his curse on you, and not a chance for you to get to know his love while the heat is on.

And for those of you who do know Christ, be a light in this world.  Remind people that Christ is close to the brokenhearted, the suffering, and the disenfranchised...he knows firsthand what it means to be forgotten, to be cast aside, and to suffer.  Do not be swayed by peoples questions and arguments; people are really wanting to know one thing...does God care about me?  And if he does how do I know he cares about me?  The Gospel has outlasted every philosophy, cultural fad, scientific development, foolproof argument(s), and the blistering winds of contempt and time.  Preach the Gospel...it is the power of God for salvation...for all who would believe.  That is to the Jeffrey Dahmer's, the garbage man, to those on death row, and to those in row #9 at the grocery store.  Life's problems affect us all, but only the Gospel will get us to God.

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