Showing posts with label justice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label justice. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 29, 2014
Why Such Silence?
I have been so distraught over the relentless targeting of civilians by Israeli forces. I see the faces of Palestinian children in my dreams and every morning I wake up Gaza has been the first thing on my mind. Perhaps I am being naive, but I really am in shock that the international community, especially the US, is allowing such atrocities to continue without forcing Israel to stop dropping bombs on innocent civilians.
What I find equally if not more disturbing is the silence of the church regarding the massacres taking place in Gaza. I've seen clergy promoting books and church programs on facebook, but not mention a word about Gaza. Israel bombs UN shelters full of women and children in Gaza and the church largely has nothing to say about it. Why? Why the silence?
Christians are the only people in the world who proclaim a crucified Savior. We believe that God is most clearly revealed among the poor and oppressed, not the rich and the powerful. Liberation theologian Jon Sobrino refers to all people who suffer unjustly as "the crucified people". What does it mean to proclaim a crucified Savior but ignore the suffering of the crucified people? Why does the church fail to recognize the Palestinians as a crucified people? They have been stripped of their homeland by force, occupied by a military regime, trapped in ghettos and refugee camps, stripped of their right of self determination and basic human rights in general, for no other reason than living on land coveted by others with superior military force. As if living in a concentration camp were not enough, now the people of Gaza must be bombed as well.
To be silent in the face of such injustice is sin and a betrayal of Jesus himself. We are our brother's keeper. We are our sister's keeper. We cannot pick and choose who we will defend if we are to be authentic to the way of Jesus. We must stand up for the crucified people wherever they appear, whether in Gaza, Syria or the urban ghetto. I have never been as disappointed with church as I am now, so slow to move, so slow to take notice, so slow to act, so wrapped up in its own agenda. A church that proclaims a crucified Savior but turns its back on crucified people has lost its way and is of no use to the world.
The world doesn't need more church services. The world needs people who will lay their lives on the line for the sake of justice and the liberation of the oppressed. The world needs people who refuse to be silent in the midst of atrocities and will fight for what's right regardless of what it might cost them. If the church turns its back on Gaza then it has turned its back on Jesus. Make no mistake about it, we cannot call ourselves the people of God without taking up the cause of those who suffer unjustly. There is no room for us in the kingdom of God if we do otherwise.
Following The Way,
Kevin
Monday, July 21, 2014
The Deception of Despair
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The atrocities currently taking place in Gaza have affected
me deeply. The death of innocent
children and the apathy from so many people regarding those deaths have been
beyond discouraging. I found myself
nearly slipping into depression and despair, wishing for an eject button to get me off
of this planet. I do not want to live in
a world where 1,500 pound bombs are dropped on innocent children in their own
homes while the international community fiddles as to what to do about it or
barely takes notice at all.
But despair is a deception.
Evil knows that it has already lost and its days are numbered. Despair is a last ditch attempt to delay the
inevitable. What is the inevitable? The end of injustice, the end off oppression,
the end of violence, the end of unnecessary suffering. When good people are silent evil wins. And when good people become overwhelmed with
all that is wrong with the world and fall into despair, evil prolongs its last
days. Do not be deceived. The darkness cannot overcome the light. Despair is a smoke screen, nothing more than
evidence that evil is in its final death throes. It is designed to keep us from seeing our
power and fool us into believing that we cannot overturn every system of
oppression. Do not be deceived. We can and we must.
Evil will never win because no amount of violence and oppression
can ever extinguish the thirst and hunger for righteousness. The thirst and hunger for righteousness, the
desire for a world free of violence, poverty, oppression and hate, the capacity
to imagine a whole new world that is just, is eternal. It cannot be killed. It cannot be exterminated. It can only be satisfied and it will not rest
until it has had its fill.
Evil has already lost and because we know this we will fight
it wherever it dares to show its face.
We do not give in to fear, apathy or helplessness. We confront it head on. I believe that authentic Christianity
requires radical militancy regarding injustice, an uncompromising, unyielding,
unstoppable determination to end injustice wherever we find it.
We are seeing injustice now in Gaza where innocent civilians
are being regularly targeted by Israel.
Stripping the Palestinians of their homeland and civil rights, locking
them into ghettos and blocking them from resources and access to power and self
determination apparently is not enough.
Now innocent Palestinian men, women and children must be bombed.
But let us not give in to despair and the paralysis it
brings. Let us not turn our heads and
look the other way in apathy. Now is the
time to take our faith, hope and love and translate it into action. We must stand up to injustice wherever it
appears. We must love the oppressed
enough to risk our very lives for their liberation or cease to call ourselves
the people of God. “Injustice anywhere
is a threat to justice everywhere” (Martin Luther King Jr.). It is time for all of us who consider
ourselves be the people of God to join
the struggle for the liberation of the oppressed.
If not now then when?
Following The Way,
Kevin
Friday, July 18, 2014
The Slaughter of the Innocents
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Photo by Momen Faiz |
The same cannot be said for the Palestinians in Gaza, however. A real life slaughter of the innocents is taking place there right now. Over 200 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli air strikes with over 40 of them being children. Civilian homes have been targeted with the 1,500 pound bombs used by Israel. It is important to keep in mind that the residents of Gaza have nowhere to go to escape the bombing. The borders of Gaza and Israel have been closed and they are hemmed in by the sea. A population of 1.7 Palestinians live in about 140 square miles and half of the population is comprised of children. To target civilian homes is to target innocent children. No political jargon or double talk can avoid this fact. Israel is dropping 1,500 pound bombs on children.
This fact was made abundantly clear by Wednesday's bombing of four children on a beach in Gaza. Hamas was not present. No rocket launchers were in the vicinity, just fisherman trying to go about their daily lives and children playing on the beach. Ahed and Muhammed Baker were 11. Zakariah Baker was 10 and Ismail Baker was 9. Their crime? They simply wanted to play outside after being cooped up in their houses for days since the Israeli air strikes began. They were innocent and they were slaughtered. No one can deny that. What are we going to do about it?
We must not remain silent. We must inform people about the atrocities taking place in Gaza. We must speak up and demand an end to the slaughter. We must remind the world that slaughtering children is never acceptable, justifiable or inevitable. And for people of faith in particular, we have absolutely no right to call ourselves the people of God if we do nothing in the face of injustice, suffering and oppression. If the slaughter of innocent children does not move us to take action what will? Now is the time to put our faith into action.
Following The Way,
Kevin
WARNING! The following video shows graphic footage of the victims of Wednesday's bombing. Please be advised. It is very difficult to watch, but I believe it is very important to bear witness to such atrocities so we may be motivated to act and prevent future atrocities from happening again.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cgmq8fs-ick
Thursday, July 17, 2014
The Blood of Jesus
(Image Credit: AP. Blood in the streets of Gaza City after an Israeli air strike killed seven, July 12)
The blood of Jesus runs red in the streets of Gaza and the church barely takes notice. In his book The Cross and The Lynching Tree, James Cone defines salvation as "a liberating event in the lives of all who are struggling for survival and dignity in a world bent on denying their humanity" (p. 151). For Christians we see this salvation illustrated most clearly in the person of Jesus and paradoxically in the scandal of the cross. It is on the cross that the Son of God becomes the Oppressed One, aligning himself not with the rich or the powerful, but the poor, the oppressed, the trampled upon. Tragically, the Jim Crow South never recognized the crucified body of Jesus in the lynched bodies of about 5,000 black men, women and children who were brutally beaten, burned, mutilated and hung from trees. And today we often fail to recognize the blood of Jesus in the shed blood of all who suffer unjustly.
The blood of Jesus runs red in Gaza where the targeting of civilian homes have left over 200 Palestinians dead, over 40 of them children. The latest victims were four children whose only crime was playing on the beach when an Israeli airstrike violently ended their lives.
The blood of Jesus runs red in Chicago where the combined forces of capitalism and racism have trapped many blacks in ghettos buried in poverty, violence and despair, while being ignored by the rest of society. Over 80 shootings took place over the course of Independence Day weekend alone. Let us not be deceived, ghettos are no Chicago phenomenon. They can be found all throughout the US. They are created by the rich and the powerful to keep the poor from access to resources and power.
The blood of Jesus runs red in Syria where the death toll continues to rise higher and higher though mainstream media no longer report the atrocities taking place there. We are over that I guess and on to other things.
Wherever innocent blood is shed the blood of Jesus flows, yet many of us who are his followers fail to recognize this fact. Many of us care more about the sufferings of fictional characters in shows like Orange Is The New Black than the very real suffering of victims in Gaza or the ghetto. The cross of Jesus ought to fuel us with a desire to put an end to any more crosses. The shed blood of Jesus ought to fuel us with an indomitable desire to stop the shedding of any more innocent blood. The horror of the cross ought to move us to place our very lives on the line in order to create a world where violence, oppression and unnecessary suffering are nothing but distant, distant memories.
Over 2,000 years have passed and yet the blood of Jesus, the blood of the persecuted, the blood of the trampled upon still flows. When will we take notice?
Following The Way,
Kevin
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
Occupy Wall Street
"For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places".
Ephesians 6:12
This Scripture came alive for me as I attended the Occupy Wall Street protest in New York City on Saturday, September 17. It was my first protest ever, but I can easily say I will never be the same. I went with a group of 9 other Christians as the Protest Chaplains. We were there to be a specifically Christian witness against corporate greed and excess and the exploitation of the poor. It was absolutely wonderful to stand in solidarity with the protesters! We sang, we prayed, we gave out about 500 granola bars and we had many conversations with many wonderful people.
One of the things I remember most is seeing the bronze statue of the bull for the first time. It was barricaded and there were police standing around it to protect it from protesters. I was disgusted! Seeing police officers defend this idol, this symbol of the false god of money devouring human lives in order to make a profit, made me want to vomit. It was then that I became aware that we were confronting evil. This protest wasn't just a social battle it was a spiritual one. We joined the people and we marched around the bull several times holding up a cross and I felt God marching with us. My eyes are tearing up just thinking about it. The atmosphere was intensely charged. I felt this surge of energy and the conviction that darkness cannot overcome the light. Evil will never conquer good. Justice can be delayed but it cannot be stopped. This bull and all who swear by it will fall.
This was the first time that I realized that being a follower of Jesus in this present time meant being an activist. When huge banks and corporations seek to devour the soul of America, highjack our political and economic systems and reduce democracy to a historical artifact, Christians must not lock themselves in their churches. We must follow Jesus out of our churches and into the streets to stand in solidarity with all who fight for justice, fairness and equality. Our faith never tells us to run and hide from evil, but to confront it head on with the knowledge that evil shall not prevail.
It is not enough for the church to say "Blessed are the poor". What are we doing to help them? Do we dare speak the truth to power in love? Are we willing to lay aside our comfort and complacency to be a voice for those who are trying to be silenced by systems of oppression and exploitation? Let's not just say what Jesus said. Let's do what Jesus did and is still doing today: setting the captives free. Let us turn our prayers into action. Let us follow Jesus, the Liberator; the Jesus who was never ok with anyone being mistreated and stepped on, especially the poor. This protest gives me an opportunity to do just that and I am going to follow this Jesus with all that I have within me. I hope you will join me.
Following the Way,
Kevin
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Act Justly. Love Mercy. Walk Humbly.
"He has showed you, O man, what is good. And what does the LORD require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God." Micah 6:8
For me the most profound passages of Scripture are often the simplest: small, often overlooked passages that are so rich with meaning if you are still long enough to grasp it. This is one of those simple beautiful passages. We make things so much more complicated than they have to be; I think it’s a part of basic human psychosis. Leave it to us to take even the simplest of tasks and turn it into some monumental labyrinth. But here in this passage we are only given 3 simple instructions:
1. Act justly
2. Love mercy
3. Walk humbly
I am struck by the simplicity of these instructions. This is something that we all can do, from the youngest to the oldest, regardless of faith tradition, or social status. This is a simple message for all of us. What would our world look like if everyone tried to follow these 3 little instructions? To act justly, to do justice, to do what is right? We live in a world where people love their houses and love their cars and love their dogs, but what would our world look like if people actually loved mercy and kindness and compassion? With all of the egos we have flying around everywhere wouldn’t it be nice to deal with people who didn’t feel the need to feed their egos constantly but instead decided to embrace humility?
Act justly. Love mercy. Walk humbly. It’s so simple and yet deeply meaningful. Sometimes we need simple reminders on how to live and what life is really about and for this little reminder I am grateful.
Following the Way,
Kevin
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