The issue of racism has bothered me for a long time. I believe White Supremacy is ugly and demonic. I also believe it is the driving force in political conservatism and so called "Christian Nationalism." I hate to even put those two words together because I do not believe any form of Nationalism is Christian. Some people like to make a distinction between Nationalism and patriotism. I do not. I think the difference between them is a matter of degree, not kind. I do not think any follower of Jesus Christ should have any emotional tie to any particular nation.
A guy in a church I served tried to say Christians have what he called "dual citizenship." My response was that such an idea is not biblical. St Paul tells us "our citizenship (singular) is in heaven." (Philippians 3:20) He does not say we have a citizenship in heaven and one on earth. Like the old gospel song says, "This world is not my home, I am only passing through." Paul himself only availed himself of the privileges of his Roman citizenship when it served to further his mission of spreading the gospel.
When Jesus said, "Render unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's, and unto God the things which are God's," This was after he had defined what was Caesar's as that which bears Caesar's image. He is trying to tell us that what bears God's image--our very selves--is what belongs to God. One of the reasons I do not think followers of Jesus belong in the military is that involves taking what is God's and giving it to Caesar!
I think that not only should Christians not take part in nationalism, but they should not take part in patriotism either. The Romans tried to get the early Christians to just offer a little pinch of incense to Caesar. The Christians would not do it. As I see it, not only is the United States an empire with similar moral compromises as Rome, but just as big a human rights abuser. If the body of Christ is entangled with the nation, it cannot prophetically call out the nation for its evils. To me, nationalism is a full-blown worship of the emperor, but even patriotism is offering a pinch of incense. I do not think you can do that and give Jesus your whole heart at the same time.
In 2023, I lost a couple of friendships over something I said about Martin Luther King, Jr. I would say it again, though. I will say it again.
Every Christian minister in every pulpit of every church in America is called by God to denounce white supremacy as a major theme of their ministry. Any preacher who does not do this with the prophetic urgency of Dr. King is walking in disobedience to the Holy Spirit. An Anglican priest got so angry at me he blocked me online over this. I do not care, I believe it is true. I think if a pastor fears losing his or her job over preaching social justice, I am skeptical of whether God called them or whether they called themselves. I was fired from a pastorate over preaching against the war in Afghanistan. It turned out to be the key that opened the door to the best ministry and academic work of my life. I plead with my preacher friends to boldly stand up and denounce white supremacy. I mean the WHITE preachers especially. Like someone said, it does no good to tell our brothers and sisters of color we are with them, and we see white supremacy as evil and demonic. We need to go back to our predominantly white congregations and tell them unless they also actively denounce it, they are not right with God.
In the church that fired me as their pastor, 22 years ago, there was a lady who asked me one time what I thought about interracial marriage. I told her I was totally against it. She smiled. I went on, "Members of the human race ought to only marry other members of the human race." She never came back and I did not care.
Someone asked me one time, what if my daughter brings home a black guy, and I said I would only have two questions. "How does he treat her?" and "Does he really love her?" If he loves her and treats her right--why should the color of his skin matter to me any more than the color of his eyes or hair?
As a Catholic I am not supposed to say what I am going to say next--but again, I just do not care. As far as I am concerned the only requirements for two people to be married should be that it is two adults, and neither is currently married to someone else. What color their skin is, and what gender they each are--is not something I care about--at all.
I have a dear friend in ministry, Rev. Dr. Starlette Thomas, whose ministry I admire. The theme of her ministry is THE RACELESS GOSPEL. Her point, and she puts it better than I can, is that the gospel is for humanity. Race is a construct which humans have made. It is something God does not see.
I wrote a piece on this blog last August which I think is also pertinent to this weekend of remembering Dr. King, and expressing my outrage at how people on the right have co-opted him in a disingenuous manner. You can find that here.
I have a photo of Dr. King, with my mentor Dr. Elton Trueblood, in Stout Meetinghouse, the place of worship on the campus of Earlham College. I was only 8 years old when Dr. King was assassinated. I did not know Dr. Trueblood until I was 22 years old, now 42 years ago. But I am proud that my mentor befriended Dr. King and believed in his ministry. As I said above, every preacher, in every pulpit of every church in America should be calling out white supremacy just as Dr. King did.