Showing posts with label Current Events. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Current Events. Show all posts

Monday, October 10, 2022

This Land Is Not Our Land: Talking to Our Kids about Indigenous People's Day


This land is not our land.

When we took our family to the Poconos (“river between two mountains”) this summer, we talked quite a bit about First Nations and Indigenous people. We talked about how the region being called Shawnee (“southerner”) was the misappropriation of Indigenous people who lived there, who were actually Lenape (“original peoples”). We talked about the same river we canoed that day was traveled by people who were eventually forced out. We talked about kindness and theft, belonging and power. We talked about how the water had a story to tell if we dared listen.
It wasn’t as profound of conversation as you may imagine, but it was just that. We talked and acknowledged and learned together about where we lived and who used to call this land home before they were exiled out.
Every year, I am reminded of where we live and the Indigenous names often overlooked…and mispronounced. Again, this land is not our land.

Tuesday, May 31, 2022

prayers are just thoughts: platitudes cannot protect our children

prayers are just thoughts
platitudes that defer action
personal responsibility,
accountability 
our claimed-to-be-sacred
utterances
resist what is deeper and divine
a collective call and cry
to mobilize change

when will our prayers
become Just thoughts
imagining
dreaming
tirelessly working
for a better world
where all children thrive
as young people alive
no longer captive
to idols
fashioned as guns
or supposed rights and freedoms,
privileges and powers possessed by too few
adults,
charged to be their protectors,
who polish more than they push
for goodness and kindness
non-violence and peace

maybe our prayers are just thoughts
as a Just world costs us what we worship
value
love
more than our children 

Friday, February 25, 2022

Locutions: Words When Everything Else Fails Us

Teresa of Ávila called locutions the single words that “contain a world of meaning such as the understanding alone could never put rapidly into human language.”

Everything is heavy right now. It has been so for some time and, somehow, it’s heavier still. Find a locution to center your soul and keep you awake when despair intends to lull you to sleep. This is vital to the mind, body, and spirit, individuals and communities. In seasons when suffering and sorrow tempt us to see only a barren present, locutions are mindful lifelines that help us take that next breath...and the next...and the next...





words
phrases
safety nets
in prose
or poetry
carbon ink
etched into the dermis
γρηγορεῖτε
stay awake
one liners
the unintelligible
spoken under our breath
screams into silence
cliche prayers
maybe
except when they
spare your life
or anxious mind
then locutions are
sacred
mystical
verbal narcan
that rescue
you
me
us
from an overdose
of this rat race
war-crazed
marginalizing
ridiculousness
called modern
less-than-life

Monday, April 12, 2021

Vaccinated: First Dose for the Common Good

Pfizer Dose 1 ✅

It’s easy to romanticize the experience of getting vaccinated. For me, it was a fairly ordinary civic duty merged with traffic to downtown Philly, hunting for a parking spaces, hitting a pothole or twelve, and waiting in a line in temperatures 20° colder than yesterday. PA weather this time of year is dumb.
The morning was also surrounded by a stop at the Belmont Plateau, where I began a virtual retreat for the next two days, conversations with a former seminary intern coincidentally behind me in line, and a walk along the so-very empty pathway on the Delaware River where padlocks and chalk art call out for hope. In these spaces, I was reminded of the connectional realities of not only the church, but also and more belovedly- the human family. This commonality is the sacred Energy that made this day possible for so many before and after my single-dose injection.

I didn’t cry. Maybe a little. Mostly I thought about all I have hoped for these last 14 months. I thought about brilliant scientists and researchers who pulled off this global miracle. I thought about those who were not able to make it to this day, because even a miracle wasn’t fast enough. I thought about those who still lack access or fear the vaccine for a variety of reasons. I thought about the smell of my stale breath behind a mask and what could’ve been if more people would have been willing to endure a tic tac for the sake of the common good. I thought about medical personnel and chaplains, therapists and volunteers at vaccine and testing sites. I thought about officiants at funerals. I thought about my children and wife, my closest friends and family. I gave thanks, lifted a prayer, looked for a piece of chalk to add my own word of hope (no luck), and now hold on hope for another day. I dare to believe there is enough energy, intelligence, imagination, and love to get us through this hell until heaven is on earth and all is right and good again. I dare believe resurrection is happening and will happen...even when such belief feels so very trivial and mundane, even terrifying. I trust this is not the end, but a new beginning...of beginnings.

You are loved to love.

Saturday, April 3, 2021

Holy Saturday: The Shadow Between Lament and Liberation

have been to this spot many times, born and raised within an forty-five minute radius of Annapolis. I have many memories walking with family and high school friends along the edges of the harbor and the narrow bricked streets. I love NapTown. But there was something different about yesterday’s venture. 


Maybe it was the shadow of the Naval Academy that is the epicenter of the city, which I understand very differently now than in my youth. Maybe it’s how I watched my children masked up and playing tag just close enough to the edge of the pier to make mom and dad’s heart stop for a moment before we yelled to be careful and knock it off. Maybe it’s because we passed by a church where friends of mine serve as co-pastors and I found hope in their witness in the capital of my beloved Maryland. Maybe it’s because my sister and brother-in-law live here now. 

All of this may be true. But as I sat at home late last night, what I could not get out of my head were the symbols and statues, plaques and quotes that reminded visitors and locals alike that these waters are where Kunta Kinte touched down alongside so many other African siblings transported across the Atlantic and sold into slavery. Here. In Annapolis. Where my family grew up. Where children play. Where the privilege sail. Where I sip my coffee. Where the governor lives. These waters are beautiful. They also have a story. One I did not learn in my youth. It was covered up and dismissed in shame and ignorance. 

On this Good Friday, in the midst of these last twelve months, this reality hit me differently than in previous visits. And on this Holy Saturday, when we linger in the lament and loss of One murdered by the religious and political systems of his day, I grieve those who have been victimized by the powers in both spaces of my own. I consider the many around this nation who live in the shadows of this empire, even as children run and play, wondering if they are the next to have their dignity slandered, bodies wounded, and lives claimed. I wonder about the Kunta Kinte’s of 2021, whose stories are not always told and remain in bondage. I wonder how I will tell their stories to my children so they can live and love alongside them for the sake of the justice and jubilee for which Jesus died.

Holy Saturday is hard. Holy Saturday is a shadow cast between the despair of yesterday and the hope of tomorrow. Holy Saturday is when we dwell in this shadow and covenant once again to hear the stories of the many for whom the Jesus story is more than a truism but their lived reality. Holy Saturday is when we remember the waters of our baptism that dare us to come up and out of the shadows of death and move together towards newness of life. Holy Saturday reminds us of the complexity of life, both beautiful and tragic all the same. But Holy Saturday is not the end. 

Tomorrow can and will come. 

Thursday, April 1, 2021

When the Church Is No Longer the Preferred Place to Love One Another: Maundy Thursday

This is not a well-nuanced reflection; instead, they are raw questions in light of a recent article posted by NPR. What is below are my modest musings shared on Facebook and Instagram this past Maundy Thursday and now rest here as a reminder to continue to ponder where and how the Spirit is moving among us...and beyond us...and despite us...

Maybe it’s because people are finding other ways to love one another faithfully and courageously?

Maybe the church has stopped washing feet and chosen the path to perceived greatness instead?
Maybe it’s because we have no longer made the Table an open space?
Maybe it’s because we have lacked courage and willingness to risk for the cause of justice and liberation?
Maybe it’s because we don’t know how to forgive, only how to throw stones?
Maybe it’s because the little children do not feel welcome to come into our worship spaces?
Maybe it’s because people are finding the walls built by religious institutions are less preferable to the welcome found in spaces outside these traditions bent in self-preservation?
Maybe it’s because the history of violence and white supremacy are not only rooted in these institutions but also watered by them in our present era of oppression?
Maybe it’s because the last four years were propped up by those claiming Jesus as Lord when, in reality, mammon, power, and privilege were their deities of preference?
Maybe it’s because a new Pentecost is happening, which doesn’t refer to the digital revolution and zoom Bible studies, but the following of the Spirit into the diaspora and beyond what we consider church?
Maybe it’s having our eyes and ears opened to see and hear what Gcd is doing in the multi-cultural, inter-generational, non-binary, and interfaith witnesses of neighborly love and empathy outside the realms of patriarchal and heteronormative systems draped in faith language.
Maybe it’s because God’s goal is not for filled pews and pulpits and congregations but for a new world completely, where all are welcome, find belonging, have daily bread, are relieved of debts, have their human dignity validated, and wars are no more.
Maybe it’s because America is not the epicenter of these dreams?
Whatever it may be, I actually find hope in this survey. Maybe it’s because the truth is out and just maybe we will lean into the real cries and concerns, even apathies about religion, and all be better for it?
What’s your maybe?

Thursday, December 24, 2020

Proclamation: #AdventWord Day 26

 

On this Christmas Eve, things are so very different. It is weird and a layer of sadness lingers in the separation from all that usually occurs on this not-so-silent night. Yet, I am taking comfort in proclamations of God with us not only in virtual worship services, but also makeshift sanctuaries like the local hospital where I went for blood work. I saw and heard first-hand testaments to Immanuel as nurses and medical personnel shared of their experiences receiving the vaccination just around the corner from my appointment.  While the strangeness of a quarantined Christmas is real, I am all the more grateful and lift endless prayers for those who have worked tirelessly- even this night- for the health and well-being of all of us. They have been shepherds of love, magi of hope, and proclamations of good news that we are not alone in the human struggle. Thanks be to God!  Merry Christmas!

Here’s a poem written in light of being deeply, yet unexpectedly, moved yesterday. 

—-

It was like church

the hospital entrance

made vaccination distribution center

I wanted to linger longer

in my lobby chair

as nave pew

to take in the energy

savor the work of the people

collective vibes of hope

I had not felt in so long

to witness relief on its way

proclamations of a new day

so very close


the waiting room 

for simple bloodwork

became to me 

a new narthex of masked fellowship

as front line workers

emergency personnel

nurses and administrators

greeted one another

pointed to their arms 

sacramental injection locales

of the first round of the

vaccine

calls to celebrate and

litanies of joy lifted 

by those who pilgrimaged 

through the trauma

passing the peace with their eyes

as the wise affirm 

the courage and privilege to receive 

the first dose 


the days will be darker still

confessions and laments

the war is not over

though this battle won

we hear their proclamations

good news in shared laughter

of those who have shed

so many tears

bearing the hopes and fears

of all this year

now a choir of  joy and life

affirmations of faith

in the night


as I walked out

I offered words of gratitude

silent prayers of solidarity and 

petitions for God with Us still 

all the while wearing 

a mask as benediction 

in the midst of the affliction 

encouraged for the road ahead

go in peace

with an end now, 

just barely, 

in sight 

—-

Sunday, November 29, 2020

Tender: #AdventWord Day 1

This year, the lectionary begins Advent with Mark 13:24-37. The writer illustrates a season “after the suffering” and the call to look to the coming of the Human One and those gathered for life lived in the liberation they have longed for so long. Smack in the middle, Mark includes Jesus’ reference to the “tender branch” of a fig tree that sprouts leaves and points to a new season of life and good fruit to be born. 

 

After the suffering and in the tenderness of creation, Mark beckons us, look for signs of life. Jesus, moments later, calls the disciples to remain vigilant and keep alert to this work (gregorēite /γρηγορεῖτε in Greek). As many know, the variation of my name is inked on my right forearm. A tender spot forever marked as a call for vigilance and to remain awake and full of hope.

 

In 2020, the four-week liturgical season of Advent meets us with a layer of pastoral insensitivity. We have already been waiting for so much- relief from the pandemic, justice in the midst of pervasive racism, economic equity, tempering of partisan divisions and hostility, end to virtual learning for our kiddos, and the ability to see, embrace, and safely share airspace with family and friends, neighbors and coworkers. We are ready for Christmas, yes. Twenty-eight days of lingering in hope delayed may be as appetizing as that casserole that shows up every Thanksgiving and yet goes unconsumed. Life may feel too tender, as in wounded, for Advent. 

 

Yet the pilgrimage cannot be evaded. We cannot merely jump from ordinary time to Christmas without the weekly waiting for Christ’s coming. We cannot fast track the deliverance found in the manger. But we can allow Advent to draw us closer to the tenderness of life for which we long, to hold space for gentle illuminations of hope, peace, joy, and love. We can remain vigilant and awake, eyes wide-open to signs of this goodness budding in the most tender of people and places, assured just as Christ came after and in the middle of the suffering of ages past, Christ will come and is already with us in the midst of our own. 

Where do you see this Adventing of Christ? I am finding it in some of the most tender and tiny of hands.

---

Check out the calendar of words for sacred imaging through AdventWord.

Wednesday, November 4, 2020

Looking for the Steadfast Love of God: A Post-Election Muse

“I will sing of your steadfast love, 

O LORD, forever…

LORD, where is your steadfast love of old…?”

(Psalm 89:1, 49)

The paradox of the psalmist is where I sit this morning, a lengthy prayer as song, which begins and ends at two very different places. I find assurance that there is a divine love and mercy and kindness that greets us new every morning. The Hebrew word, chesed, has been the hope God’s people have clung to, tight-knuckled, for generations on end. In the midst of their own battles with injustice, oppression, and vile incarnations of power and privilege, they found ways to sing and dance and work towards shalom. And we will, too. God is faithful.
But this morning, the ending of the Psalm 89 has become more like what used to happen when a record skipped or the CD was scratched. The question of absence is stuck on loop. Where is the steadfast love of God to carry us forward?
I am daring to find it in those mental icons of the virtual and socially distant prayer vigils of this past week, where the people of God affirmed we are stronger together than apart- that a better way is possible. I am meditating on the steadfast, loving kindness found in poll workers who volunteered and continue to labor so every vote is counted. I am setting my mind on the faithfulness of God that transcends generations. This prophetic fidelity was embodied by youth at the middle school turned election site, who shared with me that their #BlackLivesMatter swag ran out within the first hour the polls were open. They were still there at 1 o’clock to advocate for their cause. I am finding chesed in the pastors, social workers, community organizers, peacemakers, and all those who refuse to quit until liberty and justice are truly available for all. This was not going to happen, despite our wildest imaginations, on a single calendar day marked for the general election. The four centuries of American --isms will not be undone in one cycle through 24. But, if we lean into the steadfastness of God’s love and justice, which are the foundations of God’s way in the world (89:14), we just may see greater movement towards equity and compassion within our lifetime. At least that is my hope and prayer.
But I still have my questions. And friends, on the other side of a long day and night, be kind to yourselves if you do, too. After all, questions are the most ancient of prayers. We will need them for the marathon ahead.

Sunday, November 1, 2020

Beatitudes Remixed for the Pandemic

Below is an excerpt fro the sermon delivered at Gladwyne Presbyterian Church on All Saints Sunday, November 1, 2020. Full audio soon to be posted here and below. 


I am convinced Jesus' Sermon on the Mount, particularly the first 12 verses of Matthew 5, are to be regular meditations for all those who profess to follow Jesus. The beatitudes, Latin for “blessing,” are the prelude to the Messianic anthem and inclusive roll call of all invited to adventure along this absurd parade route with the ultimate destination a world made new and right again.
 

For those living in a first-century context of occupation by a foreign power, when imperial soldiers patrolled the streets and could force Palestinian Jews into service or do violence to their Brown bodies at a moments notice, with tax systems that perpetuated an unjust economy that favored the rich, and religious institutions were in bed with the empire as they worshipped privilege and preservation over God’s call for justice, peace, and welfare for all who bear the image of their maker- this was very good news


In our own time, with so much grief and loss from the twin pandemics of COVID and racism, with our own corrupt, exploitative, and unchecked power structures and people, when an election is just two days away, when another Black life, this one battling mental illness, has been claimed by law enforcement- this time in West Philly-  we may be longing for these blessings more so than the last time they came around in the lectionary cycle. Because here at Jesus’ rally, instead of rants and rages bent on division and quests for power, Jesus flips the script and draws together the meek and the mourners, activists and justice seekers, those who hunger for a better world, others who organize for peace, and still more those tossed to the side or wrongfully imprisoned by the powers that be. In essence, the beatitudes are Jesus identifying with the struggle of the downtrodden, validating and vindicating the specificity of their struggle, and affirming, as James Cone said, God is the God of the Oppressed. Yes, their lives mattered. This is good news. 


Last May, I pilgrimaged to the Holy Land with a group of pastors and ministry leaders from around the country. One of our stops was actually at the traditional site for this Sermon on the Mount. I’ll never forget the beauty of the landscaped hills, gardens, and chapel that overlooked the Sea of Galilee. As you walked along the floral lined path, there were plaques of each beatitude. In English, of course, which is a sermon for another day…It was breathtaking. I even plucked a flower and have it taped inside the Bible I just read from this morning. But what I most remember is our guide breaking the sacred moment as we made our way out of the garden, telling us Jesus probably never preached where we just were. Then he pointed to the left to the far-less beautiful hillside, across a paved road as cars trafficked, and enclosed with a chain linked fence. “Friends,” he said to us. “This is the more likely location where Jesus spoke the beatitudes.” It was so very ordinary, much less sexy, and on the fringe of the gardens. There were not any flowers to pluck; just rocks and dry dirt surrounded by a rickety fence. This is where, apparently, Jesus took a seated position and embodied a new way in the tradition of Moses, which extended far wider than even the greatest of prophets. In the ordinariness of the day among those often ignored and dismissed as the world trafficked by them, Jesus pronounced blessings and welcome and embrace.  Like a seminarian shared with me in the spring, in the gospel the only thing that Jesus excludes is exclusion. Blessed are…welcome are…included as kin are… Said differently, the beatitudes are Jesus’ great Yes And to those all too familiar with No, But…This Gospel is again the embodiment of Psalm 34, “The LORD is near to the broken hearted and saves the crushed in spirit” (v. 18). 

 

I wonder, then, should Jesus park himself at the top of Belmont Plateau overlooking Philly, would he remix beatitudes into a rally cry like this:


Yes to you whose spirits are wearied by quarantining and social distancing, whose imaginations have been stretched in this season of virtual everything, and others who have gone to great lengths to facilitate safe community to those who are especially vulnerable and isolated in the midst of the pandemic. Yes, And God’s dreams for the world include you;

 

Yes to you who grieve, who have lost loved ones to this cruel virus of COVID-19, who covet human connection in this season of increased isolation, whose relationships are strained, others who cry out as another Black or Brown life is slain, for the Walter Wallaces of our city and Breonna Taylors around our nation. Yes, And God’s love, peace, presence, and eternal embrace extends to you;

 

Yes to you whose voices go unheard, who are cut off at border walls and fences, whose self-worth has crumbled in battles with anxiety and depression, those who are differently abled, and  siblings who identify as gay or trans, queer or any other part of the rainbow community. Yes, And you are made in God’s beautiful image and welcomed members of God’s new world already here and yet-to-come;

                                                   

Yes to you with a hunger for activism and advocacy, who go beyond cheap words and tirelessly organize for the end of hunger and poverty, homelessness and addiction, racism and all forms of injustice. Yes, And you will find hope and freedom in the good news that God is putting the world to rights;

 

Yes to you who offer second-chances and forgiveness, even to your worst of enemies. Yes, And you will find freedom as you are unbound from the pain of the past and lean into the mercy of the God of new beginnings and fresh starts;

 

Yes to you who cannot shake an unsettled spirit when you see another wounded or excluded, for nurses, doctors, therapists, educators, caregivers, and frontline workers whose empathy for others runs so very deep that you find yourself wearied by compassion. Yes, And you have the eyes and ears and heart of God; 

 

Yes to you who practice peace in an age of violence, embody love in a world thirsty for vengeance, and extend grace in the face of retaliation. Yes, And you have indeed understood what it means to be called God’s witnesses in the world;

                                                  

Yes to you whose name has been run through the mud, reputation tossed to the wind, arrested for siding with the oppressed, and others dismissed because the way your faith dares to get political and confront systemic and intuitional sins that have stunted human flourishing for far too many. Yes, And your labors are not in vain, rather carry God’s story forward. 

 

Yes, blessed are all of you whose dreams have been labeled foolish, who have been rejected,, condemned, ignored, stymied or barred opportunity because of your commitment to the way of Jesus, to the point where you may feel like giving up. Yes, And you are not alone and will find joy in the resurrection parade of the Messiah and the movement of the gospel.

 

Do you dare see these divine affirmations of hope in the rubble of despair?


In this time of the twin pandemics of COVID-19 and increased realities of systemic racism, there are many churches and ministries who have risen up to embody the beatitudes in their time and place, in ordinary spaces at the intersection of God’s love and real human struggle. Recently I spent time with one of our worshipping communities in Philly whose congregants are neighbors experiencing chronic street homelessness. When I showed up to worship, I saw the founding pastor engaged in a conversation with a man about the cross she had around her neck. “You can have mine when the service is over,” she said. Apparently this is common practice for this church without walls. The pastor shared with me that it was a reminder of the blessedness and connection they shared on the streets, a reminder that they were beloved. And anytime someone asks for one of these crosses, they give it away as a remixed beatitude, if you will. It is not uncommon to see people on the parkway wearing these as they recline by the fountains or sit on park benches. 
 
Today is significant for many reasons. Communion Sunday- when the faithful gather and scatter from Christ’s table that is the ultimate beatitude for us and the whole world. Blessed are all of you who come, eat, and remember. Today is also All Saints Sunday, when we remember those who have been the incarnations of these beatitudes before us, who lived into their discipleship in their time and place so we could do the same in ours. They are the cloud of witnesses who nudge us to build upon their discipleship, even to confess, confront, and correct the sins of their day as we move towards the day when all is new and right again. God knows there will be generations who will be asked to do the same after us. But today is also the last day before the last day to vote. Friends, my hope and prayer is that you would find beatitudes swirling around your hearts and minds, imaginations and, yes, your ballot, as you exercise your voice on behalf of those near and far whom Jesus called blessed. Yes, And may you not only cast this vote, but also dare to live into the words of Christ as remixed beatitudes in and for the world God so loves. 

So how might you remix these beatitudes: Blessed are______ for they will________. 

Amen.

Tuesday, October 6, 2020

Showing Up in the Darkness Illuminated: Lessons Learned from Baseball Under the Lights

One of my favorite memories as a kid was playing baseball under the lights. We usually got one game a season. It was a chance for little leaguers to feel like big leaguers. I don’t really remember if we won or lost those games under the lights. I do remember, though, playing in the darkness illuminated.

Last night our kids had the chance to do the same.

Did we win? No. Lost 6-4.

Did we show up ready to play together and as a team. Yes.

That’s what will be remembered as we turn the page to a new day and the next game.

Friends, there is darkness all around us, yes. But there is also just enough light overhead to empower us to play together. Find it and play in it. In these spaces you may not always win, but you and those around you will never forget you at least showed up in the darkness illuminated. That is our collective human call- even when masked and physically distant. That is what will carry us forward into the next day...and the day after that... 

Tuesday, June 9, 2020

Thinking about Racism, Privilege, and Johnny Come Latelys

Every day, between 5-7 p.m. at the intersection of First Avenue and Business 30 in Coatesville, a small group of protesters stand with signs calling for change, solidarity, and affirmations that #blacklivesmatter. On a five-mile run this weekend, I passed by this particular placard and a group of about six. Despite their gracious invitation to join them, I could not stay; our family was quarantined until the test results came yesterday and confirmed we were and are COVID FREE. So, I supported their presence by remaining distant. 

The recent protests, marches, and public demonstrations are making some serious and rapid head way these days. I cannot help but think the Spirit is hovering over the chaos and bringing goodness and shalom out of the formless voids of the present struggle. I am not sure if the pandemic has forced many people of privilege finally to confront their complicity in systemic racism, but people are coming out in droves to affirm #blacklivesmatter and to call for far more than mere police reform. They are- we are- looking for much more. [Check out this article on what #defundthepolice and #abolishthepolice really means

For many, this was a weekend of increased allyship. For some, it was the first step in their commitment to the work of anti-racism. Maybe they were buying into the latest social trend and a chance for a quick IG pic, but their presence echoed the mantras and affected positively the algorithms calling for justice.* Sure, there is a concern for what can be called "performative activism," and skepticism has just cause, missing the forrest for the trees may not be helpful either. So  whenever I have been tempted to question fellow people of privilege who are “Johnny Come Lately,” I cannot help but also hear Jesus’ response to his disciples' cynicism about outsiders joining their exorcisms, "Whoever is not against us is for us" (Mark 9:40). 

Under quarantine, I thought a lot about and watched virtually the steady streams and images from protests and marches from large cities to small towns. My heart, mind, and conscience were deeply moved.  Then I ran by and briefly engaged the few at the corner. They have been there before and will be after the weekend buzz. They recognize this is more than a moment but a movement. They know that systemic racism is a problem and epidemic in America the brutiful. Period. Full stop. 

The generational manifestations of structural biases and racial injustices will not be deconstructed in a single weekend or by any isolated social media post, certainly to include this one. The dismantling of America’s original sin of racism that pervades law enforcement and politics, corporations and religious institutions, quality of education and access to nutritional food, basic healthcare, sustainable employment, affordable housing, green spaces, and recreational facilities, etc. will take all of us for much longer than a day or two. 

But these days matter so much, still. They matter as much as the Black and Brown lives that are the focus and leaders of this movement. 


So join the cause in whatever way you can, large or small, aware our collective efforts are required this day and every day, on this street corner and in every community near and far.  

Thursday, June 4, 2020

Recommended Reads on Race, Bias, and White Privilege: A Continual Conversion


There are many great links to recommended reads as we continue to confront the horrific realities of racism that, as many have said, is this country’s original sin. In efforts for people of privilege to educate ourselves, we must remember the systems, structures, and powers of our day are not necessarily broken; rather, they are working precisely as designed in a nation with a history of enslavement, genocide, conquest of native peoples, and racism that targets people of color. Hauntingly, these are the primary backdrops of our social, economic, political, and even religious establishments and ideologies. The great evil is, despite endless pleas, protests, marches, movements, and orations by some of history's greatest activists and leaders, these very systems have not been deconstructed or reformed to eradicate systemic racism. Instead, they continue to be cowardly sustained and defended. 

To be clear, the road towards such understanding has been slow and difficult, at times painful and humiliating. I have had to confront my own racism, biases, and privileges for the last twenty years and more. Most of my pilgrimage of faith and discipleship formation has come by way of confession and unlearning much of what I considered true, good, right, and “normal.” For white people on this journey, there is no such thing as an arrival as “not racist;” there is only the continual conversion of the heart, mind, and lenses through which we view the world and our movement through it. I am beyond grateful for the patient saints and cloud of witnesses who have walked alongside me, extended grace to me, and continue to aid in my own journey to be the best kind of ally and co-conspirer for God’s justice and reconciliation. There is much work to do and the place we all need to start, especially for us white folk, is by taking a long look in the mirror. 

Or our book shelves. 

So here are some recommended reads and a few podcasts, too. I have not been to my office for some time, so going a bit off memory here. There are an infinite others, and would love recommendations. Talk to one another and do the honest work together. 



*Picture above is a collection of old books turned into the base of the bar at the Modern Times Lomaland Fermatorium.