Racism
and “White Nationalism” Have No Place
in 21st
Century America
by Pastor
Paul J. Bern
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I once saw a
one-hour documentary on cable TV (back in the days when I still
watched TV) that was all about neo-Nazi skinheads, their swastika
tattoos and flags, and how they are organized into gangs that operate
outside the law. The extreme racial hatred of these people was
chronicled by this cable channel in raw detail. It showed how these
organizations recruit new members over the Internet, and how they
support themselves by selling drugs and guns. I clearly remember how
appalled I was as I watched this documentary with all the hate and
violence perpetrated by these racist organizations. It made me think
about the first book of John in the New Testament and what it says
about those who harbor racist hate.
“Anyone who
claims to be in the light but hates his brother is still in darkness.
Whoever loves his brother lives in the light, and there is nothing in
him to make him stumble. But whoever hates his brother is in the
darkness and walks around in the darkness; he does not know where he
is going because the darkness has blinded him.” (1st John 2,
verses 9-11) Fast forward to the present, and we had a very public
example this past week of politicized, racist behavior in connection
with the riots in Charlottesville, Va. this past Friday and Saturday.
So-called “white nationalists” put on this big public
demonstration and parade, and all the while there were equally
numerous anti-bigotry counter-protesters, resulting in an inevitable
clash between the two that would up on global TV news outlets. The
death toll from these incidents has just risen to 3 as I write this.
Was it really worth 3 human lives just so hatred and intolerance
could be better expressed? I think not!!
Ask people if they
love God or not and the vast majority will say yes, excluding the
atheists. (Atheists have themselves as their own gods, so they engage
in what amounts to self-worship.) Yet how many of us harbor hate,
intolerance and mistrust towards groups of people who are different
from us for various reasons? Religion, race, nationality, age,
gender, sexual orientation and especially differences in economic
status are some of the most common examples. We can't love God and at
the same time hate that which He has created. This can range from
laughing at a racial joke all the way up to mass murder in schools,
churches or movie theaters. The underlying message implied by these
things is that there are some people who think that they are somehow
better than everybody else. “I think I'm better than you”, is the
basis for their opinions, and that's wrong! God created us all and He
sees us as equals, as it is written: “Rich and poor have this in
common; the Lord is the Maker of them all.”
(Proverbs 22: 2)
It
is high time for these condescending, racist “white nationalist”
people to begin seeing themselves as peers as God has commanded us
to! Otherwise, things can go terribly wrong in a hurry, as we have
already seen on TV. In this next quote the apostle John, the younger
half-brother of Jesus, takes this a step further. “If anyone
says,'I love God', yet hates his brother, he is a liar. For anyone
who does not love his brother, whom he has seen, cannot love God,
whom he has not seen. And He has given us this command: whoever loves
God must also love his brother.” (1st John 4, verses 20-21)
If there is one
thing we can say about this passage of Scripture, it is that John
tells it like it really is. He minces no words with this last quote,
“whoever loves God must also love his brother”. That was
not just an idea or a suggestion. This is how we are to be conducting
ourselves in everyday living. If we love God, then we are to love
that which he has created. “For anyone who does not love his
brother, whom he has seen, cannot love God, whom he has not seen”.
It's hard to get any more blunt and direct than that. So, people who
are racially prejudiced and hate-filled but still go to church, do so
in vain! They are committing a gross injustice against people of
color by their racism, which is why racism is an injustice in God's
eyes! Does the Bible have anything else to say about injustice? In
fact it has volumes of commentary and Godly commands that humankind
is charged with the task of following. Isaiah 30, verse 18 says, “Yet
the Lord longs to be gracious to you; He rises to show you
compassion. For the Lord is a God of justice. Blessed are all who
wait for him!”. Zechariah chapter 7, verse 9 says, “Administer
true justice; show mercy and compassion to one another.” Here
is one Bible verse that I can truly say a certain Texas state trooper
violated when he racially profiled Sandra Bland due to her broken
tail-light and Black complexion back in 2015. That, combined with her
out-of-state tag, made that officer indirectly responsible for her
untimely demise. I wonder how he sleeps at night?
There are many
varieties of bigotry, intolerance and prejudice. It can be racial. Do
you hate black or white people? What about the Latino immigrants, who
are in fact economic refugees from Mexico and Central America? It can
be gender-based. Are you a guy who hates women or vice verse? There
are people like that, more than one might think. Speaking of sex, do
you hate gay people? We may not agree with their lifestyle, and many
say they are in sin, but that doesn't give us the right to despise
them. Although we believe the Bible says homosexuality is a sin as
the majority of Christians do, that give us no license to hate the
sinner. Just because they are different than you doesn't make them
any worse or yourself any better. Sexual sin is still sexual sin, and
questions about same-sex as opposed to opposite sex attraction are,
to me, besides the point. The same goes for age discrimination. Ask
any older worker who has been turned down for a job in favor of a
younger candidate to describe that experience. I've walked a mile in
those shoes myself. What about homeless people? Do you tend to not
tolerate or fear the homeless? What about the mentally ill? Moreover,
economic discrimination is the worst kind of prejudice because it
affects the largest group of people, since 99% of America's wealth is
squarely in the hands of the top 1% of the US population. What is the
antidote for this social sickness? How do we overcome all the
artificial barriers that constitute hate, intolerance and prejudice?
How can we put forth fundamental change in these areas? For the
answer to this pressing question, let's refer one last time to the
apostle John.
“Dear friends,
let us love one another, for love comes from God. Everyone who loves
has been born of God and knows God. Whoever does not love does not
know God, because God is love. This is how God showed His love among
us: He sent his one and only Son into the world that we might live
through Him. This is love: not that we loved God, but that He loved
us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins. Dear
friends, since God so loved us, we also ought to love one another. No
one has ever seen God; but if we love one another, God lives in us
and His love is made complete in us....There is no fear in love. But
perfect love drives out fear, because fear has to do with punishment.
The one who fears is not made perfect in love. We love because He
first loved us.” (1st John 4; verses 7-12, 18-19)
Love is the perfect
eraser for hate. Bigotry, intolerance and prejudice are based on fear
– fear of what we don't understand – and hate, which itself is
pure evil because it is derived from contempt. To overcome this, try
volunteering in an inner city ministry where you live, or maybe at a
food bank or in a homeless shelter, or at the church you attend. It
will open your eyes to a whole different world. Hunger in America is
real, near-panic over America's future is too, and they are
ever-present. The middle class is disappearing because big
multinational corporations have exported all the good middle class
jobs for pennies on the dollar to emerging countries and economies
worldwide. At this point, the only thing left that “we the people”
can do about it is an outright revolt, but the violence in
Charlottesville, Va. was not the way to go about it! Instead, our
churches should be a very good places to start, whether it be for
ministry, community outreach or even outright revolution (think
“Black Robed Regiment” from the US Revolutionary war). But, if
churches aren't your first choice, there are lots of other nonprofits
out there such as Goodwill, the Veterans Association and so on.
Better yet, start a movement of your own. By volunteering or being a
missionary in the poorest parts of your city or town, that is just
one way we can combat racism and poverty as an entire nation. From
this kind of a ministry we can gain understanding, from understanding
tolerance, from tolerance compassion, and from compassion empathy.
These are the antidotes for racism, bigotry, prejudice and
intolerance. This is how we as a nation can stop hate in its tracks.
This is how we as a united American people can ensure there are no
more Sandra Bland's (RIP kid sister, you are not forgotten) or
Charlottesville, Virginia's. Hate is no longer OK, it isn't even
tolerable for those with a strong sense of conscience and a deep
desire for justice. You will be surprised at what a positive effect
this can have on your outlook on life. It works for me! And the God
of peace, a holy peace that is beyond normal human comprehension,
will be with you all when you do so.
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