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Pinnacle Presbyterian Church

Echoes (of the Word)

The More Things Change, the More They Stay the Same

Jackie_Robinson,_Brooklyn_Dodgers,_1954.jpg

I finally saw the movie “42” over the weekend.  The movie dramatizes the story of Jackie Robinson’s path to Major League baseball.  Over the course of the movie, we get glimpses of the horrible ways whites treated blacks in the 40s, particularly the challenges Robinson faced as the first black man to play in an all-white major league of baseball. 

“I can’t believe people used to be so mean!”

Everyone in our family must have said that several times throughout the movie.  After all, it can be tough to look at our history and not find regret with the way we have treated people from different races over the generations.   To our kids, a time when whites and blacks were purposefully segregated seems like the pages from a history book of an era around the fall of Rome!  Then again, to my grandparents, it was just a part of life in those days.  Nonetheless, as we watched the movie, we reminded ourselves that we have evolved as a culture.

“I’m glad we are not like that anymore,” we reminded ourselves.

Then, after the movie we saw the irony in our emotions: have we really changed all that much?  In looking at the news, one would certainly think not.

The story of Jackie Robinson was possible because of, Branch Rickey, the President of the Brooklyn Dodgers at the time.  Known as a man with faith (a Methodist, but that still counts, I think!) he often leaned on his understanding of God to guide his decision-making processes.  He tells Jackie to have guts like our savior and turn the other cheek and that he will need to have the courage to not fight back when the anger of whites inevitably stares him in the face.  Mr. Rickey also reminds us the Bible says,  ‘love your neighbors about eight times.”  By the end of the movie, I was wondering who was the braver man…Robinson or Rickey?  Let’s call it a tie because we learn something from both men. 

Right now we need brave people to have the courage to lean on faith to guide their decisions.  Yes.  It takes strength to turn the other cheek when we are in fear of terror.  Indeed, it takes guts to love our neighbors, even when their presence is frightening.  But life could all be so very simple if we used God’s word to guide us instead of our human instincts.  If the Bible was our “go to” playbook and we had the patience to hear His direction, I am convinced our world actually would change for the better.  Please understand that I want to live in a safe, protected country as much as anyone.  But, I also want to be proud of my country as “one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.”   I pray that we heal, that we grow and that our leadership find inspiration and the courage to put our nation in line with where God wants us to be. I ask that our leaders seek a more prayerful and perhaps less powerful stance in the world.  I hope we can exemplify righteousness over simple right-ness.  And, most of all, I pray we can all be discerning instead of defensive in the days ahead.  Amen.

Bad things happen. People do unthinkable, horrible things. We see earthquakes, floods, droughts, and other natural disasters all of the time. Our families face sicknesses, hardships, depression, and death. If we allow ourselves to focus on the bad for long enough, it starts to feel like not much good happens in the world anymore. It seems as if God is nowhere to be found in the time we most need His presence.

In these trying times we often, and unfairly, blame God. We can question God. It is even understandable to get mad at God. But, we shouldn’t blame Him. Tragedies are not a product of God’s absence or apathy. In fact the opposite is true. Tragedy is a function of God’s amazing love for us. When God created us we are offered the choice to love. This choice, however, opens the door for darkness. But, without our free will, we could never feel true love. If we were simply programmed to love without choice, then it would not be the kind of unconditional and overflowing love we know in Christ. We would be robotic beings, going through motions, but never coming as close to God as He intended. To love (or not to love) is a choice we make freely. That’s just the way it works.

The world, if we allow it, can evoke anxiety, fear and desperation. These feelings offer us choices. We can choose to run to God or to run from Him. There really is no middle ground for those of us with faith. If we choose to run from God, we lead ourselves into despair and loneliness. However, if we lean on faith and run to God we see the opposite. Yes, the suffering and pain may still exist, but God promises peace to help us deal with the present; strength to lead us into the future; and, an eternal life shared with Him. Where we see tragedy and disaster, God sees opportunities for us to know a deeper kind of love. When we want to hide in fear from the world, God calls us to go into the world and spread the message of love and hope. In good times, or in bad, God tells us to trust in Him and share His love and grace.

In John 16:33 Jesus reminds his followers of the big picture. “I have said this to you, so that in me you may have peace. In the world you face persecution. But take courage; I have conquered the world!” Jesus already won the battle. He experienced the worst the world has to offer and is victorious. He suffered so we don’t have to. So why would we choose to go it alone, to live in fear, or even to doubt God’s very presence in times of trouble? As Christ followers, we believe there is something more. Keep that faith in the darkest hours because we know a new dawn is always just on the horizon. God will fulfill His promises, if not in this life, then in eternity.

 

In my little corner of the world, Litchfield Park, Arizona, I receive a free community newspaper twice a week. The paper reports on events in Goodyear, Avondale, Tolleson, Litchfield Park and surrounding environs. 

The most entertaining part of The West Valley View is the “Letters to the Editor” section. The letters are published exactly as submitted, typos, spelling and grammar included. It makes me think some of these folks never finished sixth grade.

In every edition there is a letter which I judge as ignorant or hateful. I ask myself, “On what planet did these Neaderthals come from?”  

Here’s a recent example:

Editor: 

“Throughout my corporate career, I was subjected to countless seminars on Affirmative Action, Diversity, Inclusion, and Tolerance. After awhile I began to see through the smokescreen. These seminars were never about treating everyone equally but rather giving special privileges to groups who are typically non white or non Asian.

“I learned that there is a hierarchy of victim hood or entitlement promoted by a cabal of government progressives and supported by big business, the entertainment industry, and many universities. 

“The hierarchy is as follows in today’s culture:

“Homosexuality trumps Heterosexuality (transgenderism will soon bypass homosexuality) 

“Black skin color trumps white skin color

“Female gender trumps male gender

“Islam trumps Judaism and Christianity. 

“This obsession with abnormal sexuality, skin color, gender, and alternate religions may also be referred to as Identity Politics where what really matters, namely intellectual or attribute diversity, is sadly mostly inconsequential.

“To many modern progressives, the ideal presidential candidate would be a black Lesbian sympathetic to Islam. The most undesirable presidential candidate would be a white straight Christian or Jewish male.

“The Diversity Cult has given our country the inept racist now occupying the White House. Like so many agendas of modern day Obama-like liberals, Identity Politics is destroying our country.

“Affirmative Action is legalized discrimination.

“Diversity without unity is chaos.

“Inclusion without discernment is suicidal.

“Tolerance without convictions is cowardly.”

Name Not Disclosed
Goodyear, Arizona

It’s a short and inexorable step from this kind of poisonous rhetoric to Dylan Roof to the terrorist shootings in Tunisia.

What I have learned in life from my faith:

“Lord, make me an instrument of thy peace.” –St Francis of Assissi.

“There are three important lessons in life–be kind, be kind, be kind” –William James

“Love suffereth long.” –I Corinthians 13. 

“You can disagree without being disagreeable.” 

P.S. I know I ought to pray for the letter writer, just not right now!!!