Many years ago, while teaching a course on Christian Ethics, I asked my students if
there was a particular issue that needed to be addressed that my course hadn’t already
addressed. Two black women answered, “racial reconciliation.”
I was thrilled with their suggestion. My wife and I decided
to host a group to discuss this very important issue at our NYC apartment. This
had always been a subject close to my heart. Unity among the brethren had been
a major focus of Jesus’ prayer (John 17:20-23). Therefore, it became central to
my prayers.
Consequently, I pursued this meeting with high expectations
and determined to do whatever was necessary to make these brethren feel
comfortable and loved. I was also sure that other friends would like to be part
of this group. Instead, friends of all colors warned me away from this
endeavor, saying, “You don’t know what you are getting yourself into.” They
were right, but I assured them that I knew these women, and we had already established
a trusting relationship. Nevertheless, all of my friends declined my
invitation.
Despite my best efforts, only three black women came. With
me, my wife, and a friend who had been visiting, we were only six people.
Nevertheless, the conversation never lagged. Instead, it was impassioned.
It was slowly becoming obvious to me that we all were
approaching this meeting with different expectations of what “racial
reconciliation” entailed. I had naively expected that if I listened to
understand what their experiences as black women were like, this would build
trust and unity. However, the most militant of the women quickly set me
straight. For her “racial reconciliation” wasn’t about building friendship
across color barriers, since she already had “enough white friends.” Nor was it
about achieving a unity, even Biblical one, without adopting shared goals for
social change.
Then what was it about? Merely listening and understanding
were not what it was about, at least for two of the three women. Only later did
it become plain to me that the militants want more than verbal affirmation.
Instead, a “true” friend had to become an “ally” in their quest for “social
justice.” But even becoming an “ally” was not enough. The initiate had to prove
their “allegiance” through action.
But what is social justice without an actual injustice,
which had to be corrected?
Weren’t all the laws against minorities already eliminated?
Instead, minorities had been granted preferences in university admission and in
employment. I was beginning to feel uncomfortable. I was glad to listen in
order to understand each of these sisters. However, I was beginning to feel
pressure to see the world as they did, but this was something I could not do,
not honestly. I wondered. “Can we still be brethren and love one another
despite our political disagreements?” Why not? Could I be free to express
myself honestly, or did the militants demand compliance as the price of
friendship?
During this past year, I saw a placard, which captured what
I had been experiencing: “White Silence is White Violence,” and I began to
understand. Any unwillingness to join
their “social justice” quest would be regarded as “violence.” This meant that
my unwillingness would be interpreted as “violence” against the black cause,
and support, even if only passive, for the racist system. I realized that I was
guilty, at least in the eyes of my militant “friend.” I was even a “racist.”
After this first gathering, I was beginning to develop a
growing sense of our irreconcilable differences, even though I wasn’t able to
put them into words as I now am. It was our first and last meeting. After it, I
received a lengthy letter from the militant, whom I had once regarded as my
friend. In it, she denounced me as a “racist.”
I found that every Biblical term was redefined to support a
militant victimization and “white privilege” narratives. However, this required
the redefinition of “sin,” “friendship, and “unity” in entirely unbiblical ways.
In view of this redefinition, only a white person could be guilty of sin and
needed to bend the knee. Speaking truth in love could only go in one direction,
and this meant that the white person had to continually bend a knee in hope of
being granted absolution.
I insisted that we needed to privately get together to
discuss our differences. I was hoping to be able to work through these
differences, but I found her even more entrenched, and perhaps she saw me in
the same way. She confidently explained to me that all whites were racist, whether
they realized it or not. In response, I pointed out her own blatantly racist
statements. However, she retorted that
it was “not possible for blacks to be racist because they had little control
over the repressive system of ‘systemic racism.’”
In her eyes, I remained guilty of enjoying my “white
privilege” at the expense of her black brethren. What could I do? As far as I
could see, I hadn’t been guilty of any sin against the black people or against
any black person. Therefore, no apology was possible, and no reconciliation was
in view. Nothing that I said made any difference to her, not even the
Scriptures. As Daniel had confessed the sins of Israel to the Lord, I was also
willing to confess the sins of the Church, but this wouldn’t be a confession of
my own sins for which I would need to make reparations. Therefore, in her eyes,
I would still be guilty as charged. I would still have to pay reparations
though compliance with their fight. “White Silence is White Violence!”
******
I had told some of my classes that I had experienced a lot
of anti-Semitism growing up. I was filled with so much rage that I actually
experienced white people as having a repulsive odor. (I grew up only among
whites.) However, I was certain that sharing this with her would do little to thaw the ice. She
had already become too entrenched in a life-controlling theology of race.
Why have I written about this after many years? Actually, I
believe that prayer is the only answer. The walls are humanly impregnable.
However, I recall that Jesus had been able to multiply our feeble offering of a
few loaves of bread and fish to feed the masses. This essay is my one slice of
bread topped with a fish spread. May our Lord multiply it to feed others!
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