WHERE WE ARE HEADED
WHERE WE ARE HEADED
©Wendell Griffen, 2021
When
the largest Protestant denomination in the United States recently met in
Nashville, Tennessee, it was notable what thousands of Southern Baptists did
not think were major concerns.
An
armed insurrection took place at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021, by
supporters of former President Donald Trump.
Several people died, including two law enforcement officers who worked
for the U.S. Capitol Police force. Many
more people, including civilians and law enforcement officers, were injured. Some of the insurrectionists stormed the
Senate chamber and offered prayers of thanks and invoked the name of Jesus in
support of their effort to prevent the peaceful transfer of presidential power. Since then, Republican members of the U.S.
Senate blocked efforts to create a bipartisan commission to investigate the
January 6 insurrection.
Southern
Baptist messengers did not condemn the blasphemous illegality of that behavior.
Last
month (May) the Israeli government led by former Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu enabled Israelis who terrorized Palestinians living in the Sheik Jarrah
community of East Jerusalem to drive the Palestinians from their homes. In response, Hamas militants fired rockets
into Israel from positions in Gaza. The Israeli
Defense Force sent aircraft that bombed Gaza.
Although a May 16, 2021, article in Al Jazeera News reported that 192 Palestinian
civilians were killed in those bombing attacks - including more than 50
children – and ten (10) people were killed in Israel from Hamas rockets, the US
government vetoed a call for a ceasefire in the UN Security Council.
Southern
Baptist messengers did not condemn and denounce Israeli bombings of civilian
targets, including destruction of a building that housed offices of the
Associated Press, Al Jazeera, and several other media outlets.
Since
the November 2020 US presidential election that ended the Trump presidency,
Republican legislators in states across the nation have passed legislation that
restricts voting rights and makes it easier to overturn the result of elections.
The US Congress has not been able to
pass the John Lewis Voting Rights bill, the For the People Voting Rights bill, or
legislation to rebuild the nation’s crumbling infrastructure because politicians
seem afraid of the white religious nationalists, neo-fundamental capitalists,
and devotees of patriarchy and white supremacy who make up the Trump voting
bloc.
Southern
Baptist messengers and their leaders said and did nothing to condemn legislation
passed with the aim to suppress voting by people of color.
A
global pandemic has caused deaths across the world. Almost 600,000 people have died in the United
States. People in India, Africa, and
elsewhere are facing a shortage of vaccines to help prevent the spread of COVID-19
infections.
Southern
Baptist messengers and their leaders did not condemn the false messages Donald Trump
made about the risks associated with COVID-19.
Southern
Baptist messengers and their leaders did not condemn Trump’s repeated lies and
bigoted statements that stirred resentment toward China and people from
Asian-Pacific ancestry.
State
legislators in several states enacted laws targeting transgender persons over
the past several months for discrimination.
Laws were passed to prohibit physicians from providing medical care sought
by parents of transgender children. The
laws were passed over strong objections from mental health experts and physicians
who treat children and young adults.
Southern
Baptist messengers and their leaders did not condemn that discriminatory
legislation.
George
Floyd was murdered on May 25, 2020, by police in Minneapolis, Minnesota. According to an article in Newsweek magazine
published on May 25, 2021, the first anniversary of Floyd’s murder, 229 other
Black persons were killed by police during the twelve-month period after George
Floyd’s death.
Southern
Baptist messengers and their leaders did not condemn the slaying of George
Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arberry, Rashard Brooks, Andrew Brown, Elijah
McClain, Daniel Prude, Daunte Wright, or any of the other victims of police
violence.
Southern
Baptists – who claim the Bible is inerrant – did not denounce Vice President
Kamala Harris after she publicly told people desperate to seek asylum in the United
States from violence, poverty, and other dangers they face in Central America, “Don’t
come.”
Southern
Baptists paid little or no attention to these glaring ethical and moral issues.
Most media coverage and commentary about
their annual meeting ignored that Southern Baptists seemed less concerned about
them.
Instead,
the coverage and commentary focused on who would be elected president of that
denomination among four candidates. Coverage
and commentary also focused on whether SBC messengers would adopt resolutions
about critical race theory and access to legal abortion procedures.
Southern
Baptists elected Ed Litton, a white Baptist pastor who has been termed a religious
“moderate,” as their president. They sang,
preached, prayed, raised their hands, and voted to support a resolution calling
for the end of all abortions, including those involving rape, incest, and medical
conditions that threaten the lives of pregnant women.
They
said and did nothing about the state-sanctioned killing of hundreds of Black people by police.
They
said and did nothing about the apartheid regime of Israel that is financed by
U.S. tax dollars, cheered by U.S. white religious nationalists, and that is
stealing land and water from Palestinians in Israel and the West Bank, and that
has destroyed housing and other infrastructure in Gaza.
They
said and did nothing to repent of SBC complicity in racism against people of color
and complicity of misogyny despite the massacre of Asian-Pacific women in
Atlanta three months earlier, allegedly by Robert Aaron Long, a white Southern
Baptist man whose former youth pastor could not recall hearing a single sermon
about the sin of racism during his tenure at the Southern Baptist church attended
by Long and his family.
I
suspect this is what Jesus had in mind in Matthew when he denounced religious
leaders who neglected “justice and mercy and faith” and strained “out a gnat
but swallow a camel” (Matthew 23:23-25).
Southern
Baptist disregard for these and other social justice concerns not only speaks
volumes about their shallow commitment to the religion of Jesus. That disregard (which I denounce as heresy) –
and media inattention to it – explains how white religious nationalism, white
supremacy, patriarchy, and authoritarianism are not recognized as contributing
to the acceptance of fascism in the United States.
When
people disregard a violent insurrection aimed at preventing the peaceful
transfer of power, disregard the role of their denomination in supporting regimes
that practice apartheid and genocide, and spend their time and energy squabbling
about who will preside over what I term the “Slaveholder Baptist Convention”
rather than “justice and mercy and faith,” we are not far from becoming a doomed
society.
That
may signal that we are doomed, now.
Thank you so much for this. For willing to call out your own. I respect that. Keep doing what you do. I support you.
ReplyDeleteAmen
ReplyDelete