What does the Middle East have to do with Sunday School?And what do controversial political issues have to do with
church? An observable answer might be, “Not much.” And that, I contend, is not good. (I’m
speaking as a Lutheran who could be called a “mainline” Christian.) There are, of course, wonderful exceptions:
churches where people of all ages talk about global events, engage the Scriptures,
pray and are equipped for ministries that matter in a complex world in need of
understanding, justice and healing.
However, often well-meaning people are simply too busy. Sunday School teachers prepare lessons and
lovingly teach children but just as lovingly try to shield them from global
realities. And adults, stressed out from
work, seek a church-going experience that is a refuge from the world. We believe
religion and politics “don’t mix,” so we pray in general for “our leaders” and
“world peace” and all we have to say from the pulpit is that political adds
have become too negative.
Don’t get me wrong.
Those benign postures are preferable to right-wing positions that
picture Christianity as a militant American nationalism. In fact, while a vicious video clip production
that insults and demeans Islam has been the catalyst for anti-American
demonstrations in the Middle East and beyond, that is only one piece of a much broader,
constant barrage of “Christian” anti-Muslim messages that Islamic countries
have been hearing increasingly. The message that to be Christian is to be
against any other religion is being taught.
And adults in such churches are being told how to vote, and many are continuing
to be fed the fabricated story that the president of the United States was not born
here, is the “other,” and is secretly not a Christian but a Muslim and therefore
anti-American.
Such hate is not the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
I hold a very different interpretation of the Christian
Gospel. Yes, one reads in the New Testament
that Jesus is the way, the truth and the light and that one can hear in that
passage that Jesus is the only path to salvation. But judgment is to be left to
God. There is danger in fear of the stranger. You see, Jesus continually
reached out to those beyond the narrow religious confines of his own faith,
Judaism. Christianity is more than a set
of “values.” Jesus is the light of the world.
Jesus loves everyone, heals all in need. Jesus cares about justice, and
the poor; he always cares about the poor. Christianity is a religion with doors
wide open. And Christianity is never to be aligned to just one national identity.
Christ suffers with those who suffer. Christ’s death and resurrection set
people free to love the neighbor, not to simply guard their own freedom.
This is not to justify the violence that took the lives of
the U.S. ambassador in Libya and three other U.S. servant citizens. Nor the violence in the Middle East and beyond
where yet more people die. This is not a commentary on Islam. My words here are about Christianity, its
message and mission.
So, what does the Middle East have to do with Sunday School?
I hope everything. I call for the media to recognize that “Christian”
is a broad term, not to be associated only with fundamentalist right-wing
Christian churches. I call for mainstream
Christian Churches to not be hesitant to speak up. No, don’t tell people how to
vote. That’s rightly against the first amendment.
But help us dig more deeply into the Scriptures and help parishioners claim
their own voices in the public arena, and to learn about world religions and to
love all the world’s people.
Ray Suarez in The Holy
Vote: The Politics of Faith in America, wrote, “As a kid standing for the recessional
hymn, I dutifully sang, “In Christ there is no East or West, in him no South or
North, but one great fellowship of love throughout the whole wide earth.” He
added, “What I was not taught was that God had chosen America as the instrument
for his will in the world.”
In my book, Open the Doors and See All the People, I write
about a Lutheran pastor on Long Island, NY, a Wartburg Seminary graduate, who over 15 years ago helped
diversify her congregation’s all-white worship leadership team to include an
Iranian deacon and a West Indian assisting minister. Together with other
religious leaders in the community she helped form an Interfaith Network and developed
a “school of religion” where they engaged in “caring, sharing and comparing.”
When 9/11 happened, they were already prepared to come together in an interfaith
prayer service 1000 attended. She says, “Our deep anxiety continued, but our
faith was deeper still. We have learned to cherish people…all people.”
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