Albany Times Union

A Christian vision of social justice

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Like a lot of people, I’ve tried to envision a way to promote social change that doesn’t involve destroying people’s careers over a bad tweet, that doesn’t reduce people to simplistic labels, that is more about a positive agenda to redistribu­te power to the marginaliz­ed than it is about simply blotting out the unworthy. I’m groping for a social justice movement, in other words, that would be anti-oppression and without the dehumanizi­ng cruelty we’ve seen of late.

I tried to write a column describing what that might look like — and failed. It wasn’t clear in my head.

But this week I interviewe­d Esau Mccaulley, a New Testament professor at Wheaton College. He described a distinctly Christian vision of social justice I found riveting and a little strange (in a good way) and important for everybody to hear, Christian and non-christian, believer and nonbelieve­r.

This vision begins with respect for the equal dignity of each person. It is based on the idea that we are all made in the image of God. It abhors any attempt to dehumanize anybody on any front. We may be unjustly divided in a zillion ways, but share a fundamenta­l human solidarity in being part of the same creation.

The Christian social justice vision also emphasizes the importance of memory. The Bible is filled with stories of marginaliz­ation and transforma­tion, which we continue to live out. Exodus is the complicate­d history of how a fractious people comes together to form a nation.

Today, many Americans are trying to tell the true history of our people, a tale that doesn’t whitewash the shameful themes in our narrative nor downplay the painful but uneven progress — realistic but not despairing.

Mccaulley doesn’t describe racism as a problem, but as a sin enmeshed with other sins, like greed and lust. Some people don’t like “sin” talk. But to cast racism as a sin is useful in many ways.

The concept of sin gives us an action plan to struggle against it: Acknowledg­e the sin, confess the sin, ask forgivenes­s for the sin, turn away from the sin, restore the wrong done. If racism is America’s collective sin, then the tasks are: Tell the truth about racism, turn away from racism, offer reparation­s for racism.

A struggle against a sin is not the work of a week or a year, since sin keeps popping back up. But this vision has led to some of the most significan­t social justice victories in history: William Wilberforc­e’s fight against the slave trade, the

Rev. Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s and the Confessing Church’s struggle against Nazism. And, of course, Martin Luther King Jr. and the civil rights movement.

From Frederick Douglass and Howard Thurman to King on down, the Christian social justice movement has relentless­ly exposed evil by forcing it face to face with Christolog­ical good. The marches, the sit-ins, the nonviolenc­e. “You can’t get to just ends with unjust means,” Mccaulley told me. “The ethic of Jesus is as important as the ends of liberation.”

There is a relentless effort to rebuild relationsh­ips because God is relentless in pursuit of us.

“He who is devoid of the power to forgive is devoid of the power to love,” King wrote. “We can never say, ‘I will forgive you, but I won’t have anything further to do with you.’ Forgivenes­s means reconcilia­tion, a coming together again.”

Mccaulley emphasizes that forgivenes­s — like the kind offered by the congregant­s of the Emanuel AME church in Charleston, South Carolina, and family members after parishione­rs were murdered in 2015 by a white supremacis­t — is not a standalone thing. It has to come with justice and change: “Why is Black forgivenes­s required again and again? Why is forgivenes­s heard but the demand for justice ignored?”

But this vision does not put anybody outside the sphere of possible redemption. “If you tell us you are trying to change, we will come alongside you,” Mccaulley says. “When the church is at its best it opens up to the possibilit­y of change, to begin again.” New life is always possible, for the person and the nation. This is the final way the Christian social justice vision is distinct. When some people talk about social justice it sounds as if group-versus-group power struggles are an eternal fact of human existence. We all have to armor up for an endless war.

But, as Mccaulley writes in his book “Reading While Black,” “The Old and New Testaments have a message of salvation, liberation and reconcilia­tion.”

On the other side of justice, we reach the beloved community and multiethni­c family of humankind. This vision has a destinatio­n, and thus walks not in bitterness but in hope.

 ??  ?? DAVID BROOKS
DAVID BROOKS

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