Sins of Omission Can Speak Volumes

Mother Emmanuel African Methodist-Episcopal Church

On June 17, 2015 Dylann Roof walked into the Mother Emmanuel African Methodist-Episcopal church and sat down to join a Bible study group.

Dylann was welcomed by all, and invited to sit with them.  As everyone’s eyes were closed for the final prayer, Dylann took out his gun and killed nine people, shooting them at point-blank range.

One of the victims was the leader of the group, 59-year-old Myra Thompson, a retired public-school teacher and guidance counselor, who

Myra Thompson

just hours before had just been licensed to preach in that very church.

Mrs. Thompson’s husband, the Rev. Anthony Thompson has recently published a book entitled Called to Forgive: The Charleston Church Shooting, a Victim’s Husband, and the Path to Healing and Peace (Bethany House, 2019).

I heard about Rev. Thompson’s book while listening to a local Christian radio station. Rev. Thompson was telling his amazing story of what it had taken for him to forgive Dylann Roof for the crime of killing his wife.

More than that, Rev. Thompson mentioned his continuing attempts to befriend Roof and visit with him in prison, where he is serving a life sentence with no chance of parole.

I heard a powerful story about the healing power of Christ’s forgiveness and the personal resolve of a deeply compassionate, unusually obedient disciple of Jesus Christ.

It was a story that might normally bring tears to my eyes, were it not for the one thing that the interviewer and host of the program failed to mention – the very thing that I had suspected would go unremarked.

The interviewer and hosts failed to mention that Dylann Root is an avowed

White supremacist, Dylann Roof

white supremacist and neo-Nazi. His most chilling statement from prison was a declaration that he had no regrets.  He was not the least bit sorry, remorseful or apologetic for what he had done.

Neither did the radio hosts mention that Root had chosen the Mother Emmanuel African Methodist-Episcopal church because it is a black congregation.

Root deliberately chose a venue for his act of terrorism where he knew every bullet fired was guaranteed to penetrate the body of a black person.

Slaughtering African-American men, women and children was Root’s one and only goal.

None of the white people hosting the interview with Rev. Thompson bothered to connect the Charleston church shooting with the shocking rise in Right-Wing, conservative terrorism in this country.

No one bothered to point out that Root’s online manifesto, entitled The Last Rhodesian, was a white-supremacist screed calling for a race war against all people of color in America. Root confessed that he hoped his massacre would trigger that war.

No one mentioned that the Rev. Thompson’s Christ-like act of forgiveness is (or, at least, I assume it is) a very old, well-practiced act of Christian discipleship exercised within the African American church. A community that continues to confront the never-ending story of racism, discrimination, white violence, lynching and Jim Crow in this country.

I realize that my reader may object.

“Perhaps the radio producers wanted to keep politics out of it,’ you say. “They didn’t want Rev. Thompson’s story about the power of forgiveness to be overshadowed by a political message.”

My response, however, is baloney!

American Christian radio is one of THE most politically driven media outlets available today.

The problem is:  Christian radio is driven by conservative, right-wing, Republican politics. A brand a politics that refuses to admit its heinous contribution to the rise of white supremacy in this country.

So, the producers at the right-wing, Christian radio station offer their obeisance to the toadies of the Religious Right political movement and reframe the heartbreaking story of an explicitly racist, white-on-black mass-murder as a heart-warming, tear-jerker testimony to “the power of forgiveness.”

This sin of omission tells us everything we need to know about the Right, including the so-called Christian Right.

Framing is everything.

By trying to avoid politics, a story becomes disgustingly political  in the worst way possible.

The nine church shooting victims

For this particular framing of the Mother Emmanuel African Methodist-Episcopal church shooting is blatantly racist.

It’s silence shouts all too loudly, “We will not face the truth about who and what we are as white, American evangelicals.”

“We will support Donald Trump’s racist border policies.  But we will not tell the truth about our implicit racism towards our black brothers and sisters in Christ, about whom we know so little. And for whom we care even less – unless, of course, we can turn your experience of pain and suffering in white America into a warm and fuzzy feel-good story for our largely white, evangelical, pro-Trump listening audience.”

I too am a white, American evangelical, and I continually feel ashamed of my community.

When Fake Christians Wear Red Shirts at Presidential Rallies

Trump speaking at a Minneapolis campaign rally

President Trump spoke yesterday in Minneapolis to loud applause supplied by a large crowd of supporters, many wearing bright, red shirts emblazoned, “make American great again.”

If you didn’t see the speech, check out the excerpts and excellent response provided by The Young Turks here.  It’s well worth watching.

I also encourage you to read my book, I Pledge Allegiance: A Believer’s Guide to Kingdom Citizenship in 21st Century America, if you haven’t already.

In the course of his rambling diatribe (the longest he has yet given), the president mocked and ridiculed individual Democrats and members of the House.

He targeted more lies and slander against Rep. Ilhan Omar, a Somali refugee from Minnesota.  Rep. Omar and her family already receive around the clock security protection because of the regular death threats she receives, week in and week out, as she does her job for the people of Minnesota who elected her.

Omar also receives a surge in the number of threats against her life every time Trump mocks her in public, as he did again last night.

Trump then expanded his racist threats against the entire Somali refugee community in Minnesota, leading the crowd in cheers and applause as he bemoaned the horrible presence of hard-working, brown-skinned families finding refuge from their own war-torn country (partly facilitated by the U.S. military) in the bosom of white America.

The audience cheered again when the president promised that he will protect the good, white people of Minneapolis from the inconvenient threat of more dark-skinned refugees from Africa moving into their city.

How many of these red-shirted fans applauding Trump’s grotesque, racist drivel claim to be Christians?  How many say they are evangelicals?

Well, it’s long past time to draw the line, folks.

And here’s the line:

People who follow Jesus will NEVER cheer or applaud for such wretched, verbal trash.

People who follow Jesus will NEVER endorse the inhumane policies – like closing our doors to refugees and asylum seekers, separating families and kidnapping children at the border – that are produced by this man’s dark and evil heart.

As I now listen to Trump speaking at the “Voters Values Summit,” he is

Rep. Ilhan Omar

again falsely accusing Rep. Omar of saying things that she has never said. And he is being applauded by the audience!

We are witnessing the complete apostasy of American evangelicalism.  It’s happening before our eyes.

If you or your friends voted for Trump in 2016 and now regret that decision, hallelujah!  Confession your foolishness.  Ask for forgiveness for facilitating the rise to power of this latest anti-Christ now spewing his putrid filth onto the American stage.

Pray for wisdom to do better next time as a well-educated voter.

But if you or your friends plan to vote for Trump in 2020, if you too applaud at his rally speeches, then you must face the truth.

You have driven the Holy Spirit from your heart, if, indeed, you ever knew Him.

You, too, are a racist.

You have become an idolater.

Your conservative politics are more important to you than Jesus Christ.

You are cheering for a fascist, a blasphemer, a sexual predator, a racist, and a career criminal.

It is impossible to be an obedient follower of Jesus of Nazareth and persistently endorse such wickedness.

You may have known Jesus at one time, but no longer.

You have become one of the choked, blighted, dying seeds woefully described in Jesus’ parable of the Sower in Mark 4:1-20. You have lost whatever connect to the Savior you may once have had.

You have become like the pompous “miracle workers” condemned by Jesus at the close of his Sermon on the Mount. Despite their protests of devotion, he says to these people boasting of their “godly” accomplishments, “Get away from me, you evil doers, for I never knew you” (Matthew 7:23).

It is LONG past time for faithful pastors to speak up and to speak out against the evangelical apostasy occurring before our eyes.

Pastors, your people need Biblical teaching and education in the ethics of God’s kingdom. Hiding behind the pretense of avoiding partisanship in the pulpit is and has always been a cop out.

The church desperately needs your help.

Where are the true, faithful shepherds who will risk giving offense by teaching the FULL counsel of God and emphasizing the radical, upside-down lifestyle demanded by Jesus Christ?

Within evangelical congregations, they seem to be few and far between…