
Turn on the news in the past few weeks and chances are the discussion has focused on the Trayvon Martin shooting (if a news channel), the success of the Hunger Games movie (if a entertainment segment), or the Tim Tebow to the Jets controversy (if Sports Talk).
The death of the young black man in a hoodie armed and dangerous with a can of sweet tea and a bag of skittles (obesity police alert) continues to slam the web with commentary (good and bad).[1] I cannot help but wonder how the situation would have played out if the situation had been reversed. Say Trayvon grabbed the gun and shot Zimmerman. Perhaps a mirror world would have many whites screaming for justice, and many blacks bemoaning the misunderstanding of the shooter. It seems that where you stand is strongly determined by your skin color. On facebook I had the temerity to post a hooded shot of myself and had a good friend treat me like an idiot who had not read any of the coverage. Meanwhile many friends whom I love and respect have given Zimmerman the benefit of the doubt (that unfortunately they never seem to give African-American men in similar situations). I have remarked that in reactions you see that many whites have a graduated view on race. Many of these same defenders of Zimmerman have spent much of the past year arguing to me that Hispanics (particularly those 1st or 2nd generation immigrants) represent a clear and present danger have dropped their suspicions of this immigrant’s son.[2] Yet when the Hispanic shoots a black kid in a hoodie, black trumps Hispanic, I guess.
For those of you who think my use of the race card is antiquated and proof of my liberal slide into victimized nonsense, I offer the Hunger Games Twitter fiasco. Here is a sample tweet from one excited fan as he viewed the movie (warning bad language: ahead are words I do not use but simply quote here in the context of explaining this person’s worldview fully):
“HOW IN THE WORLD ARE THEY GOING TO MAKE RUE A FREAKIN BLACK BITCH IN THE MOVIE ?!?!?!??!”
Another hyperventiling twit, had this wise counsel on the use of a black actress to play Rue:
“Kk call me racist but when I found out rue was black her death wasn’t as sad” [3]
Since the previous twit did my work for me, let me move on with name-calling. In this incident (occurring in real time right next to the Trayvon madness) I was dismayed. First in the book itself, Rue was explicitly described as black. This is important because both the previous twits show familiarity and love for the book. It seems that as they read they had envisioned Rue as a white character, and been as moved as any of us by the sacrifice of Rue (saving the main White character), and said character’s emotional guesture of respect for her friend’s loss of life. Sadly for some that loss only had meaning if the character was white, and when their eyes could not betray them as their imaginations had, that loss lost its significance. Here again the loss of a black life was considered meaningless and excused as just them liberals trying to mess withAmerica.
Both of these accounts intertwined for me as I read accounts of both (back-to-back) while in the waiting room of my eye doctor. I was struck by the similarities in outrage and the lack of that outrage and what they meant for our supposed “post-racial” culture.[4] As I tried to makes sense of these strange people (some of whom I have long thought well-adjusted to life), I remembered a conversation I had the day before. In the breakroom at work I had discussed the movement of my man, Peyton Manning[5], to the Denver Broncos. I remarked to one friend that I had been deemed bad by many friends who were upset that my boy had supplanted their good friend Tim Tebow. I was arguing forcefully (and cogently I might add) that the signing of Peyton was a good business move for the Broncos as they had added the last piece to a Super Bowl contender. “Peyton is a sure-fireHOF quarterback who has already been there and done that,” I ranted, “Tebow won a playoff game, a game.” I ended with my concern for the football savvy of anyone who would argue for Tebow’s greatness over against one of the best to play the game. My friend calmly took in my rant, and replied, “the problem is that Tebow is a great person, and many of our Christian friends have long confused being a good person with being good at their position.” I was thunderstruck remembering all the times I had asked other Christians for advice on a plumber, a dentist, or so forth. Time after time they gave me the name of some person with only the proviso that “this one was a Christian.” I always thought I don’t care about the orthodoxy of their religious beliefs, just tell me if they can fix my sink, cap my tooth, and not overcharge me in the process.
Yet the mistake made was one of false equivalency. The sad fact is that for some of my otherwise “good” friends being Christian means being good at their job; being white means being a valued citizen whose death is important; and unfortunately being black means being a potential threat to the community at large. Yet in all of these cases the one does not necessarily equate to the other. Yes there are some Christians who are good quarterbacks (see Warner, Kurt). Yes there are many white men and women who lead amazing lives and whose death is a cause for concern (see Tillman, Pat). And yes, unfortunately, there are some African-American men and women who represent a clear and present danger to others. But none of these should be granted the status of an always true statement; in fact, many times these are not the cases. Tebow’s throwing motion is a disaster, and his ability to read a defense is questionable.[6] Rue stands as a great black character whose death mattered regardless of her color. And Trayvon was not the thief who had been plagued that gated community. He was most likely a cold kid lost in the rain as he attempted to bring food and drink back to the kid he was watching while their parents were on a date. Maybe he should not have reacted with frustration and anger when Zimmerman followed him down the street and challenged his right to be there; but seriously can you blame him. If you were walking down the street noticed someone paying too close attention to you, had that same person jump out of his car and chase after you when you freaked and ran. If that person had a gun on their waist while they demanded you prove your right to be there. How would you have handled yourself? If that person was your son how would you feel about his death?
Think about it this: if Tebow was an arrogant jerk with the last name Vick, and a different complexion would you still argue he should be a starter? Or play this out: what fictional characters mean the most to you. In the realm of movies which character deaths have most affected you, and whose deaths have you brushed off as unimportant? When you pick up a book and imagine the characters in your brain, what color are they? If you have to, perhaps, you might imagine Trayvon was white, had a Hilfiger jacket on, and was named Bubba. Playing these games, and mentally visiting these alternate earths where Tebow is a punk, and both Rue and Trayvon are white might just clue you into some important truth about yourself. Maybe it’s time to take stock of the mental framework that undergirds your perspective on the world. Maybe it’s time to carefully consider the social construction of your world view. Maybe its time to admit that Christians can suck at their jobs and African-Americans can be role models. And maybe, just maybe the next time a black youth is gunned down in his prime for the crime of getting lost and wandering too close to your home, you, too, will feel some outrage. Because until we all get in on the outrage and demand better from ourselves and our communities, black boys are going to continue bleeding to death on our manicured lawns.
[2] I would be interested to visit a multi-verse earth in which Martin was white and had been shot by the Hispanic Zimmerman. I can hear alternate Rush and Beck screaming that we need to be saved from the brown scourge of Hispanic immigration (much as our R&B do everytime some white Arizonan is killed within a 100 miles of the border).
[3] You can see reporting on these tweets here, and an excellent commentary on their meaning here.
[4] I mean we have a black president who got into office without any racial problems popping up- wait, you have a viral picture for me to see waiting in my reader, OK, I multi-task. OMG, is this real. Wait she did say this was a racist statement, maybe we should…
[5] I was at UT for all of Peyton’s college career, and will continue to root for him until he retires, at which point I may drive to his house and root for his choices in beverages.
[6] QB rating is the best predictor of long-term success from your QB. Peyton has a career mark of 94.8. His brother, Eli, who has been oft criticized as a QB, has a lifetime 82.1. Rex Grossman, a QB that long frustrated my Chicago Bears with his schizophrenic play winning big against cream-puffs then exploding into futility once you believed that this was the year he would lead the team to glory, has a mark of 71.4. Tebow’s mark stands around 72. That record says to me that over time Tebow is more likely to resemble Grossman, than either Manning. For clarity that is not good. True, Grossman’s team did make a Super Bowl in 2007 when he posted a scorching 66.4; but the reason for that run was more found in the Bears D.
April 2, 2012 | Categories: Essays | Tags: African-American Theology, existence of evil, Hunger Games, outright fear, Race, Social Construction, Tim Tebow, Trayvon Martin, youth | 2 Comments »
Every week at work thousands of books cross my desk, many of these Christian. Today I was struck by how many of these Christian books are geared toward the “warfare” of our daily lives. Each of these promises to reveal the hidden dangers (to our Christian lives, eternal security be damned) waiting in our closets or under our beds. Today I actually noticed on chapter on how the drug-free living program D.A.R.E. was just such a Satanic indoctrination program. As someone who has had to sit through multiple D.A.R.E. meetings I feel secure is stating for the record that the only danger there was boredom. I waited to grab the author and say seriously, this is what is killing the American church, D.A.R.E., it’s not even successful as an anti-drug indoctrination much less Satan worship (or maybe that’s why their anti-drug message sucks, they are really focusing on the Satanic stuff).
Usually I just laugh at such nonsense, thank God for a real education, quote Mark Noll (the problem of the evangelical mind is that, there is none) obsessively and rock myself back to normal; yet, today something struck me. All these books are telling all these Christians to be obscenely scared of so many programs and people from our society. All these books showing how something so seemingly banal as the cheesy anti-drug program at your son or daughter’s school is really just a Satanic front designed to capture them early and send them failing into the fores of hell. How can anyone survive one day inside this level of fear and paranoia much less walk boldly into these places with the love of God in our hearts? If I were to ask I think all of us could quote and ramble on a bit about the verse, “we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities and powers and rulers of darkness.” All of us know this and preach it, and hopefully are able to keep this in mind when Uncle Frank comes over in a D.A.R.E. tee; but how can this paranoia, this outright fear of everything not affect us, and how can it not affect our ministries and our witness for Christ. Most of us can toe the party line, and talk a good game about this verse, but when push comes to shove which words are ringing in our ears, Jesus or Glenn Beck? The message of self-sacrificial love for one’s enemy or the message that we need to watch them socialist democrats carefully because of we blink at the wrong time, they’re gonna send us all to Hell?
It’s interesting, though, that verse. Paul emphatically reminds us that the enemy is not found where you might think he is. He is not finding under Nero’s throne, or in the back room of the Chief Pharisee. He is not in the home a Greek pagan or hiding in the vestibule to the Temple of Diana. The true enemy is located in “the heavenly places.” The true enemy has not but that one time actually taken spatial form (maybe, depending on your exegesis of Genesis 3, I guess). The enemy is not human. He is not Barack Obama or even Adolf Hitler. He is not the D.A.R.E. police officer at the local precinct. He is not a Democrat or Republican. He is not black or white. He is not even a ‘He’ or even a ‘She.’
I’m sure we know this mentally, cognitively. We can quote the verse and all that, but when these books cross my desk and they do (even from authors who should know better- I’m looking at you Chuck Colson. I couldn’t find the offending book on Amazon to link with and wish I had snapped a quick photo for my records, but you were there this afternoon, I saw you), I worry that maybe we’re causing irreparable harm, not just to the reputations of good well-meaning Police officers everywhere, but to our own abilities to accomplish the plans and purposes of our Creator and Savior. And I think we all know what happens to those whose abilites are impaired in such a manner. I’ll let Jesus explain:
“You are the salt of the earth; but if the salt has become tasteless, how can it be made salty again? It is no longer good for anything, except to be thrown out and trampled under foot by men.”
January 10, 2012 | Categories: Notes from the 7 1/2 Floor (things I think I know) | Tags: mark noll, outright fear, satan worship | Leave A Comment »
Love / Hate Unsanitary