Will Willimon: Preaching to Confront Racism

 

Moralism (substituting law for gospel, exhorting better human behavior without dependency upon God's grace) is no match for racism. While urging us to preach justice, Lutheran James Childs warns: "Preaching that always goes directly from sin to salvation or from cross to resurrection without ever stopping off at sanctification is missing something of crucial importance.... The grace of God in Christ, which justifies, also sanctifies ... The good tree bears good fruit ... (Matt. 7:18)." (Childs, Preaching Justice, 2000). I thank God that I am a Wesleyan Christian who, after admitting that I'm guilty of the sin of racism can say that's not all I am. I'm someone in whom the grace of God is actively, daily, persistently at work healing me of my sin, perfecting God's intentions for me, in spite of me.

Moralism is unavoidable if a preacher conceives of the congregation as good people who come to church to be even better. The Christian faith is presented as common sense with a spiritual veneer. Moralism is notoriously anthropological rather than theological in its assumption that listeners already have all they need in order to be good. History, structural injustices, the human propensity to self-interest, the various psychological binds in which we are caught, human feelings of vulnerability and threat are all ignored in moralism's appeal to our "better angels." The sermon is in the imperative mood as the preacher fills the air with shouldoughtmust.

As Chuck Campbell points out, preaching on social issues tends to imply that good people of good will have the power to solve their own problems (a thought dearly loved by liberal white people who enjoy thinking of ourselves as the masters of our domain). Moralistic preaching overlooks how structural, systemic, principalities and powers have us under their sway. Campbell urges us, "always rely on the power of God, not on our own strength, in resistance." (Campbell, The Word Before the Powers, 2003). 

Sermons whose intent is to build guilt are universally resisted. Not only does Jesus tend toward forgiveness rather than guilt but also preaching that provokes guilt backfires as hearers are encouraged to become more introspective, more obsessed with ourselves and our histories, more egotistical, not less. White people ascribed far too much power to our egos and are already narcissistic without help from the preacher. The default Christian position with regard to guilt is to confess sin, offer it up and then allow ourselves to be unburdened by the justifying grace of God and to be spurred on by sanctifying grace in our acts of contrition.

Conservative, Reformed pastor, John Piper's sermon, "Racial Reconciliation" begins by asserting (without citing support) that, "There is strong evidence that stressing differences does little to improve race relations, and may even exacerbate them." The rest of his sermon attacks the notion of racial difference. Using Scripture, Piper asserts that, "God made all ethnic groups from one human ancestor," and that all "are made in the image of God." Your "ethnic identity" is of no consequence when compared with the biblical truth that we are all created "in the image of God." That's why programs in "diversity training" "backfire." We ought to teach our children to put all their "eggs in the basket called personhood in the image of God and one egg in the basket called ethnic distinction." The problem is not the sin of white racism, the problem is a failure to think about our humanity in a biblical way. Though Piper is a strong Calvinist, there is nothing in the sermon about confession of sin, forgiveness, repentance or the need for the grace of God.

While it's good that Piper attempts to think theologically beyond rather limp, secular notions of "diversity," Piper's exhortation to color-blind Christianity overlooks that persons of color did not come up with the idea that skin color was a valid way of defining humanity in order to oppress nonwhites - that nefarious idea came exclusively from white people. Piper, perhaps unintentionally, bolsters white evasion of engagement in issues of systemic racial injustice when he ends his sermon with a stirring call to "banish every belittling and unloving thought from our minds," "to show personal, affectionate oneness" with Christians of all ethnic backgrounds, and to be "salt and light" "with courageous acts of inter-racial kindness and respect."

We don't need "diversity training" because racial reconciliation is a personal matter of individual piety in thoughts, speech and kindness, according to Piper's sermon. We wouldn't have racism if Christians refused to acknowledge the reality of race. This is the call for "reconciliation" white folks love to hear.

"Reconciliation" too often focuses, as in Piper's sermon, upon interpersonal reconciliation without focus on systemic and structural justice. Many black people push back against the call for "reconciliation" because it presumes there was a time when we were in a right relationship. It also implies that we work toward reconciliation from an equal footing. "Hospitality" also implies that we, the powerful, are the hosts; the less powerful are the guests, outsiders whom we graciously welcome. Talk of reconciliation without recognition of power arrangements degenerates into sentimentality. (see Jennifer Harvey, Dear White Christians, 2014). And speaking of my church family, sentimental accounts of human nature, racial harmony and Christian ethics is killing us. Recently a United Methodist told me that her preacher had preached a sermon on racism.

"What did you learn from the sermon?" I asked.

"That we ought to be nice to black people," she responded. Far from being confrontation with the sin of racism, sentimental narrations of racism and sentimental appeals for white people to be nice are a primary means of avoiding conversations about race among United Methodists.

A white male (Paul Tillich), preaching to white males, preached a famous sermon: "You are Accepted," (Tillich, The Shaking of the Foundations, 1963) as if unconditional acceptance were the core of the Good News. That I am graced, loved, and accepted by God, just as I am, racism and all, at first sounds charitable. But there is a more sinister side to such cheery, sentimentally blissful ignorance. Preaching is also a call to conversion, transformation, detoxification. The evil we face is more than wrong thinking about ourselves; it's our captivity to principalities and powers.

Grace, Wesleyan grace, is not a paternal pat on the head; it's the power of God that enables us to live different lives than the lives we would be condemned to live if we had not been met by God in Jesus Christ.

As Luther said, apples do not come from a thorn bush. Good deeds arise from good people. At our best, we preach to defeat racism every Sunday because every Sunday's sermon contributes to the character of Christians. That's why some of our best preaching against racism will not seem to the congregation a direct attack on racism. Preaching's value is often in the subtle but powerful ways it forms us into people who have empathy for others, who assume responsibility for the needs of strangers, who feel that they are under judgment from some higher criterion than their own conscience, and who believe that, with the Holy Spirit set loose among us, who believe that we can be born again.

Before consideration of the obviously ethical "What ought we to do?" preaching considers the theologically determinative and ethically formative, "Who is God?", "What doth the Lord require?" Human action is responsive reaction to God's initiatives. Our discipleship is our human affirmation of how God is already busy in the world. It's not for us to defeat the sin of racism; God in Christ is already doing that. Our chief ethical question is, "Will I join with Christ in his world-changing, world-ending, resurrection-work or not?"

Chuck Campbell, speaks of preaching in the face of powers like racism as "exorcism":

Don't many folks - preachers included - long to be set free from the powers of death that have us in their grip and won't let us go - powers from which we cannot seem to free ourselves no matter how hard we try? After all, this is the key characteristic of demon possession: We are no longer agents of our own lives, but go through the deadly motions dictated to us by the powers of the world that hold us captive - that "possess" us. And we need a word from beyond ourselves to set us free from our captivity. (Campbell, "Resisting the Powers" in Purposes of Preaching, 2004).

The challenge is for us to move beyond being non-racist to being actively anti-racist, always remembering that,

We aren't fighting against human enemies but against rulers, authorities, forces of cosmic darkness, and spiritual powers of evil in the heavens. Therefore, pick up the full armor of God so that you can stand your ground on the evil day and after you have done everything possible to still stand. (Ephesians 6:12-13)

That's why it's not enough for us to share our personal story or to exhort the congregation to greater striving for justice. "We don't preach about ourselves. Instead, we preach about Jesus Christ as Lord..." (2 Corinthians 4:5). In Campbell's words, "We need a word beyond ourselves to set us free," Jesus, the Word made flesh, God's word in action.

Excerpted from Who Lynched Willie Earle? Preaching to Confront Racism (forthcoming from Abingdon Press, February 2017)

Via Will Willimon's blog, A Peculiar Prophet