It’s rare for a religious
discussion to remain in our mediaculture for long, but that’s been the
case for President Obama’s comments at the annual National Prayer
Breakfast on Feb. 5. Obama gave a speech in which he compared
Islamic violence with historic Christian violence. Political opponents
expressed outrage. Jim Gilmore, former chairman of the Republican
National Committee, called the remarks “the most offensive I’ve ever
heard a president make in my lifetime.”
In the speech, Obama
said that “during the Crusades and the Inquisition, people committed
terrible deeds in the name of Christ.” He then brought his historical
analogy closer to home: “In our home country, slavery and Jim Crow all
too often was justified in the name of Christ.”
From what I’ve
seen, historians who’ve responded to the claims don’t take issue with
his statements. Others, though, don’t like him criticizing Christianity
or America.
This raises a question: Is it valuable to practice self-reflection (and self-criticism) as Christians?
A
second question is, Is it fair to even call what was done in the
Crusades, the Inquisition and in the American South Christian? Most
Muslims would deny that what ISIS is doing reflects Islam.
In a
Feb. 10 article at Slate.com, Jamelle Bouie explores the facts behind
Obama’s statement about Jim Crow. He makes two basic points: (1) it was
worse than we may have thought, and (2) it was a religious ritual.
“In
a recent report,” Bouie writes, “the Alabama-based Equal Justice
Initiative documents nearly 4,000 lynchings of black people in 12
Southern states—Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Texas, and Virginia—between 1877 and 1950, which the group notes is “at
least 700 more lynchings in these states than previously reported.”
He
goes on to offer descriptions of a few of these “lynchings” (the word
doesn’t capture the brutality of the torture and butchery), which are
too horrible to quote here.
Bouie then notes that these lynchings
weren’t just vigilante punishments or “celebratory acts of racial
control and domination.” They were rituals. He quotes historian Amy
Louise Wood, who writes in her book Lynching and Spectacle: Witnessing
Racial Violence in America, 1890–1940: “Christianity was the primary
lens through which most southerners conceptualized and made sense of
suffering and death of any sort.”
Another historian, Donald G.
Mathews, writes in the Journal of Southern Religion: “Religion permeated
communal lynching because the act occurred within the context of a
sacred order designed to sustain holiness.”
But why bring this up? What purpose does it serve?
Perhaps
it’s a lesson in humility and a warning against self-righteousness.
Jesus certainly had plenty to say about the perils of self-righteousness
(see Matthew 23).
What ISIS has done is horrible—and comparable
to what those “Christian” lynch mobs did. But let’s not judge all
Muslims by that group. We don’t want all Christians judged by what other
so-called Christians have done.
And let’s do some self-analysis
as well. Are we not all prone to acts of domination or violence? Can we
learn from our past in order to not practice such violence?
Maybe we need to practice confession and repentance on occasion.
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