The comments betrayed the commenters when it landed on an SBC blog. Many seemed incredulous that Dwight would dare play the race card. We have moved on. “Why can’t he move on,” seemed to bubble to the surface. It appears my SBC friends may need to rethink the progress we think we have made – at least in our Country. And, I would imagine since the SBC allies so strongly with the Republican party we need to reconsider the matter in our own ranks.
Tad Delay pointed to research released that calls into question the notion we have gotten better with regard to racial sentiments in our Country. Tad begins his post noting the news,
Walter Benjamin once famously said, “Every fascism is an index of a failed revolution.” This is the type of thing that naturally concerns anyone interested in the health of a society. Tavis Smiley rightly predicted this would be the most racist election since the ’60s (voter suppression and all). By now everyone has heard of the research showing Obama lost 2-4% because of race in 2008, and a new poll by AP shows the problem is getting worse. It’s no surprise that anti-black attitudes rise during the past 4 years. Sad, but not surprising at all.
Maybe one could argue that the way Mormon doctrine evolves they do not hold the racist positions they once did. But it appears those sentiments among our wider population do not die easily.
I wonder what my friend Alan Cross would say about this news as he continues writing on the issue of race in the South.
What do you make of the report? Of the notion we have made progress in matters of race?
Those of you who pastor, especially in the SBC, what do you do with the apparent latent racism that lies underneath perceptions the issue has passed? How will you address the hearts of those with whom you share life that you know well fit the described percentages?
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I think that to claim "racism" is ultimately a losing argument, though. I think that what looks like racism is just a symptom of a deeper problem, which is the categorizing of the "other" as a threat and the promotion of my own self-interests at the expense of the "other." We do that is all kinds of ways that often have nothing to do with race, but it is the same basic thing as what looks like racism. There are very few true racists anymore, if racism is defined as thinking that one race is inherently superior to the other. Most people don't think that and they have moved the point of Dr. King's dream of judging a man by the content of his character as opposed to the color of his skin. But, the fear and distrust that still pervades our attempt to protect ourselves from the other is still racialized. In other words, we no longer think that because a person is black, they are necessarily a threat. We used to think that when we had "Colored" water fountains and restrooms. We don't think that any longer. But, we do still use race as a classification for those who are more likely to be in the category of "other" that we have to protect ourselves from. There is a distinction there and unless we begin to see it, claims of racism fall on deaf ears among Whites because they quickly pull up their few examples of Black friends and acquaintances that they are not threatened by at all. But, those examples only prove the point that we still iive in a Racialized Society and that our religion is thoroughly Racialized. We may not be classic racists, but we are just like our ancestors in many ways in that we protect ourselves against the "Other" with whatever economic, social, and spiritual power we have so that we can protect OUR way of life. And, we use often use God to do it.
Todd,
I wonder if we make this issue to 'thin' we we only speak of race. For many I believe the issue is also one of culture. Power moves and self Identification have led the lives of majority/minority populations to develop in isolation culturally. While I can't recall the exact quote Merkel announced a few years back the death of multiculturalism. For many race is the charge when the underlying issue is cultural preferences. Music, family roles, socio-economic status, food, housing all play together to isolate and then further identify us with our own kind. This goes beyond race.
I would suggest that our embrace of the other needs to go deeper than "am
I a racist? No! Glad we settled that." and actually push into embracing my neighbor, the other, as Christ has embraced me. One allows us to check the box of non-racist and then be affirmed with our "one black friend" and look deeper at the things which divide us from each other.
Racialized Society: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racialized_society
Alan,
Pointing to the way we marginalized across our tribal penchant s does help us think broadly about the way "othering" works in a host of situations. But, in order to address the deeper matter, as you put it, requires particularity. Until there is wider acceptance that the underlying issue is the way we reduce and dismiss others in ways that align with our fears and preferences, we must name racism as still a reality rather than feel better by invoking radicalization.
My overall contention is we have not progressed as much as we convince ourselves we have. Remember your comments on Dwight's post. When challenged by CB, you softened a bit. Then he and others came and illustrated your very point.
it is not that I disagree with you. Instead, I see no good reason to back away from what still plagues us by naming the specific ways we treat others. Consider the shift in that same thread when the issue of economic injustice showed up. The lack of compassion called into question the existence of Christian charity when all anecdotes played the, pull yourself up by your bootstraps card without so much a sense of deference to the complexities of our current economic crisis, and system.
What it seems we witness is the wholesale lack of an understanding of human interdependence. IMO
It is a complex issue to be sure and calling out "racism" does little to help clear it up. Honestly, I have no way of knowing if someone is a true racist or not if they claim not to be. That is the reason for the softening. I can make general statements about an issue, but when someone says, "that is not me - I am not a racist," to continue to claim that they are becomes problematic. The truth is, I cannot know read their minds. But, what does become clear is how we operate in our own self-interests most of the time and that race becomes a good category for those who we think might be a threat to us, even if we do not really believe that there is a biological reason why they are a threat. Perhaps we claim it to be cultural differences or a lack of family values or economic socialism or liberalism or a rejection of Christian morals. We have lots of code words. The real issue, I think, and one that goes far beyond racism, is that we use our religion to protect ourselves, to save our life or to gain our best life now. In doing this, we actually reject Christ because He calls us to lose our lives for the gospel and His sake. To lose our life means that we have to embrace the "Other" and do so sacrificially. Racism made Black people the "Other" for Whites. Racialization, even after Racism has been denounced, perpetuates the situation as we continue to make economic, social, and psychological decisions based on what benefits our Way of Life over and against what honors God and shows love to others. I have to soften on personal, pointed charges of Racism because I just don't know what lies behind another's thinking. But, on the ways that Racialization provides a cover for our pursuit of the good life aided by our expression of Christianity, I am pretty firm about it.
And, my contention is that we have not progressed at all, despite our rhetoric. We are dealing with the same sins. We have just shape-shifted in their manifestation.
John, that is what I am trying to say. Denying "racism" gets us off the hook too easily.
John,
A more careful reading would pick up that I simply used race as how we "other" people because of the recent AP piece. There is little doubt we other people when we do not find them toting a preferred SBC line. Read the comments at Voices. There is often a lack of working toward understanding and agreement, even on a limited plane. Rather the shouting is vociferous and loud. Dwight was treated poorly in my opinion. And, mostly by a bunch of white guys. There was hardly the slightest interest to hear him describe the complex ways the black vote must be viewed. Instead, he was excoriated for his willingness to accept Obama's personal confession that he was a Christian. When the conversation turned to economics, the bluster continued. Again, mostly by white guys.
If we apply the same requirement - that to be a Christian requires us to give evidence of how are beliefs are held (ethics/praxis) then it seems consistent to call "bull" when those who claim to not be racist in fact follow racialized rhetoric.
I believe we agree. The nexus for the post, however, was that in the aftermath of Dwight's experience and stating his opinion, it seems hard to defend we have not made the progress we allege. That was my point.
Alan,
Sometimes in our attempts to nuance we create space for the very thing to continue unabated. That is my point. We may invent euphemisms to make us feel better about the way we want the world to work in order to salve the conscience. The piece in question simply stated that we have not moved much on the issue. And, to create a layer that seems to assert the same as if we were still wiling to use "racist" seems intent to engage a language game for comfort rather than systemic change. That goes for the multitude of ways we advantage ourselves by disadvantaging others.
I understand. So, you are saying that we should just keep declaring others to be "racist" when they act in ways consistent with "racialization" to protect their own privileged position? That is definitely an argument that cuts through the rhetoric and assigns a strong denunciation to the current actions of almost the entire SBC in almost everything that we do. Under that categorization, we are still racist in our denomination and our churches and our personal lives. You might be right. Perhaps the attempts at reconciliation are just a way to save face, give a little ground, and still maintain our position all the while continuing on in our own racists machinations. But, I don't think so. I think that the disease is just as deadly but it goes far deeper than race. Racism was not even really a thing until around the 1500-1600's with the Portugese slave trade in West Africa. It came to justify the perceived economic necessity of slave labor in the New World. The religious/theological justification came later after the economic interests dictated that African slave labor was needed for White European survival in the New World. My contention is that true racism is only employed when it is useful for Whites to do so. It is hardly useful now as any expression of it makes you a societal pariah. But, promoting your life over the Other is the American Way. The fact that this act continues to fall along racial lines shows how embedded we are in promoting ourselves over others, even when it appears to all as though we are classic racists. And, maybe we are. But, what I am proposing as the real cause is no less severe. It is actually worse because it manifests in every relationship with every people all the time. It cannot be localized to one race or set of relationships. But, I see what you are saying. If you want to go all the way and just call it all racist, you can make that point. I just think that the White defense against it, especially the White Evangelical Christian defense, is so engrained that there will not be a hearing for it.