Sunday, June 19, 2016

Orlando and the Language of Peace

In the wake of the Orlando shootings, I grow increasingly frustrated with those voices that lack compassion and kindness in their rantings and postings. The example Jesus portrays is one of total compassion and an extension of grace to those who are victims - victims of violence, victims of hate, victims of grief, victims of insecurity.  

I'm drawn to the story of Jesus and the woman caught in adultery, John 8:1-11.  The self-righteous scribes and pharisees bring her to Jesus for a judgment.  In the midst of the hostile language Jesus chooses not to engage the rhetoric. Instead "Jesus bent down and wrote with his finger on the ground." When they are done he poses the question, "Let anyone among you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone at her." Then he goes back to writing in the ground.  

Jesus doesn't escalate the conflict. He poses a self-reflection question. The accusers slither away in embarassment.  Jesus addresses the woman, "Neither do I condemn you." There is no heated language. There is nothing hateful said to anyone involved in the situation. There is an emphasis on compassion and understanding.  Jesus lets that be the motivation for the woman to find her way in faith and life.  

When it comes to speaking about the tragedy that happened in Orlando, how we use our words reflects on the love and grace our faith calls us to share.  Nothing is gained by using words that are homophobic or anti-Islamic or escalate a hostile rhetoric. Brothers and sisters, let us be peacemakers who seek to understand and exhibit kindness especially to those who are different from us.  This is the way of Jesus.  

2 comments:

  1. It's amazing how quickly people move to politicalize a tragedy like this, or the other mass murders that have plagued our society recently. I too, have a political point of view concerning the radicalization of disenfranchised groups, concerning reasonable gun control, concerning a culture of ignorance and hate...

    But, let's take a month at least, to realize the lost humanity, to grieve.

    The Pulse shootings are especially personal for me, as I have nephews whom I love, who are openly gay. I worry that my nephews will suffer because of their identity.

    My daughter, a student at Augsburg, has friends, classmates and teammates who are Muslim. She worries that these fine young individuals will somehow be stereotyped because of their faith.

    These problems are central to who we are as a society. We need to approach these issues from a framework of love.

    Jesus' work, our hands.

    Dave

    ReplyDelete
  2. I'd like to add to the "framework of love" remark above, that we insist on tolerance. Not sure how "Christian" it is to insist, but tolerance is non-negotiable.

    ReplyDelete