"Between 1880 to 1940, white Christians lynched nearly five thousand black men & women in a manner with obvious echoes of the Roman crucifixion of Jesus. Yet these 'Christians' did not see the irony or contradiction in their actions.”- James H. Cone, The Cross & The Lynching Tree
2. Just as Cone notes, "The conspicuous absence of the lynching tree in American theological discourse and preaching is profoundly revealing," so too is theological condemnation of racist police shootings also conspicuously missing—particularly in white churches.
3. But here's the truth: You can't talk about #GoodFriday with any kind of moral relevance—any understanding of how Christ's crucifixion occurs all around us—without discussing police shootings, without condemning the murder of black bodies by agents of the state.
4. The crucifixion is not an ancient, historical event. We witnessed its horror again, two weeks ago, when Stephon Clark was shot 20 times in his own backyard for the unforgivable crime of holding a cell phone.
5. Christ was crucified in the bodies of Tamir Rice, Sandra Bland, Freddie Gray, Rekia Boyd, Michael Brown, John Crawford, Amadou Diallo, Walter Scott, Akai Gurley, Eric Garner, Alton Sterling, Philando Castile.
In every state-sanctioned death, we see Jesus' own broken body.
6. The holes in Christ's hands and feet are reflected in Stephon Clark's beautiful, God-given form, which Sacramento police officers desecrated so egregiously that Muslim leaders were unable to ritually bathe him—officers who then had the audacity to handcuff his lifeless body.
7. Just as no one was arrested for killing Jesus—just as the lynching tree became a tacit part of American governance for decades—so too does the state habitually refuse to hold those guilty of modern crucifixion responsible for their actions.
8. Because, just as Jesus' arrest and public execution were meant to silence a movement resisting imperial oppression, police killings have become a tool for terrorizing communities of color.
9. If our government and wider culture truly found these deaths abhorrent, we would take the necessary steps to prevent them. We would convict the officers responsible.
10. Instead, @PressSec—echoing the words of those who condoned lynching—called racist police shooting "a local matter." Juries rarely convict even when officers *are* tried. And so the crucifixion plays out in our streets again, and again, and again.
11. Christians must speak up—and white Christians in particular must protest, organize, and pressure legislators to stop police shootings. Otherwise, tears shed at a #GoodFriday service ring frightfully hollow when paired with silence in the face of modern crucifixions.
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1. Some people have asked why a Christian seminary would say that Christianity is not the only path to salvation. The short answer is that this in no way violates the Christian faith and, moreover, is integral to honoring and respecting our community.
2. For too long, Christians have misread verses like John 14:6 as implying that God is found exclusively through the Christian faith, many going as far as to say that people of other faiths face eternal damnation.
This is an incredibly narrow reading of the text.
3. To box God neatly within the Christian tradition is to reveal a profoundly limited understanding of the divine. Who are we to say that God can't speak to humanity through a multitude of messengers?
This weekend, we received much damnation from fundamentalists over our denial of scriptural inerrancy. It's understandable, because once you relinquish conviction that the Bible is *literally* God's word, faith becomes a messier affair.
2. It's easier to simply believe that the Bible is a plain record of the divine, that it clearly and concisely states what Christians should believe. In a world that feels so chaotic, biblical infallibility can provide distinct comfort.
But comfort and truth aren't synonymous.
3. The truth is that the biblical books were written by humans. They represent the fruits of people grappling with God, and what it means to be human, for centuries—in all the complexity those questions necessarily entail.
Misguided sociological, psychological and political theories have long fostered biblical misinterpretation. We wish to address untruths this document proclaims: Any treatise that says social justice is incidental to the gospel badly misunderstands both. statementonsocialjustice.com
I. Scripture
While divinely inspired, we deny the Bible is inerrant or infallible. It was written by men over centuries and thus reflects both God's truth and human sin & prejudice. We affirm that biblical scholarship and critical theory help us discern which messages are God's.
II. Imago Dei
We affirm that God created every person in God's own image. Accordingly, we deny that vitriol directed towards people because of how God made them (i.e. sexual orientation or gender identity) is in any way faithful, biblical or godly.
1. Though much-analyzed, it's not discussed enough how parishioners' reservations about @realDonaldTrump hinge around personal behavior (adultery, affairs, language, etc.), not systemic sin.
2. Jack Jones, for example, says it's difficult to support a president who had an affair with a porn star. Terry Drew admits reservations about how Trump "boasted about grabbing women's crotches." Suzette finds him "abrasive." Brett Green disliked his "shithole nations" remark.
3. Now, this is all deeply sinful behavior and the members of Luverne's First Baptist Church are right to feel it contradicts Christ's message. However, decades of theology framing sin as an interpersonal affair leaves them blind to this presidency's other sins.
1. It's the #FourthofJuly, and there's perhaps no better time to discuss Christian nationalism. So, let's talk.
2. Though this sinful confluence is particularly pronounced today, the truth is that broad swathes of American Christianity have united worship of God and empire. While extreme patriotism is already idolotrous, many Christians take spiritual allegiance even further.
3. This is quite vivid in churches that proudly display the American flag in their sanctuary, flying high over Bibles and baptismal fonts. Some even recite the pledge of allegiance during worship, swearing fealty to country in a place that ought to be reserved for the divine.
1. It's #Pride, so let's talk about the God and the LGBTQ community.
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2. In Genesis, we read that God created humanity in God's own image. Scripture is clear: Each of us carry within us the divine spark, we are fearfully and wonderfully made, and God has pronounced this Creation "good."
3. From both science and folks' lived experience, we know that gender identity and sexual orientation are not incidental aspects of our being. They are not choices—they sit at the core of our humanity.