Monday, January 4, 2021

Critical of Racism Criticism

A response to “Critical Race Theory and Christianity 

Speakers Monique Duson and Krista Bontrager


The first time I remember hearing the phrase “Critical Race Theory” (CRT) was a month ago. I’ve been hearing it constantly since then. (I thought it was just the Baader-Meinhoff phenonmenon, but apparently this is the new hot topic.) 


According to Duson and Bontrager, it’s the core of the justice work I’ve been doing the last six years. That may be true- I don’t work in the vaunted halls of academia just because I hang out with college students- so if CRT is what I’ve been doing all these years, I should probably learn about it. 


But that already puts me in a sticky situation for writing this blog post. I need to research before I can give a true response to this talk. I’m happy to admit that I don’t know what I’m talking about. I’d like to read an actual book from a CRT scholar. And that may take me awhile. So for now, consider this post more of a “huh, what?” response rather than a deep dive. 


Because I do still have a response. I have concerns about the material presented here. If I’ve been unknowingly involved in CRT all these years, I see two options. 

  1. All of the teachers, writers, and activists I’ve been learning from are dramatically changing the teachings of CRT and not staying true to its core at all.
  2. Duson and Bontrager are representing an untrue version of CRT. 

So let’s walk through that and see if we can find some contradictions.


First, here is Duson & Bontrager’s evidence that I’m practicing CRT. I have used the following terms: white privilege, inclusive, racial reconciliation, systemic injustice, reparations, diversity, equity, and white fragility.


They keep saying CRT is complicated and confusing. But when they define it, I find the definition simplistic.


“White people are oppressors. Black people are oppressed.”


This may be generalized and unhelpful, but I wouldn’t call it complicated. If this were true, it would be easy to dump folks into categories. Of course, those categories would be nonsense, but that’s what makes a strawman. A strawman serves the purpose of making your enemies look bad, not of understanding them. 


The last Maven talk left me feeling confused, but in this talk, the ladies are organized. They made it quite clear what they believe CRT is, and why they believe it’s bad:


White culture is wicked. Western European culture is wicked. Being born white is bad. If we could just get rid of whiteness, we could get rid of society’s fundamental problems. People of color can’t commit the sin of racism. Today’s generation is responsible for the sins of previous generations. You need to divest yourself from whiteness. We must retrain white people to think differently. We associate privilege purely with skin color. You’re a racist. You’re responsible for 250 years of economic disadvantage. People of color don’t need to look inward- they aren’t racist and don’t need to do any self-examination. The goal is to hand over all power structures to people of color.


I’ve never been taught these things, and I don’t believe these things. (I could re-interpret some of them: “Aspects of Western European culture are wicked.”) I understand why hearing these things makes their audience mad. I feel a bit emotional myself. 


1.


Duson and Bontrager did not provide quotes from scholars or activists for these statements. (Instead, their slides are peppered with exhausting scare quotes centered on all the words they don’t like.) 


It leaves me floundering to try and understand where these extreme beliefs came from. Duson hints a bit at her conversion story: she was a black Democrat, living in Africa, doing activism work, and a passionate believer in CRT. Perhaps these were once her beliefs? Yet she changed her mind when she came home to the US and moved in with the Bontragers, a family of white Republicans. It sounds like they had many interesting conversations.


Yet, I’m questioning my theory already. If Duson thought white people are evil, she wouldn’t have moved in with them or had conversations with them. 


There were some good parts to this talk. Even after Civil Rights passed, things weren’t equitable. Bontrager says, “It makes sense” that the rise of Critical Legal Theory (a precursor to CRT) grew out of this. She calls out the “awkward silence” of Christians during these bad parts of history, and explains that this is what activists are talking about when they talk about complicity.


I’m grateful they recognize America’s history of racism, and how racism does still exist. I’m not sure how many churches believe and recognize this. I can only speak of my own experience. Duson and Bontrager have a description they consider to be an extreme belief:


“Racism is a thing of the past; racial incidents are rare and isolated.”


I believed that when I was a kid. And I often meet people who believe that. So, I’m genuinely glad these ladies aren’t promoting that belief.  But, they set another belief at the other extremity of their scale:


“Racism permeates every system. Everything is rigged to benefit whites and marginalize People of Color.”


This is a trick to make yourself look moderate, by the way. As long as you are the one creating the scale, you can always set other’s beliefs as the extremes and place yourself in the middle


Oddly, although the ladies don’t believe that racism permeates every system, they do believe that CRT has permeated everything. Bontrager in particular has a distrust of Christian colleges, and gave a lot of advice about making sure you aren’t sending your kids somewhere that has any version of CRT beliefs. (I admit finding a college that never uses the words “diversity” or “inclusion” might be hard.) 


Read more on my blog about individual vs. systemic sin here and here.


2.


So, not having sources is my first concern. My second concern is about intersectionality (although D&B don’t use the word). They make it clear that CRT is exclusively about black vs white and reasonably observe how that leaves a lot of people out. But, they also discuss the overlapping philosophies with CRT: Critical Legal Theory, Feminism, Disability Theory, Queer Theory, and Child Studies. This, for them is a scare tactic. “If you agree with CRT, you’ll have to believe in feminism as well.” they say, knowing feminism is a scary boogie man for their audience. Most people, including me, don’t know anything about child studies, so they give us a brief description: “It means that children are oppressed by their parents.” This baffling descriptor seems untrue to me, and when she follows it up with, “What will happen to parents’ rights?” I become worried that she’s talking about anti-vaxxers. 


So. Black and white are the only categories that matter. Although gender matters too. And ableism matters too. And sexuality matters, and age matters. So perhaps CRT isn’t only about being black or white? This feels like a contradiction in our speakers’ premise. 


Again, I’m not qualified to talk about this, but I want to give my limited understanding on power imbalances. I think that’s what they’re actually talking about here. Regarding children: I’m a parent. I have power over my infant. It doesn’t always feel that way: if he’s crying and screaming, it feels like he’s the one in charge. Or if he falls asleep in my lap, I am “trapped” for an hour, unable to do my own thing. But, I’ve made a choice to be attached to my child 24/7. I have the power to do things quite differently. I could leave him in the crib all day (he lacks the power to get out) and barely care for his basic needs if I wanted to. Yes, he could yell, but I could leave the room and turn up the music. I can overpower him in absolutely every way. 


When you talk to a friend who lived through an abusive childhood, you don’t (I hope) ask them, “Why didn’t you do something?” We intuitively know children lack power. They may be too small to fight back, too scared to speak up, or too isolated to ask for help. Even as adults, abusive relationships can follow similar patterns (coercion, intimidation, emotional abuse- see Power and Control wheel.) Gender often plays a role in this because men have historically had more power than women.


Please notice though, that I’m not saying “Men are evil. Parents are evil. Babies should be in charge.” We can understand power imbalances with room for nuance. There are situations where a basic binary isn’t true. White people usually have more power than black people. But not in every situation. (A badge or a gun can change a power imbalance immediately.)


But we do know situations where people use their privilege and power for bad. Think about the viral video from 2020 between a black bird-watcher and a white dog walker. The white woman was the one breaking the rules (dog off leash.) But she was confident that if she called the police and lied that the man was threatening her (he wasn’t), he’d be the one arrested.


I have power over a person in a wheelchair when I’m climbing stairs and there’s no ramp. I have access (to school, city hall, the library, whatever it is) that they don’t have. My family member who works in disability services is the one who taught me the word “equity.” (I thought it was only about mortgages.) A staircase is already equality: we both have the same challenge. But only a ramp creates equity. She told me that certain professors at her university have disputes with disability services. Her department will say, “Student X is allowed an extra half hour on her tests.” The professor says, “No, that isn’t fair. Everyone gets an equal time on tests.” But fortunately, we have laws that empower the disability services department to get the student the help they need. 


In a different circumstance, maybe the person in a wheelchair has power over me because he’s my boss. I had a long conversation with a friend a few years ago about the power of being a boss and sexual assault.  My friend had empathy for a pastor accused of sexually assault. He imagined all the attractive young women in the office throwing themselves at him for years. “If that’s true, why not fire them? Or move them to a different office?” I wondered. The boss has the power. (An employee can also choose to quit, but there’s an economic punishment for that. And in this situation, there was enormous pressure from family and community to do whatever the pastor wanted, since he was considered to be God’s Anointed.)

 

In the New Testament, tax collectors were empowered by the Roman government to collect money and enrich themselves. But, also all their Jewish families and neighbors hated them and thought they were traitors. They got excluded from the community. Power is complicated. 


3.


My third frustration is the way Duson and Bontrager believe they are the only ones interpreting scripture correctly. I know everyone does this a bit. I have as well. But I’d like them to reconsider saying things like, “We have a solely Biblical perspective.” Two people can read the Bible and come out with quite different perspectives. (In fact, I could argue that any time two different people read the Bible, they’ll read it differently.) I especially felt concern about this when they said things about historical Christianity like, “scripture is clear: it’s about your own personal righteousness.” Ancient Christianity and Judaism were communal, not individualistic.


I understand that having a Biblical perspective is their goal. That’s a fair thing for a Christian to want to do. But when one claims to have achieved it, I find it prideful. It feels like dubbing yourself the arbiters of Christianity when you say, “CRT is antithetical to the gospel.” “The goal of CRT is to undermine and demolish Christian worldview and culture.”


Additionally, this turns into a purity contest. I felt there was a heavy implication that the Bible is all you need. I don’t understand the disdain for having secular sources of knowledge. Does the Bible tell us everything we need to know about medicine? About science? (I’m almost afraid to ask these questions because, again, anti-vaxxers may answer in the affirmative.) 


Bontrager even goes so far to say that everyone is reading too many books about the Bible- they need to just read the Bible. There’s an element of truth to that, BUT— if you fully believe that, why are you standing in front of a room giving an interpretive speech? You should just be reading the Bible to us. 


Let’s zip through what they think the Bible says about racism. First, “There’s only one race.” I think what they mean is that everyone is related. Yes, secular folk and religious folk agree on that. But I don’t find it that helpful for most racism related issues. Yes, race is a construct (it exists in our minds more than our biology) - but that doesn’t mean it isn’t real. It deeply impacts people’s lives. We don’t solve problems about race by pretending race doesn’t exist. 


Next, Duson and Bontrager say that we Christians need to see each other FIRST as brothers and sisters, not as any other identity. That’s fine too- and I like the emphases on first. It leaves room for the fact that we do have other identities that matter to us as well. I’m not sure if our speakers think they matter- Duson made comments like, “I’m a women who happens to be black,” or “I live in brown skin” - which implies that being black is not important to her. That’s her choice- I’m not judging. But I hope she would allow other folks to believe their racial or ethnic group is important to them. I never thought about being white growing up. Whiteness was invisible, “normal.” I think it’s good to take some time to think about it. 


They also taught that the Bible has different standards for marginalized and oppressed than our world does: only the poor, widows, orphans, and foreigners count. However, Bontrager wanted to add disabled to the list. I’m not sure why she gets to add to the Bible if no one else does. Just looking at the Bible, I’d add biracial Samaritans, tax collectors, sex workers, eunuchs, lepers, second wives, hand maidens, infertile wives… (Maybe not everything in the Bible is easy to apply to contemporary society.)


They call racism “the sin of partiality.” This feels weak to me. I’m partial to green tea over black. I’m partial to brownies over cake. Partiality doesn’t explain why America is separating immigrant families at the border and locking them up in detention centers with unlivable conditions. Partiality doesn’t describe dehumanization or genocide. Some aspects of racism could be partiality, but it does not describe all.


Lastly, Duson and Bontrager stated that Jesus has already accomplished all that’s needed. They scorned CRT activists who want us to lament and repent, to perform acts of contrition, or who want to bring the kingdom of Heaven to earth. They said that trying to do racial reconciliation doesn’t work because it’s never enough. Activists always want more from you, they say. 


I find this version of Christianity off-putting. Yes, Jesus has accomplished the great task they we never could - sacrificing himself, defeating death, forgiving sins. But I feel like they are saying that next time I’m a jerk to my husband, I don’t have to apologize. That is not good relationship advice.


At this point, I feel like I’ve answered my question. Why build such an elaborate strawman of CRT? Yes, building a strawman lets a one “win” an argument, but if you are being honest with yourself, you know you aren’t being truthful. And I do think that our speakers want to be honest people. So I suspect (I can’t know for sure) that this core belief about the Bible is the problem. If the Bible is the only source of truth and understanding, CRT must be bad. So starting with the belief that CRT is bad, they may slowly distort and misinterpret each principal until it becomes unrecognizable, yet suitable for their purposes. 


We can toss Bible verses at each other all day, but I can’t change another's heart. I’ll pray for the Spirit to work. I’ll try to teach a clear understanding about what different beliefs are, and to be critical when they don’t line up with God’s heart. I’m sure CRT has flaws, and I know the social justice movement has flaws. That is something we can have a conversation about. But making up these distortions about the other side only sows confusion and disunity. Let’s be humble and see what we can learn from each other when we’re being honest. We can also learn from people who are different than both of us. God spoke to Gentiles, Magi, and Roman Centurions. I want to hear what God has to say. 


God has told you, O man, what is good; and what does the Lord require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?” -Micah 6:8

text: a twitter quote from Phil Vischer @philvischer
If only we had fought racism with the same passion
we are now bringing to the fight against anti-racism.
Would there have been a need for an anti-racist movement?
The church allowed racism to flourish.
Now we're mad about secular solutions to a problem we wouldn't solve.  



Updates:

Critical Race Theory: An Overview and Appraisal from Emerging Scholars Network 

A debate between Neil Shenvi (Duson and Bontrager reference him) and Rasool Berry Unbelievable? Is Critical Race Theory Compatible with Christianity?



Framing Critical Race Theory from Christianity Today

Jeff Liou on Justice and Critical Race Theory from The Reclaim Podcast

Understanding Critical Race Theory: Part 1 from Missio Alliance

Unity or Overturned Tables?

 A response to: “Unity or Uproar? A Biblical Vision of Justice for a Divided Age” 

Speaker:  Dr. Thaddeus Williams

I feel like I need to confess that I start this review from a place of distrust and confusion. I know that the speaker and I disagree, but I’m distracted by his style of argument more than the essence of his arguments. I’m trying my best to understand, but frankly, he tends to be so vague and leave so much up to assumptions, that I am probably not representing his true thoughts or beliefs here. He’s a professor and a doctor, but I want to go over this talk with a red pen, slashing out the tangents and asking for citations in the margins. I suspect that he is not arguing in good faith, and that’s a bad place to start a discussion. I’ll try anyway. 


Social Justice Warriors


We open on an antagonistic note, because he’s talking about me. Not actually me, of course; he doesn’t know me. But a caricature that’s meant to be me. 


Dr. Williams explains: Before social justice got to people like me, I was “bright-eyed and bushy-tailed for the Gospel, excited for missions, shouting the good news of salvation. Grace alone, faith alone, in Christ alone, for God’s glory alone.”


But after, some ideologue convinced me that my “primary mission was to fight systemic injustice. The fruits of the spirit were replaced by resentment, rage, suspicion, assuming the worst of other’s motives, and a quickness to be offended.” 


And what’s worse? I’m not even just the “after” — I’m the ideologue who’s duping young people into believing these things. 


Okay, now that we’ve painted a picture of our divisions, let’s slow down. I want to start with compassion. When he describes these people, he makes it sound like they are personal friends of his. I don’t know if that’s true, but if it is, I’m sorry that he’s lost friendships. I feel the same way. Divisions among family in the faith are very painful. I stand with you in wanting unity. But, I want us to have true unity through justice and restoration: not to pretend that our issues can be ignored. 


“They dress the wound of my people as though it were not serious. 'Peace, peace,' they say, when there is no peace.” -Jeremiah 6:14


"I’m offended"


This relates to the big issue about taking offense. Dr. Williams says, “In our day, it’s a virtue to be quick to take offense.” I find this to be an extraordinary claim. I would like him to provide examples: what teachers are saying this? I feel like he is saying this to poison the well. Now when I respond to him, no matter what I say, he can respond, “See? I told you. She takes offense to everything.” As if there aren’t things we need to speak up about. As if there aren’t injustices for us to fight. 


So I’m going to argue anyway. You can call it taking offense if you like. I don’t think it makes my arguments untrue. 


"Social Justice Work was Better in the Past"


Dr. Williams appeals to past glories when he talks about doing social justice work “the right way.” He brings up the examples of William Wilberforce and John Newton, whose abolitionist and political work ended slavery in the UK. A wonderful example, although I want to point out that the only protests that meet today’s approval are seated firmly in the past. If we lived then, are you quite sure you’d want their uproar over unity?


Later he makes an argument I find startling. (He may be quoting economist Thomas Sowell here.) “Conservative religious activists ended slavery.” “If they were alive today, we’d call them the Religious Right.” I don’t know who gets to claim Wilberforce (or the American abolitionists). I find it prideful to be so sure that they would be proud of you and everything you do. I’m not sure these historical figures fit that neatly into a conservative/liberal dichotomy. (I’m sure Wilberforce and I wouldn’t see eye to eye on many issues.) 


And Dr. Williams must have a very different definition of conservatism than I do. (I know some people who think to be conservative just means to be Christian, and perhaps that’s the whole argument here.) I think an important aspect of conservatism is about looking to the past: finding good things and maintaining (conserving) them. But that isn’t something we want to do with slavery. Wilberforce and his team looked toward the future. On this issue, the past was not something we want to keep. 


…let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles. And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us, fixing our eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of faith. -Hebrews 12:1b-2a


I think he is attempting to make a valid point that Christians, throughout history, have done good things for the cause of justice. I agree. (If you’d like to read more about Wilberforce or other historical Christians who’ve done social justice work, here are links on this blog.) However, this history is not an excuse to ignore the oppression and injustice caused by Christians. American abolitionists were not called “Bible-believing Christians” in their day, like he suggests. They were the heretics. Slave-owners were the ones who took the Bible “literally.” There are still pastors today who will defend slavery. 


"I’m suspicious"


But enough about conservatives vs. liberals. Dr. Williams wants to stop such divisions. (Or he wants all Christians to join him on the correct side of the political spectrum. I’m not sure.) A main point of his social justice work is that we shouldn’t have group identities. (Or perhaps that our group identities shouldn’t be very important. Again, it’s hard to tell what he’s saying.)


I was raised to be “colorblind,” a simplistic interpretation of Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream that “people will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.” In my education, this meant ignoring people’s color and ethnicity. (I would argue this was not King’s intention.) Thus, things like “Black Pride” or “Native Pride” seem offensive to colorblind white folk, who are steadfastly pretending that we have no differences. Colorblindness also helps us ignore injustice: someone recently told me that the first thing I should do to solve the disproportionate incarceration of black and brown people would be to stop talking about it. 


Maybe that is part of Dr. William’s argument. When he describes it in more detail, it seems further and further from the reality I know. He describes a table where modern social justice divides people. “You can’t sit by Bob. Bob isn’t your brother in Christ. He’s a Roman oppressor.” 


Again, if Dr. Williams has had this experience, I’m sorry for it. But no one has ever told me, “You’re a white oppressor. We can’t sit together.” And even if they did, I don’t understand why this would be interpreted as a core teaching of modern social justice. I would interpret it as a hurt person trying to protect themselves. It’s not the aim of social justice but one of the steps along the way is that, as a white person, if I need to give somebody space to do their healing, I’m going to give them space. I don’t need to force them to have a relationship with me. I hope for a relationship in the future. 


Also… if you have had this experience, it may be a good time to ask yourself where you tried to sit at the table. 


“When someone invites you to a wedding feast, do not take the place of honor, for a person more distinguished than you may have been invited.  If so, the host who invited both of you will come and say to you, ‘Give this person your seat.’ Then, humiliated, you will have to take the least important place. But when you are invited, take the lowest place, so that when your host comes, he will say to you, ‘Friend, move up to a better place.’ Then you will be honored in the presence of all the other guests. For all those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted.” -Luke 14:8-11


If you have the opportunity to spend time with people who are different than you, come as a learner and a servant, not as a leader or preacher. 


Gender is a useful comparison here. As a woman, there are times and situations where I feel unsafe around men. This doesn’t mean I hate men, or think all men are out to get me. But if I’m walking along at night, and a man starts following me, will you really begrudge me for being a bit fearful?


This may relate to Dr. William’s multiple references to suspicion. I think he’s saying that modern social justice teaches us to be suspicious of anyone outside our race. As I’m mulling this over, two examples come to mind. First, “Stop and Frisk.” This contentious police policy allowed officers to stop anyone they thought was suspicious, and search them for a weapon. Not surprisingly, the police primarily found people of color to be inherently suspicious, and stopped them at much greater rates. (This did not create a good relationship between the police and the people they were meant to serve.) 


The second example of suspicion goes the other way around, when someone who has been stopped by police are afraid for their life. They are suspicious that the cops aren’t going to treat them well. This goes against my upbringing: I was always told that the police were my friends, and I could go to them if I needed help. I didn’t know other groups of people were teaching their children how to be extra careful around the police, because they had the power to harm them. I was startled when I heard this report from LeVar Burton, one of my childhood heroes, whose race I never considered, because his interactions with the police were so much more cautious and fearful than mine.  


Yes, we dream of a future where both kinds of suspicion are gone. But this is a situation where the people in power have to surrender their suspicion first. 


"I’m aggrieved"


Dr. William’s complains about a “game of historical grievances” as if this isn’t people’s reality in the present. He provides some articles as evidence. I read, “Can My Children Be Friends with White People?” It’s a poignant article. Of course there is hurt, but not only does the author admit that he does still have white friends, he also says the real problem is the actions or inactions of white friends, more so than their ethnicity. (The article is framed around Trump supporters. Dr. Williams does not address this topic in this talk.) “White People are Cowards” is also a thoughtful article. “Why Can’t We Hate Men?” was weaker; she makes good points with a bad conclusion. (I wouldn’t call these articles “mainstream” like he does. Opinion pieces are meant to be provocative.) Dr. Williams doesn’t actually address any of the points from these articles (which would have been interesting.) I think he was mostly using the titles to stir up offense in his audience.


All have sinned and fallen short,” Dr. Williams quotes Romans 3:23. “Not ‘white people,’ not ‘economically privileged,’ not ‘straight people,’ not ‘capitalists,’ not ‘cops.’ All have sinned.” This is the point where I start banging my head. It deeply shows how he and I read the Bible differently. Yes, all have sinned. (Yes, white people, rich people, etc…) But I won’t pretend the Bible doesn’t put people in categories. 


Have you read the Beattitudes?  “Jesus said: Blessed are the poor in spirit… Blessed are those who mourn… Blessed are the meek… Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness… Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness…” from Matthew 5 


Or maybe read the Magnificat? Mary said: “God has brought down rulers from their thrones but has lifted up the humble. He has filled the hungry with good things but has sent the rich away empty.” (Luke 1:52-53


Scorning the idea that “White people have sinned and fallen short” has the taste of entitlement to me. It feels like reading the scripture and rather than saying, “Wow, I’ve fallen short too.” turning and looking at your neighbor and saying, “You’ve fallen short. You’re no better than me.” Why does Dr. Williams feel a need to reassure his audience? Why inoculate them from feeling shame? It’s a comforting talk that makes you feel better about yourself, sure, but I don’t see it leading to unity. 


Fruits


Dr. Williams makes a good point about the Fruits of the Spirit. I agree, social justice work should be full of fruit.


“But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.” -Galatians 5:22-23a


I recently heard a progressive Christian share a talk that was such a beautiful, bright picture of the future that it actually brought me to tears. I praised Jesus for giving hope in divided times. I prayed for true unity.


If you haven’t seen the fruits of the Spirit in my social justice work, I apologize. That genuinely gives me a lot of remorse. But if you don’t see Fruit in the movement… you aren’t looking. I’ve heard from so many inspiring teachers. I’m not a part of this because I’m driven by anger (even though anger can be healthy and important). I’m driven by a vision of a better future. I have hope in Jesus that the whole world is redeemable. “in hope that the creation itself will be liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the freedom and glory of the children of God… the whole creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth.. -see Romans 8:19-27 


Yes, my view on the Gospel has changed. My faith is no longer an other-worldly construct where praying the prayer of salvation, and getting others to pray it, is my only task as a believer. I take Jesus at his word when he says his mission statement:


“The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to set the oppressed free, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.” -Luke 4:18-19


We actually want good news for the poor: an end to poverty. We actually want freedom for the prisoners: ending America’s bloated incarceration system. We actually want sight for the blind: healthcare for all people. Peace, patience, kindness, self-control are all deeply wrapped up in the dream for a better world. It can’t be done without love, joy, and faithfulness. But change will take some uproar too. 


Jesus entered the temple courts and drove out all who were buying and selling there. He overturned the tables of the money changers and the benches of those selling doves.  “It is written,” he said to them, “‘My house will be called a house of prayer,’ but you are making it ‘a den of robbers.’” -Matthew 21:12-13