Action

Citizen Christian III: Gospel Truth

As a Southerner, church is expected. Synagogue or mosque is of course an acceptable substitute, and my hometown of Memphis has a vibrant and robust Jewish and Muslim community. ‘Where one goes to church’ is an introductory question, and even those who don’t really claim any faith often have an answer ready for that query.

But we still have the same separations along the wide spectrum of faith traditions that you’ll find in any American city. The left leaning Houses of Worship communicate, the right leaning ones collaborate, but little common interaction happens. So we grow up in silos as tight as any country church in many ways. 

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As a teenager, I broke into some of the conservative christian communities when I was ‘outed’ as a Christian. I think act I fascinated the conservative church goers I knew, because I was a theatre person and known to be political. They started asking me questions and inviting me to things but it didn’t quite go as they’d planned. I got kicked out of a bible study (a great story I’ll tell another time), was asked not to return to a church that hosted monthly lock-ins, and occasionally got into shouting matches with friends in the halls.

The biggest distinctions and the thing that seemed to truly raise their ire, was some iteration of this conversation:

Them: But that sounds like a social justice Gospel.

Me: I don’t know any other kind of Gospel.

Them: We are saved by grace, not works.

Me: Faith without works is dead.

Them: People have to believe in Jesus.

Me: If they don’t do what he said to do, why bother?

In many ways, I dove into theological education in order to be better equipped for those conversations. But I now realize what an opportunity I missed timing wise! This was the 1980s, and I was receiving fruits from the first wave of our modern christian political complex. Little did I know then that the term “Social Justice Gospel” was coined by a Baptist theologian over 100 years ago. It isn’t new, leftie, or radical -it’s just the Gospel and it’s solid Christian tradition. Who knows how much of that tenuous ground I could have shaken up, kept from setting, if I’d just realized I was seeing glimpses of a coordinated, strategic attack on Gospel Truth.

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Maybe ‘Gospel Truth’ isn’t a commonly used phrase in your life, but I grew up in the American South. Faith-based language permeates everything, and swearing something is the gospel truth is a promise of truth-telling. Unless said with a wink and a “Bless their hearts” and then you know there’s no truth anywhere ‘round at all. And so culturally, the meaning of Gospel Truth is fungible, movable.

Elected officials swear oaths of office most typically on a bible, as most elected officials claim to be Christians, but any text sacred to you is acceptable, which is interesting in and of itself. What exactly is being vowed here? The words spoken have to do with upholding the jurisdictional Constitution or Charter, and being accountable to constituencies. But there are never explicit moral or religious promises made. So why swear on a bible?

I grew up in the 1970’s when we all still said the Pledge of Allegiance every morning to start school. By the 1980’s, this had been replaced by a moment of silence, an interesting swap of patriotic vow for pseudo-prayer time. I didn’t learn about the addition in the 1950’s of references to God not only there but on our money until I went to college.

It also took time to learn more in-depth church history, and to discover the ways in which Christianity moved from an anti-Empire movement to becoming the moral voice of the secular powers, the frequent provider of the rationale for colonial expansion. 

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Many years ago, I decided to stand but remain silent during any Pledge of Allegiance or singing of the national anthem as my own response to a growing discontent. At first, I would say the Pledge but omit the “under God” line, but that did not satisfy me. Eventually, I adopted the choice to remain silent, but then Colin Kaepernick modeled a new way of resistance. His actions and the vitriol that followed led me to think again about my relationship with vows. About what it means to swear on something sacred.

Where I’ve landed for now is no more vows. I’ve made marriage vows and ordination vows and upholding those is a lifelong journey. I think we need to step back more often, and consider what it means to align ourselves, swear something’s true, vow an allegiance, or adhere to a theory. We need more critical thinking. More prayer. More humility. And more integrity to what we say we believe and hold sacred.

Citizen Christian Part I

Citizen Christian Part I

I believe that I have been naïve about holding onto even a redeemed view of any faith-based nationalism, especially one aligned with Christianity. The more deeply I read the Gospels, the more carefully I read Paul’s letters, the more is revealed to me about the truly subversive and radical nature of Christianity, the ways in which the teachings of Jesus upend and transform our world and bring us back to the root of all things, God’s love and grace.

Dear Governor Polis - Support SB 21-200

Dear Jared Polis (1).png

Join us on May 29 to make our voices heard on the need to pass SB 21-200 to fight climate change in Colorado: https://fb.me/e/3M0RNZg1J

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Dear Governor Polis,

I am writing to express my concern and confusion over your threats to veto Senate Bill 21-200, Reduce Greenhouse Gases, Increase Environmental Justice. This bill seeks to ensure our transition to renewable energy through a lens of environmental justice by requiring the Air Quality Control Commission to enforce existing parameters, and bringing our statewide utilities into alignment with reducing greenhouse gases.

A veto would be a disappointing action, sir. Senate Bill 200 is going through a thorough process in our Colorado Statehouse. It has been heard by committees, testimony has been given, it has been debated in open session. It was crafted to align with the exact parameters established in your office’s Climate Roadmap. And you, our Governor, threaten a veto? A veto would work against the will of the people, the protection of Creation, and the care of those most deeply affected by the deleterious effects of pollution and climate change.

Already, you have not done due diligence in supporting the enforcement of groundbreaking state legislation passed in 2019. Rather than develop a scheme to implement the laws passed by our legislature, your office released a Climate Roadmap Plan in early 2021 that is without sufficient enforcement mechanisms but establishes reasonable goals.

Governor Polis, you ran for office on the promise that you would be an environmental champion and leader in moving our state to a green economy. Explicitly, you vowed to bring us to 100% renewable energy by 2040. You had a decent environmental record while representing us in Congress, and were always highly rated by the League of Conservation Voters.

But as Governor, you have not upheld your promises to the voters or those you made to Creation itself. I urge a change of heart. As a person of faith, I know that transformation is possible, that a hardened heart can be broken open. I urge you, Governor Polis, to choose a vibrant healthy life through a transformation of our energy systems, and to support the hard and good work done by our state Legislature. 

Thank you,

Rev. Jessica Abell