"We must become troublemakers for the beloved community." So Congressman
John L. Lewis (D-Ga.) invited members of the ecumenical group Christian
Churches Together to enact a new response to Martin Luther King Jr.'s
"Letter from Birmingham Jail."
Acting on their declaration to become "extremists for love, justice,
and peace in Christ" will be no easy task for Christian Churches
Together members, who gathered April 14-15 in Birmingham, Ala., to
commemorate the 50th anniversary of King's letter. It will be no easy
task because white norms and culture still dominate many churches. Or,
to rephrase Jesus in Mark 10:25, it may be easier for a camel to go
through the eye of a needle than for white people to enter the kingdom
of God. One of the crises of our day is that predominantly white
churches may not recognize this moral and spiritual peril.
Recall that King wrote his letter in April 1963 in response to a
statement signed by two Episcopal bishops, two Methodist bishops, one
Presbyterian minister, one Baptist pastor, one rabbi and one Roman
Catholic bishop.
In their statement, these eight white clergymen appealed to "law and
order," called the nonviolent protests against Jim Crow laws "extreme
measures" and demanded an end to demonstrations. They asserted that
outside agitators had come to Birmingham to create racial disorder.
In his response, King expressed full respect to the clergymen and
immediately conveyed how "injustice anywhere is a threat to justice
everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied
in a single garment of destiny."
The Birmingham struggle was far from being created by extremists
outside the city, King explained. Local leaders had issued to King's
Southern Christian Leadership Conference a "Macedonian call for aid"
(Acts 16), he wrote.
He expressed sadness that the eight clergymen did not demonstrate
similar concern for the injustice that led to the demonstrations,
including the use of violence by the police against innocent, nonviolent
demonstrators. He elucidated the four basic steps of nonviolent
protest: collection of facts to determine if injustice is occurring;
negotiation; self-purification; and direct action. The letter details
how civil rights activists were faithful to nonviolence through every
step.
Citing Sts. Augustine and Thomas Aquinas, he proclaimed "an unjust law
is no law at all." Recall that the Jim Crow South used lynching, police
violence, denial of the right to vote, and denial of educational
resources to enforce a culture of injustice.
"It is an historical fact that privileged groups seldom give up their
privileges voluntarily," King stressed, saying that "freedom is never
voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the
oppressed."
The Rev. Bernice King, daughter of Martin and Coretta Scott King,
emphasized this point in her speech at Christian Churches Together's
conference: The sacrifice for freedom must be waged every day by every
generation. While the civil rights movement broke down many barriers, we
have yet to engage a deeper transformation of the soul of America.
As I walked the streets of Birmingham for a mile or so between my hotel
and the conference site, I was struck by memory of the witnesses who
presented their bodies (Romans 12:1) as worship to God and for the
transformation of society.
Birmingham is as hallowed as any place upon which the struggle for
humanity has been waged. On this ground, half a century ago, thousands
sacrificed their bodies and livelihood for freedom, justice and,
ultimately, the unity of the human family before God.
I noticed the empty, crumbling stores that were once graced with
nonviolent civil rights activists. I felt a humble trembling through my
soul as I walked these holy streets. Humility is rooted in the Latin
word for earth, humus. This earth echoes their cry for justice.
Their witness to the beatitude calls us to walk similarly: "Blessed are
the meek, they shall inherit the earth" (Matthew 5:5).
I clearly remember that in his time King and nonviolent activists
within the civil rights movement were pejoratively named troublemakers.
Except for Maryknoll sisters who told my family about their experience
of walking in Alabama from Selma to Montgomery, adults in our lives --
parents, family, teachers and religious leaders -- did not acknowledge
the Gospel insight of the civil rights movement.
Dorothy Cotton, who served as director of the Citizenship Education
Program for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, reminded
conference participants that civil rights activists were far from
revered during the height of the struggle for freedom. Conversely, she
also expressed concern that we have idolized King in death, creating an
idol far removed from the man she knew.
We have forgotten who he really was and the very meaning of the
nonviolent civil rights movement. We have effectively sanitized King and
the civil rights movement of their prophetic Gospel witness.
Denigrating their witness when they lived and worshiping a false idol
today, we obfuscate the core spiritual witness of "Letter from
Birmingham Jail" and of civil rights activists.
Pastor Virgil Wood, who served the board of the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference during the last 10 years of King's life, commended
the leaders for their statement and, without cynicism, issued a healthy
word of warning. The new response is "only a start" that calls leaders
to become "doers of the word."
Wood rightly invites us to pause and reflect. White churches have yet
to take the core message of "Letter from Birmingham Jail" into prayer
and mobilization for justice.
King confessed in his letter that his greatest disappointment was not
with the Ku Klux Klan or the White Citizens' Councils but with the
"white moderate, who is more devoted to 'order' than to justice; who
prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive
peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says, 'I agree
with you in the goal you seek, but I can't agree with your methods of
direct action'; who paternalistically believes that he can set the
timetable for another man's freedom."
"Shallow understanding from people of good will," King said, "is more
frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will."
White evangelical leaders Ron Sider and Jim Wallis reminded conference
participants that white churches got the race question wrong during the
civil rights movement and have yet to get it right today.
Catholic Archbishop Joseph Kurtz of Louisville, Ky., expressed sorrow
for the way U.S. Catholic bishops originally responded to King's Letter.
He stressed the need for building programs of restorative justice
within Catholic Charities USA.
Auxiliary Bishop Shelton Fabre of New Orleans called on participants to
remember our collective past as a way to overcome historical ignorance
and enact good public policy. More importantly, he said, the sacraments
call us to "engage conversion of human hearts in racial harmony," so as
"to transform attitude and action in ourselves and others."
The Rev. Sharon Watkins, general minister and president of the
Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), reminded us that Jesus' last
prayer was for the unity of all people in God. She called us to "pray
for unity every day with our feet, hearts and hands."
Watkins lamented, however, that "the sin of racism runs deep in our
church" as "the seductive power of white privilege" closes our eyes to
the reality of hyper-incarceration of people of color.
Lisa Sharon Harper, Sojourners' director of mobilizing, underscored how
our churches have a "separation problem" both in terms of geographical
segregation and from the Gospel. The problem of separation creates
"fertile ground for White Citizens' Councils" and movements that deny
the rights of new immigrants.
The price of freedom, Lewis, Cotton and Wood emphasized, is not only
eternal vigilance. More deeply, the price of freedom is ongoing
struggle. Nonviolent struggle demands, as these civil rights leaders
teach, training and self-purification.
As a form of violence, the work and struggle of undoing internalized
white superiority and racism is no different. Many people of color and
whites have taught for centuries that ending racism will demand a
different kind of training of our bodies, minds and souls.
And, if we are to become "troublemakers for the beloved community," as
these diverse churches committed themselves on April 15, then that will
demand training people of faith in the way of nonviolence and
anti-racism.
No doubt it will demand an intensive struggle for good people who have
accepted the benefits of whiteness for too long. Such a struggle would
demand relinquishing power and advantages with which we have become too
comfortable.
The work of becoming anti-racist demands self-purification of the idols
of power, privilege, control and innocence that imprison white
Christians from our recognizing our common humanity as children of God.
By engaging a struggle to become troublemakers with Jesus, we may yet
glimpse the infinite possibilities of his final prayer for unity.