It was still dark when I dropped him off outside the Delta
entrance of the Portland airport early Wednesday morning. In the past several years of our married life
airport runs have become routine – a quick stop, a light kiss and a promise of
a later call from the next destination.
And usually on the ride home I’m moving ahead, thinking about my
upcoming errands or the ever running to-do list in my head. But this day was different.
As much as we tried to treat it the same, everything was
different on this morning. This morning
my glasses fogged as I tried in vain to fight back the tears that were
threatening. This morning my heart ached
with the weight of it all. This morning
I could hear my breath in the dark, silence of the car, short and rapid with
the fear I was trying to push down.
I hated the reason for this trip, the need of it. In my mind were the images of the previous
night’s news, the words of the obviously frightened reporter, looking over her
shoulder anxiously throughout. The angry faces of the crowd, the threatening
police decked out in their military garb, the frantic press shuffling from
place to place, on the hunt for the story. I wanted to say no, don’t go. It’s not safe. But instead I kissed him good-bye and drove
away because in spite of the possible danger, there was the need. There were the cries from the street. There was the threat of the overwhelming
darkness. And there was the call.
“14 For he himself is our peace, who
has made the two groups one and has destroyed the barrier, the dividing wall of hostility…. His
purpose was to create in himself one new
humanity out of the two, thus making peace, 16 and in one body to reconcile
both of them to God through the cross, by
which he put to death their hostility. 17 He came and preached peace to
you who were far away and peace to those who were near. 18 For through him we both have
access to the Father by
one Spirit.” Eph. 2:14-18
Just
over a year ago I sat on the edge of my bed in Atlanta, hot tears streaming
down my face. The Zimmerman verdict had
just been announced and my children and I, including my black boys, my young
adult sons, had watched it together, the shock and horror of it rendering us
all speechless. A short while after I
retreated to my bedroom, wrestling with the awful truth that was becoming all
too clear. In my country, my children –
all born and raised on American soil, educated in American schools where they
saluted American flags, working at honest jobs where they paid American taxes, registered
and voted in their county assigned American polling places – had been declared
to be of less value than the children of the dominant culture or perhaps of no
value at all. Our laws would not protect
them. Our government would not protect
them. We were, it appeared, on our own.
Still,
the Martin family was gracious. There
was no violence in the street, just a collective sigh and ache in the soul of
our communities. We wiped our tears,
swallowed our sorrow and kept moving.
But though many of our non-black, Christian brothers and sisters sat in
heart-breaking silence, our loving God took note.
Unfortunately,
forgiveness and grace did not bring repentance for the bodies of our children
have continued to fall at the border, on the reservation and in the streets of
urban neighborhoods. The powers that be were
ordained by God for good for us but instead many have chosen rather to destroy. This cannot continue for the black and brown
child has also been brought near and reconciled by the cross. We too have drunk from the well of living
water and been invited to abundant life.
Any people and any government in any town anywhere that denies that is
an unjust people, government and town at odds with the King and His kingdom and
we, who have been called out and sent as ambassadors of that kingdom must
respond. It is for this reason that we
have been reborn.
So,
despite the pit in my stomach and my shallow breath, I left my love at that
airport in the predawn hours, headed to join the gathering saints in Ferguson
and the powerful stance of a peaceful resistance, and drove back down the
interstate towards home. Because the
kingdom of heaven is suffering violence.
Because I have sons and daughters in this America. Because of the call.
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