How to serve a "dark-skinned, Jewish savior" today
The event is one of the most iconic in history.
The
1936 Olympic Games are being held in Berlin, Germany. Adolf Hitler
intends them to be a showcase of Aryan supremacy. But a black man from
America named Jesse Owens defeats Germany’s athletes and Hitler’s
racism, winning four gold medals. One of them is for the 200-meter dash,
which he won eighty-three years ago yesterday.
In related news, Sonia Sotomayor was confirmed as our nation’s first Hispanic Supreme Court justice ten years ago today.
I wanted to start today’s Daily Article
with these reminders that America is a multicultural, multiracial
nation of immigrants and their descendants. We might think such a
reminder would be unnecessary, given our nation’s clear history. But
this is no longer the case.
How the shooter justified murder
Twenty
minutes before shots rang out last Saturday in El Paso, Texas, a
four-page manifesto was posted online. So as to deny them further
publicity, I will neither name the alleged murderer nor link to that
document.
But
I can tell you that authorities now believe the El Paso shooter posted
the document. It begins: “In general, I support the Christchurch shooter
and his manifesto. This attack is a response to the Hispanic invasion
of Texas.” The writer adds, “I am simply defending my country from
cultural and ethnic replacement brought on by an invasion.”
He
believes that economic and political forces are conspiring against
Americans and claims, “If we can get rid of enough people, then our way
of life can become more sustainable.” Frighteningly, his document ends:
“Many people think that the fight for America is already lost. They
couldn’t be more wrong. This is just the beginning of the fight for
America and Europe. I am honored to head the fight to reclaim my country
from destruction.”
“The Great Replacement”
No
idea exists in a vacuum. The El Paso murderer states that reading “The
Great Replacement” motivated his attack. This phrase is both a book and
an ideology.
Renaud
Camus (no relation to Albert Camus) is a French novelist, travel
essayist, and author of more than one hundred books. He wrote The Great Replacement in 2012, arguing that native “white” Europeans are being reverse-colonized by black and brown immigrants.
“The
great replacement is very simple,” he explains: “You have one people,
and in the space of a generation you have a different people.” Camus
believes that all Western countries are faced with varying degrees of
“ethnic and civilizational substitution.”
Hateful ideas lead to hateful atrocities
According
to journalist Melissa Rossi, Camus’ claim has gained wide currency
through popular speakers and websites. It has also been identified with
the hateful ideology of white supremacists and white nationalists.
Demographers
note that “Great Replacement” ideologues greatly distort the facts
regarding immigration, ethnicity, and sociology. For instance, Pew
Research Center estimates the number of Muslims in Europe to be less
than 5 percent. Even using the highest estimates for migration rates,
the report predicted the number of Muslims in Europe in 2050 to be
around 14 percent.
Nonetheless, this horrific ideology has inspired numerous atrocities in recent years.
Brenton
Tarrant, accused of killing fifty-one people at two mosques in
Christchurch, New Zealand, last March, explained his actions in a
seventy-four-page manifesto he titled, “The Great Replacement.” He
labeled Muslims “an obvious, visible and large group of invaders, from a
culture with higher fertility rates.”
Authorities
also believe that the “Great Replacement” concept motivated the
synagogue shooter who killed eleven people in Pittsburgh last October;
the Poway, California, synagogue shooter who killed one and injured
three; and Dylann Roof, who gunned down nine African-Americans in
Charleston. Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh owned a novel based on
its ideas. Anders Breivik, who killed seventy-seven people in Norway in
2011, claimed that he did so “in defense of my culture and my people.”
The
El Paso shooter and other mass murderers see immigrants as a threat to
our nation, culture, and way of life. Christians should view them in a
completely opposite way.
Theologian
Ed Stetzer: “Racism, white nationalism, and white supremacy all make no
sense if you are a Christian. Christians literally worship a
dark-skinned, Jewish savior from the Middle East. Not only is racism
sinful, it is remarkably stupid for anyone who identifies as a
Christian.”
Adam
Greenway, the new president of Southwestern Baptist Theological
Seminary, tweeted: “I want to be clear that we condemn in the strongest
possible form any and all ideologies of racial/ethnic
superiority/inferiority that fuel the kind of hate evidently motivating
the #ElPaso shooter to commit such a horrific act of violence in our
state.”
Drs.
Stetzer and Greenway are absolutely right. The Bible is clear: “You
shall not wrong a sojourner or oppress him” (Exodus 22:21); “You shall
treat the stranger who sojourns with you as the native among you, and
you shall love him as yourself” (Leviticus 19:34). The way we treat the
“stranger” is the way we treat Jesus (Matthew 25:38, 40).
Seeing people as our Father sees them
Rather
than seeing immigrants as a threat to our way of life, let’s lead them
to the One who is “the way, and the truth, and the life” (John 14:6).
Let’s see their migration to the West as a missional opportunity for the
gospel.
And
let’s start where we are, with those we know. If we will see every
person we meet today as a divine appointment and gospel opportunity,
we’ll see them as our Father sees them. If we’ll share God’s word and
love with them, we may see them again one day in “a great multitude that
no one could number, from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and
languages, standing before the throne and before the Lamb” (Revelation
7:9).
On that day, we who are “sojourners and exiles” in this world (1 Peter 2:11) will finally be home (Philippians 3:20).
Whom will you bring with you?
NOTE: With God’s help, hope can arise in the midst of any tragedy.
We recently published a heartbreaking yet inspiring story about choosing life in the face of inevitable pain.
The
origin of Abel Speaks, a DFW-based nonprofit that exists to support
families who have chosen to carry a child with a life-limiting
diagnosis, is also a model for how Christians like you can change the
culture and bless our world through your work.
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