We are shaped by our experiences and relationships in
powerful ways, ways that influence how we understand the world around us. I
have been fortunate that my life has been filled with relationships of welcome
and hospitality. It’s made me love meeting new people from different
backgrounds. I love learning their stories and finding ways to connect and
communicate across the cultural and linguistic barriers that separate us. I’ve
never felt the need to fear people who are different from me. I haven’t had to
fear for my life or my safety, either because I grew up in the midst of a war
or because my neighbors disliked my religion or ethnicity. I haven’t felt like
my way of life was threatened by outside forces.
At times, I’ve been in the minority, but almost always a
privileged one. I grew up as an American child in Germany; I worked in mostly
African-American neighborhoods in DC, as a young white woman; I served as a
Christian missionary in northern Sri Lanka, among mostly Hindu Tamil people;
I’m now a female minister in a vocation where men still dominate, but in a
denomination where women are welcomed in leadership positions. As a result of
my experiences, I find it exciting and fascinating to make friends from other
countries, religions and cultures. They help me see the world in new ways, they
inspire and encourage me with their own stories. They have taught me about
generosity and resilience.
I’m thankful that I’ve never needed to fear people who
aren’t like me. Fear can breed anger, distrust, and isolation. So, I’m deeply
troubled by the growing fear and resentment in the United States towards people
perceived as outsiders, especially our Muslim neighbors. I realize that many
Americans feel fearful because of ongoing violence committed in the name is
Islam. We hear more and more stories about killings, kidnappings, and terrible
acts by Muslim terrorists against Americans and our allies. Many Muslims, in
the US and around the world, are afraid, too. Many of them have lived with the
threat of violence as a daily reality.
If we let our relationships be driven by fear, then the
problem will only get worse. The vast majority of Muslims are not terrorists. I
believe that the vast majority of Christians sincerely want to practice Jesus’
call to love our neighbors. At our core, most Americans value diversity, even
though living it out often makes us uncomfortable. We will never come to
understand one another and build trust, we will never all be able to feel safe,
until we break down the walls between us and learn each others’ stories, until
we learn each others’ names and experiences. May we all keep working together to build a
community where understanding drives out fear, and where love is stronger than
hate.
1 comment:
Diane, You are so right. I can take this a step further - not only religion and ethnicity can separate us but also age, sex, sexual orientation and handicaps. As long as we allow fear to separate us from those who are different from us we will never be truly following Jesus. He did not behave differently to any he met. May we learn to do the same.
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