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In Theory:

Dealing with intolerance

June 20, 2009

Last week’s shooting at the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., exposed that the nation’s virulent strain of racism and racial hatred continue decades after the civil rights movement. What role should religion play in the ongoing effort to stamp out racism? And how, if at all, have churches failed in that effort so far?

It is interesting that this week’s issue opens the door to the blame game. For example, virulent racism is back, so is the church somehow at fault? Paul’s letter to the Romans mentions that all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God (Chapter 3, Verse 23), so if we must blame somebody, let’s blame us all, believer and non-believer alike.

The trouble with most of the “isms” (racism, sexism, anti-Semitism, nativism, etc.) is that they are not rational. Some white-supremacy groups, for example, claim to be “Christian” — and yet the man from Nazareth whom Christians call the Christ was Jewish and inclusive of others who were “different.”

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The good Samaritan story in Luke’s gospel (Chapter 10, Verses 25-37) has always been one of my favorite stories because Jesus turns his listeners’ preconceptions upside down. “Good Samaritan” would have been for his listeners an oxymoron: How could “good” and “Samaritan” possibly go together? Racial prejudice — in fact, any kind of prejudice — is antithetical to any person of faith.

The first letter of John says it pretty well (1 John 4:20): “Those who say, ‘I love God’ and hate their brothers . . . are liars; for those who do not love a brother . . . whom they have seen, cannot love God whom they have not seen.”

The racist madman who killed the security guard in the Holocaust Museum was an irrational liar. No amount of reason could have changed his mind.

PASTOR CLIFFORD L. “SKIP” LINDEMAN

La Cañada Congregational Church

As a nation, we have accomplished much in regards to civil rights — possibly more than any other Western country. The United States stands as a beacon of tolerance, understanding and justice to the nations of the world.

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