| Back OpEdNews | |||||||
|
Original Content at https://www.opednews.com/articles/Sunday-Homily-Black-Live-by-Mike-Rivage-Seul-Christmas_Drone_Faith_God-141206-915.html (Note: You can view every article as one long page if you sign up as an Advocate Member, or higher). |
|||||||
December 6, 2014
(Sunday Homily) Black Lives, Muslim Lives Matter: Obama's as Guilty as Wilson & Pantaleo
By Mike Rivage-Seul
President Obama, Eric Holder, and their minions are as guilty as Daren Wilson and Daniel Panteleo. All of them kill with impunity. They answer to no one. They refuse to investigate much less prosecute extra-judicial executions.
::::::::
Readings for Second Sunday of Advent: IS 40:1-5, 9-11; PS 85: 9-14; 2 PT 3: 8-14; MK 1: 1-8.
Michael Brown, Eric Garner, and 12-year-old Tamir Rice ....
The very mention of those names calls to mind the protests that have filled our nation's streets over the past week -- in Ferguson Missouri, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, and places in between. The teenager, the father of six, and the sixth-grade child represent deeply racist and unjust social structures where criminals and thugs masquerading as law enforcement officers have implicitly been granted a license to kill with impunity.
The nation-wide demonstrations on behalf of black and brown victims of the resulting "American" police state remind us that our country is decidedly on the wrong track. Like John the Baptist in today's gospel excerpt, statements by New York's Mayor de Blasio, Eric Holder, President Obama, and the U.N. special rapporteur on torture call us all to what the Greeks called metanoia -- a drastic change of direction.
Ironically however that call to repentance is especially addressed to Messrs. Holder and Obama themselves. They, after all, find themselves in charge of a national and world-wide police state of which Mike Brown's Ferguson and Eric Garner's Staten Island represent merely the tip of an iceberg. The call to repentance invites all of us to apply pressure for profound systemic reform that far surpasses anything those "leaders" have in mind.
Today's liturgical readings inspire such thoughts. Listen to the prophet Isaiah as he cries out for repentance and a restructuring of reality so intense that he imagines mountains being leveled and valleys filled. The point is to smooth the way for the advent of a profoundly non-violent God in our midst. The peace-filled change Isaiah envisions is not trivial.
Listen to Jesus' mentor, John the Baptizer, as he echoes Isaiah word-for-word. (Needless to say, neither Isaiah's nor John's words have anything to do with the artificially excited anticipation of our culture's Winter Festival and its orgy of selling, buying, and conspicuous consumption -- even though "Christmas" deceptively continues to somehow associate itself with the homeless child from Nazareth.)
As a matter of fact, the cult of materialism and "Christmas cheer" couldn't be more antithetical to sincere recollection of the birth of Jesus who had more in common with Mike Brown and Eric Garner than with the white middle-class culture Christmas celebrates.
More specifically, Jesus was the embodiment of nearly everything "good Christians" (presumably) like Officers Wilsonand Pantaleo (the executioners of Brown and Garner) give evidence of despising. After all, the working man from Nazareth was not only the poor son of an unwed teenage mother. He was an immigrant whose family took refuge in Egypt, the penniless friend of prostitutes and drunkards, and the prophet drummed out of his faith community as villain possessed by demons. He was the victim of torture and capital punishment who was treated as a terrorist by the reigning imperial power.
To the authorities of their day, both the Baptizer and Jesus even looked like Eric Garner and Michael Brown. Both were dark-skinned, either black or brown; they were not white men. Today's gospel emphasizes how poorly John was dressed.
To repeat: during his life Jesus was impoverished, homeless, unemployed, accused of being subversive, placed on death row, and ultimately executed. As a Jew, he was considered as "other" and worthless to Roman authorities as Mike Brown was to Darren Wilson or Eric Garner to Daniel Pantaleo. He was as worthless as Abdulrahman Al-awlaki (pictured above) was to Barack Obama.
And that brings me to today's real call to repentance.
It can't merely be:
Instead, our nation has to address the root of the problem, which is a world-wide policy of extra-judicial killings of racially-profiled Muslims and dark-skinned poor people. (That's what a "signature strike" means as executed by drone "pilots.")
Put otherwise, President Obama, Eric Holder, and their minions are as guilty as Wilson and Pantaleo. All of them place themselves above the law. They kill with impunity those "others" they consider expendable. They answer to no one. They refuse to investigate much less prosecute such crimes.
John the Baptizer's call to repentance summons us to publicize such guilt and completely withdraw support from the policies of the thug leaders of the world-wide U.S. police state.
That, I think, is what metanoia and repentance mean for "Americans" this particular advent.
Mike Rivage-Seul is a liberation theologian and former Roman Catholic priest. His undergraduate degree in philosophy was received from St. Columban's Major Seminary in Milton Massachusetts and awarded through D.C.'s Catholic University. He received his theology licentiate from the Atheneum Anselmianum and his doctorate in moral theology (magna cum laude) from the Academia Alfonsiana in Rome where Mike studied for five years. There he also played club basketball for Eurosport and a team within Rome's Stella Azzurra professional organization. In 1972 he served for a year as coordinator of volunteers in Monsignor Ralph Beiting's Christian Appalachian Project. Then for 40 years, Mike taught theology and general studies at Berea College in Kentucky receiving its Seabury Award for excellence in teaching, Berea's highest faculty award. At Berea, Mike founded its Peace and Social Justice Studies program. He and his wife, Peggy, also organized and started the Berea Interfaith Taskforce for Peace. For years, he periodically taught liberation theology in a Latin American Studies Program in Costa Rica sponsored by the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities. In Costa Rica Mike and Peggy were fellows at the liberation theology research institute, the Departamento Ecumenico de Investigaciones (DEI) headed by the great Franz Hinkelammert. In Mexico, they also served as fellows and program directors in San Miguel de Allende's Center for Global Justice. Mike's studies and teaching have brought him to countries across Europe and to Cuba (on 10 occasions), Nicaragua (12 occasions), Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Israel, India, Zimbabwe, South Africa, and Brazil where he and Peggy were associates of Paulo Freire. Mike's languages include Latin, Greek, Hebrew, French, Italian, German, Portuguese, and Spanish. For three years he was a monthly columnist at the Lexington Herald-Leader in Lexington Kentucky. He has contributed more than 400 articles to the online news source OpEdNews where he is a senior editor. He has also published in the DEI's Pasos Journal, in the National Catholic Reporter and Christianity Today. His scholarship has been cited in the New York Times. Mike has authored or edited 10 books including one of poetry and a novel based on his experiences in Cuba. His latest book is The Magic Glasses of Critical Thinking: seeing through alternative fact & fake news (Peter Lang publishers). He blogs at http://mikerivageseul.wordpress.com/ Attempting to appropriate his identity as an ordained exorcist (all Catholic priests are), Mike also reads Tarot cards. He is a lifelong golfer and Chicago Cubs fan.