Fellow
Heirs Through the Gospel
Texts: Ephesians 3.1-12; Matthew 2.1-12
We live in a world in which it is difficult to regard people of a
different ethnicity than our own as human beings worthy of our love and
care. We live in a world, in other words, that is racist to its very
core. Two personal stories will suffice to illustrate that
contention. In August I spent a day riding the trains and buses
of Los Angeles in California, and in doing so learned two things about
that city that I hadn’t known before. The first is that the
population of Los Angeles is mostly Hispanic. That was surprising
to me, because most of the LA-based TV shows and movies I’ve seen are
full of Anglo-Saxons, with an occasional smattering of
African-Americans. The second thing I learned about Los Angeles
is that it fosters a segregated society. The white minority seems
to confine itself to living in the hills or by the sea, and to the
suited professions for work, and to cars as a mode of transport.
I think that in the whole time I spent riding the trains and buses, I
saw two Anglo faces, and they were tourists from New York. I came
away with the distinct impression that despite the enormously
multicultural profile of contemporary American life, the enormous
prosperity of the United States is still controlled by and for one
particular ethnic enclave: white Europeans.
A second story. At lunch recently with a group of intelligent,
sophisticated, Uniting Church ministers, the talk turned towards the
role of Aboriginal people in our church. Suddenly the talk became
less intelligent and less sophisticated. These people, whom I
knew and respected, suddenly started to caricature, stereotype, and
make fun of Aboriginal people in a way that seemed to contradict
everything else they believed in. Now, most of you know already
that I am a blackfella with a white face, a native of Tasmania from
long before the Dutch or the English arrived. So the apparent fun
of this turn in the conversation was far from fun for me. Indeed,
I felt deeply wounded by what was said. So wounded that I was
stunned into a tumultuous silence so confusing that I found myself
unable to say anything to them about either how I was feeling or about
the substance of what they were doing. Now, you also know that I
am rarely short of things to say, especially if I catch a whiff of
injustice somewhere. So this was a really strange and bewildering
experience for me. It had been a very long time since I had felt
that fearful, that powerless, and that small. But that is what racist
taunts do to a person. They makes you feel as though you are not
a human being. They bring home to you the tragic fact that there
are people in the world who believe that you are unworthy of the
respect they would normally extend to other human beings—simply because
you belong, in some way, to an ethnic group that is other than their
own.
So now I want to ask the ethical question “Why is racism wrong?”
The usual way of answering the question, in contemporary Australia, is
that racism is wrong because human beings are equally deserving of
respect and care, whatever their ethnicity. Which I agree
with. But what if one were to then ask “but why are human beings
equally deserving of respect and care”? Now that is a question
that Australians find much more difficult to answer, I suspect (not
that we ask ourselves the question very much at all). I know this
because we Australians seem to so easily put our prohibition of racism
aside, when it suits us—which says to me that deep down we don’t really
know why racism is so very wrong. Why did the Cronulla rioters
chant racist slogans and beat each other up? Why did the Aussie
cricket fans at the Melbourne and Sydney tests make racist remarks
towards the South African bowler Makhaya Ntini? Why did our
Department of Immigration deport three non-Anglo Australian citizens
last year, when there was no evidence of their having committed any
crime against the state? Because, deep down, many Australians do
not believe that the ethical injunction against racism is
absolute. We believe, rather, that the prohibition can be put
aside when it suits us, when something more important comes along, like
wanting to defeat or belittle a person or a group or a team that we
perceive, for one reason or another, to be a threat.
Let me suggest to you, tonight, that there is, in point of fact, a
reason why racism is wrong, why it is always wrong, and why the
prohibition against racism should never be put aside for any reason
whatsoever. The reason is revealed to us in the event of the
Epiphany, when Christ appeared in the world to show us that God loves
and cares for everyone, without distinction, no matter what their
ethnicity. For that is the message Matthew wants to communicate
in the story of the visit of the Magi to the Christ-child in
Bethlehem. He writes to a predominantly Jewish audience in one of
the most multicultural areas of the Roman Empire—the province of
Galilee. Most Jews had traditionally believed that God had chosen
them, exclusively, to be the recipients of his love and care, and there
were apparently vestiges of precisely this kind of theological
racism in Matthew’s community. In reading the gospel carefully,
it becomes clear that Matthew’s predominantly Jewish constituency found
it very difficult to accept that others—non Jews, Romans, Greeks,
Cretans, Arabs—might also be welcomed by God into the divine covenant
of his love, peace and justice.
What Matthew says to his community, by way of a response, it
this: ‘Who were the first to recognise the significance of the
Jesus’ birth? Who were they, who were first called by God through
the rising of the star, to come and worship him? Who were they
who were first called to be God’s evangelists and prophets, those who
tell the good news that Messiah is born? Are they Jews? Are
they members of the ‘chosen people’? Actually no. They are
Easterlings, foreigners, infidels. What they understood, and you
must learn to grasp yourselves, is that the Christ born in Bethlehem is
a light not only for Israel and for the Jews, but for everyone.
What he offers us, by his teaching, his way of life, and finally by his
death and resurrection, is a light to guide the feet of all people into
the loving embrace of God’.
What Matthew says to his community was, of course, foreshadowed by the
writer to the Ephesians. The mystery revealed in the gospel, he
says, is simply this: that Christ has come to make all people,
regardless of their history or ethnicity, fellow-heirs with the
Jews, of all that God has promised. Crucially, he adds one more
thing, however. The church, he says, is the means by which this
mystery of Christ’s universal love is made known in the world, and
especially to those who are most powerful, the rulers and authorities
who control things. That means that we, the church, are called
not only to preach the universal love of God and to oppose racism, but
also to embody this gospel in our own communal life. Which the
church, to its shame, has not always done.
And so I conclude my brief reflection with this. Racism is wrong
for one reason, and one reason only: that in Christ we have
learned that God loves and cares for all people without
distinction. Such pan-ethnic love is absolute, because it is of
the very nature of God, whom the 1st letter of St. John names Love
itself. Therefore the prohibition against racism can never, under
any circumstance or for any reason, be legitimately put aside.
Let us praise the God whom has made it so by the sending of his Son
into the world. And let us pray that racism shall wither way,
both in our wider culture and society, but also within the dark
seeding-places of our own hearts.
Glory be to God—Father, Son and Holy Spirit—as in the beginning, so now
and for ever. Amen.
Garry
J. Deverell
Feast of the Epiphany of Christ 2006
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