As Lecrae said in response to Louie Giglio’s ridiculousness, “This needs to be a time when [white evangelicals] listen and learn, and not a time when you’re leading” (see this Washington Post article about last week’s “white blessings” debacle if you need some context or aren’t sick of reading about it already).
Some thoughts, in poem form:
"White Blessings" I don’t want to hear about “white blessings” really, I don’t want to hear anything at all from white male pastors who started thinking about race yesterday and talk today like we should listen they talk this way because people have always listened always looked to them as leaders but they’re not the ones I want to follow I don’t care about their vision and I’d rather not keep watching them keep scrambling keep backpedalling pathetically to try to not seem racist throwing words against the wall to see what sticks not one speck interested in changing the meaning of it all and I don’t want to hear them say that black lives matter while every inch of their theology screams otherwise corroborated and condemned by the unbothered way they walk on through a world that opens every door for them and bows and I don’t want to hear them talk about enslavement as if they’re not quite sure whether to be thankful for it and I don’t want to see them pretend that white people can enter into conversations about race and be anything but awkward or do anything but stumble through so very much in need to listen and not lead so very much in need of grace and real correction the kind we might in fact receive if we admit how desperately we bumble how short-sighted our vision, how unfit we are to lead and empathy aside, I do not want to think that one who claims spiritual leadership might actually believe that we could take racism’s material rewards and weigh them against the way it tears apart our souls or wonder for a moment if white supremacy could be in any world anything but a deal with the devil.