Five Non-Negotiables for White Folks In Pursuing Reconciliation
8/18/17 in Missiology
Conversations
“Racial
reconciliation” is all the rage. Increasingly, younger white Christians are
professing their desire for unity across ethnic lines. Christianity Today
recently ran a piece noting the growing tendency of white evangelicals to
recognize the systemic nature of racism and to desire to do something about it.
However, for white folks, racial reconciliation is often treated as one more
“add-on” to self-identity, a means to “presenting” a favorable public persona.
Being “for” racial reconciliation becomes one more proverbial “feather in the
cap.” White folks often don’t engage in the hard, humbling work required to
pursue a just reconciliation, but instead we engage with others on our own
terms, which is not reconciliation at all. When we recognize the need for the
decentering of white identity, we grow uncomfortable and revert to familiar
patterns that reinforce mechanisms of social control and white privilege.
Pursuing
reconciliation requires the peripheralization of whiteness. This does not mean
that having white skin is inherently sinful or that appreciating historically
“white” cultural particularities is necessarily problematic. However, this is
not the way white identity has functioned in modernity. Since at least the days
of colonization, whiteness has been presented as the universal “good.” In this
sense, “whiteness” names a way of being in the world, a sociopolitical order
that is best understood as idolatry. Pursuing reconciliation demands that the
altars of whiteness be cast down and its high places laid low.
Here are
5 practices in which white folks must engage if we are to seriously pursue
reconciliation:
1. We must
repent for complicity in systemic sin.
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http://fuller.edu/Blogs/Global-Reflections/Posts/Five-Non-Negotiables-for-White-Folks-In-Pursuing-Reconciliation/
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