On
Monday night, my wife and I sat in our suburban St. Louis family room and
watched St. Louis County Prosecutor Bob McCullough tell reporters and the world
that the grand jury did not return a true bill against Ferguson police officer
Darren Wilson, who shot and killed 18-year-old Michael Brown. In other words, no
charges would be filed.
Since
the death of Brown in August, I have heard and read much about the case, and
early on I understood one thing.
Tell
me how you vote, and I will likely be able to tell you your opinion on the
Brown case.
I
first saw it two days after Brown’s death. A good friend published a blog post,
which was as extreme as any I have seen since that time. Anyone who gently
pointed out that we didn’t yet know the facts to draw any conclusion was rudely
dismissed – this happened because of endemic and institutional racism, and
because white police officers are by definition racist.
My
friend is an otherwise gentle soul. I like his writing and his books. I’ve
reviewed his books, and favorably; in fact, that’s how we introduced ourselves
to each other. I wasn’t surprised at his feelings; I was shocked at the
absolutist way he responded to even mild criticism. He seethed with anger.
Many
people have been writing about Ferguson. The writing is largely predictable,
even among most Christians. I’ve seen lots of feelings, beliefs, arguments, and
advice. What I have yet to see – from any sector or individual – is wisdom.
And
let me say right here I have no wisdom to offer. This is not the time for
wisdom.
Yesterday I watched the press conference by the mayor of Ferguson, followed by the press
conference by the governor of Missouri trying to explain why the National Guard
wasn’t sent into Ferguson last night until after the business district was
looted and burned. (Looters hit corporate targets like Walgreens, McDonalds and
Toys R Us; they also hit a cake shop, a beauty supply business, a Chinese
restaurant, a public storage facility and the convenience store where Michael
Brown was filmed stealing cigars minutes before his death). I did not watch the
press conference by Attorney General Eric Holder.
It
was the Ferguson mayor’s press conference that has stayed in my mind. With the
mayor were ministers from local churches, urging calm and an end to the
violence. One, an African-American woman whom I bet can blow out the windows
when she’s in the pulpit, gave a mini-sermon. None of them offered words of
wisdom.
They
offered something more: love and hope.
If
our community is to find our way through this to something better, it won’t be politicians,
who have generally made the situation worse, who lead us. It won’t be the
anarchists who seem to have arrived by the busload from out of town. It won’t
be the media, and it certainly won’t be the editorial writers at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
It
will be the church.
Not
churches collectively, but “the church,”
the Christians who belong to various denominations and attend various churches.
I saw them at the mayor’s press conference, and I recognized them. I see them
at my own church, which is still a buttoned-down Presbyterian kind of place. I
see them at a lot of churches in St. Louis, and I see some who don’t attend
church at all.
In
The
Cure: What if God Isn’t Who You Think He Is and Neither Are You, authors John Lynch, Bruce
McNichol and Bill Thrall say this: “We’re learning to live with a
community of people who trust God and others with what is true about them. We
discover we’re part of a destiny bigger than our own. While we have an
individual destiny, the community we are part of also has a destiny, and we are
intertwined with it.”
It
will be the church who leads us, the church led by the Spirit.
Politicians
will not be able to do this.
Only
the Spirit-led church can do it.
Led
by Jason Stasyszen and Sarah Salter, we’ve been reading The Cure. To see more posts on this chapter, “Two Destinies,”
please visit Jason at Connecting to Impact. This concludes our discussion of the book.