A Word to the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles
My siblings in Christ:
In the life of nations, moments come when the person of faith must ask: “What am I to do?”
Let’s go back to the 15th year of the reign of Emperor Tiberius. His proconsul, Pontius Pilate, ruled Judea, and his puppet, Herod, was king in Galilee. As we learn in the third chapter of Luke’s gospel, this was when John the Baptist came onto the scene, calling on the crowds to “bear fruits worthy of repentance.”
The crowds wanted him to be more specific. They said, “What then should we do?” John’s first answer was about personal ethics. He said that those who had a second coat or extra food should share them, making manifest their love of their neighbor.
The next two answers were to officials who lorded their power over oppressed people. In John’s time, the people coming down to see him at the Jordan River had neither constitution nor franchise. All they had was a prophet promising that God would punish tax collectors and soldiers who abused their authority.
Luke identifies these and John’s other exhortations as “good news,” which is to say gospel. After Herod killed John, our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ built his ministry on the framework the Baptist had built.
Opposition to the unjust use of power lies at the heart of our formation as Christians.
When any in authority abuse their power, the Christian cries out. When a culture and state institutionalize any prejudice, including racism, the Christian cries out. When a police officer, soldier, or tax collector abuses their power, the Christian cries out.
This doesn’t mean, and it can never mean, that all in authority are abusers. It would be a sin to say so. This doesn’t mean, and it can never mean, that those who loot and destroy should not be held accountable by civil authorities. It would be a sin to say so.
It does mean that, as Christ did, the body of Christ must exhibit unique sensitivity toward the powerless, the marginalized, and the oppressed, especially when they are victimized by systems of power and privilege.
This isn’t politics. This is the gospel of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. When the Christian keeps talking about the brutal murder of George Floyd when there are so many dedicated police officers who risk their lives daily, remember John the Baptist. When the Christian keeps talking about white supremacy and institutionalized racism without mentioning looters and violent protestors as often as some might like, remember the gospel’s abhorrence of unjust state power, such as that which killed Jesus.
In recent days, followers of the Prince of Peace have had the additional challenge of applying gospel values to the use of federal power. I join with Presiding Bishop Michael Curry and Bishop Mariann Edgar Budde of the Diocese of Washington in opposition to President Trump’s photo opportunity Monday night at St. John’s Episcopal Church, especially because potentially lethal force was used to clear his way. By the same token, sending military forces into our cities, as the president has threatened, would only add to the chaos in neighborhoods already convulsed with rage and unrest.
Others will come to their own conclusions about the president’s actions. Whatever Christians may decide, decide they must. Questions about the just use of state power are foundational to Christian faith and practice. We can imagine that it was important to John and our Lord because they realized that there was no one else to hold power accountable. They also understood, as we do in our time, that abuses of power most often afflict the powerless, marginalized, oppressed, and scapegoated as well as those who are the victims of institutional racism and other prejudices.
These were those with whom Jesus spent most of his time. The Christian also thinks of them first, lifts them up, walks with them, and even puts them ahead of ourselves as inheritors of the earth and the kingdom of God (Matt. 5:3-12) — by our preaching and teaching, advocacy before our political leaders, peaceful demonstrations, and encouragement of voting and voting rights.
We do this work nationally, regionally, locally, and personally. We proclaim the gospel wherever we are. The rain may fall equally on the good and wicked. But the effects of the pandemic and institutional racism are falling far harder on the less privileged. As a result, our work is plentiful.
Remembering Jesus and John’s preference for the unheard, I might call a relative or friend living in a nursing home who may be feeling especially isolated in quarantine. I might support legislation to help undocumented essential workers, who are at greater risk of infection, helping feed us all, and yet silenced and powerless, lacking in rights and representation.
In church, I might wonder about unheard neighbors in my midst and speak up for offering worship and fellowship in all the languages being spoken in my neighborhood. Remembering our 40 million unemployed nationwide, I might make an additional donation to the church food pantry and or speak up for the unhoused at a city council meeting.
The gospel equips us well to look after one another in this way, especially our siblings who are most at risk. As St. Paul wrote to the church in Corinth, which was experiencing an episode of factionalism, of people divided against one another over preference and precedence, "The body does not consist of one member but of many."
We are the people who put others' wishes, needs, and safety first. The people who say that the last shall be first and the first shall be last. The people who give up our seats at the table for the sake of the stranger and outcast. The people who follow him who sacrificed all he had to save the world. The people who faithfully, even cheerfully, take up their crosses every day to follow Jesus along the way of love.
As you think about the events of these days and decide about how soon you wish to be physically present during worship once again, Bishop Bruce, Canon McCarthy, all your servants at St. Paul’s Commons, and I will keep you in our daily prayers. In the meantime, please join me in saying this prayer for guidance:
Direct us, O Lord, in all our doings with your most gracious favor, and further us with your continual help; that in all our works begun, continued, and ended in you, we may glorify your holy Name, and finally, by your mercy, obtain everlasting life; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
Yours in Christ’s love,
The Rt. Rev. John Harvey Taylor
VII Bishop of Los Angeles