SENSITIZE 22
Every morning, Mr. Cring takes a personal moment with his audience.
Today: Everything “Hitler” or “Nazi” is illegal in Germany. America needs to make racism illegal. Cring discusses how.
Click the picture below to see the video
Today: Everything “Hitler” or “Nazi” is illegal in Germany. America needs to make racism illegal. Cring discusses how.
Jonathots Daily Blog
(4445)
Maybe no one does.
There is certainly no celebration going on in the locker room of the vanquished team.
No retelling of dropped balls, missed tackles or fumbles.
Losing is intolerable in its inception but even more lonely in its conclusion.
There will certainly be no fellowship in hell for those who are self-condemned to dwell in the loneliness of ineptitude.
I once walked off a football field having been thoroughly beat up—64 to nothing. And yes—it felt like just me—like I was whipped, dragged and humiliated by eleven bullies. My teammates sat in silence, with an occasional sob.
I don’t like to lose.
I don’t keep old raffle tickets which failed to deliver the prize.
I don’t have video footage of me coming in fourteenth in a talent contest.
Yet today I feel like such a goddam loser.
But the only privilege I seem to garner from this statis is the curse of achieving my rank through vile prejudice and bigotry.
It is Juneteenth.
Yet do I have a right, as a white, to even mention it?
What would be my statement?
“I’m so glad my relatives stopped owning yours. Just for the record, I would never have bought you.”
Yuk.
It’s like working really hard to be at the top of your class and then realizing when you got there, everybody hated you.
I’m white.
I don’t mind saying I’m sorry.
I understand why it’s necessary for me to be sorry.
But I don’t feel better after I say it.
It just doesn’t seem enough.
Maybe it’s because racism has never died.
Maybe it’s because there’s a whole region of the country which still thinks the Civil War was a grand cause.
Maybe it’s because I’m part of a race that shoots black people in the street and applauds them when they run in a sports arena or dance on a video.
It doesn’t matter—whether I know how to do it, I still get the benefit. Or can we call it a benefit? It’s more like the spoils of a war, where the other side wasn’t even allowed to fight.
I want to say something, but everything comes across as anemic as the color of my skin.
I want to be one of those whites who’s “a dude” instead of one of those whites who’s really just crude.
Because this problem is not going to be salvaged from destruction by platitudes or promises.
It’ll take a generation—maybe two—before we can even begin to trust each other.
Because while I listen to the news, which implores me to be more tolerant, evening television is still about murderers and rapists, who are usually “colored in” with dark ink.
I just wanted to let you know that I don’t like being this loser.
And I just wanted to let you know that me complaining about being a loser is really a loser thing to do.
I wanted to say, “Happy Juneteenth,” because I am happy about it. Not happy in the sense that I personally was awarded liberty, but happy because hopefully, we can reach a point when we don’t have to award it.
It’s a given.
I don’t like to lose.
If there’s a way out of this, I will find it.
If there’s an opportunity to remain silent, but still be actively involved in reparations for the sin of our country, I want to discover it.
But I’m also not going to watch “Roots” one more time to make sure I’m aware of what slavery was.
Somehow or another, you and I need to go forward trusting each other—that we got the message.
I don’t know how that can happen.
But it’s a nice thing to write down as a goal on a Friday afternoon.
And belief in it, pursuit of it and faith that it’s possible…
Jonathots Daily Blog
(2311)
For those who are saved by grace, it would be wonderful to see them become more graceful. Otherwise, salvation by grace generates an insecure people who have lost hope, and threaten to become a disgrace.
What is salvation?
Is it as the fundamentalists believe–an admission of our entire, depraved, sinful nature, which has to be reborn through baptism so that we become acceptable in the eyes of God?
Or is it as the mainline denominational people believe–a submission to the teachings and philosophy of Jesus, while applying the traditions of the church?
I am most comfortable looking at salvation through the eyes of Jesus rather than the permutations brought about through denominations.
A Centurion once sent word to him, asking Jesus to heal his servant. He believed Jesus could do it from a distance, since he, the Centurion, felt that he was unworthy of a personal visitation. Jesus said he had never seen such great faith.
There was a woman at a well with five previous husbands, and was living with a man, but became the conduit for a revival in her town because she brought her curiosity, which was accounted unto her for salvation.
Zacchaeus decided to make reparations for all he had stolen from people, and Jesus said “this day salvation had come to his house.”
The woman caught in adultery hung around after the crowd departed, to receive a final verdict from Jesus. He confirmed her salvation by telling her that he did not condemn her, but challenged her to go and sin no more.
The woman with the issue of blood brought a plan. “If I just touch the hem of his garment, I’ll be well…”
The Prodigal Son came to himself and offered common sense. “I would be better off being a servant in my father’s house than starving out here in the wilderness.”
These are all part of the process of salvation. When we believe that the depravity of man must be established in order to prove that God’s grace has been extended, then we close the door to those who don’t require a complete overhaul, but instead, just a way to identify the source of the beautiful life that God has given them.
We must be careful that in the pursuit of proving that God is great, we allow for the disciples of Jesus to mature instead of becoming more meager in their character, to bolster the doctrine. Because as the Gospel of John tells us, “to as many as believed in him, gave he the power to become the sons of God.”
Salvation is an empowering experience. It is taking our spirit, which has been unplugged, and uniting it with the Spirit of God … to recreate the beauty of Eden in our soul.
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