Tuesday, July 07, 2015

UCC in from the Fringes

The United Church of Christ has always been located somewhere out on the fringes of cultural and societal norms. The denomination has always been a champion for civil and social rights, from being the first church to ordain a woman to professional ministry, to fighting for racial equality and struggling for equal marriage rights for same-gender couples. The UCC has fought for farmers' rights, women's rights, racial justice, just peace movements around the globe and equal opportunities in our communities.

The concentration on human rights had always placed the United Church of Christ on the periphery of religious and social discourse. The Church has been seen as the enemy of traditional values and the nemesis of the status quo. Because we have stood firmly with the disenfranchised, the burdened, the underserved and underprivileged, the victimized and the oppressed, the United Church of Christ has rarely been recognized as a force for American culture.

I am thrilled to see evidence that the situation is changing radically. Do not misunderstand. The United Church of Christ continues to stand, with Christ, on the side of those who are victimized and oppressed by the systems and traditions under which we live, including religious ones. The denomination will continue to fight for equality and justice, both at home and around the world. Evidence of this being the case is provided in the General Synod 30 resolutions. The UCC voted to engage in boycott, divestment and sanction in the occupied territories of Israel-Palestine. The national body acted to pressure sports teams that utilize racial or cultural epithets in their logos, mascots or marketing to cease in doing so. Dialogues on race relations continue, as does the work for gender equality, LBGTQ concerns, worker rights and just peace initiatives.

No, the United Church of Christ has not come into the middle of the social context by moderating its message or its actions. Quite to the contrary, the culture, in which the United Church of Christ has worked in sometimes radical ways, has found our causes, calling from the fringes. The culture has found our causes. It has evolved to the point of visionary peace, radical justice and equality, social, cultural and relational compassion, kindness and generosity.

The culture is starting to throw off the heavy cloaks of partisan politics and divisive economics, religious retribution and separation theology. The Cultural evolution has been very troubling for those who had demanded that their religious practices of divisiveness and exclusion be found at the core of social and cultural life. Today, many who claim to be religious - it does not really matter which one - find themselves at war with the cultural evolution that is taking place around and through us. They call it the "end times."

I concur. These times mark the end of religious hegemony, of divisive and exclusionary religious practices that favor some over others, cater to the privileged, the wealthy and the powerful. These are times when radical issues of justice, equality and peace are pursued culturally, in society, universally and communally. In other words, these are times for God's will to become systemic, communal, cultural, personally and politically applicable.

Welcome in from the fringes, United Church of Christ. I am proud to be part of your transition.  

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