There is so much on my heart these past several days that I hesitate to write or say anything at all, and yet I do not want to be silent, either.
First and foremost, I am grieving the loss of the lives of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile, as well as the lives of the five officers killed in Dallas: Officer Lorne Ahrens, Officer Michael Smith, Officer Michael Krol, Officer Patrick Zamarripa, Officer Brent Thompson.
I have been praying for the families and the friends of these men, that God would bring them the comfort only He can give.
I am praying particularly for our brothers and sisters in the Dallas area this week, black and white, to move toward one another in
love. I am praying for reconciliation, rather than retaliation.
I am praying that God's Spirit would empower people to love, where there might otherwise be hatred, anger, or fear. I am thankful that God is the Light of this dark, broken, and hurting world. And I am praying for God's people, as His image-bearers, to be light wherever they are, in whatever spheres they are in. May the fact that Christ is
in us compel us to a place of unity and of compassion, no matter our race or ethnicity.
I pray that I will be one who reaches out to those who are not like myself, and especially those who may feel devalued.
I am praying for the protection of black boys and black men. I am praying for black mothers who are fearing for the futures and the very lives of their boys. I am praying for white mothers who are fearing for the futures and the very lives of their black boys.
I am also praying for the protection of police officers.
I am praying against the fear that is so pervasive in our society. I am praying for compassion for us all. I am praying that we would walk in the ways of Jesus; that we would be humble people and that we might glorify God through our words, our actions, and our thoughts.
This week Mark and I have talked a lot about these things. We have also talked with our older kids, and these conversations sometimes filter down to our younger girls. There was a moment this week when we were all eating together at the table and we were talking generally about what was going on in our nation. Adelia, my beautiful brown-skinned daughter, happened to tune in and ask what we were talking about, and one of her siblings said, "
Police officers killed some black people."
I don't know how her eight-year-old heart and mind processes such a statement.
Or last year, while playing with a group of children at church, another little girl declared, "
She can't play this game. I don't like people with black skin."
I don't know how her heart and mind processes such a declaration.
I know how
mine does. My heart aches, and the tears come. I want to protect my little girl. I
want her to know that she is made in the very image of God. I don't
ever want her to feel self-conscious because of the color of her skin. I
look at her and I see the beauty with which God made her: tightly
coiled curls pulled into twists, her beautiful skin tanning even browner
after these days of warm sunshine, her wide smile, her infectious
laughter, her playfulness and her strong will.
Never am I more aware of the beautiful brown of her skin, or the whiteness of my own skin, than when this issue comes up. Because suddenly I look at the issue of race through her eyes.
She asked why,
there at the table surrounded by her white family who loves her.
Why indeed?
What can I say to her in these moments, when it seems as if my words will carry such weight and ought to be so significant and yet I feel so inexperienced
to speak to this at all?
What I say to her is this:
God created you, and He delights over you. And then we talk about how we are living in a broken world, and evil abounds, and that people act out of fear or hatred and that
this is why we all desperately need Jesus.
Andra Day has a powerful song called
Rise Up, and here is a part of it:
And I'll rise up
I'll rise like the day
I'll rise up
I'll rise unafraid
I'll rise up
And I'll do it a thousand times again
And I'll rise up
High like the waves
I'll rise up
In spite of the ache
I'll rise up
And I'll do it a thousand times again
Every time I hear that song I think of the many times the black community has had to rise up in the face of oppression and violence, of how they have had to rise up again and go out and live amongst those with prejudices against them. I have nothing but respect for these courageous men and women, and we have so much to learn from them.
May God give us His heart, His eyes, and His love. And may we all look to the Day where we will all stand before the throne of God as a great multitude, from every nation, tribe, people and language, in worship of the One who is worthy.