Coates argues that the persistent problem of racial hatred and animosity in this country is a spiritual problem. As he writes, "I'm talking about a national reckoning that would lead to spiritual renewal." Every instance of injustice poses a spiritual problem. This particular history of injustice implicates many white Christians (and some black Christians too). All humanity is debased when injustice is practiced on any fellow human being. Reparations imply repair. Reparations imply healing. And healing is something Christians ought to know about and care about.
Should Christians Support Reparations for African-Americans?Some thought on collective sin, responsibility, and healing
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As Ta-Nehisi Coates documented recently in his long and compelling cover story for The Atlantic, The Case for Reparations,
the government of the United States has perpetuated systemic injustice
against African-Americans for centuries. These formal legal practices
explain many of the broad demographic differences between white and
black citizens of our nation, and they raise the question of whether the
government ought to recognize the injustices of the past and work to
repair them.
Of course the injustice against African-Americans begins with slavery, but Coates frames most of his argument around policies of the 20th century. And of course slavery and then Jim Crow remained firmly in place in the states south of the Mason-Dixon line, but Coates demonstrates the pervasive racism and discrimination that prevented African-Americans in the north from educational and professional advancement as well. For example, the Federal Housing Administration, created in 1934, "adopted a system of maps that rated neighborhoods according to their perceived stability… Neighborhoods where black people lived were rated 'D' and were usually considered ineligible for FHA backing." Similarly, the GI Bill was supposed to ensure low home loans for servicemen returning after WWII. And yet "so many blacks were disqualified from receiving [these] benefits 'that it is more accurate simply to say that blacks could not use this particular title.'" Coates links this legal discrimination to ongoing poverty within African-American communities, which then links to lack of educational opportunities, lack of employment opportunities, high rates of imprisonment, and the dissolution of the family.
Coates' article goes on for 15,000 words, and it is well worth reading
for the history of abuse, disrespect, and degregation perpetrated by
white Americans first upon African slaves and later upon
African-Americans. Ultimately, Coates offers a convincing argument that
the Congress of the United States of America should study the issue of
reparations. He isn't arguing what the outcome of that study should be.
He isn't arguing about the practicalities. He simply outlines the reason
why our nation would benefit by addressing the grievous wrongs
perpetrated even in recent history against a specific group of people—of
citizens—in our country.
Plenty of other writers have responded. Kevin Williamson, writing for the National Review, offered The Case Against Reparations (to which Coates responded with The Case for American History).
The Twittersphere erupted with reasons why Coates was wrong (many of
those tweeting also betrayed themselves by not reading the article, as
Gene Demby reported in How to Tell Who Hasn't Read the New 'Atlantic' Cover Story). And Urban History has posted a two part response: The Case for Repair in which N.D.B. Connolly essentially argues that Coates' only problem is that he hasn't gone far enough.
In other words, plenty of other writers and thinkers are engaging the
important questions about whether the government should respond to our
sordid history of racism and segregation. No one needs my
less-well-informed opinion on this matter. But it is worth asking how
Christians should respond to Coates' article. Coates argues that the
persistent problem of racial hatred and animosity in this country is a
spiritual problem. As he writes, "I'm talking about a national reckoning
that would lead to spiritual renewal." Every instance of injustice
poses a spiritual problem. This particular history of injustice
implicates many white Christians (and some black Christians too). All
humanity is debased when injustice is practiced on any fellow human
being. Reparations imply repair. Reparations imply healing. And healing
is something Christians ought to know about and care about.
For white Christians, Coates' article should provoke serious reflection
and action. First of all, we come from a tradition that recognizes not
only individual sin but also corporate sin. Isaiah admits before the
Lord that he comes "from a people of unclean lips." Paul almost always
writes to the church as a whole, not to individual believers. Scripture
underlines the collective guilt we share, just as it calls us to our
collective responsibility to do justice and love mercy.
And so we begin with confession, certainly for particular sins of
racism but even for the sin we were unwittingly born into, the sin we
did not advocate for or promote but that benefitted us nonetheless, the
passive and active attitudes and actions of our ancestors who failed to
advocate for full equality and justice for their fellow citizens. We
confess that our privilege—educationally, financially, and even the lack
of stigma that comes with white skin in this country—has come at the
cost of justice for all.
And from there we turn to the more complicated question of action. What
would healing look like? I do not have all the answers, but I wonder
what would happen if every predominantly white church in America—north
and south—were to ask a predominantly black church or a predominantly
black neighborhood what they could do to serve their community? What if
every white citizen with excess capital pledged some of that capital
towards African-Americans? What if every white Christian sending their
son or daughter to private school contributed some of their income
towards educating an African-American child? What if white Christians
started to build real relationships with black Christians, based upon
our common bond in Christ, a bond that still can overcome the divisive
history of all these years?
We moved to Connecticut from North Carolina nearly thirty years ago,
but my parents are still in frequent contact with an African-American
couple I will call Vera and John. Vera worked for us. She cleaned our
house. John worked at a factory. I still correspond with Vera every so
often, because we share a faith in Christ, and she prays for me and for
our family. Many years ago, my parents offered Vera and John a loan so
they could buy a house. I don't think my dad offered the loan out of a
sense of "white guilt." I think it came out of a sense of respect, out
of an understanding that Vera and John worked hard, just as my parents
worked hard. But Vera and John weren't deemed worthy of trust by a bank,
based on the color of their skin and the history of their kin and their
lack of education. They still send checks to my dad regularly, and when
we go back to visit, we stop by to talk together for a while.
Maybe this is what the beginning of healing looks like.
Or take our friends who have moved into a low-income predominantly
black neighborhood in Richmond, Virginia, where a white and black pastor
lead a church together. Where white and black neighbors work towards
affordable housing. Where white and black members of the school board
seek a good education for all the children in the neighborhood.
In both cases, the gap of centuries of economic degradation has not
been undone. But perhaps healing—for both sides—has begun. And perhaps
the church can take up the work the government has to this point refused
to even address. Perhaps the church is even designed for this work. The
work of healing, restoring, uniting, and making all things well.
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