walking out and about in the neighborhood |
Other than the dreary weather, this week was a good one. More Netflix watching and more reading ("Sea of Tranquility", "Breathing Space", and "Friendfluence"). If you haven't read "Sea of Tranquility," I recommend you stop whatever you're doing and go read it. Now. I couldn't put it down! This week also featured lots of great projects at work. Bowling with a friend from my MPH program in Omaha and her Chicagoan boyfriend and friends. I even got over 100 on 2 of 3 games! Pretty stellar for my bowling abilities. Homemade chile rellenos (thanks Pedro! They were delicious!) and fun conversation with Chicago transplants from Nebraska. I actually lived with/in the apartment of one of them in Lincoln the summer before I started med school. The world is small. I am so happy to have "home" people around while I start getting homesick.
Glazed and Infused donut stand |
This week the interns had lunch with Bishop Elizabeth Eaton, the presiding bishop of the ELCA. She's sort of the figure head (and does lots of other things too) of the ELCA. She's absolutely hilarious also. She shared with us her favorite place she's visited since becoming bishop and also told us more about her job. We talked about many other things as well. We also had lunch with the Young Adult Ministry team--the always lovely, Rozella White. The fiesta they provided for lunch was especially delicious, but also the conversation rewarding. If you're a young adult and think you're alone in this church, you're wrong. It might seem like we are few and far between, but I promise amazing things are happening here. Let me know if you want to be part of them too!
The week was a bit of an emotional one for me, truthfully. The Charleston shooting hit close to home for ELCA congregations. Bishop Eaton, our presiding bishop, released this statement:
It has been a long season of disquiet in our country. From Ferguson to Baltimore, simmering racial tensions have boiled over into violence. But this … the fatal shooting of nine African Americans in a church is a stark, raw manifestation of the sin that is racism. The church was desecrated. The people of that congregation were desecrated. The aspiration voiced in the Pledge of Allegiance that we are “one nation under God” was desecrated.
Mother Emanuel AME’s pastor, the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, was a graduate of the Lutheran Theological Southern Seminary, as was the Rev. Daniel Simmons, associate pastor at Mother Emanuel. The suspected shooter is a member of an ELCA congregation. All of a sudden and for all of us, this is an intensely personal tragedy. One of our own is alleged to have shot and killed two who adopted us as their own.
We might say that this was an isolated act by a deeply disturbed man. But we know that is not the whole truth. It is not an isolated event. And even if the shooter was unstable, the framework upon which he built his vision of race is not. Racism is a fact in American culture. Denial and avoidance of this fact are deadly. The Rev. Mr. Pinckney leaves a wife and children. The other eight victims leave grieving families. The family of the suspected killer and two congregations are broken. When will this end?
The nine dead in Charleston are not the first innocent victims killed by violence. Our only hope rests in the innocent One, who was violently executed on Good Friday. Emmanuel, God with us, carried our grief and sorrow – the grief and sorrow of Mother Emanuel AME church – and he was wounded for our transgressions – the deadly sin of racism.
I urge all of us to spend a day in repentance and mourning. And then we need to get to work. Each of us and all of us need to examine ourselves, our church and our communities. We need to be honest about the reality of racism within us and around us. We need to talk and we need to listen, but we also need to act. No stereotype or racial slur is justified. Speak out against inequity. Look with newly opened eyes at the many subtle and overt ways that we and our communities see people of color as being of less worth. Above all pray – for insight, for forgiveness, for courage.
Kyrie Eleison.
The Rev. Elizabeth A. Eaton, Presiding Bishop; Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
I'm struggling with how I am supposed to respond to the very many events of racial tension and violence that have been in the media much more frequently over the past year. I know that, unfortunately, these events are not new. These types of events have been going on for years. It's only now that mainstream media has been picking them up. And it's only now that the conversation about racial injustices have become trending topics. I am thankful that those conversations are happening, that I can be part of them, and hopefully that change is possible. But I am sure that there is much more to be done beyond conversations. Still working out what that actually means for my life practically though.
What a week.
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