Faith Works 8-26-17
Jeff Gill
It's a privilege just to be here
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There's this thing people are talking about called  privilege.
It's the better-heeled brother of racism. We know, sort of,  what racism is (although it seems to always have another rancid layer to it,  like peeling a rotten onion), but the counterpart to racist animus against people  of color is the ability of those of us not in those communities to worry about  racism, much.
Privilege. I have it. I get to write this column, for one. I  try to use this privilege, and in fact responsibility, with care and  consideration. Many of you who read this are involved in churches, but I know  full well that many of the regular readers here are what's called "spiritual  but not religious," not attenders anywhere but interested in spirituality  everywhere.
In truth, I'm interested in getting most of you into some  form of community, but I don't write or preach from this platform with the  assumption that's where you are. For those who have a parson preaching to them  each week, or an elder teaching or convener moderating discussion, you have the  privilege of assembly and structure.
And I have a very particular sort of Christian privilege,  which is having grown up in a household of belief and practice. Not everyone  got that, and I think it's only right to allow for those differences in  experience. I didn't pick my childhood home, so why should I get credit for it?  If you never heard much about God or the gospel in your earlier life, why  should that be held against you?
My photograph, inflicted on many of you reading this on the  page or online, shows that I have what's known as "white privilege." It's  true. I grew up not wondering if people would watch me closely in stores,  especially the pricey ones; as I got older, I never had a concern that I  couldn't rent a place if I had the green in my wallet. There are many ways that  a white man even if not from wealth has certain economic and social advantages,  ones we don't think about and can be touchy about if pointed out (since as far  as we know they don't exist).
Oh, and I did say white man. There's white privilege, and  there's still – whether you believe it or not – male privilege. I know all the  counter arguments, but there are so many ways and places where being a guy  gives me a certain place that a woman doesn't. The pulpit is one.
Should I add Christian privilege? Before my church-going  readers say to themselves "but isn't there persecution against Christians  around the world, and even here at home?" I will note that I am indeed  irritated by the growing trend in print and online to put the word "god" in  lower-case, making it clear that many folks like to make it clear they don't  think God is a proper proper noun, since capitalizing God implies the divine  One is a person. But why should I make someone who doesn't believe that God is  a person affirm that in their punctuation?
Regardless, there's still some privilege to be had in our  culture from being a part of the mainstream. Some are not in that mainstream,  and it takes nothing away from me to acknowledge and honor that there are those  who find themselves on the outside looking in.
We are working through a national inventory of privilege and  privileges these days, alongside the struggle to change racism into acceptance  and hate into love. Some say those transformations are impossible. My privilege  is to believe that there is a God, and this God wants to change us all for the  better.
  
  Not all of you believe that, but you are curious. How can this be, and how can  we be part of it? Included or excluded, faith communities in general and  Christians in particular should be a living witness to the possibility of  transformation of not just human persons, but entire cultures. It is my  privilege to believe and to proclaim that this is happening all around us even  now.
Jeff Gill is a writer, storyteller, and pastor in Licking  County; he believes it's a privilege to answer your emails, no matter how  briefly! Tell him what you think is being changed in our community at knapsack77@gmail.com or follow @Knapsack  on Twitter.
 
 


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