BUT REALLY !!!!............

I wrote this essay not long after November 24th, for a class I took last semester.
I wrote this essay not long after November 24th, for a class I took last semester.
Memories
of my adolescence are littered with the phrase “what would Jesus do?”
Despite my family’s relative areligiosity I feel like that phrase was
everywhere. On brightly colored bracelets and bookmarks my friends
always had, on billboards near my home town, spoken over and over again
whenever someone didn’t know what to do or when someone else had done
something they disapproved of. I never knew how we were supposed to know
what Jesus would do, I’d never read the Bible or really heard it
preached. All I ever really heard in that phrase was “whatever you’re
doing, stop that. Jesus was perfect and you are not.” Everything I heard
about what Jesus would do was in the negative. In my world people
talked much more about what Jesus wouldn’t do than about what he would do, and when they talked about what he would do it was still mostly judgement.
I’ve
been thinking about that phrase a lot lately. I’ve been thinking about
what it would really be like to live your life in emulation of what
Jesus would do. Thinking about what it would mean to take seriously
Jesus’ life, work, and suffering as a human. As Jordan makes so clear,
many Christians don’t ever really take Jesus seriously as a human. He’s
difficult to handle if he is fully human, his life makes difficult
demands on our comfortable lives if we take it seriously. Christ is so
much easier to handle. We can build fountains to glorify a god, but we
have to give a thirsty man water. We have to accept that we might be
culpable in his thirst. What would Jesus do?
It
was a Monday and I had plans. I was going to get out of my house and
work on a project, be productive. It’s a little astonishing how often my
plans of productivity are destroyed by the moral failings of my
country. Early in the day I heard that the Grand Jury decision about
Michael Brown’s murder would be released that day. I’ll admit that my
first thought was that I had too much to do for everything to go to hell
on that particular day, but, of course it did anyway. I spent the whole
day sure of what would come, knowing there would be no indictment,
collecting and sharing essays, and determining where I would meet up
with people to head out to protest that evening. I didn’t stop to ask
myself what exactly I was doing and if I was sure I wanted to do it
until I was waiting for a bus to Oakland and writing the number to the
National Lawyers Guild on each of my arms. My only actual response to
myself was, “don’t just talk about it, be about it” and so I went. What
would Jesus do?
From
the 6PM announcement until my 1:30AM arrival back in my apartment
things are mostly a blur. I can remember a timeline, and I could point
out specific events if asked to, but the overall effect isn’t about
those details. I made a choice to “be about it” and then I kept making
that choice. I made that choice until my heels literally bled, and then I
kept going. There is a clear memory of marching behind the crowd,
carrying a banner with a couple of UU clergy members and trying to keep
some distance between the crowd and the cops, and realizing how badly my
feet hurt. Earlier in the day I had seen a picture of Michael Brown’s
father crying to the heavens, and had heard that his mother’s cries
could be heard above the protests in Ferguson. I hurt, but they and so
many other Black families and individuals hurt worse. I couldn’t end
their suffering, no amount of me out in the street yelling my lungs out
would actually bring their son back or end their pain, but at least I
could be with them. My soul hurt and my body hurt. The pain of the world
was in me, and I was going to push through. I was dedicated to
suffering with. What would Jesus do?
I
didn’t realize until I looked at my shoes the next day that I had bled.
I didn’t cry until I was in the shower that Tuesday morning. That
Tuesday I kept getting hit with it. With what had happened, with what
keeps happening, with what the world demands of me. My whole body ached,
my heels hurt every time anything touched them and sometimes when
nothing did. For the first time ever Jesus on the cross made sense to
me. What would Jesus do? Suffer with the families of those most hurt by
our racist “justice” system, flip over the money changers’ tables, shed
his blood for his belief in justice and liberation.
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