There are some things that simply need to change. There are others that need
to change now! The most recent disaster making its way through the southern
and mid-western United States gives me reason to demand that all
holy-people quit speaking for God. It has become abundantly clear that
man gets wrong what God wants said. There, I said it.
A mother, Jalisa Granger, died while trying to protect her daughter when a tornado
hit her home, a few weeks back in Louisiana. One of at least two twisters tied to a weather system caused
major damage in the state and wreaked havoc on Mardi Gras festivities.
Mardi Gras? Wasn’t that the “homosexual parade” that spawned Hurricane
Katrina, according to well-respected conservative preacher John Hagee?
Rayne, Louisiana, Mayor James “Jimbo” Petitjean told reporters that the 21-year-old
woman was killed when a tree fell on her house. Her daughter is “doing
fine, from what we heard,” he said. It appears the Religious Right would
have a time skillfully crafting God’s message out of this incident. The
mother died, the baby lived and the town got chastised, right? “It’s unfortunate,
and that’s where we really need your prayers,” Petijean said. My question
is, what are we to be praying for?
The National Weather Service confirmed that tornadoes hit that city, about 80
miles west of Baton Rouge, and the nearby city of
Crowley a few weeks ago. According
to a disciple of Evangelical pastor, John Hagge, where exactly is the
sin that God is targeting? I have to also ask, how does one decipher God’s
actions on sunny days? Are people not sinning then?
In addition to the mother who died, at least 11 were hurt when the twister struck
Rayne. Over 230 powerful storms have ripped across the Southeast, killing
more than 45 people over the past four days, according to the National
Weather Service and reports from fourteen states. The storms’ impact on
North Carolina was characterized
as “epic.” Among the worst-hit places was Bertie County, North Carolina, a rural area in
the northeast part of the state. The weather service reported 14 deaths
in the county. More than 50 people were taken to hospitals in Greenville, and between 50 and 70 homes were destroyed.
But it’s not just twisters, its fires, tsunamis, earthquakes and floods, like
the one that hit New Zealand. Recall that a powerful earthquake rocked the New Zealand city of Christchurch and the confirmed death toll from last month’s magnitude
6.3 earthquake has risen to 166. What I know is that I don’t hear any
condemnation of Christchurch for the lascivious acts
of this New Zealand’s
city’s inhabitants. Funny how that happens.
Now, paradoxically
speaking, do you remember what Christian-conservative TV icon, Pat Robertson,
said following the earthquake in Haiti? Mr. Robertson’s theory was that Haitian
slaves made a “pact with the devil” 200 years ago in order to free themselves
from the hated clutches of Napoleon Bonaparte’s regime, resulting in a
curse that led to the destruction of much of Port-au-Prince and a massive loss of life in last year’s earthquake.
In this, he seems to know exactly what God is doing, but the rest of us,
even the God-fearing faithful, don’t. Funny how that happens.
We didn’t hear
this Sodom- and Gomorrah-bashing when the 4.5 magnitude earthquake of
January 12th hit California (although I bet some were dying to) or the tornado in Moore
County, Tennessee, where one person died. Many mobile homes were destroyed
and houses were damaged along the track; the fatality occurred in a destroyed
mobile home. Four other people were injured, two seriously. This was the
first killer US tornado in 2011. Nobody speaking for God there…although
many were surely thanking Him.
Aside from the United
States, in Australia, a 13-year old Toowoomba
boy, Jordan Rice, is being remembered as a hero after he let his younger
brother get rescued first, seconds before he and his mother Donna were
swept to their deaths. The death toll from the devastating floods, which
swept through Toowoomba and the region, caused 28 deaths and millions
in damage. Why aren’t the mouthpieces of God attributing this disaster
to Australia’s colonialism, its
184-plus years of taking someone else’s land and calling it “discovery?”
Or why aren’t we blaming God (or praising Him) for the heroic act of the
13-year old? What did somebody do wrong? The inhabitants of New Orleans did something wrong; so did the Haitians.
It’s abundantly
blatant that these judgments God is executing
is only punishment for Black inhabitants. Oh yeah, and gay ones. Ever
notice that? They fail to mention that it’s been revealed that many among
their flock have intimately intermingled with Blacks or are “in-the-closet.”
Blame, too, often stops with society’s most marginalized people. I won’t
attribute the storms to God’s vengeance, but where are those Christian
conservative, right-wing prognosticators on this? Is God punishing Red
states for their cutting of programs that help the poor? Must not, because
the Hagges and Robertsons of the world didn’t say so.
I would say, “Stop
the foolishness,” but that would be foolish; ‘cause that’s what fools
do - and do best! I have come to the point where I posit that men need
to quit speaking for God. God is too complex a being to be pinned down
and too vast a being to need an official spokesperson. He may have at
one point (and they’ve made the Moses account suspect now), but now, the
holy men have tainted the waters. I can’t drink from their cisterns any
longer. Anyone who would spawn the 6 billion current personalities dotting
the earth, surely can’t put all his/her wisdom
in one guy. And even more so, put out overtly race-biased judgments through
racially-biased evangelists? Surely not. This picture is suspect at best,
unreal at worst. It can’t be reality when these people speak for God.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist, Perry
Redd, is the former Executive Director of
the workers rights advocacy, Sincere Seven, and author of the on-line
commentary, “The
Other Side of the Tracks.” He is the host of the internet-based talk
radio show, Socially Speaking in Washington, DC. Click
here to contact Mr.
Redd.
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