Learning to Disenthrall

 
 
 
There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male or female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus
— Galatians 3:28

Families were devastated. The economy was in ruins. Major portions of cities and farms were wastelands. Resentment ran high and in some portions of the land, there had been systematic acts of terrorism on both sides. Just google “Kansas, Bloody Kansas” and you will be shocked at the horrors that exploded in Kansas and Missouri, as well as other parts of the south—acts of terror that would make the Middle East look tame. It was to this greatest national emergency that the president addressed his attention:

The dogmas of the quiet past are inadequate for the stormy present. The occasion is piled high with difficulty, and we must rise with the occasion. As our case is new, so we must think anew, and act anew. We must disenthrall ourselves.

 

When Abraham Lincoln spoke these words on December 1, 1862, our American Civil War appeared intractable, tragic, and expanding. The country had to “disenthrall” itself. The bigoted, closed-minded attitudes of then we recognize now as antiquated, racist, classist, sexist, and fool-hearty. 

Think on what perspectives you hold today that will need to be revised in the future. Expand that to include any aspect of society. What new insights are necessary now? This July, let us attempt to “disenthrall ourselves.” Consider carefully your own struggles. Evaluate fully your own prejudices, and live compassionately. 

More importantly, consider what God’s spirit might be about, working in and with regular people like you and me. Moving through and within the confines of culture and human perspective, God’s holy presence continues to inspire, adapting to time and place as needed.

Following the Civil War, many would now agree there was a gradual spiritual awakening as regular people opened up new realities. We now realize the immoral and anti-spiritual nature of slavery. Further, if we allow ourselves, we can see the remaining reality of discrimination, destructive nature of prejudice. Sadly, we continue to wrestle with these personal and societal demons. 

Reflect on how God might be at work this week, in you or in those whose voices you hear. Search for new insights emerging in your mind, heart, or surroundings. 

Love, David

Open unto me – light for my darkness ... courage for my fear ... peace for my turmoil ... wisdom for my confusion ... Thyself for myself. Lord, Lord, open unto me! Amen.

—Howard Thurman

 
 

David Jordan
Senior Pastor

 
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A Letter from Mark Green