“Greed is the
inventor of injustice as well as the current enforcer.”
Julian Casablancas
Earlier this month (October 8th),
a fan was kicked out of a basketball game for holding up a sign calling for
freedom for Hong Kong and for yelling a freedom-for-Hong-Kong slogan. One of
the teams on the court was a Chinese team from Guangzhou, the Loong Lions. But
this game wasn’t being held in Beijing or Peking. It was in Philadelphia…the
birthplace of American freedom. Just feet from where our forefathers signed the
Declaration of Independence, Americans were told that they couldn’t show public
support for basic human freedoms in China. This was right after the NBA forced
an apology onto the Houston Rockets general manager for tweeting, “fight for
freedom, stand with Hong Kong.” Why? Greed!
The
NBA is poised to make $1.5 billion off its streaming agreement with Chinese
media company, Tencent, over the next five years, so the NBA is willing to slam
dunk basic human rights to increase their bottom line.
Basketball
is the most popular sport in the world’s most populous country. There are more
NBA fans in China than there are people in the United States. The NBA is willingly
being fiscally blackmailed by a repressive nation known for forced abortions,
harvesting organs, and the abuse of religious minorities, like the Muslim
Uighur community.
That’s not to mention China’s recent blood-drenched history. Chinese
Communists make the Nazis look like Boy Scouts. There’s a general consensus
among historians that after Chairman Mao and the Communists came to power,
political purges caused the deaths of
tens of millions.
Today
most have forgotten the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre. Estimates of the death
toll vary from several hundred to several thousand, with thousands more
wounded. What’s ironic is how quickly the NBA was ready to boycott North
Carolina over bathrooms a few years ago, but now kowtow to a brutal Chinese
government…all for the love of money.
Yet, the NBA is hardly exceptional. In recent years, American and
European companies have made a regular habit of apologizing for their
accidental contradictions of China’s Communist Party line. Last year,
Marriott fired a social-media manager for liking a post complimenting
the hotel chain for its (unintentional) endorsement of Tibetan independence.
Around the same time, Mercedes-Benz issued an apology for quoting the
Dalai Lama on Instagram. After learning that one of its t-shirts featured a map
of China that didn’t include Taiwan or various disputed islands in the South
China Sea, the Gap expressed its regrets and affirmed its respect for
“China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.” Versace apologized for a similar
offense last August, saying, “Versace reiterates that we love China
deeply, and resolutely respect China’s territory and national sovereignty.”
By
itself, U.S. consumer brands’ disinterest in advocating for Tibetan independence
or democracy in Hong Kong isn’t especially concerning. But capitulation on
these largely symbolic issues (symbolic in the sense that Gap T-shirts won’t make
or break the “Free Tibet” movement) clearly indicate that corporate America is
virtually absent of a moral compass or compassion for the oppressed or brutalized.
Greed massacres freedom!
Christians
have largely been concerned about Big Brother, and the oppression of biblical values
but been oblivious to Big Business’s oppression of Christianity. But corporate
America is no friend of grace or the people of God. Think about it. If corporations
won’t support the defense of basic human rights by an oppressive regime like
China, do we believe that religious freedom won’t also be sacrificed? Giant corporations
like Google, Twitter, Facebook have been caught censoring Christian posts and organizations.
Just
consider the malicious media slandering and political blackballing of Chick-fil-a
because their owners dare to espouse a biblical worldview. Yet, it’s common
knowledge that Chick-fil-A serves, employs, pays, and offers benefits to people
who consider themselves gay, queer, lesbian, bi, and any other
sexually-specific identity a person wants to claim. They don’t discriminate or show
partiality or prejudice. They simply sell chicken sandwiches in clean
restaurants (except on Sundays).
What
infuriates those who hold a different worldview is that the owners of
Chick-fil-A are Christians who personally hold to a belief in the biblical moral
ethic. That’s it! They’re believers striving to honor God and live in obedience
to His Word. That obedience means loving others, serving others, helping others
and doing all things (even selling chicken sandwiches) as though they’re
working for God Himself and not for man.
Even
an innocuous site like Pinterest censors and blocks certain Bible verses and
Christian terms in its search engine. While a quick search makes it clear that some
Bible verses are still allowed on Pinterest, one employee whistleblower revealed
that the company’s auto-complete function was modified and there is hostility against
some Christian beliefs.
Yet,
none of this should surprise us. Jesus promised that, “If the world hates
you, know that it has hated Me before it hated you” (John 15:18). While in
America we should defend our Constitutional rights while we can, just as the
Apostle Paul defended his rights as a Roman citizen, we must also be known as
the people of love and grace. We’re to turn the other cheek (Mt. 5:38-40), and love
and pray for our enemies (Rom. 12:14-21).
Most
vocations are no longer exempt from the conflict between career and
convictions. As Christians, we must develop a “theology of getting fired” and answer
the tough questions before they’re forced on us: “What am I willing to take
a stand for and get fired over?” God’s grace is sufficient. He has called
us to live as His light in an increasingly darkening world. We’re not the first
who’ve faced these dilemmas. As God has been faithful to all those who have come
before us, He will be faithful to us!
Can
we help you spiritually? Can we help you know Jesus better? Please check out
more resources on our church's web page, Gracechurchwi.org. Or, call us at
262.763.3021. If you'd like to know more about how Jesus can change your life,
I'd love to mail you a copy of how Jesus changed my life in "My
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