Sunday, March 21, 2021

Choosing Your Battles

 


“You will never reach your destination if you stop and throw stones at every dog that barks.”  Winston Churchill

 When I was a child we often visited my grandparents who owned a small farm in South Georgia. There wasn’t a lot to do and being a typical kid, I’d get bored. So, I’d borrow Ma Ma’s flyswatter and I’d go outside to swat flies. Remember this was a farm with farm animals. Can you imagine how foolish it was to attempt to kill flies outside on a farm? 
  Because we live in a “cancel culture,” sometimes Christians are as foolish. We become so defensive and so caught up in the battle that we miss that sometimes there are things that should be canceled. 
  Recently, the media reported that they’re canceling Dr. Seuss. That’s not completely accurate. Of the sixty children’s books that Dr. Seuss wrote, six of them will no longer be published, But maybe they should be canceled.  
  Dr. Seuss’s real name was Theodor Seuss Geisel and Dr. Geisel became famous, first of all, as a cartoonist of political cartoons and only later more famous and much more wealthy as the bestselling author of children’s books known as the Dr. Seuss books. He took his pen name Dr. Seuss by taking his middle name and using his doctorate in order to identify as Dr. Seuss. His books, his stories, and poetry include unusual rhyme which was a delight to children. His storylines became part of American culture. 
  Why are these six Dr. Seuss books not being republished? Because Dr. Seuss wrote for his day and in them, he used what today is considered offensive and insensitive imagery. The historical context of so much of the controversy has a great deal to do with World War II and with the fact that before he became a children’s author and illustrator, Dr. Seuss was a political cartoonist. In his cartoons that were published before, during and after World War II, there were racist depictions. Many fueled by the war. 
  During World War II propaganda took place on all sides of the war, particularly in the Axis powers, Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan, but also by the allies fighting against the Axis powers. In the United States, even the war posters, the propaganda posters, the advertising that would have been quite familiar to Americans during World War II would be quite concerning to Americans today.  
  That’s what’s really important for us as Christians – the historical context. While that doesn't mean the historical context justifies any kind of artistic misrepresentation, it does mean the historical context helps us understand it. With the attack at Pearl Harbor, Japan became the great enemy. 
  The Bible teaches that every human being is made in the image of God, even the ones who attack us. Christians are commanded to love God and love their neighbor. Every human being is Imago Dei and we’re to celebrate what God has given us in humanity. We’re to treat all people with respect. It’s biblically wrong to dehumanize other image-bearers of God, even in wartime, even in a cartoon or a children’s book. That should caution us from immediately becoming defensive every time there’s a suggestion of cancel culture. Yes, cancel culture is a contemporary reality, but we’re wasting energy to “swat” at all of it. Let me highlight some considerations that may help you navigate these difficult waters. 
  In an extreme culture, the only way to garner attention is to be more extreme than the already extreme. New York Times columnist,  Charles M. Blow, did that when he wrote recently that Pepé Le Pew “normalized rape culture.” Such silliness should have been met with a yawn. Seriously, Pepé Le Pew? Has Mr. Blow watched the music videos by Kool G,  Nicki Minaj, Cardi B and countless others? Can we start with rappers “normalizing rape culture” and violence against women before we target a cartoon skunk? 
  The media loves to manipulate more than they do to report the news. Increased ratings mean increased revenue. Compare the teaser or headline to the actual “news” report. Often it’s a lot of smoke with no fire. Yet, it’s not just secular media that does it. Some Christian organizations are masters of using liberal attacks on our “cherished values” to increase their following and fundraising efforts. 
  Big business cares more about profits than morals. The toy company, Hasbro, received millions of dollars of free advertising when they canceled Mr. Potato Head. The move wasn’t ideological but fiscal. How can a company suggest that they care about human beings, much less sexual “rights” when a large percentage of their factories are in China (over 40 according to a 2018 report). 
  China has a consistent history of being repressive of all human rights. Their genocide of the Uighurs is a confirmed fact. It’s hypocrisy for Hasbro to suggest they care about human rights and freedom while the majority of their manufacturing takes place in China. The same is true of most other major corporations who wring their hands publicly in the States about racism and sexual rights, yet are in bed with evil totalitarian states. 
  Politicians care more about power than ideology. While there is always the wonderful exception, in general politicians will do what it takes to stay in power and keep their party in power. While as Christians we must hold to moral absolutes, politics is the world of compromise and cutting deals. 
  Where does this all leave us? The Bible prophesied that this would happen. “Evil men…will go from bad to worse, deceiving and being deceived” (2 Tim. 3:13). Our Heavenly Father is not surprised by any of this. The Lord Jesus said, “even so, when you see these things happening, you know that the kingdom of God is near” (Luke 21:31). 
  Because we’ve been blessed by God with religious freedom in America, we need to seek to protect it while we can. Yet, even if we lose it, God’s mission has not changed. In a world intoxicated by anger and fear, we’re to live differently. God has called us to be people of grace, faith, and peace.   
  Those 1st century Christians are our model. They, too, lived in tumultuous times but refused to be distracted from the mission. What our world desperately needs is the gospel, to know that God loves them, that Jesus died on the cross for all of our sins and the only hope is to surrender to King Jesus. God has not called us to be cultural warriors but sharers of the cure, the heart cure – new life in Christ. Let’s not swat at flies when we’re commanded to be sharers of God’s wonderful grace (2 Cor. 5:14, 21).  

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