As the Ball dropped and the clock struck midnight, crowds
cheered, fireworks exploded, couples
kissed, balloons fell, and a New Year was rung in. It was a huge celebration.
kissed, balloons fell, and a New Year was rung in. It was a huge celebration.
But in many ways 2014 was a difficult and painful year,
especially for minority communities in the United States of America. Ferguson,
Eric Garner, failed Immigration Reform, the US Senate report on torture. We watched hunger strikes on Capitol Hill,
protests in NYC, shut down freeways in Northern California, and thousands of
African Americans crying out in pain, desperately trying to remind our leaders
and our nation that #BlackLivesMatter. Time and time again we were reminded
that racism and dehumanization are integral parts of the fabric of our country.
Many people have been asking what can be done, and how can
these issues be addressed. New policies, better education, and higher quality
training are all ideas that have been floated. Unfortunately, while these ideas
are well-intentioned, I fear they are woefully inadequate. I believe the
problem facing our nation is rooted in our belief in our own exceptionalism.
I have spent much of 2014 studying and speaking about the
Doctrine of Discovery. This is a troubling doctrine that came out of the
Catholic Church through a series of Papal Bulls written in the 15th Century.
In 1452, Pope Nicholas V wrote the following words in a
Papal Bull:
“…invade, search out, capture, vanquish, and subdue all Saracens and pagans whatsoever, and other enemies of Christ wheresoever placed, and the kingdoms, dukedoms, principalities, dominions, possessions, and all movable and immovable goods whatsoever held and possessed by them and to reduce their persons to perpetual slavery, and to apply and appropriate to himself and his successors the kingdoms, dukedoms, counties, principalities, dominions, possessions, and goods, and to convert them to his and their use and profit.”
Essentially, the Doctrine of Discovery was the Church in
Europe saying to the Nations of Europe, whatever land you find that are not
ruled by Christian Rulers, those people are less than human and the lands are
yours for the taking.
It was the Doctrine of Discovery that allowed European nations
to colonize Africa and enslave its people. It was also the Doctrine of
Discovery that allowed Christopher Columbus to get lost at sea, land in a “New
World” inhabited by millions, and claim to have "discovered" it.
Because his doctrine informed him that the indigenous peoples of North America
were less than human, and, therefore, the land was empty.
Throughout European history in North America, the Doctrine
of Discovery has become embedded in the foundation of America. The Declaration
of Independence dehumanizes Indians by referring to us as "merciless
Indian savages." The US Constitution specifically excludes Indians and counts
African Slaves as three-fifths of a person. And in 1823, the US Supreme Court
set a legal precedent when it stated that based on the Doctrine of Discovery
Indians only had the right of occupancy of the land while Europeans had the
right of discovery and, therefore, the true ownership of this land. This precedent was referenced by the Court as
recently as 2005.
Over the years the centuries, the Protestant church also
adopted the Doctrine of Discovery and began to use it for its own benefit. In 1630, in the colony of Boston, John
Winthrop preached a sermon in which he referred to the colony as a “City on a
Hill” and reminded them that they must be obedient to God so that "the
Lord our God may blesse us in the land whether wee goe to possesse
it." Through the lens of the
Doctrine of Discovery, the colonies beginning to see their presence in North
America as a God-blessed, even a God-ordained, event out of which comparisons
to Old Testament Israel and their journey to a "Promised Land" could
be drawn. Over the next hundred years or so this thinking matured into an
understanding that not only was this new nation a "City on a Hill"
but it also had a “Manifest Destiny” to discover, occupy, and rule this
continent from "sea to shining sea."
Today, our leaders and our institutions continue to ease our guilt and massage our egos by telling us, that as a people, as a nation, we are exceptional. Our educational systems may be failing, our infrastructure may be crumbling, our manufactured and genetically modified foods may be killing us, our technology and consumption may be altering the earth’s climate, our middle class may be disappearing, we may be torturing our enemies, we may be aborting our babies, and our minority populations may be forced to scream out that "their lives matter." But, we tell ourselves, "We are exceptional." "We are good." "We have a 'manifest destiny'." And "The United States of America is still a 'City on a Hill'."
As a nation we have to believe that we are exceptional,
because if we aren't, if our history is truly this dark, then that means our
nation is merely average. If our nation is not exceptional, then our unjust
history of discovery, slavery, genocide, theft, torture, and dehumanizing the
other is no longer justified. If we are merely average, and our nation has not
been established and ordained by God, then we can be held accountable for our
unjust actions, both past and present, just like everyone else.
Our nation is in agony, and our people are literally crying out in pain. Our history is dark and the path forward is difficult. As a country we need to give up the false notion of our exceptionalism and accept the fact that we are no better than any other nation around the world. We need to remember that this land was not empty and Europeans did not discover it. We need to acknowledge that Africans and African Americans are human, their labor is not free, and their lives do matter. We need to accept that many of our national holidays, like Columbus Day, are meant to be mourned, not celebrated. We need to own our history and accept responsibility for our actions.
It may be a new year, but the problems and challenges of the
old one have not magically disappeared. Immigration reform still needs to be
passed. Our leaders and our institutions still need to acknowledge that
#BlackLivesMatter. We still need to deal with the revelation of the fact that
the United States of America tortures its enemies. And we have yet to
acknowledge that we are citizens of a nation that has been built on a
foundation called the Doctrine of Discovery that dehumanizes the other and
attempts to "God-ordain" our collective selfish desires in our so-called
exceptionalism.
Perhaps rather than turning the page and celebrating the start of a New Year, we would be wise to better educate ourselves and lament the old year(s).
Lament is not hopeless. It is not merely wallowing in guilt.
Lament is a godly weeping over our own sin and brokenness. It is an admission
that a wrong was committed and justice is due. But there is also hope. For
while God is a God of justice, He is also a God who loves mercy. He is a God
who heals. And he is a God who will go as far as sending his only son to be
born in a manager, tortured, and crucified on a Roman cross in order to be
reconciled with his creation.
The United States of America does not have a covenant with
God and the continent of North America is not our promised land. Our
citizenship in this country does not provide us any additional hope or
preference in the eyes of the Creator. But if we are able to repent of our
American exceptionalism and instead find our identity solely in the blood of
Jesus Christ, then there is hope. We can lament our sins, even the sins of our
nation, and still trust that no matter what judgment comes, or what mercy is
shown, God is good. Our relationship with him is still intact.
I invite you to read another article I recently published
titled "The
Doctrine of Discovery- A Buried Apology and an Empty Chair." This
article gives an in-depth history of the Doctrine of Discovery and its
influence on the United States of America. It also contains a proposal for a
step towards healing and reconciliation.
You are misunderstanding the meaning of "American exceptionalism." You write of it as if it is a boast by Americans as to "how good they are." That wasn't and isn't the meaning. The meaning was and is that the US was the "exception" to the general then-existing rule as to how to do a country (government and society). The US was not like European countries: no monarch, no static societal classes, no government endorsed institutional church, no governmental control over the press and individual speech, etc etc etc.
ReplyDeletePerhaps the US is less exceptional (unique from others) now than when it was begun, but that would be because so many other nations mimicked the US model, to some extent at least.
But it has come to mean, "We are the best country in the world." This "exceptionalism" has also developed into arrogance and American imperialism.
ReplyDelete