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The White Evangelical Church Has Failed America. It’s Also Failed Jesus.

Christians need to name something right now: the white Evangelical Church in America has failed us all—fully, grievously, irreparably.

If not for them, the previous president’s vile video confession of assault is a deal breaker.
If not for them, he isn’t elected.

If not for them, he isn’t declared a Christian.
If not for them, there are no stomach-turning photo ops of sycophants laying hands on him.

If not for them, thousands of kids aren’t separated from their families and treated like animals.
If not for them, sick people aren’t creating gofundme pages to stay alive.

If not for them, white men marching with torches aren’t called “fine people.”
If not for them, our elections aren’t polluted by murderous dictators.

If not for them, his unhinged, racist vanity rallies are deservedly empty.
If not for them, Puerto Rico doesn’t have to repeatedly beg for aid.
If not for them, climate change isn’t ridiculed and disregarded.
If not for them, gun victims get more than #thoughtsandprayers platitudes.
If not for them, bigots aren’t emboldened to proudly parade hatred in the light of day.

If not for them, sexual assault survivors aren’t belittled and traumatized anew.
If not for them, all of his lies are named and condemned.

If not for them, he is held accountable for his crimes and his immorality.
If not for them, this planet is safer, more compassionate, and more just.

The irony in place, is that despite all their sanctimonious sermonizing and finger-wagging condemnation and sky-is-falling histrionics, the white Evangelical Church has enabled, nurtured, and championed more inequity and more misery in these days than any other entity—and there is no close second. For the disparate masses of the world, the Church has become a barrier to belonging, a sanctuary for supremacy, and a hostile presence for the least of these.

By its marriage to a politics of exclusion, the white Evangelical Church has failed the poor, women, people of color, gender fluid human beings, non-heteronormative people.
It’s failed immigrants and refugees and foreigners; vulnerable and marginalized communities; non-religious and non-Christians.
It has failed everyone outside the tiny gated community of the white and the wealthy.
This is indeed a tragedy.

But more than anyone—the white Evangelical Church has failed Jesus.

They have misappropriated his likeness, hijacked his name, and weaponized his messaged into something grotesque and oppressive—and it is rightfully repelling good people.

If not for the white Evangelical Church, people might see the peacemaking, wound-healing, leper-embracing, crowd-feeding Jesus that deserves to be seen—and run toward it.
If not for them, religion might not be a trigger of the worst abuse and the greatest harm and the worst violence that has visited them.
If not for the White Evangelical Church, Christianity might be the refuge for the hurting and the hopeless that it was intended to be—and it can be again.

Followers of Jesus can be the healers and lovers of people that we were called to be if we have the courage to be, if we have the strength to oppose this bitterness, to reject it, and to leave it.

So cue the exodus, throw open the doors, and let the good people stream out of the pews and into the streets. May that thing become a deserving dead relic of the distant past; a dusty museum of another fully fallen empire.

Let us set a table big enough for everyone who has been failed by this Frankensteined freak show claiming to be of God, and let us remind people that where Jesus is, there is good news for the poor, embrace for the unloved, rest for the weary, and a belly-busting meal that demands no prerequisite but hunger.

Let us make sure love gets the last, loudest word.

Yes, the white Evangelical Church has failed us, but followers of Jesus will not fail him—and we will not fail one another.

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