Evangelicals who seem to speak most about race today are often the most racially charged people involved in any conflict. I have personally witnessed places where no racial tension existed become divided over accusations of white privilege, demands of generational confessions, etc. The follow story by Rhett Burns highlights yet another example of the current mission drift of the Church.
Andrew Peterson is a good guy, and no one is charging him with outright racism. Even his critics acknowledge his good intentions with the video. I want to acknowledge the same good intentions with his apology. He believes he hurt people—people he cares about—and he genuinely feels bad about it. Fair enough, but he should have refrained from apologizing. Apologies of this sort are weapons, forged to silence dissenters from the new orthodoxy. How can you spot a weaponized apology? First, there is mob outrage. Thankfully, in our dystopian times the mob has moved from the streets to social media, allowing the self-disciplined among us to tune it out, turn it off, and enjoy the fresh air. Second, the mob makes demands. Demands for apologies, demands to make amends, demands for silence. Demands for restitution. But, third, no actual sin is ever charged. Feelings were hurt and triggered, the tone was bad, or one’s experiences were not adequately taken into due consideration. But a sin, as defined by the Bible, isn’t within three zip codes of the alleged offense. Fourth, a new orthodoxy is established. In this case, all Christian artists have been put on notice: comply with the Diversity Codes or else. Fifth, all dissenters are silenced. The apologizer is often enlisted in this effort as evidenced by the part of Peterson’s apology that calls for his would-be defenders to just be quiet. This essay is my willful disobedience to the decree to remain silent.
The most important part of the above diagnostic for weaponized apologies is the absence of real sin. Of course, if one sins he should apologize for it. If Peterson had refused entry to people of color or even schemed behind the scenes to ensure an all-white cast, he would have been guilty of the sins of racial malice and showing partiality. He would have needed to apologize for that. But that was not the case. Peterson issued an open call for anyone who wanted to a part of his music video to come. The people in the video are those who showed up. Now, can we think of any other explanations for why a bunch of white people showed up for Peterson’s video other than white evangelicalism’s latent racism? I don’t know, maybe the fact that Peterson—the folk-music-playing, blazer-over-tee-shirt-and-jeans-wearing, fantasy-novel-writing singer/songwriter who named his creative club after the room where the Inklings met—is the incarnate version of the old blog, Stuff White People Like. He probably likes Friends and baked kale, too. It is simply not surprising that a group of white people showed up for his video shoot. Would it have been a better, more powerful video had the cast been more ethnically diverse, especially in light of the Revelation 5 context of the song? Sure. But was it sin to shoot with the folks who showed up? Absolutely not. Yet, some advocated for Peterson to reshoot the video, referring to it as repentance and restitution. Repentance for what? Restitution for what? What sin? Be specific. Peterson can reshoot it if he wants to, but let’s not call it an act of repentance. To do so would actually to be an act of bearing false witness, of naming something as sin that is not sin.
The most egregious aspect of this controversy is exegetical. Revelation 5:9 does present a beautiful picture of the diversity of the kingdom of God. When the church of God gathers around His eternal throne there will be men and women from every tribe, tongue, people, and nation. This fact should cause much joy. But Revelation 5:9 is not primarily about diversity. It is about Jesus. He is the one worthy to take the scroll and break its seals, for He is the one who was slain. The verse and the song are about Jesus, not the people in the pews or the choir. To reduce this great scene in John’s Revelation to a diversity lecture is to entirely miss the point. It introduces divisive identitarian politics into the heavenly vision and subverts the unity so many purport to champion.
This is one of the best new worship songs |