Kingdom Come Undone | Sojourners

Kingdom Come Undone

When the Most Christian States Are Also the Poorest
Image via Forsaken Fotos/Flickr.com

Alabama, where I live, just placed last among states for livability, according to a recent CNBC article.

“Worst” and “best” lists, a cottage industry on social media these days, are the cheap candy of critical inquiry. They give us a quick sugar high laced with self-satisfaction, before we move on to the next post, the next meme.

But what worries me about this list is that it points to uncomfortable truths: Nearly one-in-four people in Alabama live in poverty, compared to the national average of 13.5 percent. In cities like Birmingham, where I live, the poverty rate reaches 37.4 percent, the brunt of which is born by communities and persons of color. This makes Alabama the fourth poorest state in the country with the fourth highest child poverty rate. It is a state where every county except one has a child food insecurity rate above the national average of 20 percent. And if you are Latino or African American, one-third of your community will be poor, compared to a little over 13 percent for white communities statewide.

At the same time, Alabama is tied with Mississippi as the “most religious” state in the country, according to the Pew Research Center. Having lived in both the Northeast and the Southeast, the prevalence of churches and billboards in Alabama, admonishing passersby to repent or accept Jesus, is sometimes overwhelming. My first month in Birmingham, I was asked by a blood technician taking my blood if I had found my home church yet, even though I had not mentioned religion at all.

But what is more overwhelming is the realization that the most religious states — a comparison based on questions like church attendance, identity, and prayer frequency — more often than not coincide with the poorest states, the states with lowest life expectancy, and the states where it is most dangerous to be LGBTQ and/or a person of color.

How can this be? If you ask Christians in a state like Alabama, which I have, you will hear that Christianity is the solution to most of life’s problems. It is a religion of peace, a religion of love. How can there be such suffering if, as Romans 8:27 argues, “the Spirit intercedes for God’s people in accordance with the will of God?”

This is a question that for a Christian should muddy the spiritual waters. Is it despite the prominence of Christianity, or partly because of it, that states like Alabama are struggling? There is no quick answer to this, nor should there be. It should weigh on a Christian’s soul and pull one’s attention back to question the prominent theologies or our time. If Christianity can thrive, yet the people starve, how Christ-like are our Christian communities?

A friend who grew up in Alabama told me one day that she would never move back to the state. When I asked her why, she responded, “It’s a state that does not invest in its people.” That is a damning response. Truly, what else is there for a Christian to invest in than their community, than in other people? With New Testament emphases on “the least of us” and Paul’s argument that love, that care for others, is the greatest of Christian virtues, a people that do not invest of their own time, energy, and wealth in their neighbors are living a life that is Christian in name only. They are like the wolf in sheep’s clothing, only this time, the wolf has forgotten it is a wolf and believes itself to be the sheep.

If the Christian project is the Kingdom of Heaven, what then is the status of that project in the United States? The Kingdom of Heaven, or of God, is a constant theme throughout the New Testament, and in the Gospel of Matthew alone, the phrase “Kingdom of Heaven” is used more than 30 times. Jesus describes the Kingdom of Heaven in six different metaphors for this week’s lectionary reading in Matthew. It is a term that has been understood in various ways, as signaling the imminent parousia and return of Jesus, to the true life that is after life, to the promise of the social gospel, where the Kingdom can be created here on earth in this lifetime.

What makes it so open to interpretation is the use of parable, of story, in presenting the topic. In one of the more famous set of parables, Jesus is said to have referred to the Kingdom of Heaven as a “mustard seed” that grows enormous to support birds and other life. It is also leaven or yeast used to increase the size of bread. What does it mean to call the Kingdom of Heaven a “mustard seed,” which for the farmer back in the day was a weed? Why is the Kingdom the leaven and not the bread? Why is it the seed and not the tree?

Despite those who argue that the Bible is a literal document, the use of parables undermine a literal interpretation of Jesus’ teachings and instead insist that the reader think about what was written. The Bible invites dispute, contemplation, disagreement. If Jesus spoke these words, then he had a twisted sense of humor. He must have, looking at the faces of those who listened, now confused, now unsure. But if community is built on dialogue and argument, what better way to nurture community over time — to plant community’s seed, if you will — than to give it images that will only compel the community to revisit its beliefs every generation, even every day.

What seeds are we in Alabama planting? What seeds are we planting in the United States, in the world? “Leaven” is often taken to be positive in Matthew, but in other parts of the Bible, it has a negative shade. The leaven must saturate the dough, becoming the animating ingredient that shapes the bread that we will one day eat. The parable is a good one, because it is open as to its meaning. Is the leaven supporting a rich, healthy meal, or is it undermining our future?

The mustard seed creates an ecosystem where other life, such as birds, find a place to live and flourish. What was a weed becomes the biggest plant in the garden and the best able to nurture life. Out of wrong decisions and a twisted history, there can be hope and growth. This is a key gospel message: love, hope, and life. But this side of Eden, the ground must be tilled. We must discern the best seeds to plant. And if we do not ready the ground, then who will?

 

Via ON Scripture.