News and Views

End the Culture of Violence

Posted by Guest Author on

By Rev. Harold Recinos

Black and Brown Americans live with the existential terror they will be shot by a criminally motivated police officer. After the night of terror in Dallas, good police officers find themselves anxious about being targeted by disturbed snipers with semi-automatic rifles.

Americans live with the persistent fear of terrorism and the threat that a mass shooting will prematurely end life for them or someone close. The culture of violence seen in urban neighborhoods, reported in news narrative and paraded by entertainment media showing precious lives ended by gun shots evidences a major and challenging public health threat is on hand.

The death toll is climbing and the context of mass shootings makes us speechless witnesses to the criminal behavior of the disturbed: church, schools, nightclubs, restaurants, malls, courtrooms, post offices, train stations, bus stops, police stations and public streets. Our public squares for so long an imagined space for debating public policies, democratic ideals, human values, and the meaning of the common good, have become places to dodge bullets. Life together is crumbling into a heap of insecurity, fear and a more narrowed sense of freedom.

Those who fashion crosses to violently end the lives of ethically innocent human beings, who use murder to communicates their cause, and ferociously cast upon the face of the earth the burning fires of hell, will not prevail against the good men, women and children of a society committed to rebirthing and cultivating a culture of peace.

The dream of finding the right medicine to treat the public health crisis produced by a culture of violence and its servants is not an impossible one to achieve. The culture of peace will issue forth the moment we renew a commitment to build life together on the basis of the luxurious diversity of American society, compassion for the helpless, care for shared creation, deepened understanding of the meaning of the common good, and passionate pursuit of a different gun policy.

Christians regularly pray a petition that says, thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth, as in heaven. I will repeat this prayer and live to help make it so, since in that space no shots will be fired, no tears shed, no hearts broken with grief, no strangers or enemies present for hate.

The Rev. Harold Recinos, a member of the Baltimore-Washington Conference, is a professor of Church and Society at Perkins School of Theology/SMU in Dallas, Texas.

Comments

Name: