A hate crime last week in Louisville did not
get the publicity of last year’s Pittsburgh synagogue shooting, which is only
right since no one was physically harmed. But it was an act of hate nonetheless.
It has affected me because I lived in Louisville, Kentucky, for a while.
I went to seminary in Louisville for three years in the
1970’s while getting my Master of Divinity degree and returned annually in the
early 1980’s for three more years to attend classes while earning my Doctorate.
Last week someone vandalized the Hindu temple on Bardstown
Road, just down the street from the church where I served as a pastoral intern.
A photograph of the graffiti published in the Courier
Journal caught my attention. Across the entrance to the Swaminarayan
Temple were spray-painted the words: “Jesus is the only Lord” accompanied by a
cross.
Elsewhere in the building the words "Jesus Is All
Mighty," "Jesus Is Lord," and "God" were painted on
walls, as well as numerous crosses. A picture of a Hindu deity was defaced. There
was also more typical hate speech emblazoned across a bulletin board calling
Hindus "foreign b*****s."
It is despicable, of course. What bothered me the most is
that my religion had been hijacked. Phrases meant to be professions of faith
were used as instruments of intolerance and hate. I wonder if the teenage
vandal (who was caught and charged on Thursday) understands the depth of his
betrayal of his Christian faith. Probably not.
He is probably as clueless as the other Kentucky teenager from
a Christian school in Covington, who gained notoriety with his “smirk seen
round the world” on Martin Luther King weekend. The additional videos and
testimony that have surfaced since the episode at the Lincoln Memorial in
Washington, DC, have helped to put the incident in a wider context, but the
verdict remains the same.
But no matter how one spins the facts and or paints the MAGA
teen’s adolescent motives, his facial expression and body language (as well as
those of his fellow students) and his refusal to step aside for a Native
American procession betray an attitude of disrespect for the religious ceremony
that the Native American elder was leading.
What bothers me the most is that these young men profess to
be Christians. The Louisville teen probably thought he was being zealous for the
Lord by attacking a place of “idolatry” like his heroes in the Bible. The
Covington youth said in his public statement
that he is “a faithful Christian and practicing Catholic” and that he was actually
praying while he was in the face of a Native American elder.
These are examples of a faith that has been corrupted and
distorted into something base. I know nothing about the Louisville youth. The
17 year-old’s name has been withheld because he is a juvenile, but you can bet
that he learned those slogans in church and Sunday School. I hope his church
quickly releases a statement condemning the attack.
I hope my alma mater in Louisville also condemns the attack.
I have been checking the blog site of Albert Mohler, the president of the Southern
Baptist Theological Seminary, but I haven’t seen a response yet. I am not
holding my breath. In a 2006 television interview on Fox’s The O'Reilly Factor (March 17), Mohler called Hinduism “a
demonstration of Satanic power.”
When I did a search for “Hindu” on Mohler’s site, all that
appeared was a 2010 article
warning Christians not to practice yoga and a 2009 post
condemning Hinduism as a “false gospel” and reminding readers that “Jesus
Christ is the only Savior.” Sounds a lot like the Louisville vandal.
In this age when hate speech is polarizing Americans and
acts of right wing terrorism are increasing in the United States (while Islamic
terrorism is decreasing in our country, according to the Global
Terrorism Index) Christians would do well to be careful what we say
and how we say it.
America’s youth (at least the ones who still attend church) are
listening, and some take what they hear from the pulpit seriously. As American Christianity
is declining and churches are emptying out, it would be wise for Christians to
be more tolerant and accepting of religious minorities. We might be one soon.
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