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Wednesday, March 24, 2021

Being an American, Christian, or Both: A Fundamental Problem of “Can” v. “Should” – radical eyes for equity

Being an American, Christian, or Both: A Fundamental Problem of “Can” v. “Should” – radical eyes for equity
Being an American, Christian, or Both: A Fundamental Problem of “Can” v. “Should”



March is a harbinger of spring.

March 2021 has also been an harbinger for some sort of return to normal after a year of living through a pandemic in the U.S. and across the world.

Mid-March now may force us to reconsider what we have wished for since the return to normal in U.S. includes two mass shootings in a week—8 murdered around Atlanta, GA followed by a mass shooting at a grocery store in Boulder, CO leaving 10 dead.

Mass shootings are so normal in the U.S. that they very much define what it means to be “American,” what it means to be a “Christian Nation,” routinely and darkly emphasized after every bloody event: ‘No Way To Prevent This,’ Says Only Nation Where This Regularly Happens.

After the Atlanta shooting and the predictable debates about racism, hate crimes, and gun control, one meme proclaimed “You can’t be a Christian if” by detailing the contradictions between racism and Christian values.

The problem with this claim is that many people in the U.S. do in fact identify as Christian while also actively expressing racism or passively ignoring and CONTINUE READING: Being an American, Christian, or Both: A Fundamental Problem of “Can” v. “Should” – radical eyes for equity