The day that Barack Obama was elected President, a noose was hung from a tree on the campus of Baylor University. In case you don’t know, Baylor is a Christian university.
This past week, teenagers in our youth ministry have been posting opinions (many of which mimic their parents’ opinions) about the election on Facebook. Sometimes it’s gotten ugly. Maybe you’ve seen the same with your kids.
I love what one of our two youth pastors said yesterday to students in response to the bitterness that has surfaced in response to the election: God is not contained within any political party. I disagree with Obama on some issues, and with McCain on some issues. You probably do too. It’s not “Country First” (a common McCain slogan) – it’s Jesus first. The hope of the world is not in America (as Obama has said), it’s in Jesus.
This same youth pastor, who’s African-American, proceeded to share his own journey as a person of color. As he shared the tears that streamed down his face when the media proclaimed Obama the victor, and the way he hugged his two year-old daughter at that moment, the tears streamed down my face too.
But I cried even more yesterday at church during our final worship time. During our first worship set, the worship leader usually invites students to sit down or stand up at particular times. But during our last worship set, our tradition is for the worship leader not to give instructions but to have students stand up somewhat spontaneously. Usually it’s girls who are the first to stand up.
But not yesterday. It was boys. Boys of all different skin colors who stood up as we stood about Jesus being “everlasting.”
Maybe this week gives us as youth workers a chance to have real and authentic conversations with kids. Maybe this is a chance for the church to show our unity that transcends political party, and that the God we worship is bigger than we can imagine.
Maybe in the midst of some of us being thrilled and others of us being despondent, this is a time for us to live out Paul’s words in Romans 12:15-16a: “Rejoice with those who rejoice; mourn with those who mourn. Live in harmony with one another.”
I love that our boys seem to be getting that. I want to get it too.
©2008 Fuller Youth Institute