I am so far outside, the Hubble telescope
can’t help me see in. I cannot see through
the dark skin of African-Americans into
what it means to be black in America.
I thought I could back in grade school
but I noticed my best friend on the play
ground had dark skin and after school
he went to his home and I went to mine
and never the twain met, and in college
my senior year room-mate was a black
guy who I counted as my best friend for those
nine months, but I couldn’t get into his skin,
and he once asked me to hold my arms
down at my side and he pointed out
how curled, like a gorilla, my fingers were
compared to his and so asked without
the question, who was the monkey.
I am a white man of Swedish and
Dutch ancestry and in spite of the ups
and downs of life and, to be honest,
there have been some significant
downs as well as ups, I still only see
life as a privileged white in America.
It is stamped on my national DNA.
I think I am a follower of Jesus and
I try to strive for social justice and to
speak out for those mistreated by
the system, but those are acts and we
are talking about being. My being is as
an American something who cannot
understand an American something else
because of our very different roots in the
same garden. In my America, my roots
always flower; in their America, seen through
my America, their roots mostly result in weeds.
I am a child of a country founded by whites
who have had supremacy in the marrow of
their bones from day one till now; I, too,have
inherited that heritage and it, too, goes to the
marrow of my bones without my even knowing it
and in spite of my dark-skinned savior Jesus. I
have had it easy; I am racially profiled, too, every-
day as a-okay; I choose safe neighborhoods in
coveted areas in which to live; I had no trouble
choosing and achieving the American dream
because I am a privileged, white American;
but because I can only see from my side of
life’s story, I can see nothing at all; I am blind
and as I said, not even a Hubble telescope
would help. I’m too much of a white American.
I’m sorry, Jesus, my dark-skinned savior.
This is the deal … sharing …
What I love about our “dark-skinned savior” Jesus, is that we don’t have to see out of someone else’s eyes. We simply have to love others as we love ourselves. That’s all any of us can do. As long as we are inside Christ, we are never outside.