When I was a small child, I watched a religious
documentary on television about the life of Jesus. I have forgotten most of it,
but I remember the ending. The narrator quoted Jesus: “Whatsoever you do to the
least of my brethren, you do so to me.” The narrator made no further comment.
But the film footage that accompanied it showed drug addicts sitting in the
gutters of a major city. This was in the mid-1960s, during the height of the
hippie era.
I felt really challenged and uncomfortable by the ending
of this documentary. If I believed Jesus, which I did, then it was my
responsibility to love drug addicts sitting in the gutters. Jesus did not say
that the drug addicts first had to reform, and then we could love them. To
me—and I was as neat and conservative of a little kid as there could be—this
sounded like giving the nod of approval to their sinful life styles. I did not
like this.
I still don’t. Jesus’ words are still hard to swallow.
But the most interesting part is this. I’m pretty sure
that I remember that the documentary was sponsored by the Southern Baptist
Convention. I very much doubt that Southern Baptists would produce such a
documentary today. The Southern Baptists have pretty much sold out to the
conservative, Republican political line that drug addicts are evil and unworthy
of any assistance, and that poor people are poor because they are lazy.
Conservatives today despise poor people, especially those who are, in fact,
responsible for their own poverty. But they did sponsor this documentary fifty
years ago. In the last half century, the Southern Baptists and other
conservative religious groups have left Christianity behind and become an arm
of the Republican Party. It didn’t used to be this way, and it doesn’t have to
be this way.
I hope conservative churches might emerge out of their
Trump-worshiping phase and go back to this particular aspect of what they used
to be like. I’m not holding my breath, however.