“Every prejudice that exists in your society is a part of you. To deny it is to refuse to fight it.”
– Aphorism 4
To me this
ministry is a direct and clear challenge. Many of us, and Quakers not
least, like to think that we are so enlightened and have moved beyond
prejudice and bigotry. We like to tell ourselves comforting lies, and
this is a key example.
It’s
understandable. We can be so scathing of those who are blatant
racists, so negative about employers with sexist policies or pay
rates, so condemnatory of those who attack others for their faith,
that it is a simple matter of psychological self-defence that we
struggle to see the speck in our eye when we decry the beam in
another’s. Yet while it may not be the degree of hypocrisy
described in the Sermon on the Mount, still, it is hypocrisy.
I’d imagine
that a lot of you got a little defensive at that, as well. At
being accused not only of being prejudiced but hypocritical as well.
Here’s the thing: