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Showing posts with label social justice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social justice. Show all posts

Against Social Justice: What Real Justice Is, and Why Social Justice Subverts It

Isaiah 30, in which God declares, ki Elohei mishpat Adonai כי אלהי משפט יהוה - For I, Adonai, am a God of justice.

What's the difference between social justice and justice? I heard the great Jewish luminary Dennis Prager describe it as such:

“A poor man and a rich man go to court. With social justice, the poor man wins. With justice, the one who’s right wins.”

Friends, I'd like to introduce you to my older brother, Jesse, today's guest author. In this post, Jesse argues that modern social justice is a subversion of actual justice. Where God commands us to do what's right regardless of class or economic status, social justice perverts this by demanding we favor the oppressed class regardless of individual merit. Given recent world events, this is a timely post.



These last weeks we’ve witnessed great upheaval across the nation. A great many have peacefully protested the injustice of a man killed in police custody. And yet, many of these protests have devolved into rioting, looting, arson, rebellion and insurrection, and even murder. At the time of this writing, 2 black police officers have been murdered by violent protestors.

Worse still, there has been a disturbing trend among believers justifying the rioting and looting in the name of social justice.

The moral confusion of our nation and the church has reached a precipice where, as Yeshua predicted, "even the elect are deceived." Even so, it is shocking to witness biblically observant people, grounded in the Word, defending wickedness in the name of social justice. From the secular world I expect this - but not from believers.

Satan has come to divide through the guise of racial division, a scheme running counter to God's sure plan. In Satan's plan, races and classes are divided and pitted against each other - a stench in God's nostrils. But in God's unstoppable plan, our inheritance is people from every tongue and tribe grafted together into the olive tree of Israel.

God Loves Justice

The Bible describes God as a God of justice. God speaks through the Torah, the Psalms, the prophets, giving a clear picture of his character:

For Adonai is a God of justice; happy are all who wait for him!

- Isaiah 30:8 
But Adonai reigns forever. He established His throne for judgment. He judges the world in righteousness and governs the peoples justly.  

- Psalm 9:8-9
But a perversion of true justice has been fomenting in the minds of many, secular and believer alike, produced by a partisan media that seeks to divide us, an education system that is long void of morality, and a society that has discarded godliness. This society -- our society, our generation -- has produced the lie of social justice.

So, what’s the difference between today's “social justice” and God's justice talked about in the Bible you might ask?

The prime difference is that social justice isn't just; while it bears the name "justice", it practices nothing of the sort.

Social justice is bound to the relativistic, nebulous, ever-changing moral code of the day. What was moral yesterday is immoral today; what is moral today will be immoral tomorrow. (Great evidence of this is how rioters recently have been tearing down statues of great Western figures, like Winston Churchill, Christopher Columbus, or even slavery abolitionists like Matthias Baldwin.)

God's justice, on the other hand, is absolute and unchanging. If something is moral, it is because God, the author of all justice and morality, has declared it so.

The two cannot abide together. 

Consider the contrast:

 Justice Social Justice
Blind, both in defining the crime and convicting the criminal, regardless of belief or background. Takes into consideration, race, gender, sexual deviation, economics, and historical oppression before judging. 
Produces reward or punishment what you deserve without special favor.Produces a reward or punishment based on who is favored by the crowd.
 Demands that all are equal under the law.Demands that all be equal economically and socially.
 Asks, "Who committed the crime?" and prosecutes the perpetrators.Asks, "Why was the crime committed?", excusing criminal behavior.

Justice should be about truth, not promoting the weak over the strong, the poor over the rich, female over male, one race over another.

A "justice" that does not hold the individual accountable because of group membership is devoid of any true justice

Consider the Torah's warnings against this:


Do not be unjust in judging — show neither partiality to the poor nor deference to the mighty, but with justice judge your neighbor.
-Leviticus 19:15
You must not show partiality in judgment—you must hear the small and the great alike. Fear no man, for the judgment is God’s. The case that is too hard for you, you shall bring to me and I will hear it.’

-Deuteronomy 1:17
Gods shows us in His word that Messiah himself is the destroyer of class-based separatism. As Paul writes,
For you are all sons of God through trusting in Messiah Yeshua. For all of you who were immersed in Messiah have clothed yourselves with Messiah. There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female—for you are all one in Messiah Yeshua. And if you belong to Messiah, then you are Abraham’s seed—heirs according to the promise. 

-Galatians 3:27-29

In God's morality and justice, personal responsibility is paramount. Each person is responsible for his or her own actions:

Suppose a father is violent, quick to shed blood, and acts wickedly to his brother. He has eaten with idols, lived in sexual sin, wronged the poor and needy, robbed others, broke his oaths, lifted up his eyes to idolatry, loaned with interest and taken unjust gain. Will he then live? He will not live! He has done all these detestable things. He will surely be put to death and his blood will be on him.

Now behold, suppose he fathers a son who sees all his father’s sins that he committed, and observing, does not do likewise. He does not eat with idols, doesn't live sexually immoral, doesn't wrong anyone, doesn't commit robbery, but he gives his bread to the hungry and covers the naked with a garment, doesn't mistreat the poor, doesn't loan with interest, practices My laws and walks in My statutes—he will not die for the iniquity of his father, he will surely live.

-Ezekiel 18:10-17
 
If anyone will not work, neither shall he eat.

-2 Thessalonians 3:10


It doesn’t say, "Unless you belong to this group or that group." But rather, the Bible places responsibility for your actions on yourself. Not your class, race, oppressors, or circumstances. Rather, “You will reap what you sow.” 

God's justice requires that each person give an account for his own works, not that of his class or race or ancestors: 

And I saw the dead, both great and small, standing in front of the throne. Books were opened; and another book was opened, the Book of Life; and the dead were judged from what was written in the books, according to what they had done. 

- Revelation 20:12

For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Messiah, so that each one may receive what is due for the things he did while in the body—whether good or bad. 

- 2 Corinthians 5:10 

Notice God does not say, "You will be judged according to your actions, unless you belong to some ingroup.” Ancient Israel didn't receive special pardon for their sins; in fact, most of the Tenakh is devoted to rebuking Israel for its sins and calling each individual to return in repentance. 

What about injustice today?

Turning our focus to today's upheaval, we must acknowledge that justice sometimes fails. The killing of a man in police custody, whether deliberate murder or inadvertent manslaughter, remains an injustice. To speak out against such injustice is the duty of believers everywhere.

The answer to injustice, however, is not more injustice. 

There are wicked and corrupt policemen and policewomen, yes. Undoubtedly, as with every human endeavor, people are the problem and some use their badge to carry out their own racism or prejudice, some abuse their power, some use their badge to hide their own abuse. 

The existence of fallen and sinful men in the police force - does that give anyone or any group the right to riot, loot, steal, kill and destroy? No!

We must speak against both the injustice carried out by this particular policeman and the rioting and looting.  We cannot abide by the world's voice which excuses the rioting and looting as acceptable-under-the-circumstances. 

We cannot allow “social justice” to interfere with true justice. As God dictates in the Torah, 

"A curse on anyone who interferes with justice for the foreigner, orphan or widow.' All the people are to say, 'Amen!' 

- Deuteronomy 27:19

Even Messiah's commandment to “turn the other cheek” was combatting Sadducean permitted-under-the-circumstances personal vengeance. In Messiah's Torah, personal vengeance is not permitted:

"You have heard that our fathers were told, 'Eye for eye and tooth for tooth.' But I tell you not to stand up against someone who does you wrong. On the contrary, if someone hits you on the right cheek, let him hit you on the left cheek too! 

- Matthew 5:38-39 

This was combatting an extra-Biblical interpretation of the Torah's command. In the Book of Decrees (Sefer Gezerata), the Boethusians (Sadducees) had interpreted the Torah's “An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth" in this way: "If a man had knocked out the tooth of his fellow, let him knock out his tooth. If he had blinded the eye of his fellow, let him blind his eye. Let them be equal to each other. “And they shall spread the sheet out before the elders of the city”, the words as they are written. “And she should spit before him”, that she should spit in his face.”

The Torah tells us to not take revenge, but instead to go to the courts and obtain a just ruling that would place a value on the injury or injustice. If the perpetrator is found guilty, restitution is demanded by the court, not by the individual.

Repay no one evil for evil but try to do what everyone regards as good. If possible, and to the extent that it depends on you, live in peace with all people. Never seek revenge, my friends; instead, leave that to Elohim’s anger; for in the Tanakh it is written, "Adonai says, 'Vengeance is my responsibility; I will repay.' " On the contrary, "If your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him something to drink. For by doing this, you will heap fiery coals [of shame] on his head." Do not be conquered by evil, but conquer evil with good.

- Romans 12:17-21

Ultimately, God is the final arbiter of justice, and vengeance for injustices cannot be meted out by either vigilante individuals or a mob:

''Vengeance is Mine; I will repay,' says Adonai"

- Deuteronomy 32:35, Romans 12:19

An upright nation and Godly people must come against the injustice of the killing of George Floyd and the injustice of rioting and looting. We simply cannot condone either. These is no good reason to justify or downplay either of them. Only partisan politics instruct us otherwise.

God's people should understand that the Lord himself has final, cosmic justice:

When He comes, He will convict the world about sin, righteousness, and judgment.

- John 16:8
His justice is perfect. Human justice is not.

"For I will proclaim the name of Adonai. Come, declare the greatness of our God! The Rock! His work is perfect, for all his ways are just. A trustworthy God who does no wrong, he is righteous and straight. "He is not corrupt; the defect is in his children, a crooked and perverted generation. You foolish people, so lacking in wisdom, is this how you repay Adonai? He is your father, who made you his! It was he who formed and prepared you!

This is truly a wicked generation that has discarded biblical justice and Judeo-Christian values for social justice, ultimately looking for an excuse to do their own desires. 

But God's calling for us is higher:

Justice, justice you must pursue, so that you may live and possess the land that Adonai your God is giving you. 

- Deuteronomy 16:20

The Action of Justice

How does one pursue justice? If our response should include taking a stand against injustice, how do we do that?

From the beginning of Scripture onward, justice is an action:

For I have made myself known to him (Abraham) so that he will command his sons and his household after him to keep the way of Adonai by doing righteousness and justice, so that Adonai may bring upon Abraham what He has spoken about him.” Then Adonai said, “The outcry against Sodom and Gomorrah is great indeed, and their sin is very grievous indeed. I want to go down now, and see if they deserve destruction, as its outcry has come to Me. And if not, I will know.” Then the men turned from there and went toward Sodom, but Abraham was still standing before Adonai. Abraham drew near and said, “Will you really sweep away the righteous with the wicked? Suppose there are fifty righteous within the city. Will you really sweep away and not spare the place for the sake of fifty righteous who are in it? Far be it from You to do such a thing—to cause the righteous to die with the wicked, so that the righteous and the wicked share the same fate! Far be it from You! Shall the Judge of the whole world not exercise justice?” 

- Genesis 18:19-25
In the story of Abraham negotiating with God about whether to judge or spare a wicked city, Abraham frames his argument this way: "Surely the righteous and the wicked won't share the same fate; surely the Judge will do justice?" 

The word being used here in Hebrew is  מִשְׁפָּט mishpat. Strong's Concordance defines this word as,

A verdict (favorable or unfavorable) pronounced judicially, especially a sentence or formal decree (human or (particularly) divine law, individual or collectively), including the act, the place, the suit, the crime, and the penalty; abstractly justice, including a particular right, or privilege (statutory or customary), or even a style: - + adversary, ceremony, charge, X crime, custom, desert, determination, discretion, disposing, due, fashion, form, to be judged, judgment, just (-ice, -ly), (manner of) law (-ful), manner, measure, (due) order, ordinance, right, sentence.
If this is what justice from God entails, our generation must again renew our devotion to it. God's Word gives us concrete actions for us to take:
  • Our pursuit of justice must be blind and impartial. Not following popular whims of the day. Not taking sides based on race, class, or status of any kind.

    Do not to spread a false report. Do not join hands with the wicked by becoming a malicious witness. “Do not follow a crowd to do evil. Nor are you to testify in a case, to follow a crowd and pervert justice. On the other hand, nor should you take sides with a poor man in his case. 

    - Exodus 23:1-3 
     
  • Our pursuit of justice must place a value on the damage or loss.

    “If people quarrel, and one strikes the other with a stone or with his fist, and the other does not die but lies in bed, if he rises again and walks around on his staff, then the one that struck him he will be cleared. But he must pay for the loss of his time and help him to be thoroughly healed. 

    - Exodus 21:18-19
     
  • Our pursuit of justice must include capital punishment for capital offenses; life for life.

    Whoever strikes a man so that he dies must surely be put to death. But if he did not hunt him down, yet God caused it to happen, then I will appoint for you a place where he may run. If a man presumes to kill his neighbor with craftiness, you are to take him from My altar and put him to death. 

    Exodus 21:12-14

  • Our pursuit of justice must seek a 120% repayment on damages and wrongdoing. 

    That person is to confess the sin he has committed, make full restitution for his wrong, add one fifth to it and give it to the one he wronged. 

    - Numbers 5:7
     
  • Our pursuit of justice must seek a 200% repayment on theft.

    If the item is found in his hand alive—whether ox, donkey or sheep—he is to pay double. 

    - Exodus 22:3
     
  • Our pursuit of justice must seek individual responsibility.

    Suppose a man is just and does what is lawful and right: He has not eaten at mountain shrines or lifted up his eyes to the idols of the house of Israel. He has not defiled his neighbor’s wife or come near to a woman during niddah. He does not wrong anyone, returns his pledge for a debt, does not commit robbery, gives his bread to the hungry and covers the naked with a garment. He does not loan with interest or take unjust gain. He keeps his hand from iniquity, executes true justice between people, walks in My laws and keeps My statutes, behaving honestly. Such a person is just—he will surely live.” It is a declaration of Adonai. 

    - Ezekiel 18:5-9

  • Our pursuit of justice must not punish generations for the crimes of individuals.

    Fathers are not to be put to death for children, and children are not to be put to death for fathers—each one is to be put to death for his own sin. 

    - Deuteronomy 24:16

  • Our pursuit of justice must seek to punish the guilty only, not ascribing guilt to race, class, or other status.

    Far be it from You to do such a thing—to cause the righteous to die with the wicked, so that the righteous and the wicked share the same fate! Far be it from You! Shall the Judge of the whole world not exercise justice?” 

    - Genesis 18:25

  • Our pursuit of justice must seek mercy and judgment in proper order.

    So speak and act as those who will be judged according to a Torah that gives freedom. For judgment is merciless to the one who does not show mercy. Mercy triumphs over judgment. 

    - James 2:12-13

    Who is a God like You pardoning iniquity, overlooking transgression, for the remnant of His heritage? He will not retain His anger forever, because He delights in mercy. He will again have compassion on us. He will subdue our iniquities, and You will cast all our sins into the depths of the sea. You will extend truth to Jacob, mercy to Abraham, that You swore to our ancestors from the days of old. Because judgment and punishment is meant for us to turn from our sins. 

    - Micah 7:18-20

  • Our pursuit of justice must seek restoration to God.

    But you, O man—judging those practicing such things yet doing the same—do you suppose that you will escape the judgment of God? Or do you belittle the riches of His kindness and tolerance and patience—not realizing that God’s kindness leads you to repentance?

    - Romans 2:3-4

Social Justice, a religion opposed to God 

What is keeping us from pursuing Biblical justice? One such barrier is the faux justice of social justice, which metes out judgement not based on individual wrongdoing, but on membership of class, race, or oppressed status.

Unlike God's justice, social justice welcomes sinful behavior; there are no introspective calls to repent among its faithful. Instead, the damning finger is pointed at "other" -- other races, other classes, other generations. 

Contrary to Scripture, social justice shows favoritism based on class or race. 

Guilt is conferred to non-guilty parties, "all white people are racist."

It excuses sin like looting and arson in the name of race and class warfare.

It exists at the behest of a mob.

It guilts the non-guilty for abuses in past generations.

It demonizes entire professions, races, classes for perceived injustices, failing to call for individual responsibility, and instead 

It is vengeful and vicious: enforced through deliberately damaging the personal lives, professions, and property of those who oppose it. 

It is censorious: deplatforming and cancelling those who hold the "wrong" opinions.

It condemns righteous men of past generations for violations of today's ever-changing modern morality, failing to judge men by their generation. 

Social justice is not God's justice.

In the gospels, a rich man had to peel away at the things that were holding him back from entering God's Kingdom. Might we be held back too? What’s holding us back from His kingdom?

  • Have we fallen in love with this age? Its mores, its justice, its mobs, its emotionalism?
  • Have we been fooled and deceived by social justice, thinking ourselves righteous while practicing unrighteousness?
  • Have we been taken in with politics, hating a brother along party lines? 
  • Have we fallen prey to racism, tricked into an us-vs-them mentality that divides God's global people and runs contrary to God's ultimate plan of unity?
  • Have we been blinded by patriotism, placing love of our nation above love for God's Kingdom?

Consider these things, friends, and pursue justice.

Murder and Looting Run Contrary to Biblical Values (And Other Truisms)

After police killed suspect George Floyd by kneeling on his neck during his arrest, riots broke out across the US and quickly turned violent, with looters smashing windows and stealing from businesses.

This weekend we celebrated Shavuot, the 3,500+ year anniversary of the giving of the 10 Commandments, which instruct us to avoid murder, theft, coveting.

But this weekend saw murder, theft, looting, #riots2020.

On this same Shavuot holiday 2000 years ago, a momentous, civilization-changing event took place: God poured out his spirit on human beings in a tangible miracle manifested at the Temple in Jerusalem in front of thousands of witnesses. The evidence of God's spirit in a person include gentleness, patience, self-control, goodness.

But this weekend saw little fruit of God's spirit, but instead violence, unbridled rage, wickedness, hatred.

The commandments are still needed, still relevant as ever.  

God's spirit is still needed, still as relevant as ever.

And where there is a void of these, there is civilizational chaos.

It's strange to me to have to write a post that says murder and looting are wicked. Isn't it already obvious? Yet I see some Jews and Christians justifying violent riots. "Systemic racism" is the justification. "We must dismantle white patriarchy." 

No. 

You don't get to go outside of the law just because you perceive injustice within it. That's not how justice works. As God says in the Bible, pre-empting our cries against injustice, "I will avenge." If God is just, God will ultimately have the final say over injustice. Not you.

There are racist cops, there are bad apples, there are injustices within the judicial system. Their existence does not justify looting, assault, theft, coveting, hatred of races and classes other than your own. That's still wickedness, and it undermines the initial injustice of the death of George Floyd.

Dear reader, start with yourself. Do you have God's commandments in your life? Do you have God's spirit in your life? Is there good fruit proving that?

Judeo-Christian Values and the Modern Social Justice Movement

Summary: We celebrate Martin Luther King’s birthday here in the US. Examining the role of Judeo-Christian values in the early anti-slavery and nascent Civil Rights movement. Where modern social justice errs. Why Yeshua’s disciples ought not be social justice warriors.

16142932_10154441194068003_9118563958406056607_nReverend Martin Luther King Jr. (left), Rabbi Maurice Eisendrath (center with Torah scroll), Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel (right).

Standing alongside the Christian pastor Martin Luther King Jr. were the Jewish rabbis Abraham Joshua Heschel and Maurice Eisendrath.

What inspired Jews holding Torah scrolls to walk alongside Christians carrying crosses?

It's the values of the Bible.

The Torah – the first 5 books of the Jewish and Christian Bible –instructs us to treat oppressed people (poor, foreigners, widows, orphans, etc.) with kindness and fairness.

You are not to pervert justice to your poor. Stay far away from a false charge. Do not kill the innocent and the righteous, for I will not justify the guilty... Do not oppress the foreigner, for you know the heart of a foreigner, since you were foreigners in the land of Egypt.

-Exodus 23

If a foreigner lives with you in your land, you should do him no wrong. The foreigner living among you shall be to you as one native-born. You must love your neighbor as yourself—for you yourselves once lived as foreigners in the land of Egypt.

-Leviticus 19

You must not mistreat any widow or orphan. If you mistreat them in any way, and they cry out to Me, I will surely hear their cry...and your wives will become widows and your children will become orphans.

-Exodus 21

These Divine statements motivated Jews and Christians to undermine the legal abuses of minorities in the 1950s when so many others were either lethargic bystanders or approving cheerleaders.

Judeo-Christian values sparked these men of faith to work a marvelous and lasting justice that endures to this day.

Consider this: These men of faith actually saved peoples’ lives and reduced human suffering by the millions through their good works.

Let Christians learn the lesson: the all-grace, do-nothing-gospel preachers who tell you good works somehow cancels God’s grace are not telling the truth. All grace and no works reduces us to worthless, ineffective people of faith.

How Biblical values overthrew slavery

Atheists often call out the Bible’s apparent approval of slavery and other ugly practices of the old world. They point to these things and justify unbelief in God.

But these people miss the reality that it was the values of the Bible that ultimately undermined slavery in the West and sparked the massive social change necessary to overturn the millennia-old practice.

imageIn the UK, the 18th century English lawmaker and Evangelical Christian William Wilberforce was convicted of the evil nature of slavery through his reading of the Bible. He wrote in his diary,

“God Almighty has set before me two great objects, the suppression of the Slave Trade and Reformation of Morals.”

He contended for the abolition of slavery for 20 years of his career. It bore fruit in 1807 when the Slave Trade Act passed, effectively abolishing slavery in the United Kingdom.

imageIn the US, of the 4 groups that settled the American continent, it was the most religious group, the Quakers, that formally and legally opposed slavery as early at 1688.

The great Evangelical preacher Charles Spurgeon saw his sermons censored by slaveholders due to his preaching against slavery, calling it "the foulest blot" that "may have to be washed out in blood." (How sadly prescient a prophecy!)

And leading up to the American Civil War, the US Abolitionist movement found its majority among devout religious Christians. The influential American Anti-Slavery Society, with its campaigns of persuasion throughout state and federal governments, was headed up not by the secular Enlightenment, but by Protestant Christian clergy.

A 19th century historian recorded that American opposition to the Abolitionists was strong, as citizens protested an intrusion into the State by members of the Church. Separation of Church and State was once used in favor of slavery in the United States.

The early civil rights movement was birthed not by secular social justice warriors, but by Christian and Jewish religious leaders who took seriously the thrust of the Bible’s imperative to care for oppressed people.

What about slavery in the Bible?

In short, the Bible neither commands nor forbids slavery.

But this is misleading: the Bible does indeed forbid the kind of slavery that has existed in modern history: enslavement of a race due to the color of their skin, mistreatment and abuse, treating foreigners as less than human. This is explicitly forbidden in multiple Biblical commandments.

Much of the “slavery” in the Bible isn’t really slavery at all as we think of it, but rather a system of bond-servitude: In ancient times, if a person couldn’t pay off a debt, he could temporarily work for and live with the owner of the debt until the debt was repaid.

While many religious argued in favor of continued slavery, noting the Bible doesn’t forbid it, it was the bold faithful people who saw the Biblical injustice of the slave trade. The knew the modern slave trade was no parallel of the ancient Biblical bond service, and they recognized the abuse of human life ran counter to the Law of God. 

The failures of the modern social justice movement

It’s now been 49 years since Rev. King’s assassination. Who now carries the torch of standing for the oppressed?

Today’s inheritor of all the good works of the faithful appears to be the social justice warriors and the new civil rights movement. These champion not only the rights of racial minorities, but also of religious minorities and sexual orientation minorities.

(It doesn’t champion all minorities, nor all helpless people, nor the innocent, as we’ll discuss shortly.)

Some Christians and Jews, particularly those swayed by the political left, identify with these social justice causes, believing them to be in the genuine preserved tradition of the great religious pioneers of civil rights.

Yet the modern social justice movement has erred, and like a lazy child receiving the inheritance of a hard-working father, it has become the very thing its civil rights parent once opposed.

Some examples are in order.

Martin Luther King famously proclaimed he dreamt of a time when “people will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.”

The modern social justice movement opposes this in tangible ways. It’s gone so far to the other side as to promote a kind of new kind of racism, practicing unfairness to rectify past unfairness; a reverse oppression.

“The modern social justice movement has erred, and like a lazy child receiving the inheritance of a hard-working father, it has become the very thing its civil rights parent once opposed.”

For example, many American universities now support racial quotas for students. Students who are minorities are now more likely to receive full-ride scholarships because of the color of their skin.

This is color-compensation, not color-blindness.

It produces students who rightly question whether they’ve been accepted on scholarly merit or because of the color of their skin. And peers who do the same.

This is not MLK’s dream, but rather the dream of the spoiled child: modern social justice.

This form of reverse oppression is forbidden by the very same Judeo-Christian values that informed Martin Luther King and Abraham Joshua Heschel:

You are to do no injustice in judgment. You are not to be partial toward the poor nor show favoritism toward the great, but you are to judge your neighbor with fairness.

-Leviticus 19

The same Torah (in fact, the same chapter of the same book) which warns us against mistreating oppressed people also warns us against doing the opposite: showing partiality to someone because of his oppressed status. In matters of justice, God commands us, “do not be partial toward the poor…but judge your neighbor with fairness.”

Another example is one from my own profession. As a technologist and leader of technical conferences, I can attest first hand: there is now a kind of reverse oppression where people will boycott conventions that don’t have an arbitrary number of minorities as speakers.

One prominent and recent example is Jon Skeet, a well-known and respected software developer and renowned tech speaker, who announced just last month he will stop speaking at technical conferences if his arbitrary quota of speakers isn’t filled with enough women. Reverend King dreamed of not being judged by the color of his skin, but modern social justice demands we judge according to the shape of your genitals. This is reverse oppression and faux-morality.

As a technologist who helps run technical conferences, I can attest that we certainly don’t oppress minorities. I personally want more women and more minorities in tech; having a monoculture hurts us. Historically, we even encourage diversity by reaching out to minority and women-in-tech groups, and by making our conventions and conferences be agnostic to color, orientation, religion, and gender.

And yet, a kind of reverse oppression is going on through forced minority quotas – and whoever doesn’t get on board is the next boycott target.

The Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement in the US is another such example of the failure of the modern social justice movement. BLM aimed to stand up against police brutality targeting blacks – a noble and Bible-values-approved cause – but has now gone into the other ditch.

BLM activists regularly engage in reverse racism, demeaning whites as oppressors and even vowing vengeance. In one incident last year, a BLM zealot opened fire with a sniper rifle on white policemen, murdering 5 people. Even the leftist New York Times admitted the sniper was “clearly encouraged by Black Lives Matter rhetoric.”

Another example: In a Minnesota town only a few miles away from me, a black man sitting in his car was shot by police officer who mistakenly believed he was reaching for a gun. The tragedy was broadcast live on Facebook. Black Lives Matter staged protests, blocking freeways, rioting, pressuring businesses and politicians to bow to their political agenda.

Few people had the courage to point out the offending officer was not white, but was a minority himself. But it didn’t matter; to BLM, this was clearly a matter of white oppression.

Black Lives Matter has become less about fairness and justice and more about reverse racism. This, again, is not the color-blind justice advocated by Reverend King and his Judeo-Christian values.

Inequality ≠ injustice

The modern social justice movement errs again when it perceives any form of inequality as an injustice.

Take, for instance, this week’s popular New York Times article, World’s 8 Richest People Have as Much Wealth as the Bottom Half. Social justice warriors cry “inequality!” and demand forced redistribution.

Where is the injustice in this inequality, you ask?

Well, there is none. Inequality does not equal injustice.

Just because something is not equal does not mean an injustice has occurred.

I’m 6’6” – unequally tall to most of the world! – yet no injustice has occurred. I work 3 jobs to make more money than most people; still no injustice has occurred. I stay in shape and try to be healthy unlike many in the West; still no injustice has occurred. Or on the other side of things, the best guitar players in the world have 1,000x the skills I have; still no injustice has occurred. (I wonder, do the top 8 guitar players have more talent than the bottom 50% in the world? Oh, the inequality!)

To social justice warriors, inequality of any kind is a great evil to be eradicated through the point of a gun by a powerful central government.

In truth, this is little more than a violation of the 10th commandment:

Do not covet your neighbor’s house, his wife, his servants male or female, his animals, his ox, his donkey, or anything that belongs to him.

-Exodus 20:17

Income inequality is a politically correct term for coveting what our neighbor has. God calls us to something better.

In the case of the world’s wealthiest 8 men, they worked hard and took risks that no one else took. In a free market, risks and investment can produce wealth.

Bill Gates and Steve Jobs and other tech luminaries made a wild bet – that they could put in the hard work to make computers popular and on every desk – and they dumped all their time and money (and the borrowed money from relatives and friends!) to make this dream a reality.

And it worked.

Bill Gates put a computer in every home. Steve Jobs put a computer that can make phone calls in every pocket. In a free market, they were rewarded greatly for their work and investment.

But none of that matters to the social justice movement.

It’s not fair that Bill Gates has a lot of money. Social justice warriors demand wealth be shared with the rest of us; even Joe Blow, whose primary contributions to the world include viewership for Judge Judy and exhaled ganja smoke.

Social justice warriors and political leftists, particularly socialists in the West, rage against these inequalities. But inequality is not injustice.

Another example of inequality that isn’t injustice is the ratio of men to women in prison. Men far outweigh women in prison. Did some injustice occur? No, it’s that men currently commit more crimes than women do.

Some people are unequal because of the content of their characters, for better or worse. And that aligns with Rev. King’s vision and his Judeo-Christian values.

Social justice’s lack of standards

Modern social justice rightly champions one area – mercy – but fails in its corollary: standards.

God is a God of both mercy and standards.

Mercy: God is quick to forgive, slow to anger, overlooks our differences and squabbles, doesn’t hold a grudge, and judges people fairly by their character and their actions.

For the word of the LORD is upright
All His work is done in faithfulness.
He loves righteousness and justice.
The earth is full of the love of the LORD.

-Psalm 33

The Lord is righteous—He loves justice.
The upright will see His face.

-Psalm 11

Then all the trees of the forest will sing for joy—
Before the LORD, for He is coming!
He is coming to judge the earth
He will judge the world with righteousness
and the peoples in fairness

-Psalm 95

One could post nearly half the Bible talking about God’s mercy and fairness.

But if this was all there was to God, He would not be God at all. God is a God of mercy and standards.

A parent who loves his children but never corrects, never punishes, and holds no standards for his kids is not loving at all. Indeed, such a parent is inadvertently harming his kids, who will grow up thinking they are entitled to do anything as they please without regards to others.

God is better than that. 

God has mercy and standards.

God corrects.

God punishes.

And this is where modern social justice warriors – now fully divorced from their roots in faith – have missed the mark.

God’s standards tell us we’re not to sin, for example. To the Reverend Martin Luther King, this was common sense and clear for a man of faith.  But for social justice warriors today, this is heresy.

To say that an act is sin is purely heretical to the social justice movement. To the secular social justice warrior, sin doesn’t exist. There is almost no surer way to enrage (“trigger”) a modern social justice warrior than to claim one of their defended actions is sin.

For example, Reverend King’s Judeo-Christian values defines the sexual practices of adultery, promiscuity, and homosexuality as sin. God has something higher and better and life-producing for mankind. That doesn’t mean we should mistreat gays and adulterers, but rather, it means we are to amplify God’s better plan and stand against engaging in these practices ourselves in our communities. 

Stating the Biblical truth that God’s ideal for mankind is faithful male-female marriage is total heresy to the social justice movement. And when you spout heresy to the social justice movement, be prepared for oppression.

imageOne recent example of this, again from my profession, is the case of Mozilla founder and JavaScript creator Brendan Eich. The whole web is indebted to Mr. Eich; without his technology, the internet wouldn’t exist as it is today. His technology enables this very blog to exist. His company, Mozilla, has been a force for good on the web.

Despite his unmatched gift to technology and the world, Brendan Eich lost his job through the abuse of the social justice movement. He was pressured to resign after LGBT activists discovered his personal $1,000 donation to a pro-traditional marriage cause in his home state.

This, again, is reverse oppression and demonstrates the very dangerous errors of the modern social justice movement. It damages free speech, it damages openness and diversity of thought. People lose jobs over the abuses of the social justice movement.

Only today, I found that social justice warriors issued death threats to the great opera star Andrea Bocelli. His crime? Planning to perform at the inauguration of the next President of the United States. (This, despite President Trump’s status as the first US President in favor of gay rights at his inauguration.)

Death threats were also sent to rhythm and blues star Jennifer Holliday for the same reason.

Is this really social justice? Surely not the kind Reverend King and his Judeo-Christian values espoused. This is oppression and it’s produced by the social justice movement.

Even the original impetus of the American Civil Rights movement – justice for the innocent and the helpless – is now frowned upon by the modern social justice movement. Millions of people who are both innocent and helpless are being oppressed right now in the US, legally, and social justice warriors are smiling on in approval.

That form of legal oppression of helpless innocents is innocuously called abortion. And it’s not merely tolerated, it’s applauded and vociferously defended in the name of the female rights.

But who – man or woman – has a right to kill innocent people? And where does that “right” come from? The founders of the United States saw rights as being granted by the Creator – so where does the “right” to kill innocent and helpless human beings come from? Surely not from the same Creator!

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The great holocaust of innocent unborn children in the West is the most damning aspect of the modern social justice movement. Had it remained silent it would merely be passively evil. But that it cheers on and defends the gruesome reality of murdering unborn innocents makes it an active and useful tool in the hands of wicked people.

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Instead of standing up against the oppression of the innocent and unborn, social justice warriors spend time arguing on the internet so that men with penises who fancy themselves to be women can use the female bathroom. In doing so, Reverend King’s grand vision is discarded in the name of feelings-based morality that only pretends to care for the oppressed.

Disciples of Messiah ought not be social justice warriors

The modern social justice movement, and indeed much of the new civil rights movement, has divorced itself from its faith-based roots. For these reasons, disciples of Jesus ought to not identify with them.

Instead, we must practice justice and mercy while retaining moral standards for our own communities. And we’ll do so in the name of God and faithfulness.

We ought to stand up for the oppressed without practicing reverse oppression. And we’ll do so in the name of God and faithfulness.

We can do good works and righteousness without marrying them to leftist politics. And we’ll do so in the name of God and faithfulness.

Rev. King’s vision of judging people by character-over-color is fulfilled not by the modern social justice movement and its abuses, its reverse oppression, and its grave failings.

Rather, we fulfill the faithful Reverend King’s dream by returning to what God told us to do some 3500 years ago, defined in the same book and spoken by the same God that sparked and stoked King’s holy fire.

You are the light of the world. A city set on a hill cannot be hidden.  Neither do people light a lamp and put it under a basket. Instead, they put it on a lampstand so it gives light to all in the house.

In the same way, let your light shine before men so they may see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven.

-Messiah, Matthew 5

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