Mark 7:24-37
Tribalism Meets God’s Love and Grace
James Sledge September
9, 2018
A
great deal has been written and discussed of late on how tribal we’ve become in
America. I read something the other day following the death of John McCain that
said although Senator McCain was widely admired, he had become something of a
political pariah in his home state of Arizona. All three Republican candidates
in the recent Arizona senate primary either distanced themselves from McCain or
outright disparaged him.
McCain’s
hostility to President Trump is certainly one reason for this, but tribalism is
involved as well. Tribalism draws very clear us and them boundaries and tends
to view “them” as the enemy. Someone like McCain, who would work with members
of the other party and even work against his own party when his principles
required it, looks very suspicious to those who view the world from a tribal
perspective.
We
humans seem to have an innate tendency towards tribalism. We may not be born
racists or homophobes or sexists or elitists or any other sort of ists, but we
seek comfort and security and purpose by coalescing into groups with others who
are like us in some way. It starts at a very young age. School children often
form cliques that can be hostile and cruel to those who don’t fit into their
group.
This
is not a recent phenomenon. In Jesus’ day there were numerous divisions and
groups. The Pharisees were a reform movement centered on synagogue and
following scripture, opposed to what they saw as the corrupt, priestly Judaism of
the Jerusalem Temple. The Essenes withdraw entirely into their own, separatist
community in reaction to perceived Temple corruption and a world too accommodating
to Greco-Roman culture. Then there was the Jewish – Gentile divide, the biggest
tribal division of Jesus’ day.
These
divisions are different than those of our day, and some may strike us as odd.
But they functioned much the same as the divisions we hardly notice. We gather
here for worship each week and frequently hear Paul’s words that say, There
is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer
male and female; for all are one in Christ Jesus. But we hardly
represent the diversity and inclusiveness these words suggest. We’re not a
representative sampling of America or even our immediate community. We’re
whiter, wealthier, more liberal, more likely to be cultural elitists, and so
on.