Ephesians 6:10-20
Equipped by God
James Sledge August
22, 2021
Scene from
Trajan’s Column, Rome, 113 CE
Where you are situated when you encounter
a scripture passage has a lot to do with what you hear. People in positions of
privilege and power may hear a vastly different message than those from the
underside do. Slaves in the pre-Civil War American south heard a very different
word from the Bible than did those who oppressed and exploited them.
Ever since the 4th century, when Constantine made Christianity the official religion of the Roman Empire, interpreters of the Bible and the Christian faith have largely been aligned with empire and power. As a result, the Church has often given its sanction to wars, crusades, and genocide, and much of American Christianity still suffers from an easy, uncritical alliance with patriotism and the privileged status quo.
I suspect that my growing up in a position of privilege, a citizen of a powerful nation that often describes itself as “Christian,” has greatly influenced how I’ve heard this morning’s scripture. It’s always made me a little nervous with its military imagery and talk of spiritual battle against the forces of evil. It’s just the sort of passage that has been used to justify violence against those deemed pagans, heretics, or practitioners of unapproved versions of the faith, and I’ve always avoided preaching from it until today.