I was asked to share a few words and a prayer at a local “Back
the Blue Rally” in our city. In light of
the recent cop-killings in our country (77 since January, 20 in July alone),
police are on edge, and communities are trying to find ways to show some
support for law enforcement. Some good
things have happened already in Hot Springs: some prayer gatherings, a few
churches inviting police to come rub shoulders with them. This “Back the Blue Rally” was another
attempt to let the police know the community has their backs. That said: the following are my remarks and
prayer.
***************
Samuel Tucker McCallum was the City Marshal in Lake Village,
Arkansas. He had served in that office
just over a month when on October 11, 1928, in answering a disturbance call at
a local coffee shop, he was ambushed by a drunk who shot and killed him. He left behind a wife and six children. One of those children, the 14 year old, was
my dad. Samuel McCallum was my
grandfather. No wonder I was taught to
back the blue.
I guess I grew up in a bubble of sorts. My family left Little Rock when I was 8 and
we ended up moving in 1964 to a small town called Branson, Missouri. Not much crime in Branson in those days. Not much of a police force either. There were two or three cops as I recall. Their headquarters was under the city
library. The policemen were friendly
and pretty much knew everybody. I
remember the one named Hoss because he was a big fellow and reminded local
folks of Hoss Cartwright on Bonanza. The
police would smile and wave. And if you
got in trouble they treated you more like a friend than a felon.
My younger brother got caught with a few other teenagers for
pulling a teenage prank. They took some
lady’s “Skunk Crossing” yard ornament as a joke. She saw them, called the police, gave a
description of the car, and not long after, the cop found them and
pulled them over. He lined them up, got
their names, and when my brother identified himself, the policeman said, “Aren’t you Joan’s boy? She’s not gonna like this.” No arrest was made. The policeman followed the boys back to the
lady’s house where they returned her “Skunk Crossing” ornament and apologized
for stealing it. He then instructed them
to go home and tell their parents about this.
“I know most of your parents,” he
said, “so if you don’t tell them, I’ll
find out, and we’ll have a problem.”
That is the kind of policemen to which I was first exposed in my
life. It felt a lot like the cops I got
to know from Mayberry: kind, wise, put people first kind of officers. Add to that, television shows of the day like
Dragnet and Adam 12, The Mod Squad
and Ironside, and police were real
heroes to me and so many others.
My mother taught us to respect the police. “They
are an authority. They are your friends. You can trust them. Treat them with respect. Do what they tell you and you’ll be all
right.” I grew up in a bubble.
That bubble burst a little bit when I saw images on the
evening news of policemen turning fire hoses on peaceful black protesters in
the Civil Rights movement. I
didn’t understand that. It didn’t make
sense to me. That did not jibe with my
experience with police nor my image of how policemen were supposed to treat
people. That may have been the first
time it occurred to me that even among the police there could be some bad
apples in the bunch (which, of course, is true for plumbers and teachers and
politicians and preachers too).
I guess I was growing up.
And as I became acquainted with police officers I realized they
had the same problems as everybody else: trying to make a happy marriage,
worrying about their kids’ grades and friends, making ends meet and taking
off-duty security gigs to do it, just making their way in a world that can be
kind of harsh sometimes. So add a
stressful home to a stressful job and it doesn’t take much for stress to
become distress. And these days there is
the added pressure of all these cop killings going on and groups
chanting for cops to be killed—a pretty lousy use of free speech if you ask me
and all done under the protection of the police they despise. This climate can make even a routine traffic
stop a matter of life and death. I suspect
this cop-hate climate has most every policeman a little on edge these
days. I don’t know how they do this job,
and to do it as well as our city, county, and state law enforcement do it.
Most Americans feel that way—which is why we’re here this
morning. After the Dallas shootings I
remember thinking: “I learned something
about myself today: I take the police for granted. I need to express more appreciation and offer
more prayers.” My guess is that
speaks for a lot of us. We have a deep
appreciation and respect for our law enforcement officers, the sacrifices they
make for us, and the risks they take for us day by day by day. So we back the blue. It would never occur to me to do anything
else. But it’s easy for me to feel this
way because that’s the way I was raised to feel, and I haven’t personally
experienced any reason to feel otherwise.
I can’t speak for those who were raised to feel a different
way, or those with first-hand experience to believe that the police are an
enemy rather than a friend, that they are out to get you rather than help you,
that they assume you're guilty rather than innocent. That’s not my experience. I can’t speak for them. They will have to speak for themselves.
And even though it’s painful to be caught in this “black lives matter / blue lives matter” war of words in our
culture, maybe one of the hopeful signs in all of this is that people are speaking up. We’re getting these grievances on the
table. And more importantly, in many
places they are not just speaking up to
each other or about each other; they
are speaking with each other—which is
happening here in Hot Springs—building bridges of mutual respect and
trust and teamwork that adds more light than heat, more hope than hurt, and
makes things better and safer for everyone.
Don’t you long for the day when black and blue won’t be
viewed as a bruise on society but the very colors of justice that rolls down
like mighty waters and cleanses us all?
PRAYER
Father, it takes a lot of courage and a certain kind of edge
to seek a career in law enforcement. If
just anybody could do it, maybe more of us would. We can’t begin to imagine the stress they are
under in these days and the worry that chips away at the peace and joy of their
families. So very few of us serve in
occupations where a kiss goodbye could be the last and where a return home at
the end of a shift is met with a sigh of relief and a quiet prayer of thanks.
Though our police are like us civilians in many ways, their
lives are different from the rest of us in significant ways. We get to run from danger; they don’t. We get to avoid high-crime neighborhoods;
they don’t. We get to choose the kind of
people with whom we spend time; they don’t.
We can close our eyes to the seedier side of our communities; they
can’t.
Father, please give us a deeper respect for police and
appreciation for all they do for us.
Forgive us when we take them for granted or treat them with contempt and
anger—even when they write us a ticket we deserve. Our city, our state, our highways, our lakes would
be chaos if it were not for their presence.
Thank you for the order and stability they bring to our world.
We pray for them today.
We pray you would give every officer …
a kind heart, a keen eye, and a
firm hand,
a respect for and understanding of all
those they serve,
a distinct blindness to the color
of anyone’s skin,
a humble heart that longs for
justice,
and the wisdom to know the right
and do the right, especially when they have to decide all that in a split-second.
We pray you would bless them with …
the courage to take the risks
required of them,
a heart not hardened by all the
evil that they see
a salary they can live on
satisfaction in their work,
and a sense that they make a
difference in their communities, that their communities are better places
because they are in them.
And, Lord, if it’s not asking too much, we ask for …
a supportive constituency,
the opportunities to build bridges
toward those most suspicious of them,
cordiality with the public they serve,
collegiality with their co-workers,
and a sympathetic friend who can
help them process what they feel.
Would you please get them safely home at the end of each day
to a family that loves them and supports them and doesn’t live in fear when
they go off to work? Please bless their
families. Would you mend the frayed
edges of their nerves with peace, and surprise them with joy?
And finally, we ask you would bless each officer with …
a long, healthy, and peaceful life,
and a sense that they need you to
be their best as men and women and as officers of the law, so that in the words
of the prophet Micah, they may do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly with
you, God.
In Jesus’ name, amen.
Thank you for your insightful words of understanding, encouragement, unity and peace, and your heartfelt prayer for our law-enforcement officers and their families.
ReplyDeletePerfect
ReplyDeleteThis is another reason that I am so thankful that God allowed you to be my friend and brother in Christ John. You have a unique way to love different classes of people that are placed in front of you. Blessings on you, your family and your Church. Philippians 1:3
ReplyDeleteThis is another reason that I am so thankful that God allowed you to be my friend and brother in Christ John. You have a unique way to love different classes of people that are placed in front of you. Blessings on you, your family and your Church. Philippians 1:3
ReplyDeleteThanks for posting this, John! Would have loved to be there in person.
ReplyDelete-Steve
John, I love your blog. Even though I'm in Tyler getting two weeks of training for my new job, I got to hear you speak through your written words. Thanks for putting everything you have into your messages for us; both at the pulpit and in the community.
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