Click here for the backstory on this post.

It
didn't take our new governor long to stumble with his comment that if
you haven't accepted Jesus Christ as Savior, "You're not my brother and
you're not my sister, and I want to be your brother." It took the
governor a long time to apologize, saying he didn't mean to offend. I've
heard from lots of United Methodists who are not so much offended by
the governor's remarks as concerned that he - perhaps unintentionally -
misrepresented the Christian faith.

While I'm glad that our dermatologist governor wants to be our brother in Christ, I want to assure him that, in Christ, we already are brothers. Christians don't only accept Christ, Wesleyan Christians want to obey Christ and one way we obey Christ is by regarding those who once were strangers as our kin.

A
number of United Methodists (many of whom say they are political
supporters of the governor) have expressed dismay at his comments. Aside
from noting the gap between our new governor's rather irenic Inaugural
Address and these comments in the setting of a church, I feel a need to
clarify that Christians do not view someone as "brother" or "sister" on
the basis of that person's alleged faith commitments or personal virtues
but rather on the basis of what we know of God in Jesus Christ.

Jesus has taught us to pray, "Our Father," which naturally requires us to regard all children of the Father as siblings.

Christians
don't' regard others as our brothers and sisters because they are
members of our church, they affirm our creed, or because they are nice
people. We relate to others as Jesus has related to us - making us
brothers and sisters, not by virtue of who we are but on the basis of
who he is.

As a Methodist preacher I know nothing of governing or dermatology. All I really know for sure is that God so loved the world (including
those who, in my sin, I have yet to recognize as my sisters and
brothers), that God gave us his Son who has a considerably more
expansive definition of family than those in my political party,
biological family, or church. I wouldn't have known that my fellow
citizens of Alabama are my brothers and sisters if Jesus Christ had not
known me.

Originally posted at A Peculiar Prophet.

William H. Willimon

William H. Willimon is a retired bishop in the United Methodist Church and professor of the practice of Christian ministry at Duke Divinity School, where he directs the doctor of ministry program. His most recent book is Don’t Look Back: Methodist Hope for What Comes Next (Abingdon).

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