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Repentance is life work PDF Print E-mail

Saturday, April 28, 2012 | TAMPA, Fla. (UMNS)

 

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 A delegate picks up and holds a stone in the center aisle  during an April 27 "Act of Repentance toward Healing Relationships  with Indigenous Peoples" at the 2012 United Methodist General  Conference in Tampa, Florida. A UMNS photo by Paul Jeffrey.

 

Delegates relived some painful chapters in the lives of Native peoples during an April 27 “Act of Repentance toward Healing Relationships with Indigenous Peoples.”

 

“There’s a lot of history that has been concealed; you have to go and dig it up,” said the Rev. George Tinker, a citizen of the Osage Nation and a professor at Iliff School of Theology in Denver.

 

Tinker began that excavation by recalling the 1864 massacre at Sand Creek, where John Chivington, a Methodist pastor, led 700 Colorado territory militia in the killing and mutilating of some 165 peaceful Cheyenne men, women and children.

 

Tinker also told a lesser-known Methodist chapter of that tragic event.

 

After refusing to meet with Cheyenne leaders, John Evans, a Methodist serving as governor of the Colorado territory, ordered the massacre.

 

In spite of that action, Evans is celebrated as the founder of the University of Denver, Northwestern University and Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary in Evanston, a city named for the Methodist leader.

 

 

Tinker also recalled that 30 years earlier, the Tennessee Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church South voted to recall missionaries who resisted the removal of Cherokee Indians from their native land in North Carolina. “The removal had one goal,” said Tinker, “to open fertile farmland for white Christians.”

 

“It’s way too early to talk about reconciliation,” said Tinker. “It’s like asking an abused spouse to live with (the) abuser without any change. … Apologies don’t do anything.”

 

Tinker said repentance is not something done once. It is a way of life. “We have to give up some of the things Americans hold dear (and) make sure all have genuinely equal access to the riches of the world.

“I respect The United Methodist Church for beginning this process,” said Tinker, “because it is fraught with danger, it takes a great deal of courage and it is difficult and complex.”

 

A closing litany confessed that “while some in the church protested its transgressions against indigenous people, the dominant pattern has been one whereby both its silence and its active support the church has participated in the violation, the exploitation and even the killing of indigenous people. Our congregations and ministries benefited from Native lands acquired unjustly when it was not a result of outright confiscation.”

 

As the service concluded, participants were encouraged to pick up symbolic stones from the “river of life” scattered in the worship area and take them back to their own communities “as a covenant to continue to listen and to walk the journey of healing with one another.”

 
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