The Unintended Complexities of Shenandoah Cuisine

The Red Hen is supposed to be a quaint little farm-to-table spot nearly 200 miles from D.C., but now it’s the center of controversy. Friday evening at about 8:00, White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders was asked to leave this Lexington, Virginia, restaurant because of President Trump’s policies. She offered to pay for her appetizers, and complied. She then tweeted about the experience.

Stephanie Wilkinson, who co-owns the restaurant, told The Washington Post that several gay employees at the Red Hen were bothered by Trump’s intentions to ban transgender people from military service. Apparently the employees asked Wilkinson to ask Sanders to leave.

In my opinion, we – as an American civilization – are entering into murky waters. We may have been lulled into thinking that this type of political climate is our new normal, but I contend that it is dangerous. Dangerous indeed.

Equality. Equal protection in the eyes of the law. American value and virtue.

Tolerance. Respect for differing opinions. American value and virtue.

Civility. Basic politeness when it comes to public behavior and speech. American value and virtue.

Check. Check. Check.

But personal destruction, trial by social media, and one-upsmanship until my political “enemy” is dehumanized.

Danger. Danger. Danger.

Let me be clear about something. I don’t like dehumanization on either side of the aisle. I don’t like Hollywood tweets suggesting that Barron Trump ought to be ripped away from his mother, and I don’t like far-right Twitter trolls suggesting that Mexican immigrants are thugs. Enough already. Grow up. Get a real job.

We’ve got to dial back some of this stuff, folks. To disagree with someone does not make the one who disagrees evil. Proverbs 18:17, for goodness’ sake.

The American ideal was never meant to be built on bullying. Martin Luther King, Jr. said it well: “Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.”

Do we really want to live in a nation where we have to think about where we eat dinner when we visit our nation’s capital? Hasn’t Virginia, in particular, seen enough of that over the years?

In order to test Him, a lawyer asked Jesus a question (Matthew 22:35-40): “Teacher, which is the great commandment in the Law?” And he said to him, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets.”

When you and I talk about the law of God (or the laws of our land, which we believe are ultimately rooted in the law of God) without demonstrating the love of God, we’re more like the people who killed Jesus than the people who follow Him. We who have received grace ought to show grace. It’s that simple. That’s the lesson for the “conservatives” among us.

Now here’s a lesson for the “liberals” among us: Please be liberal. Favor liberty over coercion. This is the Biblical and American vision: Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom (Second Corinthians 3:17).

And the lesson for all of us is this: BE KIND. That’s it! Be kind. “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”

Perhaps the last eleven words of one of our childhood tales were packed with a double entendre: “And the little red hen ate the bread all by herself.”

 

Pastor Charles

 

 

 

Posted in Blog Posts
7 comments on “The Unintended Complexities of Shenandoah Cuisine
  1. Tywatha Dyson says:

    Wow. Thank you for making the whole picture so much clearer. Thank you for your service and leadership

  2. Raymond Beverly says:

    Pastor Charles: Re. The Little Red Hen I agree with your comments. There is entirely too much petty bickering in high places (and in low places as well). We have surely moved into “House Divided territory.”I am most certainly not a Trumpist, but I too decry the treatment of Sarah H. Sanders.

    On a more cheerful note-it was a real pleasure to see Kevin Ezell last Sunday. I suspect that a lot of our people had no idea who he is, but those few of us who go waaay back remember him as a bright cheerful young boy growing up in our church and being led into the Ministry. He came from a wonderful family.

  3. Bob Kersey says:

    Good article. Indeed we are headed (or already there) into dangerous waters where there will be no winners only losers.

  4. Brenda McElroy says:

    Yes! Yes! Yes! Thanks Charles! You hit the nail on the head!

  5. Wow. Well said. Now we know the truth!

  6. Gloria says:

    Quite right! Why can’t we just be KIND!

  7. Katherine says:

    Your writing always strikes me as timely. Even your double entendre at the end is clever.
    So, how do we dial it back?

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