Lying on a blanket in the pasture and listening to my older sister read is one of my favorite memories. Until she didn’t finish the story and I had to read the rest of the Zane Grey western myself. I was either in the third or fourth grade but I loved the story. And because my mom and dad were often reading westerns including their favorites, the Zane Grey ones, I also read them. Grey began his writing career by writing about his ancestors. They were fictionalized but still there was historical truth in them. And so, I wondered about the Native Americans who became Christians and died for their faith in a burning church. Was it true?
I couldn’t remember which book it was in but when I went searching, I found that in the book The Spirit of the Border Grey had written about the death of some native Americans who died for their faith. With further research I found that Grey had seemingly melded two historical events together. In his story the Moravian community was attacked by both unfriendly natives and decadent mountain men. Each time a Moravian missionary got up to speak in their church, he was shot. And then the Christian natives were burned alive—at least that is my memory.
But the truth is there were two incidents, one during the French and Indian wars and the other during the Revolutionary War. In an article on Wikipedia, the first event is explained:
“The Gnadenhütten massacre was an attack during the French and Indian war in which Native allies of the French killed 11 Moravian missionaries at Gnadenhütten, Pennsylvania (modern day Lehighton, Pennsylvania) on 24 November 1755. They destroyed the mission village and took one woman prisoner, and only four of the sixteen residents escaped. Following the attack, Benjaman Franklin was commissioned by the Pennsylvania Provincial Counsil to construct forts in the area, and in other parts of the Province of Pennsylvania, to defend against Native American attacks, which were becoming increasingly frequent due to the French and Indian War."
Clearly this was an attack on missionaries, any native Americans there escaped. But Grey seems to have centered his story on the second incident, the one that occurred during the Revolutionary war, 1782. The natives had been converted by the ministry of Moravian missionaries. The Moravians were pacifist and so the Christian natives were also. They lived in community but owned property. The missionaries’ history went back to Bohemia and John Hus in the 14 century. Hus was a reformer much like Martin Luther, but about 80 years earlier. And unlike Luther Hus was burned at the stake. The first followers of Hus were willing to take up arms and fought in the thirty years war. However eventually they were overcome, persecuted and exiled.
Some of Hus’ followers took shelter at the estate of Count Zinzendorf, a Pietistic Christian, coming under his protection in the 1700's. There they became a community concerned with missionary ministry which included their calling to the native tribes in America, first the Mohawks and later to the Lenape. In their ministry they were pacifists.
Because they were pacifists they were suspected of treason and arrested by a Pennsylvania militia. Wikipedia states this:
“The Moravians asked their captors to be allowed to pray and worship on the night before their execution; they spent the night before their deaths praying as well as singing Christian hymns and Psalms. Eighteen of the U.S. militiamen were opposed to the killing of the pacifist Moravians, although they were outvoted by those who wanted to murder them; those who opposed the murder did not participate in the massacre and separated themselves from the killers. Before murdering them, the American soldiers "dragged the women and girls out into the snow and systematically raped them." As they were being killed, the Moravians sang "hymns and spoke words of encouragement and consolation one to another until they were all slain". Believing in nonresistance, they pleaded for their lives to be spared but did not fight back against their persecutors."
Those who committed the crime were never charged but later history memorialized the martyrs and according to the Wikipedia article Theodore Roosevelt called the massacre "a stain on frontier character that the lapse of time cannot wash away." There is much more to this account at Wikipedia.
As I have searched out the stories of faithful Christians, I am amazed at how these differing groups turned to non-violence in their faithful suffering. The Huguenots I wrote about earlier were not pacifist but in their deepest troubles found that carrying swords to worship was untenable and rather, instead carried only their Bibles. For the Christian natives the acts of hymn singing, prayer, and words of encouragement to brothers and sisters, was their defense, their only defense, against such evil. Their resistance to tyrants was truth—because the Lord of life is truth—it is our real means of resistance. Speaking truth about evil is resistance.
I am trying to capture the meaning and fortitude for Christians despised in the midst of tyranny. It's not happening here you say. In the Hispanic churches, both Catholic and Protestant, it is. Among Iranians and Afghan Christian refugees sent back to their countries it is death. And among those who are speaking the truth about what is happening, that is, the loss of freedom for the immigrant and refugee, the brutality given to those arrested, there are already insults, isolation and death threats.
But there is a name above every name:
7 comments:
No one has been dragged out of a church and raped by ICE, let alone shot. You are crazy to even compare the story you shared with what is happening in our country! People who were here illegally are being deported back to their home countries. People whose visas or points of entry were questionable (yes, some of those Afghani refugees should not have been here, and were not properly vetted in the mess that Biden made of that situation) are being vetted and sent back to their home countries. Guess what, when Americans overstay their visas in other law-abiding countries, or enter illegally--we get deported too! It's how countries exist, they have these things called borders, and laws regarding how they are crossed and why. You can certainly complain about the memes and videos being posted to make fun of people being deported, without comparing what is happening to militias RAPING and MURDERING PEOPLE. The two events are hugely, incredibly, insanely different.
Meanwhile you don't appear to give a crap about what is happening in Europe where unfettered Muslim immigration is making sexual crimes against women normalized, and where Britain's government, among other European governments, is so afraid of their now huge Muslim population that they have told Jews they need to be more careful in public and banned Jewish fans from attending a sports match that was being held in a heavily Muslim area. Talk about raping, the whole grooming gang scandal in Britain, as horrific or even more so than the story about the Moravians. And it happened recently, in the past 10 years, in Britain! But radio silence. Because Trump is the new Hitler, facts be damned. And all immigrants are great, whether they rape your daughters and implement sharia law and bully your government or not.
I think in the story Viola told, the role of the immigrants was literally being played by the soldiers. Nothing was more dangerous to the European dispossession and conquest of the New World than if the people that came here thousands of years earlier converted to Christianity. And today, nothing is more threatening to the legitimacy of our continuing (and recent) hold of these lands our ancestors took by blood than if someone else shows up claiming they have the same right. So it's guns again.
What would really be bad is if we couched these fears and violent tendencies in religious terms. History tells us that will bring out the worst in all of us.
Jodie Gallo
Los Angeles, CA
Melissa, when I wrote this, "I am trying to capture the meaning and fortitude for Christians despised in the midst of tyranny. It's not happening here you say. In the Hispanic churches, both Catholic and Protestant, it is. Among Iranians and Afghan Christian refugees sent back to their countries it is death. And among those who are speaking the truth about what is happening, that is, the loss of freedom for the immigrant and refugee, the brutality given to those arrested, there are already insults, isolation and death threats." That doesn't have to mean rape, although I have read some reports of rape, but rather I am referring to the way mostly Mexicans and other brown people are being treated. Perhaps you have not read any of the reports or watched the videos I have posted. Perhaps you don't care about the father of three marines who has been here over 20 years and was badly beaten and uncared for by ICE after they put him in detention, perhaps you did not read the report this morning about the US citizen who had her car rammed and was shot five times by an ICE agent- the case against her was dropped and it sounds like the agents are being investigated. Some of the reports of what the detention centers are like are horrific. I could go on and on, but it bothers me that you don't care about these people and the pain and fear they are going through. What about the woman who had her car rammed and was pulled out of it and slammed down on the street. She had just recently had, had kidney surgery. And since when is it legal to take people away without letting them contact family or a lawyer? I know that there are many churches that have members who are being dragged away, and pastors who are very concerned.
Jodie, forgive me, but I can't quite understand what you are saying, Perhaps clarify.
Grandma, a huge amount of the things you post on FB are not true, or are described in a way that is misleading and pulls on the readers' heartstrings without actually describing the event honestly (like the guy who left his child outside while running away from ICE, or the whole attempt at making Kilmar Abrego Garcia a martyr and he turned out to be a sex criminal as well as a gang member), so I stopped reading them. They seem to be a string of politically motivated stories propagandized to make out that Trump is akin to Hitler. Which is embarrassingly ridiculous.
I do care about criminals who have bad run ins with law enforcement. But not enough to demonize law enforcement in general over a handful of bad incidents.
I have friends who are here illegally, and I have friends in ICE. You can love people without thinking its ok for them to break the law. You can also love people who work for a government that you don't always agree with. Making one type of person ("Mexicans and other brown people") out to be helpless innocents, and another type of person (those who work for ICE, many of whom happen to also be Mexican-American or other varieties of "brown") to be monstrosities in human form is not christian. It is terribly wrong.
Hi Viola,
I got carried away in my response it and it turned into 2 1/2 pages of prose. Too long to post. So I either need to pair it down or break it up. Your call...
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