Editorial: Jerrald Gallion bore God’s image
Saturday, Aug. 26, a man shot and killed three people at a Dollar General in Jacksonville, Fla. You probably know that. You probably also know the man was white, and the three people he killed were Black.
If you’ve followed the news, you know writings left by the shooter “made clear … he hated Black people.” Much of the media attention surrounding the incident thus far has focused on this motive. And so far, there’s no reason to believe the killing wasn’t racially motivated.
You may not know, however, one of the people killed—Jerrald Gallion—was “a father who gave his life to Jesus and was trying to get it together.” That’s how his pastor, Bishop John Guns of St. Paul Missionary Baptist Church in Jacksonville, described Gallion.
That Gallion was our brother in Christ and therefore connected to us is a detail we must not overlook.
Degrees of separation
We should care about all the shooting victims, because God created each one. Each one bears God’s image. But because all the other 8 billion citizens of our planet bear the same, acknowledging God’s image doesn’t necessarily move us to care all that much about one or two people we don’t know personally.
But the victims weren’t only three of 8 billion people. They were members of a much smaller population—the 330 million people living in the United States. Surely, the fact our compatriots were gunned down can rouse in us some concern.
Yet, we’re confronted with similar news every day. We’ve long since grown numb to most of these reports. But at least one of the victims was one of far fewer than 330 million U.S. residents. He was a Christian; he had given his life to Jesus. Do we not now feel a modicum of concern, a tinge of sadness?
Perhaps not. But the Christian I have in mind was part of an even smaller group. He was Baptist.
I’ve been Baptist and around Baptists long enough to know Baptists take great pride in not being any other kind of Christian. So, I’d like to feel confident the fact Gallion was “one of us” is enough to flare our nostrils over his killing.
Except I also know there are Texas Baptists and Florida Baptists, and among them are Southern Baptists and Missionary Baptists. You know, “our kind” and “not our kind.” So, to say Gallion was “one of us” really isn’t specific enough.
Just how specific do the details need to be for us to care that Jerrald Gallion and two other people were gunned down at a Jacksonville Dollar General on Aug. 26?
A walk in his shoes
Some of us don’t need even as much detail as the above, not just to be concerned, not to be upset, but to be deeply angry, aggrieved and sorrowful. Specifically, I am thinking of the 1,031 African American churches who are part of the Baptist General Convention of Texas.
For these churches, the murder of Jerrald Gallion, Angela Michelle Carr and A.J. Laguerre isn’t some unrelated incident over there. These churches feel Gallion’s, Carr’s and Laguerre’s deaths in their bones.
The rest of us, even if we do not feel the same connection to the tragedy in Jacksonville, need to find it within ourselves to mourn with those who mourn, to weep with those who weep. One way we can do that is to give serious thought to the presumed motive behind the killing.
Gallion wasn’t killed because he was American. He wasn’t killed because he was a Christian. He wasn’t killed because he was Baptist. From what investigators so far have determined, he was killed because he was Black. Carr and Laguerre also were killed for being Black.
We can do something about what religion we practice and which God we worship, but we can’t do a whole lot about the color of our skin—a color God meant our skin to be.
Here’s a disturbing exercise: Before the next time you walk out the door of your home, imagine there is one person out in the world who intends to kill you because of the color of your skin. For some of our readers, this doesn’t take any imagination.
You don’t have to imagine the whole world is out to get you. Just imagine one person is, and you have no idea where that person is and when that person will show up. Regardless, you have to go out into the world to buy groceries, earn a paycheck or otherwise survive.
How does this make you feel?
Now, imagine this isn’t make-believe or an exercise in empathy, but it’s your lived experience every day.
How does that make you feel?
Does it make you feel like doing more than weeping and mourning? It should.
Focus on God’s image
What might be a scenario for some of us is a lived reality for too many of us. We should be moved to change that reality.
A place to start is by advocating for the image of God in every person. People who believe every person is created in God’s image should live and work in the world in accordance with that belief. That belief should be readily apparent in how we treat people.
Inasmuch as racism is a devaluing of God’s image in people—and it is a profound devaluing of God’s image in people—we should speak out against racism. I know many think too many things are called “racism.” At the same time, many of us think too much racism is overlooked.
While we need to diagnose racism accurately, let’s not let that argument distract us from the fact there really are people who hate other people because of their race. Let the argument also not get in the way of us treating every person as a bearer of God’s image—whatever a person’s skin color, ethnicity, heritage, nationality or demographic category may be.
And let’s start right here, right now, because regarding every person as created by God and bearing God’s image is our problem right here and right now. This isn’t something we need to talk about. It’s something we need to do.
Eric Black is the executive director, publisher and editor of the Baptist Standard. He can be reached at eric.black@baptiststandard.com. The views expressed are those of the author.