The Cross and the Frog: reaching out to the Alt-Right

Pepe the Frog is an Alt-Right symbolThe Alt-Right is a Xenophobic movement filled with deplorables that are beyond redemption. 
Or so I'm hearing.
The idea behind the term 'Alt-Right' is that it is an alternative to mainstream conservative parties – the Tories here in the UK and the Republicans in the USA. The term has been used by some to refer to those who enthusiastically supported Brexit and Trump in the 2016 elections. Many in this group perceive Western-Civilisation to be in decline due to internal weaknesses and want to revive what was classically good.
When I write about the Alt-Right, I write as an outsider - but not as one trying to arrogantly dismiss them or their concerns. As Christians, we should seek to understand and sympathise with people wherever possible, so that more may be won for Christ. How can we do this with the Alt-RIght?
Avoid Broad Brushing
James writes ‘Be slow to speak, quick to listen, and slow to anger.’ That’s rare in politics. One thing that will close up anyone quickly is to misrepresent them. If words like ‘racist’, ‘misogynist’, ‘xenophobic’ are the first things that come out of our mouths when dealing with the Alt-Right you may need to check your heart.
When you care enough to look closer, you realise just how incredibly diverse the various groups are that get put under this umbrella: Libertarians to gun owners to white supremacists. They don't all fit the stereotype. 
For example, one of the major Alt-Right players is Milo Yiannopoulos. He is an immigrant to the UK from Eastern Europe, he’s part Jewish, and he’s openly homosexual. He’s also one of the pioneers and chief editors of Breitbart News – the main Alt-Right news website that is often dismissed as being homophobic, neo-Nazi, and anti-immigrant. 
Confused?
If you paint the Alt-Right movement with too broad a brush – in word or on social media – your chances for sharing the good news about the resurrected Jew from Nazareth will be slim. This is true of any group, but particularly here.
Example
Yesterday four young black people kidnapped and tortured a special-needs, white man in Chicago. They videoed themselves abusing him while mocking his ‘privilege’ as a white person and making jokes at Donald Trump. 
I assume most of my readers – regardless of their politics – find such behaviour somewhere north of deplorable. These incidents open up old social wounds like complicated flowers in the night.

But if you’re going to reach those in the Alt-Right community, you also need to know how they see might see this event. Let's put on some Alt-RIght glasses and see how might this event fit into the larger narrative that makes up their worldview? 
Imagine
Imagine growing up as many white, working class males do – in poverty. The term ‘white trash’ gets used to describe you and your family regularly. You see affirmative action and scholarships sometimes offered to the ethnic minority youth in your neighbourhood - but you’re white and not eligible for those. You’d never consider yourself a white supremacist, you simply feel treated unfairly. 
Imagine that you hear of protests happening when a black person gets shot by police. But when your white friend gets shot by police - no one seems to care. You don't disagree that 'Black Lives Matter', you're just wondering why your friend's life didn't.
Imagine that you don’t get to see or care for your two-year-old child very often - even though you know the mother is on drugs and lives with her new boyfriend. The law - which favours a mother's custody right's over a father's - makes you pay lots in child care (even though her new boyfriend makes more than you). 
You try to complain about these issues, but you're dismissed and told to 'check your privilege' or to 'fight the Patriarchy'.
Imagine that neither Republican nor Democrat (or Tory & Labour) seem to be doing anything to help your situation I life. You feel that you get no breaks. And because you’re a white male, you grow up hearing that most world problems are your fault – and no one with a platform seems to argue back.
Then a situation like last night in Chicago happens.
Imagine…what are your first thoughts? Your first thoughts are: ‘If it had been four white guys that kidnapped a black man and tortured him while making fun of Obama, it would be world news! It would be labelled a hate crime instantly! But because the victim was white, it hardly gets a mention! No one cares about us!’
Imagine that you are angry and feel forgotten by the world.
Then a powerful movement like the Alt-Right comes along… what do you begin to feel when you hear other voices crying out about an injustice you can relate to?
Hope.
Listen
Please take the glasses back off. As Missionaries we are not called to adopt the worldview of those we are reaching. It is simply to understand it and sympathise with people where possible. Christians are called to be a people who listen - even if we perceive a person's political talk to be a torrent of turpentine. This is hard for those who find their identity in political movements - but as Christians we appeal to a higher altar. 

Feeling not listened to runs deep among many in the Alt-Right community. We may disagree, but if we are seen to be dismissive of them, we will not be given a hearing. If we judge a person more through a political lens than we do through a gospel lens, we will fail to be the kind neighbour and faithful witness that Christ calls us to be.

This does not mean we should never express disagreement with certain Alt-RIght ideologies. We should stand firm against idolatrous forms of Nationalism and racial exaltation. Patriotism can be a false religion. But we listen first - and speak with both courage and humility later.

Remember your own massive sins - and resolve to love your crooked neighbour, with all your crooked heart. 
Good News for the Alt-Right
In the case of the imagined young man, he experiences the Alt-Right movement in a messianic way. But the trouble with movements that make messianic promises of justice or righteousness – LGBT, Islam, Nationalist movements, etc – is that they are not the Messiah and can never deliver the type of justice and righteousness our souls really need.

Only Christ can give this young man the value and affirmation that his heart has never experienced and that he longs for. Alt-Right politics – whether we sympathise with some of their views or not – will not reconcile us to God. And if we build our identity on it – it will one day break our hearts.
Many people in the Alt-Right feel betrayed, unfairly treated, and misrepresented. They are looking for a renewed civilisation that will not be destroyed. The Gospel speaks to these hearts. There was someone else who was also betrayed. He was also unfairly treated. He was misrepresented and lied about in the trial that determined his execution. 
And why did he do this? So that he could give us faithful love from God himself. So that he could build a new home and new civilisation for us – one that will be around long after the nations and civilisations of this world have faded.
When someone from the Alt-Right, or any other group, finds that love and that new home – it transforms. And that is something we all desperately need. 
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Published on January 05, 2017 07:30
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