Epidemic of Hate

Photo by E. Unuabona


I shared this post in June 2020. At that time, we were being introduced to the ravages of the COVID pandemic. However, we were also seeing the emergence of an old contagion – hate.

In honor of Juneteenth and all the lives that fought against the virus of hatred, I offer this abbreviated re-post and reminder.


The virus hit the country as a silent assault, masked under the cover of just another flu. But we soon learned that it carried a deadly punch.

In a few short months, it changed how we experienced the world, how we treated one another, and how we navigated our lives. Who would have thought this silent enemy was hiding in plain sight, waiting to disrupt and conquer.

And just as we were getting our arms around a pandemic – masked, hands sanitized, and socially distant – the winds swept in an epidemic. A virus of hate that has been incubating in this country for 100s of years.

The illness contaminates those with narrow minds and hardened hearts. Unfortunately, it has infected the fabric of our nation, threatening the country’s foundation. The carriers spread the poison through social media posts, community conflicts, and acts of violence toward those that look, speak, and believe differently.

But this disease also devastates the lives of those that fight to eradicate it. A history of brave souls that have fought diligently to wipe out the virus and its effects – Harriet Tubman, Dred Scott, Frederick Douglas, Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King Jr., President John F. Kennedy, and hundreds of others.

A persistent, sinister illness that takes vigilance, education, and determination to eradicate.

My husband and I are Black. We live in a small Oregon community where blacks make up less than 4% of the total population. If you’re not intentional, you will overlook us.

A few years ago, he was driving home – the same route he has taken 100s of times. He pulled through a major intersection, the light flashing yellow, the intersection clear. He headed up the hill making the right turn to our home. When behind him the red lights of a State Trooper flashed in his rearview mirror. The officer had been following him for nearly a mile. My husband pulled over and lowered his window.

The officer sat in his vehicle for a few minutes and then approached the car. As he neared the window, he belted out the standard, “Driver’s license and registration.” After a glance at both, he asked, “So how long have you had this car?” (Note: my husband drives his dream car – an older model Porche.) There were no references to driving violations or vehicle maintenance issues, just a focus on the ownership of the car. My husband responded, “I’ve had it a few years.” The officer added, “You didn’t give me enough room at the yellow light.” My husband acknowledged his comment. The officer looked around the car, handed him back his license and registration, walked casually back to his vehicle, and drove away. No warning was issued, no citations given, just a comment about intersection distance that did not correspond with my husband’s reality.

As the officer drove off, my husband sat for a few minutes gathering his thoughts, what had just happened? Was this a subtle, perhaps unconscious, judgmental action that reflects the insidious nature of the virus of racism? 

Unlike our need to rush to create a vaccine to battle COVID-19, we have an inoculation for this epidemic.

We each can play a role to combat this infection. When it comes to covert racism, injustice, ignorance, and hatred,

We are the vaccine!

We are the answer.

Gen 1:27 reminds us that,

…God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them.

New International Version (NIV)

The color of our skin, the languages we speak, our cultures, traditions, and food preferences all speak to the amazing creativity of our father. Yet, we all carry His image; we all are created by Him. There are no differences, no superiority, only beautiful variation.

We can work to celebrate our differences, honoring the image of God in each person. We can encourage, educate, and reflect on God’s original plan for His children. We can allow Him to work through us, we are the antidote, and God is the healer.

Image bearers, brothers, sisters, family – in His paradigm there is no room for hate, no place for racism, no space for inferiority.

BeLOVED, please join me in praying for God’s original plan to be recognized in this country and around the world. It is only through Him that we will find our healing.

I refuse to accept the view that mankind is so tragically bound to the starless midnight of racism and war that the bright daybreak of peace and brotherhood can never become a reality… I believe that unarmed truth and unconditional love will have the final word.

Martin Luther King Jr.

Be Blessed His BeLOVED,

6 thoughts on “Epidemic of Hate

  1. “The color of our skin, the languages we speak, our cultures, traditions, and food preferences all speak to the amazing creativity of our father.” Amen! I’m sorry you have experienced narrow mindedness. I join you in the prayer that the Holy Spirit stirs this vaccine ❤

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  2. Debbie

    “We can work to celebrate our differences, honoring the image of God in each person. We can encourage, educate, and reflect on God’s original plan for His children. We can allow Him to work through us, we are the antidote, and God is the healer.”
    Lord, help us to acknowledge that we are all made in your image, equally unique and LOVED. Help me specifically to spread the Good News of YOU to all I encounter.

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