Wednesday, October 19, 2016

A Note From Tracy Hipps: Equity Together

Tracy Hipps, CSM Executive Director
The buzz word used today in so many speeches, by organizations and in the media is the word “equity.” Equity provides access to opportunities for living a long and healthy life. CSM is a faith-based organization that seeks to live out equity in our city and create a new culture in Birmingham. Organizations in Birmingham have been meeting together for several years to create a new language and culture for our city. By creating a new language and culture, we have the opportunity to define and create equity together.

As I have served on these committees, boards and sat in these meetings, I haven’t seen many local churches represented. A new culture of equity is really a part of Biblical culture, and we should be living these values because of our faith. Equity is another word for “justice” and “neighbor.” Justice is to walk in harmony with our neighbor. Neighbor is everyone who was made by God. The Royal law is to “love our neighbors as ourselves.”

We can begin to live out our values together in our city because equity calls for a change in mind, heart, hands, action, behavior, life and in all areas of culture. In a culture of equity, we would have new behavior, action, speech, thought, reaction, sight, hearing, as well as our sense of place, space and time. Our senses are affected because our hearts are being changed from the inside out.

Birmingham is a city deep in a rich history, and depending on where you live, it has been good to you. But, some are those by whom the city was built, and who still feel the struggle and pain. Steel was Birmingham’s primary industry of the past. Today’s Birmingham, the “Steel City” with equity, is a city that WE build together walking side by side and treating people with respect.

A movement was started in Birmingham which we refer to as the “Civil Rights Movement,” a movement foundational to the equity of the 60’s. Building from this movement is our next step of equity for all people. It challenged us then, and continues to charge us all, to pursue a new day and a new dawn where barriers and divisions are broken down and equity can thrive.

But the division of culture, class, character and conduct continue to exist in Birmingham, and in some ways we have circled back to our old culture. We have 99 neighborhoods in the city of Birmingham, we have 38 or more municipalities, three counties with more zip codes than we can recall. Our glorious Red Mountain still represents division and divide. We have railroad tracks, interstates, malls and restaurants that divide.

Birmingham’s neighborhoods have replaced grocery store for payday loan companies by the hundreds. Birmingham’s transportation problems have created even wider equity divisions in our culture. We are all deeply affected by education, because it is foundational to the equity of our current society. Birmingham’s many education systems; public, private and religious; educate our children in inequity, though education is a tool that could bring equity. Some of our brightest people, who could help create solutions to our systemic education problems, are focused on their own systems and zip codes rather than the whole picture.

Birmingham has its own dialect that serves inequity. “OTM,” “UAB,” “AARP,” “ATRS” are a few abbreviations that identify and separate us.  We have code language to describe people groups such as “they,” “those,” “them” and “least.” We need a new language of equity where “we,” “us,” “our” and “together” is commonly used by all. We must live the language of the Postmaster where all zip codes represent “Birmingham.” The airport is Birmingham. The maps say Birmingham. Many can say they were born in Birmingham. This is our city— Birmingham.

To define equity in this culture is to build the future hope we all should hold dear. But to move forward, we have to look back to build a future stronger than steel. Equity of the past sought to build industries on the backs of laborers, so equity of the future must build on all of our shoulders as we stand side-by-side. creating the prosperity of the city we all hold dear, will come from working for the good of ALL, not ours. 

If we can retrain our minds, renew our hearts, refocus our eyes, retune our ears, realign our thought, and retool our actions— then God will restore our city. We need to influence Birmingham with the value of His Kingdom, which will be in “equity.” God created us in “equity”– in the image and likeness of Himself so we can walk in unity and harmony. To experience “Shalom” in our city, we must live in “equity.” To be prosperous and see good, we must live out “equity.”

“Also, seek the peace (Shalom) and prosperity (welfare) of the city (Birmingham) to which I have carried you... Pray to the (Our) LORD for it, because if it (Everyone) prospers, you too will prosper." Jeremiah 29:7


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