3 Years Later: Don’t You Dare Turn Your Head: The Self-Immolation of The Rev. Charles Moore

3 Years Later: Don’t You Dare Turn Your Head: The Self-Immolation of The Rev. Charles Moore June 24, 2017

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Family

 

As the lightening crashes on this night, the passion of Rev. Charles Moore visits me again…

 

 

Originally written on July 3, 2014

 

 

The fiery passion of 79-year-old retired United Methodist pastor The Rev. Charles Moore is raging in my soul right now.  On June 23 around 5:30pm, Moore exited his vehicle in Grand Saline, Texas, doused his body with gasoline and set himself on fire.  After rescue efforts by bystanders, Moore was taken by helicopter to Parkland Hospital in Dallas and eventually died late last night.  Based on notes left behind, Moore chose to self-immolate based on his frustration with the United Methodist Church’s position on human sexuality, opposition to the death penalty, disdain for racism (especially in his hometown of Grand Saline) and his deep anger at Southern Methodist University’s decision to house the George W. Bush Presidential Center.

 

Rev. Moore knew how we would react.  On June 22, the day before he self-immolated, Moore wrote, “I know that some will judge me insane.”  When I first shared Moore’s story with a table full of people at a Dallas restaurant, everyone immediately declared him insane.  I know different.

 

While a graduate student in history at the University of Alabama, I spent six months studying self-immolations that took place in both the United States and in Vietnam during the Vietnam War.  With stark consistency, the persons who self-immolated that I studied were remarkably sane and unquestionably persons of deep conviction.  The temptation of the hour will be to turn our heads and call The Rev. Charles Moore insane.  If we do…we should also turn our heads from Jesus and call him insane too.  For we must not forget, Jesus sat in the Garden of Gethsemane and made a conscious clear decision to step out into death…just like Moore.

 

Instead of judging Rev. Moore, maybe we should try to ignite the passion for justice that burned so brightly in his life in ours.  When Texas tries to execute Manuel Vasquez on August 6, maybe we should do something more than simply turn our heads and protect our dignity.  When our churches and societies ignore racial segregation and discrimination, maybe we should do something more than simply turn our heads and protect our pride.  When we are asked to perform a same-sex wedding ceremony or ordain a same-gender loving person, maybe we should do something more than turn our heads and protect our salaries/pensions.  When institutional injustices occur all around us, maybe we should do something more that turn our heads and bless them with our silence.  I will go to bed this evening thankful for the public witness of The Rev. Charles Moore and pray that the church would garner even an ounce of his passion and courage.

 

On a personal note, I serve on the Board of Directors of the Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty.  Rev. Moore helped found the organization.  Because Moore lived, I am able to do the work that I do.  My respect for Moore is unwavering and I am proud to follow in his footsteps.  Jesus asks us to give our lives and Moore did.

 

Tonight my passion for Jesus burns as intensely as ever.  When I look straight ahead into the dark, I see Moore’s bespectacled image burning.  I see Moore giving his life so that others might live.  I refuse to turn my head.  I know that Jesus is speaking to me from there.  The courage of a passionate follower of Jesus can set the world afire with love.  May the great martyrdom of The Rev. Charles Moore make it so.

 

Amen.


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