oh my

Infamous, celebrity butter connoisseur, Paula Deen — the Paula Deen of the millions of dollars Deen cooking empire — acknowledged the previous use of a racial slur.  On Friday, Deen apologized for “the wrong that I’ve done,” following this week’s admission that she said the “N-word” years ago.  Almost immediately, the Food Network fired her.  The Emmy-winning chef has worked for the Food Network for the past 14 years.

 

Allow us to begin with a few caveats and statements of fact.  First and foremost, none of us know everything; we continually make judgments and build perspective based on limited information.  Second, the name calling was not (at least admitted to be) in public.  And third, the “N-word” is a racial slur that many of all skin colors still reserve the right to say for some reason.  That said…

 

I wonder… (as you knew I would…)

 

How forgiving of a society are we?

When exactly does a person “cross the line”?

When has their debt or wrong choice gone too far?

70 times 7?  When do we legitimately choose to forgive… or to not?

 

Please don’t equate consequence with forgiveness.  Such is a separate topic; there are consequences for poor choices.  Today my question centers around forgiveness… especially as we hear the “aghast’s,” “oh my’s,” and “she should pay” in regard to a Paula Deen.

 

Can we extend forgiveness that far?

 

For many we say they don’t deserve to be forgiven…

 

I’m reminded of the historical king’s account who decided to forgive the monetary debts of his servants.  As he got under way in the squaring up process, one servant was brought before him who had run up a debt of a hundred thousand dollars.  He couldn’t pay up, so the king ordered the man, along with his wife, children, and goods, to be auctioned off at the slave market.  Yes, an awful fate.

 

The poor wretch threw himself at the king’s feet and begged, “Give me a chance and I’ll pay it all back.”  Touched by his plea, the king let him off, actually erasing the debt.

 

The servant was no sooner out of the room when he came upon one of his own peers who owed him only ten dollars.  The servant seized him by the throat and demanded, “Pay up.  Now!”

 

This poor wretch threw himself down and begged, “Give me a chance and I’ll pay it all back,” but he wouldn’t do it.  The original servant had him arrested and put in jail until his debt was paid.  When the other servants saw this going on, they were outraged and brought a detailed report to the king.

 

The king summoned the man and said, “You evil servant!  I forgave your entire debt when you begged me for mercy.  Shouldn’t you be compelled to be merciful to your fellow servant who asked for mercy?”

 

Isn’t that seemingly half our problem?  Even if it’s a poor choice we have also made, we still often hold others to a higher standard than ourselves.  We ask for mercy; yet at the same time, we often withhold it from others.  We withhold mercy.  We refrain from freely offering forgiveness.  “They don’t deserve it!” we are tempted to adamantly reply.  Paula Deen obviously made a poor choice, but the reality is that many among us — including those at the Food Network — have most likely said the exact same thing or something comparable or even worse.  And yet, there is no forgiveness.  There is sadly, seemingly, only more “aghast’s,” “oh my’s,” and “she should pay.”

 

Respectfully,

AR

2 Replies to “oh my”

  1. I’ve had a very similar reaction to the Paula Deen story. Professional athletes seem to set a low standard of behavior both on the playing field and off, but society still buys tickets to see them play and will buy their shoes and other merchandise without the bat of an eye. They might get hit with a hefty fine and a brief suspension, but they are allowed to go back to what they do without much “punishment’ to speak of. I personally think Food Network was too quick on the trigger and crucified her without the consideration or a chance for forgiveness, redemption or atonement. Swift and strong punishment seemed to replace the idea of forgiveness and I think that’s a real shame here. The Food Network has been good to Paula Deen, no doubt, but she’s done great things for them as well. I don’t believe this is the end for Paula Deen and someone on another network will pick her up for a new show, but the beheading she’s received is, in my opinion unfair. Look at Serena Williams who last week made horrible comments about the 16 year old victim in the Steubenville rape case, basically blaming the victim and her parents for failing to tell her “You should not take drinks from other people.” She apologized…she’s playing at Wimbledon this week. Neither Deen nor Williams did the right thing, but why is Williams worthy of forgiveness and Deen isn’t? Forgiveness is an underutilized gift in our society, and blame runs rampant.

  2. I agree with you Ann and Joan. Just listen to the rap music these days. I have heard the “n” word in those songs sung by singers of all races. And it is all acceptable. Paula Deen’s comment happened 20 years ago. Let’s go back and see other comments that took place 20 years ago and 90% of the people now on TV would be kicked off.

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