United We Pray Loading and Newsletter Logo
Loading ...

Dear White Woman

by | Dec 5, 2023

I don’t run at night or before the sun comes up. I wonder if you don’t either. While my husband can strap on a headlamp and reflectors and hit the neighborhood running, I have to be more cautious—even in the suburbs. Common sense tells women that running in the dark carries a risk that many of us wish to avoid—so we run in pairs. We run at the gym. We run in the daylight. 

I don’t let my sons run alone in the dark either. Parenting wisdom says letting our young children run without supervision is ill advised—so they run with me. They run in the light. But one day they will trade childhood for manhood, weakness for strength. They will outgrow their vulnerability, but I won’t. I’ll still run in the light, while their options expand. 

It’s the world we live in, the one where we make choices based on our vulnerabilities.

Others’ vulnerabilities are not based on gender or age. We know this because we watch the news. We hear of black and brown brothers and sisters misunderstood and harmed simply because they were in the wrong place at the wrong time. There is a vulnerability racial minorities bear that I will never know fully, but I can empathize. I know what it feels like to feel exposed and fearful. I know what it means to feel helpless simply for being  myself. I know what it feels like to make choices based on risk—choosing to run in the day, rather than the night. 

White women have at times unfortunately been proponents of increasing the vulnerability of our black and brown neighbors. Our foremothers have picketed schools, boycotted integration, and rejected equality. But what would have happened if we instead considered our vulnerability as a gateway to understand theirs? What if we found the common ground of our vulnerability as a pathway towards understanding? 

God reminds us that we’re limited beings, bound by bodies, time, and space. In every culture, some bear more limitations than others. The  “strongest” have an obligation to use their strength to hold up the weak. The strong are to use their power not to grow more comfortable, but to grow more empathetic. 

I can’t run at night. Neither can my friends of color. This is a shared vulnerability, one that lifts me away from what I can’t do and towards what others equally can’t do. We bear that burden together.

But I can drive without much fear of unjust policing. Instead of rejecting my friend’s experiences of being profiled, I can instead ask what it feels like to have this vulnerability. I don’t share the experience, but I do know what it feels like to be exposed and fearful of strength. My vulnerability is a chance to start a conversation about something I don’t understand.

As a woman in male spaces, I’ve been misunderstood and mischaracterized. I know what it feels like to be treated differently simply because I was born a certain way: female. This is a shared vulnerability, one that allows me to hold the grief that my friends feel for being cast aside not only for their gender, but the color of their skin too.

But as a member of a “privileged class” of sorts, I also use my influence to shine a light on what others might experience. For the Christian, we look for ways to advance not our own causes, but the causes of our fellow Christians, and especially those who are suffering. If we’re strong, it’s for the good of others. If we’re weak, it’s so God’s people can bear us up. If we have influence, it’s so we can use it for those who lack it. If we are vulnerable, it’s so the powerful can stand in our corner showing that God uses the weak things of the world to shame the wise (1 Corinthians 1:27).

Dear white woman, you know what it feels like to be vulnerable. You know the feeling of anxiety when you get in your car in a dark parking lot or when you’re home alone and hear a noise in the house. Your weakness leaves you exposed. 

You know something of the vulnerability your brothers and sisters of color feel.

But you also know what it feels like to have influence. You know it feels like to use your power to change things—whether it’s online, in a school, in your neighborhood, or even in your own church. Your shared vulnerability coupled with your cultural power can be a force for good.

In the ways we’ve been given privilege, let’s use it to lift up the vulnerable. And in the ways that we share vulnerability, let’s use it to listen and bear one another’s burdens together.

 

Prayer Requests:

  1. Pray for God to open your eyes to the ways you share vulnerability, then ask for empathy to listen well to the struggles of others.
  2. Pray for the end of vulnerability for all people, regardless of gender or ethnicity.
  3. Pray for influence to use both your privilege and vulnerability to be a voice of reason and reconciliation.

Recent POdcasts

Our Conscience Leads Us To Fight Sin

Our Conscience Leads Us To Fight Sin

”One person considers one day more sacred than another; another considers every day alike. Each of them should be fully convinced in their own mind.” Romans 14:5 How does conscience relate to faith? Isaac and Austin discuss how differences conscience can lead us to...

read more
We Mourn Announcement

We Mourn Announcement

In this episode, brothers and sisters lament and intercede about different matters given this woeful pandemic—matters ranging from the loss of lives to exacerbated racism in these times. Join us as we take racial struggles to the throne of grace, and sign up below and...

read more
Is Coronavirus Racist?

Is Coronavirus Racist?

”Those who give to the poor will lack nothing, but those who close their eyes to them receive many curses.”  Proverbs 28:27 Episode Overview: Is a virus racist? Isaac and Austin explore the news that COVID-19 is disproportionally affecting African Americans. They also...

read more

Upcoming Events

Isaac-Adams-United-We-Pray-speaking-at-an-event

Click Here to View Now

Recent Articles

COVID-19, Xenophobia, and a Prayerful Response

COVID-19, Xenophobia, and a Prayerful Response

By now everyone is aware COVID-19, or coronavirus, has become an emergency of international concern—a pandemic. Fear and panic have escalated across the globe. Countries are now taking aggressive measures to contain its spread. As skeptics debate whether such...

read more
When I Recognized Race: Ryan King

When I Recognized Race: Ryan King

“At the end of the American Civil War in 1865, a Union soldier observed that the remains of the Confederate army consisted of boys and old men. Upon asking what had happened to ‘Johnny Reb’, he was told, “he died at Gettysburg”. That statement may or may not be...

read more
Bloody Sunday: An Exhortation for Bridge-Builders

Bloody Sunday: An Exhortation for Bridge-Builders

Above my desk at work sits a painting of the Edmund Pettus Bridge, which carries U.S. Route 80 across the Alabama River in Selma, Alabama. The steel bridge, now a national landmark, was constructed in 1940. It’s named after Edmund Winston Pettus, a former Confederate...

read more

We’d love to hear what you think about this article. Submit your feedback by clicking here to contact us.

Author

  • Courtney Reissig

    Courtney Reissig is a writer and bible teacher living in Little Rock, Arkansas. She is the proud mom of four sons, happy wife to Daniel, and author of three books: The Accidental Feminist, Glory in the Ordinary, and Teach Me to Feel: Worshiping Through the Psalms in Every Season of Life. They are members of Immanuel Baptist Church. You can follow her on Twitter or Instagram (@courtneyreissig).

    View all posts

Related Articles

Stay Connected