But in 1979, Wallace said of
his “Stand at the Schoolhouse Door,” “I was wrong. Those days are over, and
they ought to be over.” He had come to faith in Christ and as a result he “apologized
to black civil rights leaders for his past actions as a segregationist. He said
that while he had once sought power and glory, he realized he needed to seek
love and forgiveness” (“George Wallace,” Wikipedia). This is the transgressive
power of the gospel. Awakened to his sin of racial and cultural gerrymandering,
he crossed the boundaries of race, history, and societal pressure to seek
reconciliation.
We need to seriously consider this kind of
outworking of Christ’s reconciling death on the cross. The sin that separated us from God has also consistently generated
sinful societal boundaries that serve to keep some in power while forcing
others to the margins. In the process of reconciling all things to himself, whether on
earth or in heaven, Christ calls his disciples to pick up their
crosses and follow him as he transgresses those lines to implement his plan for his sin-racked creation. And, as
reconciling us to God took the transgressive act of the Son of God leaving the
glories of heaven that he might both live and die for us on this earth, we can
expect that following our Lord across sinfully constructed boundaries will cost
us something. It did for him. But motivated by love and empowered by his Spirit
we can prove effective agents of reconciliation in an often cruelly divided
world.