
Everywhere his name is spoken, it is spoken as curse. The white Christian male is summoned like a specter, the vessel into which all the sins of history are poured. He wakes condemned, his silence called complicity, his strength branded aggression, his faith mocked as tyranny. Before he can take breath, judgment is already nailed above his head. Before he can rise, the whip is coiled to strike again.
Each lash lands with its bitter refrain. Once his labor was called honor; now it is theft. Once his faith was a lantern; now it is fire set to destroy. Once his steadiness was a gift; now it is cruelty in disguise. Every virtue twisted into vice, every offering spat upon. The circle of blame returns endlessly, as if time itself were bent to hold him in place.
They strip him, scourge him, spit upon him—yet in every strike they glance upward, desperate for his nod. Their whips are sharp but their hearts are weak; they cannot finish their work without his sanction. They cry out that he is the disease, but plead silently for him to say the cure is just. They hang him on the cross and still their eyes flicker: Tell us this is righteous. Tell us we are holy as we drive the nails. Their rage is not complete, for it leans upon him even in its cruelty. They grind him into dust, and yet beg the dust to speak approval back to them.
But he owes nothing. No absolution to their lies, no blessing to their violence, no tribute to the mob that chants for his blood. Their need is endless, but his debt is nothing. He was not born to be ledger or scapegoat, not made to carry the weight of centuries he never lived. The skin they lash does not belong to them, the spirit they mock does not answer to them. His existence is his alone—bought by no tribunal, purchased by no chorus. He was not made to kneel, nor to agree to his own destruction.
So he rises. Not for their applause, not to soothe their conscience, not to grant the benediction they beg for as they crucify him. He rises because rising is thunder, and thunder needs no permission. He rises higher than the lash can follow, until the whips crack only against shadow. He rises until their voices break against the sky, still crying for his approval, still demanding that he say they are good, that their condemnation is holy. But the thunder is his alone, and it answers not with their righteousness but with their ruin.
