Supergirl is quickly becoming
my favorite television show. In the first two episodes following her move from
CBS to the CW, Supergirl introduced a
warm, charming, and inspiring version of the Man of Steel that far outshines
his cinematic counterpart. I could easily write a whole essay on why the CW’s
Superman is better in every way than Zach Snyder’s interpretation, but this
post is about Supergirl not Superman.
The
most recent episode of Supergirl, titled
Welcome to Earth, touches on some
very relevant and relatable themes—specifically, the issue of immigration and
personal prejudices. The story centers around the arrival of the President
(played by Wonder Woman actress, Linda
Carter), who plans to sign an executive order granting America’s extraterrestrial
visitors amnesty and even full citizenship. As you might expect, the Alien
Amnesty Act is a pretty divisive issue. Kara gets very excited about it, but
J’onn J'onzz (The Martian Manhunter) remains pessimistic about the prospect of aliens stepping out the
shadows. “People in this world don’t have much tolerance for others who look different,”
says J’onn. “I say that as an alien and as someone who wore the face of a black
man for 15 years.”
When
an alien assassin makes an attempt on the President’s life, Kara’s own prejudices
rise to the surface. Her first suspect is an alien named Mon-El (Lar Gand
actually, but that’s a long story). When Supergirl discovers that Mon-El hails
from the planet Daxam, she explains that Krypton and Daxam used to clash because
of their differing ways of life. While Krypton was a democracy, Daxam was a
monarchy that “ruled a population of hoodlums.” Thus, she immediately assumes he attacked the president.
Only after wrongfully imprisoning Mon-El does Supergirl discover and defeat the
actual attacker—a fire-manipulating villain named Scorcher.
This
episode serves as a social commentary, highlighting real problems and
prejudices in our own culture. Of course, America isn’t the first nation to
struggle with racial tension. Prejudice and discrimination, in varying forms and
to various degrees, has plagued humanity for thousands of years.
Racism
and oppression littered the world of the New Testament. In the mind of a
first-century Jew, Gentiles (Africans, Romans, Greeks, Syrians, Asians, etc.)
were created to fuel the fires of hell. When a Jew called a Gentile
“uncircumcised,” he spit it. It was a name of profound contempt. If a Jewish
person married a Gentile, the Jewish parents held a funeral service for their
child. In their eyes, their child was dead.
On
the flip side, Gentiles regarded Jews to be sub-human. Historically, the Jews
have been an oppressed people, living under the thumb of one Gentile nation
after another (e.g., Egypt, Assyria, Babylon, Greece, Rome). In all of human
history, there has never been so much animosity, hatred, and violence between
two groups of people as there has been between the Jew and the Gentile.
Yet,
here’s what the Bible says about this division: “For Christ himself has brought
peace to us. He united Jews and Gentiles into one people when, in his own body
on the cross, he broke down the wall of hostility that separated us… He made
peace between Jews and Gentiles by creating in himself one new people from the
two groups” (Ephesians 2:14-15 NLT).
In
other words, Jesus intended the church to be a community free of
discrimination, prejudice and hostility where we are called to “accept each
other just as Christ has accepted” us (Romans 15:7 NLT). Again, the Bible says,
“There is no longer Jew or Gentile, slave or free, male and female. For you are
all one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:28 NLT).
After defeating Scorcher, Supergirl releases Mon-El from his cell, confessing, “I don’t know you at all and it was a mistake of me to misjudge you just because you’re from Daxam. You didn’t try to kill the President and I apologize for assuming you did.” She then extends her hand in friendship. We all ought to follow in Supergirl’s footsteps, admitting and apologizing for our prejudices then trying our best (with the help of Christ) to overcome them.