The Black Church Is A Spiritual Virtue

 

 

“Back then, Black churches were a small piece of peace.
Church was a world where, even with its imperfections,
the offer of equality and common humanity was the sustenance needed to make it through the rest of the week
in a society that deemed them less than human.”

 

Today you will read the “heart cry” of Dante Stewart that encapsulates the hurt, pain, and disappointment of many. As you read this, prayerfully consider how we bring unity to the body of Christ.
Guest Author: Dante Stewart
I can remember when it first happened — when my dungeon shook and my chains fell off. I had recently gone through a horrible experience and felt there was nowhere to turn, no one who could give voice to my ache, my pain, and my rage.

 

I feared that many wouldn’t understand.

 

At the time, I was immersed in White evangelical church life. I had been the one selected to lead a group through John Piper’s Bloodlines because the church wanted to be more “diverse.” I was probably the first black person to preach there.

 

That usually came with a badge of honor — the “first” usually means you’re breaking barriers (or so I thought). Then Trump happened. Then the shootings of unarmed black people. Then … the white responses in the church I was in.

 

I was confused.

 

“How could they be around me and my wife and say this about black people?”
“How did they not know us?”
“How could they believe this?”
“Why aren’t we speaking about this?”

 

Confusion compounded by the employer who used my abstention from the National Anthem as an opportunity to lecture me on NFL protests and oppression.

 

Confusion compounded by the colleagues who said, “there’s no need for Black History Month,” and another, “there’s no such thing as black theology.”

 

Confusion compounded by another colleague who reported me for inappropriate touching after I side-hugged her while bidding her a good weekend. Maybe at that moment I forgot all the lessons my mom taught me about being careful around white women. Did she know that they see her as innocent and me as a danger? Maybe she believed the lie that Amy Cooper believed: that her whiteness is a weapon to keep a “n— in his place.”

 

And then my confusion turned to rage as the comments continued.

 

“You are losing the gospel.” 
“I’m not racist.” 
“You’re a social justice warrior.” 
“I have black friends.” 
“All lives matter.”
“Black men need to stop killing black men.”
“It’s a sin problem, not a skin problem.” 
“Jesus came to change hearts not societies.” 

 

Black rage in an anti-black world is a spiritual virtue. Rage shakes us out of our illusion that the world as it is, is what God wants. Rage forces us to deal with the gross system of inequality, exploitation, and disrespect. Rage is the public cry for black dignity. It becomes the public expression of a theological truth that black lives matter to God.

 

Rage is the work of love that stands against an unloving world. Rage is the good news that though your society forgets you and works against you, there is Someone who loves you and believes you are worth fighting for.

 

If you’re more concerned about the responses of black rage than you are about a system that justifies and rewards black death, you don’t love black people — you just love when they stay in their place. And that’s not love, that’s hate.

 

So, I wept — I wept because I felt so powerless, so vulnerable, so unloved, so hated.

 

In “A Letter to My Nephew,” James Baldwin wrote:
Please try to remember that what they believe, as well as what they do and cause you to endure, does not testify to your inferiority, but to their inhumanity and fear.

 

His words hit me with the sort of mercy, a grace as if Almighty God was speaking, when he wrote, “You don’t be afraid. I said it was intended that you should perish …”

 

But I did not. We did not. We are still here. It was at that moment that a fire came over me. It was then that my dungeon shook, the chains of fear fell off, and the bones began to rumble, and the sinews that made flesh black began to come to life. It was not just the question, “Lord, can these bones live?” No. It was, “Lord, where will these bones go?”

 

I needed to give voice to God’s action in the black experience, our suffering, and our resistance. I needed to bear witness to the struggle for our freedom. I needed to give voice to being both black and Christian. I did — and I never looked back.

 

James Cone said after the Detroit rebellion, “I could no longer write the same way, following the lead of Europeans and white Americans.

 

And don’t we feel this? With white racial paranoia. With Trump. And now with black suffering in COVID-19, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, George Floyd. Terror. We saw the responses to the cries of our people as many of our women, children, and men became hashtags. They praised “black forgiveness,” called us to speak of love, when their people gave us death. Our people’s blood cries out from the ground.

 

What does theology have to say in the black freedom struggle today? What does faith say in the face of black death? What is good news for black people in America’s racial caste? Cone was right: “I had to find a new way of talking about God that was accountable to black people and their fight for justice.”

 

I am black; I am Christian. We have been through hell in this country — and we’re still going through it. But I too am America; this is my country. Being black in an anti-black world becomes the greatest spiritual, moral, and political task of each generation.

 

The journey has been long and a struggle for many of us — trying to speak of Christian faith and being black in America — but it is also empowering. We know that we come from a long tradition of black people who refused to accept the tragic belief and practices of white supremacy — the belief that we are second-class citizens, that we deserve exploitation and punishment, that we deserve disrespect and death, that we must be respectable and cater to the demands of whiteness. No. We will not.

 

Many will believe we have exaggerated the scope and depth of injustice. That’s okay. We’re fighting for hope, we’re fighting for love, we’re fighting to live. This world as black people experience it is not the world as it should be. All of us must give voice to the hope of a better day. There’s no other way.

 

To love, to struggle, to fight, to pray, to embrace, to remember — these become our sword and shield. To protest violence against black people is a spiritual virtue, moral obligation, and political practice. In a world that wounds the souls of black folk, it represents the Spirit of God at work resisting the evil of white supremacy and murder with impunity. It’s holy work. Through rage and heartbreak, we work. Until we are free, we can never rest.

 

SOURCE: Sojourners, Black Range In An Anti-Black World Is A Spiritual Virtue, May 29, 2020

 

Finding Our Way Back . . .


 

“Over the last 72 hours, I have received multiple death threats
and thousands of emails from Christians saying
the nastiest and most vulgar things I have ever heard
toward my family and ministry.
I have been labeled a coward, sellout, a traitor to the Holy Spirit,
and cussed out at least 500 times.”

 

According to a New York Times columnist, this is the beginning of a Facebook post by conservative preacher Jeremiah Johnson. On January 7, the day after the storming of the Capital, Johnson had issued a public apology, asserting that God removed Donald Trump from office because of his pride and arrogance, and to humble those, who had fervently supported him.
Strife and division is at an all-time high within Evangelical Christianity and within conservatism right now. As I mentioned in the last issue, misdirected pulpit rhetoric can lead to dangerous outcomes. Evangelical pastor Tim Remington preached, ‘I rebuke the news in the name of Jesus. We ask that this false garbage come to an end. It is lies, communism, and socialism. It threatens us to engage in more violence in the days ahead.’ Evangelist Franklin Graham compared ten GOP members to Judas Iscariot, who betrayed Jesus after they voted to approve the president’s second impeachment.
Juxtapose this to Rev. Samuel Rodriguez, who delivered a prayer at the Trump inaugural, telling his congregation last Sunday, ‘We must all repent, even the church needs to repent.’ He and many others have been shaken to the core by the sight of a sacrilegious mob blasting Christian pop music and chanting ‘Hang Mike Pence.’ Beth Moore, a prominent evangelical speaker and author tweeted, ‘I don’t know the Jesus some have paraded and waved around in the middle of this treachery. They may be acting in the name of some other Jesus but that’s not Jesus of the Gospels.’
Pastor Tony Evans sums the dilemma this way, ‘What we are seeing today especially among Christians is us building walls against one another because of government. We’ve allowed government to divide the church and that is an agenda from Hell. We’ve made government God or made it bigger than God because it can do something God wouldn’t do.’
“There is no virtue in absolutism.”
Worshipers seek an escape from the tensions of everyday life by attending church (virtual or in person). Yet, today politics is as great a challenge as the pandemic. People hear the themes always covered in the church: poverty, sacrifice, mercy, and justice differently. Now your view on abortion, guns, taxes, and how we should distribute the costs and benefits of healthcare to have a flourishing society is on everyone’s mind. It is hard to explore nuance and depth in the Bible’s message of love.
“People’s political persuasions are taking precedence over any other spiritual commitments,” said Dean Inserra, senior pastor at City Church Tallahassee, Florida, an evangelical church. “We’ve had people leave the church because, in their eyes, I’m too woke, and we’ve had people leave the church because I’m not woke enough.”
Not only have politics affected attendance, but the pandemic also broke the habit of showing up every Sunday. ‘The polarization is worse, and people aren’t going to church right now,’ said another pastor. ‘Based on what’s going on, nobody knows who’s coming back.’
Protestant Christianity takes the view that, “Using the name of Jesus to justify subjugation of people of color is immoral, unjust, dangerous and inexcusable.”Additionally, they are facing their own challenges these days relative to “loving the people, but hating the sin” in addressing gender choices, right to life, and levels of support for those in need.
Then there are the Christian politicians who are dividing conservatism. For example, Bible tweeting Sen. Marco Rubio trying to straddle the line for political expediency said there was “nothing patriotic” about what was occurring at the Capitol during the violence. A few hours later, he voted the Electoral College count wasn’t valid. The central issue of this controversy was that black and brown people’s votes don’t count. It seems he is willing to devalue his families Hispanic, immigrant identity for voter favor.
South Carolina Republicans issued a formal censure to U.S. Rep. Tom Rice to show disapproval over his vote in support of the second impeachment of former President Donald Trump stating, ‘He told us he voted his conscience. These people did not vote for him to vote his conscience; these people voted for him to support us, our district and the president.’ What’s interesting is the States creed is, ‘I will never cower before any master, save my God.’
Has Evangelical Christianity betrayed the commitment to the truth, moral character, the Imago Dei, and the Sermon on the Mount? This potential betrayal is not a theological phenomenon; its ideology developed from the strongholds of self-interest, superiority, self-absorption, and a belief that their group is being polluted by the “other.”
Has Protestant Christianity lost its ability to love and forgive those who hate them; as God has forgiven. Forgiving someone for not valuing your existence is not easy. The offense seems so egregious, it cannot be forgiven. The strongholds of pride, bitterness, and vengeance poison the soul. Yet, on the cross, Jesus cried out, ” Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.” Forgiveness takes great courage and it reflects the grace and mercy of Jesus Christ.
The weapons in the Christian conflict have become intimidation, verbal assault, death threats, violence, real and rhetorical in pursuit of pure power. The Bible teaches us the weapons of a Christian’s warfare are different from the world’s weapons of warfare. Our weapons have power from God that can destroy strongholds, people’s arguments and every proud thing that raises itself against the knowledge of God. Strongholds are the inner turmoil we face, not other people. It is self-idolatry for anyone to think they can create their own truth based on how they “feel.”
Today would be a great day to come to Jesus Christ in repentance and faith. Strongholds rob us of peace, separate us from God, steal our joy and destroy our witness. Strongholds, by design, build walls of separation. Let all our fears, biases and beliefs, like Jericho wall, come tumbling down. There is compassion for those who repent and restoration according to God’s promise. Through trust in Him, not people, politics, or power we can find our way back.
“Father, we ask as a church for your forgiveness for the extraordinary delight that our church has taken in humiliating others. Help us to remember other people come from different perspectives and have had different life experiences. It doesn’t mean they’re horrible people. We pray, Father, that as a church, we demonstrate love one to another and find our way back to You.”
SOURCE: nytimes.com, How White Evangelical Christians Fused With Trump Extremism, January 2021; damemagazine.com, Is the Media Ready For The Next GOP Gaslighting?, Allison Hantschel, January 2021; Newsweek, Franklin Graham Compares 10 Republicans Who Voted to Impeach Trump to Betrayal of Christ, Jeffery Martin, January 2021; sun-sentinel.com, Trump ignites war within the church, David Brooks, January 2021; www.deseret.com, Religious leaders call for peace amid election turmoil, Kelsey Dallas, January 2021; apneas.com, In voting to impeach, SC’s Rice acknowledges political risk, January 2021