Wednesday, April 30, 2008

History is against Obama’s bridge between black & white: The root of the “gap” & the slavery problem in the Methodist Church

This week, the “Jeremiah Wright” episode finally came to a head. Rev. Wright “went off” at the Press Club and Obama did what his white supporters have wanted all along, he clearly disassociated himself from his former pastor. My feelings about Dr. Wright are posted below in older postings and they remain the same, Monday’s episode notwithstanding. The concern for today has more to do with the comments made by Sen. Obama on Tuesday when he reiterated his desire to serve as a “bridge” between the different races. While Obama’s goal is truly a noble vision, the facts of history suggest that closing the gap is easier said than done.

In defining this gap between black and white people, David W. Wills says that “it is the story of a persisting and seemingly intractable gap or distance. Recurrent and sometimes heroic efforts have been made to overcome this gap, but in the end it seems always to endure” (African American Religion: Interpretive Essays in History and Culture, Fulop and Rabetou, eds.). Wills argues in his essay that since the days of the Great Awakening, through the period of Reconstruction, and up to the Civil Rights Movement, there have been periods of time when this gap was narrowed, but never closed.

Although Wills wrote over 10 years ago, the closing words of his essay are troubling and prophetic: “Since the late 1960s, there has been a clear retreat from a direct facing of the gap between black and white… Acknowledged or not, however, the gap between the races—a gap involving both the interpretation of the American experience and the degree of empowerment within it—remains one of the foundational realities of our national religious life. And however much members of both races might sometimes wish it were otherwise, the painful encounter of black and white is likely to remain in the future what it has been in the past—one of the crucial, central themes in the religious history of the United States.”

As members of the African Methodist Episcopal Church [AMEC], we need look no further than the Methodist Episcopal Church [MEC] (our mother denomination), for evidence of this fact. Prior to our founding in 1787, the MEC had opened its doors wide to black members. In fact, Bishop Francis Asbury in 1785 invited a former slave, Richard Allen, to join him on a preaching tour in the south. Allen’s decision to decline the offer set in motion a set of events that would eventually lead to the founding of the AMEC 2 years later. This invitation of a black preacher to join this white bishop on this evangelistic tour, however, was not considered rare in the early days of American Methodism. There were widespread reports of blacks and whites joining the same churches, worshiping side-by-side, and even blacks preaching to whites.

In fact, American Methodism began its journey on this soil heavily influenced by the anti-slavery sentiment of English founder John Wesley (see his book Thoughts upon Slavery by clicking here). So it is not surprising that they were decidedly anti-slavery in their rhetoric and their policies. (I am indebted to the work Paul Ernst, one of my former students at Methodist Theological School of Ohio. His research on this subject for his final assignment in our class on the history of black religion in America dealt with the following subject matter.) By 1784, the MEC had adopted the following stance on the issue of slavery:

Every member of our society who has slaves in his possession shall, within twelve months after notice given to him by the assistant (which notice the assistants are required immediately and without delay to give in their respective circuits), legally execute and record an instrument whereby, he emancipates and sets free every slave in his possession...In consideration that these rules form a new term of communion, every person concerned who will not comply with them shall have liberty quietly to withdraw himself from our society within the twelve months succeeding the notice given as aforesaid; otherwise the assistant shall exclude him in the society… No person so voluntarily withdrawn or so excluded shall ever partake of the Supper of the Lord with the Methodists till he complies with the above requisitions.” Beams of Light on Early Methodism in America, Phoebus, George A.

Talk about closing the gap! There was no ambiguity about where the church stood on the issue of slave holding. If you held slaves, you were not welcome in the MEC. Simply find a new church. As far as the preachers were concerned, there were also serious consequences:

Quest. 12. What shall we do with our friends that will buy and sell slaves?

Ans. If they buy with no other design than to hold them as slaves, and have been previously warned, they shall be expelled; and permited (sic) to sell under no consideration.

Quest. 13. What shall we do with our local preachers who will not emancipate their slaves in the States where the laws admit it?

Ans. Try those in Virginia another year, and suspend the preachers in Maryland, Delaware, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey.

Quest. 22. What shall be done with our traveling preachers that now are, or hereafter shall be, possessed of slaves, and refuse to manumit them where the law permits?

Ans. Employ them no more.

Unfortunately, the narrowing of the gap did not last. Pressure from influential slave holding members, the concern for lost revenue, and the fear of a church split led to a compromise of the newly enacted law. In the end, white racism and the power of the pro-slavery forces prevailed. As a result, racist attitudes were tolerated and discrimination was openly practiced in the local churches. Thus, just a few years later, Richard Allen and Absalom Jones found themselves being pulled up from their knees in prayer as they dared pray in the “whites only section” of St. Georges MEC in Philadelphia in 1787.

How does a church move from a place in 1784 where it would put members out of the church for holding slaves to a place 3 years later where Jim Crow, apartheid like practices had taken hold? How did we move from a place where the gap was almost closed at one moment and then in 3 short years the gap was reopened to a place where it has not budged in over 221 years? More importantly, what will white Americans do this time, in this 2008 version of the same old story?

Yes, I said white Americans. This gap does not exist because blacks want it, but because blacks have had little other choice but to accept it. A white gentleman once asked me why our church was called “African” and sarcastically asked me if he would be welcome to attend. After a short history lesson on our founding, I then informed him that he would feel right at home if he were to visit and he would be welcome to join. I am not suggesting that blacks in America are blameless in all things, but with regard to this particular issue, this is not a black problem. (For a white male perspective on this, please see "It's Gut Check Time for white Americans" by Mark Brown in the Chicago Sun Times today by clicking this link. He states it far better than I ever could ever say it!)

Blacks in America have enough votes to serve as the spoiler in a national election, but not enough to give the presidency to either candidate. And so there is great pressure on whites at the moment, just like in the 1780s in the MEC, to retreat from closing the gap. History suggests that Obama and black America are in for another major disappointment. History suggests that the old pro-slavery forces will win the day once again. History suggests that John McCain will be the next president of the United States.

However, I am still encouraged. I heard a sermon last week by the Rev. Dr. Eric Brown, entitled “You are not bound by your past.” Presiding Elder Brown reminded all of us that we are not bound to the mistakes of yesterday, but free to break the destructive cycles that often bind us. And for that, I am grateful. And so I ask my white brothers and sisters who are headed to the polls, “Where do we go from here? A full fledged retreat to the fear-mongering of the 1700s, or into Martin Luther King’s vision of a Beloved Community where people are actually judged by more than their race? The world is watching and waiting.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Annette John-Hall: Hearing Wright's real sermon - not incendiary sound bites



Annette John-Hall is a faithful member of Mt. Pisgah AME Church in Princeton, New Jersey, where her husband the Rev. Arthur Hall is an associate minister on the staff of Rev. Vernard Leak. She is currently a features reporter and columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer. She has also written for the Oakland Tribune, the San Jose Mercury News, and the Rocky Mountain News in Denver. The article below makes anyone associated with the AME Church proud of our rich heritage and adds another voice to such a critical and defining moment in our history. -mkt

For more than fortysomething years, you've been just about able to set your watch by where I'll be sitting at 11 on any given Sunday morning.

No, not in front of the TV watching bodies fly and helmets crunch. You'd better believe I've got my behind in a church pew, trying to work out my own salvation.

Like so many other African Americans, I grew up in church. My grandmother's name is still etched into the cornerstone of St. Paul A.M.E. Church in Berkeley, Calif., as it's been since 1953.

Unlike other public places, we didn't have to check our culture at the church's door for acceptance. Church was a place where we clapped, joyfully shouted "hallelujah," and reveled in the hope we had as African Americans. It was the same cultural fulfillment I imagine that Jews find in a synagogue, Catholics find in a cathedral, Muslims find in a mosque, and Buddhists find in a temple.

At the same time, the Scripture tapped into our sense of being. I learned that God was on the side of the "least of these" - on my side. That yes, Jesus loves me, even when nobody else does.

Most of all, it was there where I learned how to forgive and to love others.

So I was not one of those suckered into blind judgment of the Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr., one of the nation's foremost theologians and Sen. Barack Obama's former pastor, when I saw the endless clips of seemingly incendiary sound bites from a few of the sermons he gave during his 20 years at Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago.

With every spool of the now-infamous video splices (source unknown), the pundits became more accusatory with their own vitriol, throwing around words like hate speech, characterizing the pastor as a nut and fanatic, and insisting that Obama should have walked away.

Even now, they continually talk about "the Jeremiah Wright problem" as if it's some incurable disease about to overtake the nation.

It didn't take a prophet to realize that what we were hearing certainly wasn't the measure of this man.

Nor a true reflection of the black church, especially from people who'd never been in one.

Suddenly, if you believed those pundits screeching from their bully pulpits, every black church was preaching hate, was full of conspirators, was unpatriotic. The black church was the devil in disguise.

No viewer would have a clue that my church, like most black churches, was not just a house of worship but also served as a credit union, cultural center, therapist's couch, day-care center, food pantry and so much more.

On Sunday, I chose to worship at Macedonia A.M.E. Church in Camden.

As part of the service, Macedonia's pastor, the Rev. Mark Kelly Tyler, had promised to play one of Wright's sermons in its entirety so that we, the congregation, could decide. Tyler has always been an admirer of Wright, known worldwide as one of the best orators and respected theologians, and whose father was pastor of Grace Baptist Church of Germantown for 32 years.

"As a student of preaching, I try to find people who not only have something significant to say nationwide, but in the world," said Tyler. "I know he's not a preacher of hate.

"Theology has called us to be prophetic and not popular. Even the biblical prophet Jeremiah was called unpatriotic."

When Obama delivered his historic speech on race a few weeks ago, the symbolism for Tyler was not that it was made at the Constitution Center or across the street from Independence Hall. It was that he was speaking a few blocks from St. George's Methodist Church, where black parishioners in 1787 were pulled off their knees and told to go pray in the balcony by white church officials. It's what called Richard Allen and Absalom Jones to create the African Methodist Episcopal Church in 1816.

"To me, as a person of the A.M.E. Church, it was that Barack was speaking at Ground Zero of race relations in the church," said Tyler.

Which is why the motto of Wright's Trinity Church - "unapologetically Christian, unashamedly black" - is more about pride than race.

Mayor Nutter and so many others say they would have walked away. I understand why Obama didn't.

What we heard listening to Wright's full sermon, the one that followed the 911 attacks, was very different from the distorted video of the pastor's ranting about "the chickens are coming home to roost."

Sure, he blasted the country for misusing its super power at times and for being arrogant enough to think that we would never be attacked. But the real question he asked in his sermon was how "we" as a country would respond.

This was a time, he said, to examine ourselves and our own relationship with God. A time for social transformation for our country, and a time to give thanks for all that we have as citizens of this country and as people of God.

He always used "we" as Americans, never "them" or "us."

And he ended his sermon in a way that we never would have known from the distorted video.

He reminded us to love one another, to take time to give thanks, to thank God for the lives of the lost in the attack and for the ways in which those who died touched us.

And then he asked members of the congregation: When was the last time they told their family they loved them?

"Turn to your neighbor and say, 'I love you.' ''

And hearing his urging on audio in the church, that's what we did.


Contact columnist Annette John-Hall at 215-854-4986 or ajohnhall@phillynews.com. To read her recent work: http://go.philly.com/annette.




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