Sunday, August 19, 2007

Announcement as Candidate for AMEC Historiographer












(The following was posted in the Online Version of the AMEC Christian Recorder on August 8, 2007)

STUDY OF HISTORY IS NOT DEAD AND DRY, SAYS DR. MARK TYLER:

Thank you for making these few lines available to share my passion for preserving the history of the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AMEC) with the readership of the Christian Recorder. Unfortunately, too many people in our society regard the study of history as a dead and dry science. However, the study of the history of the AMEC is not dead nor is it dry. In fact, it is the story of God’s saving activity among a people, often with their backs against the wall. One cannot tell the story of African Methodism in the United States, Africa, and beyond without telling the story of God continually bringing us out safely.

The problem with spiritual amnesia is made clear in the Book of Judges. Throughout the book, the people of God continue to find themselves in trouble because they forget. When they forget, they worship strange new gods, they adopt the wicked ways of their neighbors, and they become powerless over their enemies. Each time they forget their own divine history, they are led into disobedience and rebellion. Yet, they are saved by remembering. Whenever they remember to call on the name of the Lord, their God, they are delivered. Forgetting leads to destruction, yet remembering leads to salvation. Mr. Editor, this is a word for African Methodism.

In order that we might remember, I am running for the office of Historiographer of the AMEC. If elected in 2008 at the General Conference, with God’s help, I plan to implement the following program:

1. Build the Official Archives of the AMEC to house our most important documents, including a special holding for the papers of our Bishops, General Officers, Pastors, Laity, and other notable persons (The artists rendering in the photo above is one proposal for an archive generated by Rev. Jeffery Leath and the members of Mother Bethel AMEC, Philadelphia)
2. Commission the most exceptional scholars to write the most current volume of the History of the AMEC
3. Produce a DVD/VHS series documenting the history of the AMEC that will be available for use in New Member Orientation, Black History Month, and for other appropriate usages
4. Make the AME Review available in an online format
5. Create an ongoing dialogue with scholars concerned with the history of the AMEC

Many of the problems we face in our Church today can be tied directly to our collective amnesia. Maybe, we are so ready to preach the newest and latest theology from what we’ve seen on television simply because we’ve forgotten that before prosperity theology, we believed in a theology of Black Liberation (that would ultimately lead to a greater prosperity for all the people, not just the pastor!). When we forget, we rely more on fundraising than tithing. When we forget, we close our doors to hurting communities and become selective on whom we seek as new members. When we forget, we run the risk of rebelling against God and being alienated from God’s power.

But when we remember that we have not come all this way by ourselves, but that it was by the strong hand of God, then God becomes an active agent on our behalf. When we remember to call on God, our pews will fill again. When we remember to call on God, we won’t be reliant on the fish fry and the chicken dinner to bring us out. When we remember to call on God, people will have to compete for parking spaces in the lot and seats in the pews. If we, as a denomination, are to remain relevant and effective in this new millennium, we must remember to call on the name of the Lord!

If the AMEC elects me as the next Historiographer, I won’t forget!

Mark Kelly Tyler, Ph.D.
Candidate for the office of Historiographer, 2008
Pastor, Macedonia AMEC, Camden, New Jersey

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Congrads! Trust that your candidacy will spur excellence in the office.

Anonymous said...

Thank you, Dr. Tyler for championing this small but necessary advancement in the AMEC. As a seminarian, it is very difficult to do a thorough research paper on my own denomination. Go figure!!! Our history must be preserved and cherished by the current generation and generations to come. I hope and pray that God in God’s wisdom will allow you to undertake this monumental and enormous task when you are elected as a general officer of the AMEC in 2008. I pray that God will give you favor with the electorate and delegates in the AMEC.

Anonymous said...

Great information Dr. Tyler. You may want to contact Mr. Chester Owens in Kansas City, KS who has a lot of AME history that you might be interested in.

Anonymous said...

Congratulations Dr. Tyler.
Happy Holidays to you and your family.

~Dyanel aka Donna Boles

Anonymous said...

There's lot's of information and your blog looks so professional. Keep up the good work. May God bless you and reward your endeavors.

Theo Williams
Culture360.info
FAME, Los Angeles

tabbyb said...

Is your ideal of the "theology of black liberation" the same as Black Liberation Theology which is based on Liberation Theology of Latin America and is a Marxist Theology and not a Christian Theology?

Mark Kelly Tyler, Ph.D. said...

I'm not certain about your understanding of Black Theology, but I do not share the views you expressed. For me, Black Theology simply says that God is always on the side of the oppressed. Historically in our country, that has often (not exclusively) meant people of African descent. It is, therefore, the work of the church to advocate on the behalf of the voiceless, the unseen, the walked over. I don't know what could be more Christian or democratic.
mkt