| By
Ron Walters | SACOBSERVER.COM WIRE SERVICES
(NNPA) - It began last year with Hannity
and Combs calling the theology followed by Dr. Jeremiah Wright’s
church a “cult.”
But it continues with recent news articles calling Black
Theology and “strange religion” and a “separatist”
concept. All of these characterizations are distorted in that
they emanate from a perspective outside of the Black community
attempting to perceive the fundamentals of a culture that
honors the dignity of Black people in its religious practice.
Rev. James Cone was interviewed by National Public Radio
in March and he was repeatedly referred to as the father of
Black Theology. That may be true in the sense of his composition
of the theology, but he would be the first to say that its
practice grew out of the historical religious experiences
of Black people. I recall that in the book by Professor V.
P. Franklin, Black Self Determination, he comments on a scene
on a plantation where slaves were being preached to by their
white master. When the master sited several passages in the
bible meant to support his view that slaves should obey their
master, they arose and moved to the other side of the room!
The notion had come to Blacks early in their engagement
with Christian religion that there was a contradiction between
the theological interpretation of their master, and their
own understanding of the message of Amos that the mission
of Christians was justice which should “roll down like
water and righteousness like a mighty stream,” or that
Jesus ordered his disciples such as the prophet Jeremiah to
“preach good news to the poor,” or that the basic
duty of Christians was to care for the oppressed and despised.
In other words, the mission of Christianity appeared to speak
powerfully to their own liberation.
In the 1960s, Malcolm X contributed to Black Theology by
his demand that Black love themselves and in doing so, validate
their own humanity before the world. He noted that many Blacks
existed in the mental slavery of loving their modern masters
and their theology more than they loved their own or themselves.
This was a profound observation of a Muslim that many Blacks
had received Christianity uncritically and had not interpreted
it in the context of their own identity and life challenges.
This would all change with the coming of the ideology of Black
Power which affirmed the Black self and led to Rev. James
Cone’s seminal book, Black Theology and Black Power.
The view that a people whose humanity had been debased through
slavery and civic oppression could not express a positive
view of their identity was received by many whites, however,
as “separatist.” This, however, represents the
perspective of the dominant group - separation from who? -
rather than a focus on the empowerment of black humanity and
not a prescription for hating whites. Moreover in the hands
of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. even when it was not recognized
as a formal theology, Black religion was a moral force that
provided an alternate definition of freedom and liberation
of the material and spiritual dimensions of life in confrontation
with the evils of war, poverty and racism.
Most important, many Blacks were challenged to reinterpret
the Christianity they practiced in terms of their own history
and identity, leading to the blackening of religious images,
the reconceptualization of the identity of Jesus as a white
man and the African origins of Christianity by Howard University’s
Professor Cain Hope Felder and others. And why not? In every
civilization, the evolution of the highest spiritual force
is rendered in the context of the culture of the people who
are supplicants to it. The Christian religion is an exception
only because it was spread with the sword through the Crusades
and colonialism. But even then, it has rarely eclipsed indigenous
religions, rather, they have merged in a syncretistic dance
that allows the indigenous religions to be practiced under
the shell of Western religions.
Surveys by Professors Lincoln and Mamiya have found that
Black Theology is practiced least by the black working class
Church of God In Christ (COGIC) churches, and most by Black
churches with more highly educated and affluent populations
and, in any case, it is not the dominant theology of the Black
church in general. Nevertheless, the extent to which it opened
a window for the exercise of the prophetic exegeses that evaluate
the quality of American life, and especially the condition
of Black people, in terms of the application of Christian
principles of liberation, makes it exceedingly precious and
worthy of defense.
Dr. Ron Walters is the Distinguished Leadership Scholar,
Director of the African-American Leadership Center and Professor
of Government and Politics at the University of Maryland College
Park. His latest book is: The Price of Racial Reconciliation
(University of Michigan Press).
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