Archive | June, 2008

An Uppity Update

11 Jun

Well, where I’m staying at this summer, somehow has fried my wireless connection with their particular router–go figure, so I’m relegated to staying late at my job and using the company’s computer. 

Hmmmm…wonder what they would say if they decided to do a History check and see name’s like “uppity negro” “averagebro” “black snob” and God forbid “raving black lunatic” in the search engines.

That’s beside the point, I could really care less.

But, so that my readers won’t be left in the lurch, I’m just letting you guys know that barring any significant change in my current work schedule which is 6 days a week, with only Thursday’s off, and unless I get dedicated to coming in the A/V room here my posts will from now on be significantly shorter and less in-depth than my normal writings.  However, I am keeping up with those on my blogroll as I am prolifically (sp?) commenting on their blogs.

But, hmmm…iono, I may write a lot tonight, I may not, let’s see.

I have received a direct letter from Rev. Jeremiah Wright and Rev. Otis Moss III who is now the “Senior Pastor-elect” of Trinity United Church of Christ.  I have not yet decided, let alone figured out a way, to post this letter.  The reason why was because this was a letter issued to church members and I’m a firm believer that what is church business, is church business, as long as it’s nothing that negatively affects the larger community.

This letter clearly denounced the Time/CNN article that I posted earlier last week.  So from what I gathered upon reading the letter was that what the Time/CNN article said happened, DID in fact happen.  The problem was an issue with Trinity’s by-laws and Rev. Moss’ inability to get ordained by the denomination of United Church of Christ.  This in fact had little to do with Rev. Wright wanting to hold on to the reigns as senior pastor at Trinity.  In fact this church letter stated that there is nothing in the denominational by-laws nor the church by-laws that delineates between “pastor” and “senior pastor” but rather a distinction that was bestowed upon Moss’ arrival by the Board of Trustees.

All that says to me, after reading the letter was that Moss and whoever else should have been more vigilant about getting their UCC ordination done by the first Sunday of June 2008 and this situation wouldn’t have happened.

To my readers: As soon as I can figure out a way to copy this letter into a Word document, I will quickly cut and paste and provide it to you so can draw your own conclusions rather than just take my word on it.

And yes, I still must go back to the Hillary Clinton debacle of last week.  I guess since everyone else has commented on it I still owe and ENTIRE post to my reaction to Sen. Clinton because I still have a lot to hash out as far as her being treated as a woman in the race and how I personally feel that even though she lost, she still proved that a woman CAN be the president of the United States.  People are saying that she cracked the ceiling and honestly, I believe that she BLASTED through it.

The same goes for Sen. Obama, I think we’ve proven, barring any voting irregularities in November, that a black man has a viable chance of being president in this country.

Which brings me to yet another idea that Obama is a member of the Illuminati that I’ve seen floating around the blogosphere?!?!?!?! 

Are you SERIOUS?!?!?!

And it was through Soul Jonz’ blog that I had read that and also through Average Bro’s blog that had a YouTube clip of these crazy black dudes just…well, watch that clip, I have no words for it…and one of their claims was that Obama was part of the Illuminati and he was going to institute the New World Order.  And I MUST write about what is it in the water with our young black men, around 25 that just all of a sudden have this weird black nationalist bent, and what not…classic symptoms of I-once-was-dumb-but-I-read-a-book-and-now-I-have-all-the-answers Syndrome.

So, stay tuned.  I want to leave you all with this clip.  At first I was going to find the song “I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free” because I’m definitely there. 

I wish I knew how
It would feel to be free
I wish that I could break
All the chains holding me
I wish I could say
All the things that I’d like to say
Say ‘em loud say ‘em clear
For the whole round world to hear

I wish I could share
All the love that’s in my heart
Remove every doubt
It keeps us apart
And I wish you could know
What it means to be me
Then you’d see and agree
Every man should be free

I wish I could live
Like I’m longin’ to live
I wish I could give
What I’m longin’ to give
And I wish I could do
All the things I’d like to do
You know they’ll still miss part of you
Yes Sir…
And I’m way way over due

I wish I could be like a bird up in the sky
How sweet it would be
If I found out I could fly
So long to my song
And look down upon Ihe sea
And I sing because I know
I would see you
I sing because I know
I would see you
And I sing because I know
I would see you
To be free

There’s a lot going on in this world and, MY GOD, we have a LOT of work to do, and I myself am fighting this feeling of apathy and disillusionment that many of black brothers and sisters fall victim to simply because the stresses of being black in America are many and the remedies are few.  But, then I remembered this other song by Miss Nina Simone that I remember my roommate summer of 2006 kept on playing.  Now he played the Walter Hawkins version of it, but I’m going to leave you with the Nina Simone version–and so I may make this my official theme song.  Enjoy.

Keep it uppity, and keep it truthfully radical, JLL

 

Say It Aint So Rev….

6 Jun

 

 

Well, this is most definitely a story I am troubled to pass on to my readers.  I don’t think MSM has gotten hold of it, and clearly the Obama-Clinton surprise meeting here in Washington trumped this story.  And seeing as how the Fr. Pfleger removal (or suspension) story didn’t break big news nationally, I’d be shocked if this is more than a small footnote on AC360.  But seeing as how I’ve just been in my moods concerning all things racial, political and religious lately, I refuse, for once, to subject myself to the ravings of FoxNews.

Below is a story that was tipped off to me by one of my fellow Fiskites and a professor.  I really wanted to cry because those who know me ALREADY know how vocal I have been about this situation.  For the sake of privacy of the church matters and my own personal reservations, I vascillated about whether or not to even bring this particular story to light, but in the interest of many parties who simply don’t know, I feel the need to.

I am reserving my deep personal feelings concerning this due to the private nature of the situation to church members and to me as well.  Below is the Time/CNN story in full entitled “The Unretirement of Reverend Wright” written by Steven Gray, published online on June 4, 2008.

When Sen. Barack Obama severed ties with his Chicago church, most political observers saw the move as a way for the candidate to insulate himself from the controversies stirred by its retiring pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr. But Trinity United Church of Christ does not have that kind of insulation. According to sources within Trinity, Wright, 66, who began the process of retirement two years ago, is resisting fully relinquishing his duties as senior pastor, hanging on to power in the church he helped build.

Wright was officially to have stepped down last Sunday, June 1. And from the pulpit at 7:30 a.m. that day, Wright’s hand-picked successor, the Rev. Otis Moss III, preached what should have been his first sermon as senior pastor of Trinity, one of the Chicago’s largest congregations and among the most influential religious institutions in America. Instead, on church bulletins on June 1, Moss was identified simply as “pastor” rather than “senior pastor,” even as Wright assumed the title “pastor emeritus.” Indeed, Trinity members familiar with the developments say that on May 27, Moss was summoned to the church’s massive brown sanctuary for a meeting that included Wright, several church board members and other senior leaders. According to those sources, Moss, 37, expected the meeting to finalize transition plans. Instead, Wright suggested the board merely declare Moss “senior pastor-elect” because the younger cleric needed “supervision” — effectively ensuring Wright remains Trinity’s preacher-in-chief. Wright’s essential argument hinges on a technicality: Moss is an ordained Baptist minister who has yet to be fully ordained in the United Church of Christ, the predominantly white protestant denomination of which the roughly 8,500-member Trinity is the largest congregation.

As news of the situation traveled through the congregation, many Trinity members were baffled. “Two years ago, you felt God gave you the vision to bring Rev. Moss here,” one Trinity member said this week, referring to Wright’s explanation for hiring Moss. “Now,” the same member added, “why are you second-guessing God’s vision, and saying Rev. Moss isn’t qualified, that somehow he needs to go through more hoops?”

According to Trinity members familiar with the situation, after the May 27 meeting, Moss was ordered to tell the first person he hired — his head of communications — that she could no longer serve in the paid pastoral staff position. At least one other Trinity staffer has also been relieved of her duties in recent days. One source familiar with the situation said of Wright and the dismissals, “He doesn’t have to run it by the board.”

Sunday June 1 lacked the fanfare that often marks the official start of a pastor’s tenure. In fact, Wright didn’t even show up, for reasons church officials have so far declined to explain. From the pulpit on Sunday, Moss didn’t address the unseen drama, and later that evening he left for a vacation. “He has inherited this mess,” one Moss supporter observes, “and his priority is to help a congregation heal and move forward. Hopefully Wright will let him do that.” “The church is splitting,” says one Trinity member. “It’s sad, because this is a case of the older leader not being prepared to pass the mantle to the new leadership, and all that the new leadership represents.”

Church officials have been evasive if not obstreperous in clarifying the precise timelines for the transition from Wright to Moss. Trinity’s spokeswoman, Donna Hammond-Miller, responded to questions on the matter by e-mailing a reporter the church’s already widely circulated response to the Obama family’s departure. Pressed further on Sunday morning in between church services, Hammond-Miller said: “Those questions won’t be answered at this time.” When asked to help clarify points for the sake of accuracy, Hammond-Miller responded, “That’s your problem, not mine.” When queried by TIME again on Wednesday on the same issues, Hammond-Miller said, “They’re not responding to those questions. That’s the pastor’s choice.”

Officials at the United Church of Christ’s national headquarters in Cleveland are aware of the leadership tension at Trinity. However, they say, individual U.C.C. churches are autonomous and the national body can do little to intervene. Barbara Powell, a U.C.C. headquarters spokeswoman, noted that “Trinity didn’t follow the normal U.C.C. guidelines for the [pastoral] search” (Wright handpicked Moss, apparently without a formal search committee), but said it was hard to imagine that Moss wouldn’t successfully complete the ordination process.

At several points in recent years, Wright has openly contemplated his retirement. But the rift between Wright and Moss was unexpected. In early 2006, Wright announced that Moss would be his successor. It was an interesting choice, considering Moss’s pedigree: His parents were civil rights movement activists married by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and his father is a prominent Cleveland minister. Educated at Morehouse and Yale, Moss had since 1997 led an Augusta, Ga., congregation, boosting its membership from 125 to some 2,100. In a January 2007 interview with Trumpet, a Trinity-affiliated magazine, Wright recalled introducing Moss to the congregation. “I had prayed to God to send someone to God’s church. God answered my prayer in Otis,” Wright told the publication. “Don’t think,” he added in the interview, “I would turn over 36 years to someone I didn’t have complete confidence in.”

In accepting the Trinity job, Moss apparently bypassed an opportunity to assume leadership at his father’s church. Moss moved his wife and two children to Chicago, where he was to serve as an associate pastor at Trinity during the two-year transition. By most accounts, Moss quickly energized Trinity, particularly with his easy, unself-conscious references from the pulpit to both hip-hop culture and deep biblical scholarship. However, in an August 2007 Cleveland Plain Dealer article, Moss seemed to foreshadow his troubles in Trinity. The generation gap plaguing such institutions, Moss said, is “a gap of language, values. It’s a gap in the best tactics on how to transform the black community. It’s an intellectual gap in many ways. There has to be a dialogue between those generations [so] that you don’t cast aside one generation or the other, or one generation doesn’t demonize the other.”

The church became an issue in the presidential campaign after Wright’s videotaped comments on 9/11 and bitter aspects of the black experience in America were propagated widely over the Internet. In response, Obama delivered his widely praised March 18 speech on race, in which the candidate repeatedly referred to Wright as his “former pastor.” Then came Wright’s fiery April 28 speech and haughty question-and-answer session at the National Press Club, in Washington. The next day, Obama denounced his “former pastor” outright. Attempting to quell the anxiety at Trinity, Moss wrote a “Declaration of Interdependence,” which began: “We pray for our pastor. We pray for our member, who is a public servant…. We, the community of Trinity, are concerned, hurt, shocked, dismayed, frustrated, fearful and heartbroken.” Now, without Obama in the church, Moss must deal with the formidable figure of Jeremiah Wright alone.

I look forward to any comments concerning this and use the comment space as one to share your own opinions and thoughts.

JLL

Romans 8:26-28 “Likewise the Spirit also helpeth our infirmities: for we know not what we should pray for as we ought: but the Spirit itself maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered. And he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit, because he maketh intercession for the saints according to the will of God.  And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose.”

100th Post!

5 Jun

 

And the crowd yelled virulently “SPEECH! SPEECH! SPEECH!” and he walked up to the podium slowly, taking deliberate steps careful not to trip over the raised platform.  He smiles as the spotlights shine brightly onto his black and white tuxedo.  There was no need to adjust the microphone because his voice was already clear and loud enough; no need to signal to the crowd he was about to speak as he leaned slightly forward toward them.  Blinking once, as time seemingly slowed to a crawl, he licks his lips and begins to speak.

LMAO!!!

I’m just joking.

But a party for me would be nice–black tie event even better.

Seriously though, I really never really saw how far I’d go with the blog thing, I certainly never thought I’d make it this far though.  So go ahead and mazaltof, I’m here for at least another 100 more!

Keep it uppity and keep it truthfully radical, JLL

Saving Face over Faith; Pfleger removed from his pastorate

5 Jun

THIS is a blog I’d rather not feel moved to write. I’ve already set a task before me of a list of blogs that I was supposed to be writing exploring some of the issues surrounding the recent Democratic campaign events.  Pushing those issues further make making them less and less relevant. 

BUT, the fact that Cardinal George of the Chicago Archdiocese decided to suspend [yeah, ask Hillary Clinton for this definition of "suspend" and what it really means, talkin' bout "suspending" campaign, wtf?!?!?!]  Father Michael Pfleger from the pastorate of the Faith Community of Sabina Roman Catholic Church.  Well, despite my own reservations about Roman Catholicism, I liked Fr. Pfleger.  His glowing bio on Wikipedia speaks volumes about his character as a pastor. His faith had moved him to actually do community activist things that actually lead to a physical and tangible betterment of the surrounding Auburn-Gresham community on the South Side of Chicago.

This was a guy who just hosted the birthday party of Maya Angelou, who’s friends with Oprah, who also endorsed Barack Obama, soooooo are we going to now go after Maya Angelou and Oprah en masse and call for their removal, or is it suspension, I’m getting the two confused.  Just look at the picture below with him flanked with the King’s, but folks want him removed. 

I’d REALLY be interested to see what folks would think of a Martin Luther King if he had given his 1967 Riverside Church sermon in 2008.

I mean Fr. Pfleger is a bad dude!

Now, let me first say I don’t like Cardinal George, never have.  I felt he was mealy mouthed and didn’t have a spine to save his life.  Chicago hasn’t had a decent Cardinal since Fr. Bernadin passed in 1998 from cancer.  By extension of my parents, I don’t like Cardinal Cody who I believe preceeded Cardinal Bernadin.  But Fr. Cody had threatened to remove Fr. Pfleger in 1981 when Pfleger decided to adopt a black male child.  So, for Cardinal George to remove Pfleger over this, but shuffled his feet on removing pedophiles from their pastorates…

(Pause….to get breath…)

Granted, I coulda seen this removal coming a MILE away, and yes I’m sure Stevie Wonder could have as well, but honestly, the South Side of Chicago had definitely been lulled into a stupor that Fr. Pfleger was an untouchable, because even I believed the hyped.  I mean, from a white guy with blue eyes who frequently preaches in Kente cloth, in front of a picture of black Jesus and chain smokes–I mean, he was a black church pastor, the church was his lock, stock and barrel!

Maybe he should just pull a Fr. George Stallings with Imani Temple and leave the Roman Catholic church, it’s not like they have a great track record historically with African Americans contrary to popular opinion.

I just think it’s really messed up that Cardinal George even removed Pfleger from the rectory.  Granted he’s not living on the streets, but he’s definitely not home; somewhere he’s been living for quite a few years now.

So, yes, this note is really another spiel solidifying this idea of social justice in the pulpit because yet again, Pfleger’s nearly 30 year ministry DEFINITELY far outweighs this ONE stupid comment about Hillary (which appears to be a sentiment if not shared by Hillary herself but by many of her supporters) and I’m ready to debate until the death that Pfleger made a true slip of the tongue when he said that “America is a…sin against God,” albeit a Freudian slip probably.

http://video.ap.org/v/default.aspx?f=ILCHS&g=30fc032d-2890-4b2e-a1de-38e49165220f&mk=en-ap&fg=svip_copy

[I was unable to embed the above link, but this link provides context for Father Pflegers sermon in which he mocked Hillary Clinton] 

This is a bellwether moment for me, especially as someone planning to go into the ministry and I wonder are we going back to the days where black churches were watched by the white powers that be lest they said something that challeged the status quo.  Honestly, I consider this Trinity-watch nothing shy of the practices of local authorities in the era between the Civil War and the modern Civil Rights movement.  If someone fails to preach what falls into certain perameters, apparently as determined by whatever random, person, usually white, political pundit who’s never attended a black church on the regular to get a good feel for the ethos of the church.

So, it seems to me that Cardinal George was willing to save face rather than step out on faith that Pfleger was on to something with his radical judgments of the state of race relations in this country.   Especially juxtaposed to denominational presidents coming out to speak on and defend more or less the establishment of Trinity United Church of Christ and their association with Jeremiah Wright.  Is the church about saving face or about stepping out on faith that the direction they are headed is the direction where God is.  I guess its the age old debate about religion and politics mixing together (guess you could add race into the mix whenever applicable).

I mean, people compromise their faith just to save face all the time.  This is not even remotely a new tactic that Cardinal George is using.  It’s called opportunity costs: are you willing to give up something in order to get something.

Just ask Barack Obama.

My question simply posed to the blogosphere is saving face worth more than your faith?  At what point are you willing to compromise?

Keep it uppity and keep it truthfully radical, JLL

The Night I Missed History

4 Jun

As most every knows by know who is a regular reader of this blog that I’m staying with a host family for the summer while I do my internship.  Well, tonight, Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008 was the night that one of their daughters had her graduation party.

June 3rd, 2008 was also the night that that good ol’ Senator from Illinois with a funny name, Barack Obama effectively became the first African American party nominee for the President of the United States of America.

Yes, Michelle Obama might actually be First Lady.

Well, per my comments on various blogs that are listed on my blogroll such as Averagebro and theRoot and my all-time favorite The Black Snob (who effectively introduced me to the black blogosphere as I know it! :-) ) I’ve been in a weird place as far as how I feel about race relations in this country.  I mean, the clip of this irate woman from Manhattan at the Democratic Party credentials committee meeting earlier this week kind of told the story for me that yet again, we have a long way to go.  But, it just seems that I’ve been saying the same thing in my blogs for a while, and then something else happens that just totally adds fuel to the fire.

A few people say I flip-flop as far as my position; usually my blogs amount to thesis, antithesis and then synthesis for those who are wondering.  But it appears that my synthesis is usually a voice crying out in the wilderness.  There are those out there, don’t get me wrong, that generally call for a more balanced and INTELLECTUAL dissection of all things racial, political and religious. 

All of that being said, aside from the small, but very real fear of an assasination (yes, I’m serious about that), I’m just TOTALLY baffled by our political system.  The following issues I have I do hope to flesh out into following blogs that will ensue for the rest of the week.

Seriously, I have grown a bit apathetic about race relations in our country as a result of of recent events centered around this race.  Barack Obama was right about folks being “bitter.”  Perhaps he was wrong about who was bitter and perhaps what they were bitter about, but when I watch people like Harriet Christian in the clip above, hell, Fr. Michael Pfleger was pretty close to being dead-on about Hillary Clinton having this sense of entitlement.  You’d be very hard pressed to tell me that Miss Christian, who I actually feel sorry for, because I wish she’d just let go of whatever it is that’s she’s dealing with, wasn’t bitter about what was happening to her candidate.

And then I went on The Root today and the one main article “The Return of Real White People” and I couldn’t agree with DeWitt’s article more, that it’s the same incident’s such as the picture of the Rebel flag with the adage “Don’t Forget Your Roots” flying behind it at the Darlington International Speedway in May of last year that make a Rev. Jeremiah Wright sound less and less crazy to the wider public. 

I haven’t figured out yet how black people have turned so RABIDLY against Hillary Clinton.  I guess you can call me a Clinton apologist, who supports Obama.  I don’t know if it was because I just chalked ALL of her comments about “real white” voters when campaigning in Kentucky and West Virginia to just politics or was it the fact that Obama’s luster dulled quite a bit for me after he distanced himself not just from Rev. Wright, but more importantly the major and earth-shattering racial issues that Rev. Wright had brought up in the short three days surrounding his PBS interview, his NAACP and National Press Club appearance.  I mean, I’ve seen my fellow bloggers get NAKED on their feelings about Sis. Clinton.

Among my favorite are:

  1. Ice Queen“  thanks to The Field Negro (and I just have an image of the White Witch from the Chronicles of Narnia and I think it’s an interesting juxtaposition of traditional thought concerning things that are “white,” lol)
  2. Queen of Darkness” thanks to Raving Black Lunatic’s blog.

If you have any names for Hillary you’d like to add, feel free to post in the comments section!!!

I’d also like to explore this whole thing about sexism versus that of racism.  We need to remember that historically white women were not for the uniting of the races over that of themselves.  Just ask Elizabeth Cady Stanton.  It was no secret that her and Frederick Douglass parted ways over that issue.  I will be among the last to say that Hillary got a fair shake, despite her being a woman, simply because I can identify with being a minority in a majority situation.  However, those using the argument that reporters are referring to her as Hillary over that of “Senator Obama” or deferring to his last name over that of Hillary are barking up the wrong tree.   She herself uses (or is it used now, last I heard she’s still campaigning, go figure) campaign signs that say “Hillary.”

Finally I’d like to see what’s up with the fact that Obama can’t win these primaries and these swing states.   Granted he played the nominating game which was really about delegate counts and personally, I believe he won fair and square. 

[And I'm going to take this moment to go down a rabbit-hole and say that Florida and Michigan DID NOT follow the rules and by seating those delegates negated the fact the 48 other states plus the other territories followed the rules.  And yes, Clinton somewhat showed her Queen of Darkness powers through Harrold Ickes by threatening to challenge the credentials committee at the convention in Denver.  I mean, hell, she agreed back in January when she seemed entitled and favored and poised to win this whole thing that Michigan and Florida should NOT count. Oh, but once her dream slipped away (just imagine the Fr. Pfleger demonstration) she started hollering and pueling like a little baby.  Anyway, off that soapbox, back to our regularly scheduled programming.]

I’m not sure if it was the Rev. Wright factor which came up interestingly around the time of the Ohio and Pennsylvania primaries and what seemed like a pretty decent primary season SUDDENLY turned bad for both candidates.  Or was it the fact that Obama, for whatever shortcomings of his, is un-electable on the mere basis that he just can’t connect with them.   Or, is the disconnectedness really a result of race….who knows.

Since, I missed this historic night, I’m watching Obama’s speech as I type this on FoxNews (yes the enemy, but they are the only one’s I’ve found replaying the whole speech and I am interested to hear with the turd Juan Williams has to say.)   

But, as most of the black blogosphere has went into overdrive typing up their expectations and apprehensions for Bro. Obama, and their seething hatred for that which is called Clinton, first name Hillary, second name Bill; as the conservative blogosphere hammers out stories masking their own racial prejudices and using “history as a wedge and patriotism as a bludgeon…enemies to polarize” (wow, look at God, a direct quote from Obama mid-speech!!!!!) and perhaps as hospitals see a slight spike in heart attacks, strokes and other stress related symptoms in certain parts of Appalachia as those citizens learn of Obama’s presumptive nomination, I honestly do believe that this is in fact the Lord’s doing and it is most certainly precious in the Lord’s sight!

Make sure to leave possible names for Hillary Clinton so that I may add them to the list.

Keep it uppity and keep it truthfully radical, JLL

The Black Preacher in me…

4 Jun

I don’t know if it’s just me, or are other black church folk, especially preachers and musicians just on the edge of their seat when they hear Obama give a speech.  Especially when we see him use such masterful use of parallel structure and especially when we hear his close:

America, this is our moment. This is our time, our time to turn the page on the policies of the past; our time to bring new energy and new ideas to the challenges we face, our time to offer a new direction for this country that we love.

The journey will be difficult. The road will be long. I face this challenge — I face this challenge with profound humility and knowledge of my own limitations, but I also face it with limitless faith in the capacity of the American people.

Because if we are willing to work for it, and fight for it, and believe in it, then I am absolutely certain that, generations from now, we will be able to look back and tell our children that this was the moment when we began to provide care for the sick and good jobs to the jobless.

This was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal.

This was the moment when we ended a war, and secured our nation, and restored our image as the last, best hope on Earth.

This was the moment, this was the time when we came together to remake this great nation so that it may always reflect our very best selves and our highest ideals.

Thank you, Minnesota. God bless you, and may God bless the United States of America.

So…..is it just me, or is it the black preacher in me who just wants him to grab the podium and rare back and let out one good squall and let have someone cue a Hammond organ to back him up?  I mean, musicians know their cue when they hear a lil’ hum in the preacher’s voice, or they hear the preacher start using all of this high rhetoric such as “when the rise of the oceans began to slow”  I mean, John McCain and a Hillary Clinton aint got NOTHING on Barack!!

Honestly, some of us have already coordinated what amounted to an 11 o’clock Sunday morning black church service at your average Baptist church (just think Easter morning), complete with Howard Gospel Choir providing the music.

Anywho….

Do you think black people who were raised in the Black church or have some current connection to the Black church have a tendency to make some things “churchy?” or is it just our natural thing to do the “call-and-response” thing much like folks do in church and the whole situation comes off as churchy?

Keep it uppity and keep it truthfully radical, JLL

It’s Safe To Murder Negroes

2 Jun

I’m frustrated.

Really frustrated.

Seven people were murdered out here in Washington over the weekend and there’s absolutely nothing that will probably be done about it.  Furthermore, the majority of the people were probably black.  I’m also frustrated that Sean Bell, another black man was killed, and nothing truly effective was nor probably will be done to prevent that from happening.  I’m frustrated at the nameless black women who have murdered, beatened and raped, but yet and still we both in the community and in this country stand by and do nothing.

It’s safe to murder Negroes.

This title was pulled from a sermon supposedly preached by the Rev. Dr. Vernon Johns the fiery predecessor to Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King at the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Ala.  Now not much is known about the life and sermons of Johns, but it was documented by Taylor Branch in Parting The Waters his first civil rights tome in 1988 and by the made for TV movie “The Vernon Johns Story” that he preached this particularly incendiary sermon, resulting in being arrested mid-sermon by Montgomery’s finest, and ultimately resulting in the removal of him from that pulpit.

Sounds familiar doesn’t it?

Played brilliantly by James Earl Jones, the script has Johns saying “that last week, a man was fined for shooting a rabbit out of season.  A rabbit is better off than a Negro, because in Alabama, niggers are always IN season.”

Again, sounds familiar doesn’t it?

Well, if it doesn’t, let me help you out a little bit. 

From referencing the opening paragraph about my frustrations, its quite clear that for the majority of my life, if not all of my life we’ve gotten stuck in a rut, so to speak.  It’s more like a trench or canal by now because we’ve been digging this hole deeper each day; we keep on shaking the same trees expecting different fruit.  We shake orange trees expecting apples to fall from them.  We wait season after season, thinking we’re doing a new thing when winter gives way to spring and we see a new crop, but yet and still we expect apples to fall.  Rather than do the harder task of searching for an apple tree or finding apple tree seeds and planting our own apple trees, we do the easy thing over and over and over again–shake orange trees expecting apples.

Another way of saying it is to stop barking up the wrong tree–but I know how blacks are and their dogs, at least I think I do…

Whether or not the killers of the seven people slayed here in DC this last weekend of May were black or white, police officers or not, the end result is that seven people are dead and we really live in a society where there is no outrage about the systems in place that engender the culture of violence that breeds violence.  No one is being moved in any substantive way.  We watch the 10 or 11 o’clock news and 35 minutes later by the time one of the late-night talk shows is on, we’ve moved on with our lives.  We sleep well at night!  We don’t loose any sleep over it!  We live, move, operate and breathe in a society and a world where it’s safe to murder Negroes.

It’s safe because we do nothing.

In the movie the writers had Johns comparing the “stand-by nature” of blacks to the “stand-by” nature of the crowds at Jesus’ crucifixion.  Although the Christian faith is based on a crucifixion and the need for the crucifixion to take place, but we need to remember that this was nothing more than a public lynching Roman style and that it was Jesus’ words on the cross that transformed the lynching into a crucifixion.  But to those surrounding the cross, this was nothing more than business as usual.  

The seven killed this weekend, Sean Bell’s death, and the countless number of blacks who have HIV/AIDS and are dying daily, the gang violence, the silent suffering of black women suffering from the hands of pimps and who prostitute themselves to put food in their children’s mouth have all become business as usual and WE all stand by!  It’s as if we stood by while Pontius Pilate allowed for the execution of an innocent man named Jesus and said nothing.

Clearly, I’m on a soapbox with this blog, and doing a lot of venting, but I’m quite sure that I’m on to something regardless if it makes people uncomfortable or not; or whether or not one has a problem with me using Negro as I did in this blog.  But this blog was to call attention to some more of our societal ills, and to, yes, continue the incendiary flame in the tradition of a Rev. Dr. Vernon Johns, or a Dr. Martin Luther King or a Dr. Jeremiah Wright.  Honestly, if that makes Barack Obama uncomfortable enough to place his presidency over Providence–to each his own.  At this point in the game, I think Trinity should go for broke and Moss III might as well just steal this as a great sermon title (before I do, I already got my scripture and verse ready) and just preach till he can’t preach no more and just buck politcal correctness and just stand where God is telling him to stand; he definitely won’t do any good by pandering to the gods of MSM.

If you think I’m off the mark, feel free to leave a comment, something intelligent and worthy of a response.  If you think I’m dead on, leave me a note as well, I could use the encouragement because it’s times like these when you feel like you’re out there alone in your thinking.

Keep it uppity and keep it truthfully radical, JLL

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