Faith in Action

Religion, Policy, Activism

When people ask, "what is the biggest mistake made in the Black Panther Party?" I tell them very clearly that what we did wrong was to take God out of the movement. -Afeni Shakur (Former Black Panther and Mother of slain rapper,Tupac Shakur)


Archive for the ‘preacher’


Baltimore Sun: Whatever happened to Rev. Vernon Dobson?

Baltimore Sun
January 19, 2008

Rev. Vernon Dobson

The Rev. Vernon N. Dobson, who played a pivotal role in the struggle for civil rights in Baltimore during the 1950s and 1960s, first came to historic Union Baptist Church as assistant pastor in 1958, and then was pastor for 39 years, until retiring last year. “I’m doing a little writing now, and I still preach at different churches several times a month,” said Dobson, 84, the other day. He said he keeps busy with a number of organizations, including BUILD - Baltimoreans United in Leadership Development - a church-based social action group, of which he was a founder.”

Dobson was a friend of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights heavyweights, such as Ralph Abernathy, Jesse Jackson, and Andrew Young. “Whenever Martin came to Baltimore, he’d visit Metropolitan, Douglass Memorial and Union Baptist Church, and we marched together,” Dobson recalled. “I remember when we marched from Selma to Montgomery in 1965, we had thousands of people, and I never saw so many cracker cops in my life.

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A Personal Message from Pastor Delman Coates (Enough is Enough Campaign)

Enough is Enough Campaign

 Dr. Delman Coates

My brother, Dr. Delman Coates from the Mt. Ennon Baptist Church in Clinton, MD, just informed me about the wonderful success that the Enough is Enough Campaign is experiencing already in regard to their efforts to influence what is broadcast on Black Entertainment Television. The demeaning, disrespectful, and derogatory videos are well known. It’s time that African Americans do something substantive to address this issue.

Please visit the website of the Enough is Enough Campaign and consider how you can support their efforts. For those in the PG/DC/Baltimore Metro area, please consider attending the Saturday rallies there OR think about extending the campaign to where you live. We’ve got to put the pressure on multiple places in this pipe if we’re going to bust it up.

Juanita Bynum becomes victim of domestic abuse

Juanita Bynum

Sad news I heard during the morning drive this morning. 

Apparently, televangelist Juanita Bynum is currently in the midst of a separation from her husband, Bishop Thomas Weeks.  Bynum and Weeks had a lavish televised wedding back in 2002. 

Reports, indicate however that the marital hardship took a violent turn Tuesday night after Bynum and her estranged husband agreed to meet for dinner at a Renaissance Hotel near Atlanta’s airport.  The  meeting didn’t go well and Weeks abruptly left.  Bynum followed him to the parking lot where the two engaged in a heated conversation.  That’s when tragedy struck.  This from Fox 5 News in Atlanta:

According to an Atlanta Police Department report, that’s when Weeks allegedly attacked her.  In a statement to police, Reverend Bynum said her husband, Thomas Weeks, “choked her, pushed her down, kicked her and stomped her in the Renaissance parking lot.”
 
Ronald Campbell of the APD said a bellhop at the hotel saw the attack, intervened and stopped it.
 
Officer Campbell said Reverend Bynum suffered multiple bruises and swelling and required hospitalization.
   
Reverend Bynum is being kept at an undisclosed location.   Police are searching for Thomas Weeks
.”

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Considering Ethics in the Black Church

I remember vividly sitting in Dr. Patricia Gould-Champ’s class at the Samuel DeWitt Proctor School of Theology at Virginia Union University.  Dr. Gould-Champ is an exemplary professor with a very “familiar” style of teaching and interacting with students.  Familiar in the sense that she made you feel as if you’d known each other for a long time.  I loved her class, but I remember one night being disappointed when Dr. Gould-Champ said that we would be talking about the sad reality of manipulation, abuse, and molestation that occurs in far too many pulpits in America.  She spoke in very grave terms about the practice of some ministers to prey on the congregation or mishandle their influence by using it for selfish, sinful, and even criminal pleasures.  At that time, I felt like I didn’t need to hear about such things because I concluded that I would never do anything near the nightmarish stories of abuse that I’d heard other ministers involved in.

Five years later, I’m so glad that Dr. Gould-Champ forced the class to engage this sometimes uncomfortable issue.  The reality is that the issue of unethical and even criminal behavior in the Black church is still an extremely taboo topic.  While many improprieties have occurred in Black congregations across the nation; it would seem at times that more energy is devoted to covering up what happened as opposed to dealing with what happened and moving forward in a healthy way.  Also unfortunate is the practice of protecting the perpetrator even at the expense of the wellbeing of the victim.  Let me also say that as it pertains to Pastors I believe that even if consensual sexual relations occur - especially in a situation of infidelity - the Pastor is still the perpetrator.  The Pastor in the Black Church enjoys enormous amounts of influence over the congregation.  It behooves them (whether male or female) to be humbly aware of that reality and rely on God entirely so that they will be found faithful in executing the office of UnderShepherd. 

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A Day for Darfur Pt.3

Joe Madison is testifying for the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee.  He drops stats, facts, and figures left and right.  While half of my brain is listening to him - the other half is trying to organize my thoughts and sound half way intelligent while testifying. 

Madison is done and Walter Fauntroy goes next.  Like a good preacher he makes a little joke before starting to warm up the crowd.  They chuckle and he proceeds. 

While he’s talking I get my stuff together.  I think I can pull this off impromptu style now.  It hits me in that moment that growing up in the Black Church prepared me for this.  All those times that I had to stand and welcome visitors, respond to the welcome, sing a lead on a song, or pray over the offering prepared me for speaking confidently in front of people.  Thank you Church! (I gotta give a nod to the Future Business Leaders of America Club in high school too.  Did I mention that I placed 2nd in the county in the Impromptu Speaking competition?)

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Baltimore’s Black Pastors take bold steps in Maryland politics

I have always been a proponent of Faith leaders getting involved in political issues in such a way that holds elected officials accountable and encourages the wider community to get politically active.

While there are those that disagree with pastors being politically involved, the reality is that in the African American community the Black Pastor still wields considerable influence and often times is one of the few community leaders that is free to speak.  African American elected officials have by and large been in too many people’s pockets and therefore have too many outside influences controlling their voices and votes.

We need Black Pastors involved in responsible ways that ensure a greater quality of life for the majority of our communities.

In light of that, I celebrate the creation of a new alliance in Baltimore. Bishop Walter S. Thomas, pastor of New Psalmist Baptist Church, Senator Verna Jones (Chairwoman of the MD Legislative Black Caucus) and Mr.Raymond Haysbert (President of Forum Caterers) have helped to form an alliance of Faith, government, and business leaders in an effort to influence the policies that govern African American communities. (AFRO, Oct.12) While we have groups in place already like the Interdenominational Ministerial Alliance, BUILD, and Young Clergy for Social Change; I am of the opinion that the more African American clergy organized for social reform the better.  Without organization we are no match for the major systems and backstage powerbrokers that intentionally divest from our communities, economically exploit our families by snatching their valuable real estate in the name of urban revitilization and perenially underfund Baltimore City Public Schools leaving many of our youth ill equipped to be the leaders we need them to be. Let’s be clear ghettos are not coincidental; they are created.  The agenda of both major political parties have failed our communities. It’s time for us to organize and take our agenda to them.

We need pastors involved - and not just involved, but responsibly involved.  This point was reinforced in my mind when I read an article in the Baltimore Sun (Sun, Oct. 23) 2006) which described a visit by Governor Robert Ehrlich to an historic Baltimore church.  The Sun reports that the pastor of that church made a plea from the pulpit for parishioners to give $100 dollars to the Ehrlich campaign.  The article quotes the pastor as saying: “We cannot write a church check to a politician, but when people come to speak, you should sow into their lives I want 10 people to write me a check for $100 to Friends of Ehrlich. When someone rushed a $100 bill to the pastor’s hand he was quoted to say, Let’s give God a hand for $100 cash!”

In the spirit of political fairplay, the Pastor said that he will do the same for the Democratic candidate for Governor when he speaks to the congregation, but yet the political fundraising sanctioned by the pulpit does too much to disrespect the sacredness of the sanctuary and the intimacy of the relationship between undershepherd and flock. When congregants view one person (rightly or wrongly) as the spiritual representation of Divine presence among them; one would do well not to invite parishoners to haphazardly engage in a charged political arena.

The strategy is obvious - equally dividing support to both candidates is a smart move especially in a closely contested race, but if Judas taught us anything he taught us that when money is exchanged between the Church and the State; someone is bound to be crucified.

Furthermore, it doesn’t appear as if anything of substance came out of the event.  According to the article, Ehrlich didn’t talk about issues - he talked about leadership. 

Afterward, one of the congregants is quoted as saying, “He just got my vote. I believe in his words and I respect him.  For some reason he just talks to my heart.

And that precisely is the problem.  For far too long African American voters have been swayed by historic loyalties or carefully crafted emotional messaging.  This elementary approach of political engagement is appropriate for high school elections where you vote for who is most popular, but it’s poisonous when participating in real world elections where people create the rules and regulations that govern your life.

We must stop allowing ourselves to be wooed by the charisma of silver tongued politicians who come only at election time to speak to our hearts. We must run the marathon of tracking the policies of those elected with our brains to ensure that they are doing what we need them to do in office. Churches must join with community leaders to create public policy agendas for their neighborhoods and then demand that political candidates endorse their agenda - not the other way around. We must expose our youth to political education classes, advocacy trainings, and visits with elected officials in an effort to groom them to represent us honorably in offices of public service. If election after election we struggle to find candidates that represent our values and champion our issues it would make sense for us to train up a child in the way they should go so that when they are older and electable they won’t depart from us.

It will take innovative pastors to recognize these needs and put initiatives in place at their church that will educate, train, and equip Black Believers on how to responsibly engage the political process in ways that will bring about concrete results for our people. With the legacy of clergy activism in the city represented by groups like the Interdenominational Ministerial Alliance and the emergence of exciting new alliances spearheaded by the likes of Bishop Walter S. Thomas, we just may have taken another step toward the promised land for Black Baltimore.