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An Open Letter to Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr. |
An Open Letter to Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr.
A press release from
Equal Partners in Faith, 31 Jan 2005
[Posted here 2-1-05]Dear
Colleagues:
Please read the following open letter
to Dr. Martin Luther King signed by progressive clergy who are working
for equal justice for all people. I believe that if our collective
work reflects the spirit and advanced consciousness of Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr., we will be successful in our efforts to secure
fundamental human rights across a wide spectrum of social justice
concerns in America. We applaud the signers of this open letter and
support them.
Sylvia Rhue Director, Equal Partners
in Faith |
An Open Letter To MLK Jr.
By: See Signers Below
paid announcement January 20, 2005
Dear Martin,
Every third Monday in January history
compels us to remember and reactivate your legacy. How shall we honor you?
And how shall we honor our deepest and truest selves? Nearly four decades
have passed since you left your legacy to us, and what a momentous legacy it
was. Yours was the vision of a transformed nation, a society that dared to
practice the very brotherhood - and sisterhood - that it preached. In a time
of tremendous social upheaval you joined the freedom-loving and
justice-seeking tradition of your people, black people, and you did so at
great personal cost. Using nonviolent direct action, you challenged the
existing status quo. In the presence of your enemies - citizen's councils,
police dogs, fire hoses, bigoted mobs, half-hearted allies, Christian
racists, the FBI - you practiced an insurgent religious faith. You modeled
for others the commitment to racial justice and reconciling peace. With your
very body and life you led us into the magnificent, multi-colored and
multi-ethnic quest of justice, peace and human community. Sore distressed,
we the people, have yet to catch up to your radically inclusive vision.
For African Americans, the cumulative
effect of the last forty years has been as disturbing as it is dramatic. In
the new millennium, our elusive and torturous quest for freedom and equality
continues. The full repercussions of radical democracy in the United States
are not yet known. The vast majority of whites see themselves as non-racist
and live comfortably with little or no real contact with other racial-ethnic
people. Oblivious to the obvious (and sometimes the not so obvious), the
connection between white privilege and black rage is discounted, resisted,
denied. In our houses of worship, in the ivory tower, in the corporate
boardroom, in the halls of government, in popular culture and mass media, in
states red, purple and blue, in old and new formations, racism lives on. In
the U.S., racial exclusion is still second nature. Racism is who we are. It
is our way of life.
Sadly, many black people now have
difficulty seeing their connections to other black people. We have embraced
societal distinctions that separate us by age, education, gender, sexuality
and class. We have forgotten the example set by so many courageous souls a
generation ago. Mose Wright, Daisy Bates, Jo Ann Robinson, E.D. Dixon, Ella
Baker, Bob Moses, Diane Nash, Fannie Lou Hamer, Septima Clark, John Lewis
and Bayard Rustin were part of that magnificent movement of blackness that
emerged, broke beyond itself, widened the circle of humanity, and called
forth women, children and men of all colors and conditions.
The painful truth is that we now often
violate and oppress our own in the name of religion. Always, at the center
of the heart of the historic black-led struggle for freedom was the black
religious experience. Black self-love was upheld as a divine imperative.
Local black churches became ecumenical networks of nurture and resistance.
At those beleaguered places of our most urgent human need common ground
often could be sought and found in the church. But not always. Movement
women like Ella Baker, organizer of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating
Committee, found themselves at odds with the sexism and sexual misconduct of
male ministers. An out gay man like Bayard Rustin, architect of the 1963
March on Washington, was feared as a potential threat to the advancement of
the race. Today, in the imperfectly desegregated post-civil rights era,
religiously inspired leadership continues to perpetuate a cruel sexual
ethic, and in stark violation of their own best sacred inheritance. That
black women continue to be relegated to secondary status and lesbians and
gays are made to feel unwelcome, unworthy, and uncomfortable in what should
be the most caring, compassionate and empowering of communions is a searing
indictment against all the black faithful.
Martin, like you, we are sometimes
uncertain in our leadership. The dominant views on sex, sexuality and gender
in the Black Church are undermining community, diminishing the faith and
leading many to abandon churches out of sheer moral frustration and
exhaustion. Our churches have been slow to embrace gender equality. They
have largely spoken only opposition and condemnation to same gender loving
people and have been unable to proclaim a sexually liberating and redemptive
word. Some black churches have concluded it is in their best institutional
interest to participate in "special rights" polemics against this so-called
"immoral humanity." As black clergy we offer here a more hope-filled
perspective.
In the spirit of Jesus of Nazareth, we the
undersigned clergy extend the divine invitation of human wholeness, healing
and affirmation to "whosoever" (John 3:16). In the best of the Black Church
tradition we say, "Whosoever will, let her or him come." Who is included in
this "whosoever?" The "whosoever" of today are the diseased and the dis-eased,
the discomforted and the distressed, those who live on the margins of the
marginalized, who are the oppressed of the oppressed, the sexually battered
and the abused, the homeless and the bereft, the HIV/AIDS infected, who are
the young and old, female and male, lesbian and bisexual, transgender and
straight. These are they, the children of God. They are our sisters and
brothers and partners and friends. They belong to all of us. And they are
very much we ourselves.
As Black Christian religious leaders what
more shall we do? We must help to forge a progressive agenda for the black
community in which race, gender, class, age and sexuality are kept in active
dialogue with one another. We must engage one another, prophetically demand
more of one another, and prepare to suffer, cry, and toil with each other
when it comes to matters of racial and sexual justice, economic and
political empowerment, to waging peace. We must be courageous in confronting
the social conditions that divide; elitism, poverty, militarism and more
await our deepest response. We must continue to look to the ancestors and to
Jesus, "the author and finisher of our faith." We must dedicate ourselves to
a world where borders can be crossed and a new consensus can be found, where
we call our own community beloved and celebrate black people, one unique
person at a time. Martin, on your day we vow to take a stand to love all
black people. We vow to accept and to honor all regardless of their gender,
class, age, or sexuality for we all are the children of God. The power is in
our hands. This is where we must go from here.
Respectfully,
"An Open Letter to Martin" Signers
(organizations for identification purposes only)
Rev. Ayanna Abi-Kyles
Program of Black Church Studies,
Candler School of Theology,
Emory University
Shrine of the Black Madonna, Atlanta, GA
Rev. Margaret Aymer, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of New Testament
The Interdenominational Theological Center, Atlanta, GA
Randall C. Bailey
Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Hebrew Bible
Interdenominational Theological Center
Daniel Black (Omotosho Jojomani), Ph.D.
Professor of English/African American Studies
Clark Atlanta University
Rev. Edward B. Branch, D.Min
Catholic Chaplain
Atlanta University Center
Rev. Michael Joseph Brown, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of New Testament and Christian Origins
Emory University
Dr. Lawrence Edward Carter, Sr.
Dean of the Martin Luther King, Jr. International Chapel
Morehouse College
The Reverend Da Vita Carter McCallister,
Staff Associate,
First Congregational Church UCC
Rev. Michelle Holmes Chaney
Program Coordinator
Interfaith Health Program
Emory University
William T Chaney Jr.
Senior Partner
Chaney and Associates, LLC
Rev. Jawanza (Eric) Clark
Pan African Orthodox Christian Church-
Shrines of the Black Madonna
Pastor Will Coleman, Ph.D.
Theologian and Kabbalist
Co-director, Black Kabbalah Institute
Sybil Corbin, M.Div.
Rev. T. Renee Crutcher
Spiritual and Creative Director
Sankofa Ministries & Tellin' Our Story Publishing, Inc.
Rev. McClain Dyson
New Bethel A.M.E. Church
Lithonia, GA
Dr. Teresa Fry Brown
Associate Professor of Homiletics
Candler School of Theology, Emory University
Minister Ronald W Galvin, Jr.
Community Organizer
Atlanta, Georgia
Rev. Willie F. Goodman, Jr., Th.D.
Black Pastoral Theologian
Reverend Vivian Green
Rev. Dr. Maisha I. Handy
Assistant Professor of Christian Education Interdenominational Theological
Center
First Iconium Baptist Church
Rev. Renee K. Harrison
Emory University, Ph.D. candidate
Department of Religion
Rev. Wallace S. Hartsfield, II, Pastor
First Mount Pleasant Baptist Church
Dorinda Henry, MTS
David Anderson Hooker
Min. BaSean Jackson (ssc)
Ph.D Student at Emory University
Rev. Shonda R. Jones
Clergy, United Methodist Church
Assistant Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid
Candler School of Theology
Emory University
Emmanuel Y. Lartey, Ph.D.
Professor of Pastoral Theology, Care and Counseling
Candler School of Theology, Emory University.
Pastor, Ghana
Interdenominational Church, Atlanta.
Rev. Portia Wills Lee
Trinity African Baptist Church
592 Veterans Memorial Highway
Mableton, GA. 30126
Stephen LewisProgram Coordinator,
Pastoral Leadership Search Effort (PLSE)
The Fund for Theological Education
Reverend Dr. Mark A. Lomax, Pastor
First African Presbyterian Church
Assistant Professor of Homiletics
Interdenominational Theological Center
Herbert R. Marbury,
University Chaplain
Assistant Professor of Religion
Clark Atlanta University
Rev. Timothy McDonald, III
Pastor, First Iconium Baptist Church
Rev. Veronice Miles
Minister of Christian Education, Greater Bethany Baptist Church
Graduate Student, Emory University
Graduate Division of Religion
Reverend Susan C. Mitchell
Co-Pastor Sankofa United Church of Christ
Rev. Deborah F. Mullen, Ph.D.
Reverend A. Nevell Owens
Rev. Chauncey R. Newsome
Assistant Pastor
First Iconium Baptist Church
Rev. Jeanette Pinkston
Associate Pastor
Saint Philip AME Church, Atlanta, GA
Alton B. Pollard, III, Ph.D.
Director, Program of Black Church Studies and Associate Professor of
Religion and Culture
Candler School of Theology
Emory University
Reverend Derrick L. Rice
Co-Pastor Sankofa United Church of Christ
Rev. Fert Richardson
Pastor
Suwanee Parish United Methodist Church
Rev. Marcia Y. Riggs, Ph.D.
J. Erskine Love
Professor of Christian Ethics
Columbia Theological Seminary
Rev. Aaron Naeem Robinson
Rosetta E. Ross,
Chair Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies,
Spelman College.
Rev. Melva L. Sampson
Project Manager
Sisters Chapel WISDOM Center
Spelman College
Rev. Roslyn M. Satchel, Esq.
Executive Director
National Center for Human Rights Education
Rev. Dr. Teresa E. Snorton
CME Minister
Co-Chair, First African Community Development Corporation
Dr. Dianne Stewart,
Departments of Religion and African American Studies
Emory University
Dr. Lewis T. Tait, Jr.,Senior
Pastor, Imani Christian Center
The Rev. Dr. Eugene Turner
Retired Presbyterian Church USA Minister
President of the Board of Johnson C. Smith Theological
Seminary,Atlanta, GA
Rev. Lamont Anthony Wells
Senior Pastor, Lutheran Church of the Atonement
President, Southeastern Synod Black Pastors Conference
Min. Michael J. Wright
Gayraud S. Wilmore
Emeritus Prof. African American Church History
Interdenominational Theological Center, Atlanta
Reverend Bridgette D. Young
Associate Dean of the Chapel and Religious Life
Emory University
EQUAL PARTNERS in FAITH
is a multi-racial national network of religious leaders and people of
faith committed to equality and diversity. Our diverse faith
traditions and shared religious values
lead us to affirm and defend the equality of all people, regardless of
religion, race, ability, gender, sexual orientation or gender
identity. As people of faith, we actively oppose the manipulation of
religion to promote inequality and exclusion.
Join us and help us promote a more inclusive vision of religion and
society.
Equal Partners in Faith
1040 Harbor Drive
Annapolis, MD 21403
Phone: 877-501-4194
Fax: 1-443-782-0273
Email: EPFinfo@aol.com
Web: www.us.net/epf |
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PVJ's
Facebook page
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Witherspoon members and others can gather to exchange news and
views. Mitch and a few others have posted bits of news, both
personal and organizational. But there’s room for more!
You can post your own news and views,
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Voices of Sophia blog
Heather Reichgott, who has created
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After fifteen years of scholarship
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and devotees, from many parts of the world, all children of the God
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John Harris’ Summit to
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Got more blogs to recommend?
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Plan now for our 2010 Ghost Ranch
Seminar!
GHOST RANCH SEMINAR
July 26-August 1, 2010
WE’RE ALL IN
THIS TOGETHER
CONFRONTING THE STRUCTURES OF INJUSTICE |
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