It wasn't a million-person rally on the mall in Washington, D.C. It wasn't a sweeping new civil rights law. It was something smaller, but nonetheless profound. It was one sermon, preached by one man, in one church outside Atlanta, Georgia. Granted, Pastor Dewey Smith is a big deal. And the church where he preaches, House of Hope Atlanta, has 11,000 members and holds services in a 7,000-seat neo-Gothic cathedral.
What's profound about this semon is that a ray of light has pierced the darkness. Painful and honest words have been spoken, and the result has not been outrage from his congregation, but rather (from what we can see thus far) celebration.
Thanks to social media, Pastor Smith's message will now spread and reverberate. The conversation about gays in the African-American church will inevitably shift, if only a little.
Whether or not we are believers, religion and organized religion affect us all. The church's influence on the larger African-American community is profound and cannot be denied.
Will this sermon on a Sunday in July of 2015 be remembered as "the" tipping point? Probably, no. It's too soon for that. Other pastors will need to take up Pastor Dewey's message and carry it to their own flock. But I will believe we will look back on Pastor Dewey's sermon as seminal, akin to certain key acts of bravery and leadership taken by Dr. Martin Luther King and his peers.
When I saw the video of the sermon (above) I was dumbstruck. I shook. There were tears in my eyes. I knew something momentous had occurred. Yet, when I shared it on social media, the response was tepid. Here's an example of an exchange from my Facebook page:
Today, I have been asking black friends, especially musicians, for their reaction and perspective. I'll probably update this post and include some of that in the days ahead. But I want to know what YOU think, how significant you feel the church is in current civil rights challenges for gays, Muslim-Americans and other disenfranchised groups, and how you feel we can best get the message of inclusion into America's church communities.
i think some churches don't know what to do about Muslim Americans or LGBTS we are seen like a foreign object. some of them don't know how to teach or talk about it in there sermons or churches. i have been luckily i have gone to a church who was welcoming to all religions. i look at more what people think about my religion and what it looks at them from the outside. what they think and what have they learned about my Muslim religion. i feel bad and sad when a terrorist group who says they are Muslim kills people and blows up stuff. i am a modern Muslim living in America with wanting terrorist to just go away. i would want a world where everybody understands everybody's religion and doesn't hate anyone without knowing anything about it and also the same goes for LGBT people too. Also the LGBT community in the church and in other worship areas shouldn't be sinned because they are gay or because they love the same sex. the church and different religions should be accepting of everybody who goes to church or different worship areas.
ReplyDeleteEverybody it shouldn't matter who you are is a person and has a heart and has feelings. they have a soul too. maybe we can change there mind sets and open there eyes in this world.
It is sad to think the African American church community has clearly forgotten that their own civil right to marry whom ever they choose was restricted in the not too distant past and if not for the symbolic and historical designs of the civil rights movement, Forgotten what it felt like to be discriminated and hated simply because of who you are. I think its important to REMEMBER not just what part of history effects you personally, but remember how it still effects those of us who are still waiting for our civil rights to be a reality!
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