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Full of the Spirit: I'm gonna move when the Spirit say move
To understand us, one must understand our spirituality,
which has African roots. The ways of searching for
God and experiencing God's presence in our lives is
not done within a vacuum but in a cultural context. Black spirituality, the late Sister Thea Bowman said,
is a response to and a reflection on black life and
culture. It is rooted in our African heritage and
is colored by our Middle Passage from Africa to America,
slavery, our Caribbean and Latin experience, segregation,
integration, and our ongoing struggle for liberation. But how exactly is black spirituality defined and
expressed? Here are five key characteristics: 1. God on our mind God is the lens through which we experience all things.
Our view of God orchestrates, governs, empowers, transforms,
and infuses us with a soul that is the basis and the
power of our life. In Western culture the theological
question has been, "Is there a God?" For
black people the question is rather, "How is
God present in the midst of my suffering and my joy?" Our God is both immanent and transcendent. God dwells
within us and is beyond us. Such phrases as "God
don't ever change" and "There will always
be a God" speak of our concept of God. As the
director of a graduate theological program for African
American Catholics studying for lay ministry in the
church, I have often been struck by how my students
speak of being called by God, using god language in
their everyday communication. They speak of that sense
of God as always present. For black people, our sense
of God is as natural to us as breathing. 2. People of the Book Black spirituality is based on sacred scripture.
As the U.S. bishops' pastoral letter on evangelization
in the black community, What We Have Seen and Heard,
states regarding our relationship with the Bible,
"The Bible story is our story; the Bible promise
is our hope." Our ancestors, who were forcibly brought here, connected
with the story of Exodus. Even when the slave masters
tried to convince our ancestors that God condoned
their enslavement because "the Bible says so,"
they knew that the God of Jesus Christ did not call
us to be slaves and that the master had the wrong
interpretation of scripture. 3. Joy, wholeness and contemplation Joy is the hallmark of black spirituality. We celebrate
in the midst of suffering. Our joy does not negate
suffering but is focused on the hope of Jesus Christ.
Our joy is expressed in our movement, our dance, our
song, in color and sensation, in thanksgiving and
exultation. Black people are a contemplative people. We experience
God at all times, in many ways. Prayer is both spontaneous
and pervasive in our community, and every place is
a place of prayer. This sense of God's presence taught
us that no one can run from God, nor can anyone hide
from God. 4. All are welcome In West African tradition, the I is defined as we.
Our individual identity is to be found in the context
of the community. This communal aspect of our spirituality
is quite evident in our churches and at our liturgies.
One cannot enter an authentically black church and
not feel welcome. Several years ago, I was responsible for organizing
alternative spring break experiences for college students.
These experiences were to introduce the students to
different cultures and give them the opportunity to
reflect on social structures within the United States.
Part of this experience including taking the youth
(who were primarily white) to an African American
Catholic Church for Sunday Mass. Time and time again, the students were struck by
the sense of hospitality and community, which for
many was quite unlike what they experienced in their
home parishes. Many said that if the experience were
reversed, they would question whether the folks from
St. Benedict the African Parish would be welcome in
their home church. This is the gift of black folk.
All are welcome in my Father's house. At the same time, it must be recognized that the
black community is multifaceted, not monolithic. As
Thea Bowman said, "Ministers who wish to know
how to interpret, relate, and impact the spirituality
of black people must endeavor to learn the reality
of a particular group of black people their ministry
affects." 5. Called to do justice Our community- and person-focused spirituality affects
how we treat one another. The quality of a person's
life is important. Jesus' message is one of establishing
right relationships-in other words, the reign of God.
As Christians, we are called to prophetic action on
behalf of justice. We cannot remain quiet when we
experience injustice. In response to a spirituality that is justice-focused
and liberating, black Catholics are realizing that
they can no longer remain silent or inactive when
faced with injustice and are working with other black
Catholics in the hopes of liberating their communities. Theologian Sister Jaimie Phelps, O.P. argues that
the absolute criterion of the authenticity of black
spirituality is the following: "Do the actions
of the community lead to right relationships?Does
the person act right and call others to be right?
Does the person and the community struggle for the
liberation of oppressed persons, races, and nations?"
A person and a community imbued with the life force
at the center of black spirituality-with the Spirit
of God-is willing to struggle for this liberation
from sin and its effects. As we enter this new millennium, black Catholics
are being called to be attentive to the Spirit that
is urging them to move. It is our spirituality, embodied
within the person of African descent, that is moving
the community to fight for freedom and lie in God's
ways. Amen, praise God, thank you, Jesus! Reprinted with permission from U. S. Catholic Magazine
published by Claretian Publications. For subscriptions
or more information call 1-800-328-6516 or visit www.uscatholic.org Home | Bishop's Message | Parishes | Events | Feature's Archive © 2003-2005 Black Catholic Convocation Implementation Committee, All Rights Reserved |
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