113
ROUNDTABLE:
RACIAL
RECONCILIATION
From Azusa to
Memphis: From Here? Roundtable
Where Discussions
Do We Go
on the
Memphis Colloquy
Frank D. Macchia
On October
17-19, 1994,
the all-white Pentecostal
Fellowship
of North America
(PFNA)
met in Memphis to admit its racist
past
and to meet with African-American Pentecostals
concerning
the establishment of an
integrated
association. The result was the dissolution of the PFNA and the establishment of the PentecostaUCharismatic Churches of North America
(PCCNA),
with the
governing
board of six whites and six African Americans.
Bishop
Ithiel Clemmons of the Church of God in Christ serves as
Chairperson.
The
only
woman chosen to the board was
Bishop
Barbara Amos of the Mt. Sinai
Holy
Church of America. As the name of the new Association
suggests,
the Charismatics were also
included,
and Mexico was
explicitly
mentioned as part of its geographical
region.
The
Memphis meetings
featured four
principal
lectures: the
past roots of racial
unity
and division
(Cecil Robeck),
the
present problem of racism in Pentecostalism
(Leonard Lovett),
the
ideal,
biblical
pattern of
unity (William Turner),
and the future
strategy
for reconciliation (Vinson Synan).
The
meetings
also featured
spontaneous
and
planned times of
repentance, forgiveness,
and
worship.
At one
point,
white and African-American leaders
engaged
in a
spontaneous
foot
washing ceremony.
The
meetings
ended with a communion service.
As I have discussed in the
society’s journal,’
the efforts of white Pentecostals to achieve
unity
and
partnership
with African-American Pentecostals raises a number of
thorny
issues and
questions.
Can African-American Pentecostals come to the table of
dialogue
and partnership
with white Pentecostals who have not
yet
taken
significant measures to
repudiate
racism and
inspire
racial
justice
and
healing
in their denominations? Would such a
partnership represent
a search for “cheap grace” by
white Pentecostals? Can
repentance
and
forgiveness ‘Frank D.
Macchia,
“From Azusa to
Memphis: Evaluating
the Racial Reconciliation
Dialogue Pentecostals,”
PNEUMA: The Journal
Pentecostal Theology 17 (Fall 1995): 203-218.
Among of
the Society for
1
114
healing throughout the sacrifices involved commitments
for
justice
Pentecostals
for the
purpose
changes
and
as initial and affirms a mere
“spiritual”
unity
without Pentecostal in
defining
function
politically
to create a
preliminary partnership
of
aiding
white Pentecostals in their efforts to
inspire
racial
justice
and
their denominations? Will white Pentecostals make
in the radical institutional
necessary
to
support
the
struggle
of African Americans
and liberation? Has the PCCNA made a
sufficiently
radical break from its roots in the PFNA?
Why,
for
example,
did the PCCNA affirm the PFNA’s Statement of
Faith,
which excludes Oneness
(many
of which are African American and
Mexican), insists on the classical Pentecostal doctrine of
tongues
evidence
(excluding
most
Charismatics),
a word about the
visible,
institutional divisions between
believers based on race and
gender?
Was the PCCNA wise
racial
justice solely
in terms of black and white, without fundamental
input
from Asians and
Hispanics?
In the
light
of the
role
played by
women in the
history
of Pentecostalism,
why did
only
one woman attend
among
the 200
participants
significant
meetings?
For this SPS Roundtable theologians
Gaxiola-Gaxiola
Andover-Newton
Theological author,
(Gaxiola-Gaxiola
meetings.
Gaxiola-Gaxiola
who was not
invited to the
a
panel
of six Pentecostal
include:
of the
PCCNA,
Manuel
scholar and panel
members
in the context and as one
discussion,
and church leaders have been asked to summarize what they
believe the
Memphis meeting represented
and what
prospects
exist for the future. Panel
participants
Ithiel Clemmons of the Church of God in Christ and
Chairperson
of the Center for the
Study
of
Religion
in Mexico City,
Barbara Amos of the Faith Deliverance Christian
Center,
Cecil M. Robeck of Fuller
Theological Seminary,
Samuel Solivan of
School, and, independent
Leonard Lovett. All but two of the
and
Solivan)
were
major participants
in the
Memphis
speaks
from a Mexican Pentecostal context as a Oneness Pentecostal who was not invited to
participate meetings.
Solivan
speaks
from a Hispanic-American
invited to
participate
in the
Memphis partnership.
In the first
presentation
of the Roundtable
discussion, Clemmons
expresses
a cautious
hope
that white Pentecostals will take
the sacrifices and
challenges
involved in true
partnership
for racial justice
and
healing.
He draws from Comel West’s
Prophetic Fragments to define a future
trajectory
for Pentecostal
prophetic leadership
toward racial
unity
in
diversity.
The
major components
the
past,
connection with the
humanity
of all
peoples, tracking
internal
up
hypocrisy,
and cautious
hope.
Ithiel
include discernment of
African-American Pentecostals mere token
gestures
Leonard Lovett is not
hopeful
that white Pentecostals
in
genuine partnership
made
by
white Pentecostals toward Americans since the
Memphis meeting
leave Lovett “disturbed
will join with for
justice.
The
African
about
2
115
the future of racial reconciliation” in the Pentecostal movement. His criticisms and
disappointments
need to be taken
seriously by those
who tend to celebrate
Memphis prematurely.
Manuel Gaxiola-Gaxiola
compares
the
tendency among
American Trinitarian Pentecostals to exclude Unitarian Pentecostals from partnerships
and associations with the trend in Mexico and Latin America for Pentecostals and
Evangelicals
to work
together despite certain differences in belief After
all,
if all Pentecostals have been sanctified and
empowered by
the same
Spirit, why
has the PCCNA affirmed a Trinitarian Statement of Faith that excludes Unitarian Pentecostals? Gaxiola-Gaxiola
suggests
the “Trinitarian” Statement of the Lausanne
pact
which confesses “One
God, Father, Son,
and
Spirit.” Samuel Solivan shares the
deep disappointment
he felt upon hearing the news about an
attempted
racial reconciliation
partnership
at
Memphis that was limited to whites and Afiican-Americans. He finds in this limitation of racism to a problem between “black and white” as “at best hypocritical
and worst a denial of the
dignity
of all
people.”
He finds this limitation to be reductionistic and a biased
reading
of
reality. Solivan will not allow Pentecostals to feel that
they
have
repudiated racism
solely
within the context of a
dialogue
between whites and African-Americans. He
implies
that such a dialogue further
perpetuates the
implied insignificance of Hispanic
Pentecostals as dialogue partners. A
meeting
for racial
justice thereby only
serves to
perpetuate
further injustice.
Solivan makes us
pause
to
inquire
into the
degree
to which the PCCNA has
really departed
from the
politics
of discrimination that so characterized the PFNA. In a similar
vein,
Barbara Amos
expresses concern for whether we have
“really
disbanded the
original
team (PFNA)”
or
merely “reorganized
the team”
by adding
new members (PCCNA).
Amos was struck at the
Memphis meetings by
the lack of participation by women, youth,
and other racial/ethnic
groups.
Most disturbing
was her encounter at
Memphis
with “brothers who refused to remain in prayer and
dialogue groups
with
my
female
presence.”
The uneasiness with Amos’ female
presence
is reflective of the Church’s general tendency
to
keep
women within certain social roles that are rigidly
defined and distance them from
decision-making power.
She remarks
concerning
women in the churches that the “welcome mat must be
placed
not
only
at the door of the music room and the
kitchen, but also at the door of the board room.” She wonders about the
degree to which
participants
in the
Memphis meetings
will communicate these concerns to the churches at the
grass-roots
level.
Only
in this
way
can genuine repentance
occur and
systems
be dismantled in an authentic “ministry
of reconciliation”
(2
Cor.
5:17-18).
She concludes that such a ministry
“must extend
beyond
the formation of token
groups
and periodical meeting
that
give
the
appearance
of
harmony.”
The
3
116
Roundtable discussion concludes with a
powerful
statement from Cecil M. Robeck who
played
a crucial role in the
Memphis meeting, along with Ithiel
Clemmons,
Leonard Lovett and Harold
Hunter,
in formulating
the “Racial Reconciliation Manifesto. ,,2
The
Day
of Pentecost reveals an event of enormous ecumenical implications.
Men and women
gave prophetic
witness in many tongues that
people
from
many
different
geographical
locations could
inherent
nations, tribes, peoples,
praise
of God’s
mighty
expressed Pentecostals century.
understand and affirm. Such an
astounding
deeds cuts across
geographical
and cultural lines without
eliminating them. There was a
unity
in
diversity. Yet,
the ecumenical
implications of Pentecost were
by
no means
fully
realized on the
Day
of Pentecost. The
people
from
many
lands were
Diaspora
Jews. The
story
of Acts presents
us with a
people
of God who had to
struggle constantly
to reach
beyond
their own limitation in order to realize more of the implications
in Pentecost. The ecumenical fullness will not occur
until,
before the throne of
grace,
the
people
of God from “all
and
tongues” glorify
God and the Lamb of God in the
power
and
unity
of the
Spirit (Rev. 7.-9ff). Until then,
the
people of God must continue the
struggle
and the journey, of which Azusa and Memphis
are
only
minor moments of triumph. The
despair
and the
hope
in the
following
statements need to be heard all
if the
journey
is to continue
by into the twentieth-first
What Price Reconciliation: Reflections on the
“Memphis Dialogue”
Ithiel C. Clemmons
“Ever since the
coming
of John the
Baptist
the
kingdom
of heaven
has been
forcing
its
way forward, (Matthew 11:12, NEB).
you my
reflections
and men of force are
seizing ‘
it”
Pentecostal/Charismatic
Frank
Macchia, my
Union
Seminary colleague
and much
younger brother
(almost
a generation separates
us),
has asked me to share with
on the
Memphis Dialogue
of October
7-9,
1994. That
dialogue gave
a
respectful
burial to the then 46
year
old “all white” Pentecostal
Fellowship
of North America
(PFNA).
The
dialogue also
gave
birth to the new inter-racial
inter-gender,
inter-cultural
Churches of North America
(PCCNA).
Frank has himself
given
a most astute and
wide-ranging
and has
really
asked me to answer some of the
of that
dialogue
historical assessment
2 Reprinted,
“Pentecostal Partners: Racial Reconciliation
Manifesto,”
in PNEUMA: The Journal
of the Society jor
Pentecostal Studies 17 (Fall
1995): 217-218.
4
117
paradoxical questions
that led
to, structured,
and resulted from the dialogue. Why,
for
example,
would African-American Pentecostals come to the table of
dialogue
with the PFNA
knowing
that the constituencies of the member churches of PFNA were not
really ready to take
significant steps beyond
the
pious
rhetoric of its leaders to eradicate racism and affirm
equality?
Was the
major impetus
behind PFNA’s desire to dissolve and
reorganize
with the
participation
of African-American Pentecostals
really
a realistic awareness that the PFNA’s
days
were numbered? Is it not true that it faced
extinction,
and as usual when
lily
white
organizations
are
dying,
blacks are
suddenly admitted and
given
some token
leadership positions
with the responsibility
of
extending
the life of that
community, usually
without adequate
financial resources or
adequate support
staff?
I stated
again
and
again
to those leaders
who,
with
great sincerity, initiated this new venture that our Caucasian brethren and sisters have usually
wanted
unity
without
being really ready
to
pay
the
price
of justice;
that is without
being willing
to take
seriously
the issues of power, privilege
and
purse.
As African-American
Pentecostals,
our interest is not in unity in simply a spiritual sense. Our interest is in love, power
and
justice
which are
indivisible,
and concrete
expressions
of unity
of heart and
unity
of soul.
Historically,
white Pentecostals have attempted
to be
vigorously missionary
minded and
evangelistic
while being unwilling
to view racism as a sin
(viewing
it as
merely
a social problem)
and
hypocritically hiding
a sense of racial
superiority. Why did
I, despite grave misgivings,
come to the
Memphis Dialogue
with “cautious
optimism?” Why
would
I,
over
my family’s sage
advice and concern for
my health,
venture forth
by agreeing
to assume the Chairmanship
of the Executive Committee of PCCNA? What concrete objectives
does PCCNA have
beyond
the
generalized
vision set forth in the
Memphis
Manifesto? Let me
attempt
to answer these
very important
and crucial
questions
in reverse order.
I do not have to outline for
you
the events in our nation and around the world that made the
year
1995 an
appalling
one for race relations. The
responsibility
for
promoting
racial
healing
rests with all Americans, but
especially
with the Christian
Church;
and
especially
with that segment
of the Christian Church in which Pentecost is the essential metaphor
that defines its vision. The PCCNA above all is established as a
symbol
of
interracial, inter-cultural, inter-gender cooperation
that
by , precept
and
example challenge good people
to
step
forth and
say enough
to
hate, bigotry
and violence.
PCCNA leaders are in
continuing dialogue
in search of an ever deepening understanding
of the Old and New Testament biblical traditions with their
suspicion
of
power (Old Testament)
that we have absorbed,
and
recognition
of God’s universals
(New Testament)
which is where tribalism ends. There are no “chosen
people”
in the sense that
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118
God
gives privilege
to one
group
over another. All have
equal
access to God,
which is the
beginning
of the truest biblical and
incidentally democratic vision.3 The
Founding
Fathers of America were
grasped by a Deity that
they
did not
fully comprehend
and allowed their
prejudices to
sully
God’s dream. Yet God continues to raise
up prophetic witnesses like William J.
Seymour
and Charles Harrison Mason to free the Bible Christian
Faith,
and the church from
captivity
to America or any
other Government. That is why some of us are able to
forget
those things
that are
behind,
and reach forth to those
things
that are
before, and
press
toward the mark for the
prize
of the
high calling
of God in Christ Jesus. PCCNA is
attempting
to so structure itself so that it can accomplish
at least seven
objectives.
1.
Create, encourage
and
intensify church-community
based efforts to
promote
racial
healing.
2. Call
upon
churches and
community
leaders to
speak
out
against bigotry
and violence whenever and wherever
they occur, regardless
of race, religion
and
ethnicity
of the
perpetrators.
3. To
expose
not
only
the evils of racism but also “neo-racism.” Neo-racism is not manifest in an obvious form. It is hidden,
subtle,
and frequently
unconscious. It is often undetected
by
the victim. It
is, however,
more destructive because of its insidious character. Neo-racism is nationwide in America.4 It is
powerfully present
in structural,
institutional manifestations and in missionary activities of the denomination. 5 It is the
major
form of
oppression
at the end of the 20th century.
4. To
encourage churches, colleges, universities,
Bible
colleges, institutes, Sunday Schools, Saturday-Sunday Schools,
to address the problems
of the racial divide in America and around the world. It was Karl Barth who lifted
up
the need to look at the world’s condition with the Bible in one hand and the
newspaper
in the other. Dr. Gardner Taylor,
America’s most
dynamic preacher,
in his
Lyman
Beecher lectures at Yale
Divinity
School some
years ago, said,
we must read both the Bible and the
newspaper
with
“split
vision.”6 For the
preacher must
point
out the hidden but
powerfully present footprints
of God in the affairs of men and nations.
5. Create
multi-racial,
multi-ethnic networks to
press
for
public policies
that reflect the biblical vision of justice.
I Cf
Stanley Crouch, “We’re Still One People,” New York Daily News. Sunday, 24 December
1995, 33.
.
‘ See J. Deotis Roberts’ excellent volume, The Prophethood of Black Believers (Louisville,
KY: Westminister/John Knox Press, 1994), 133.
‘ C$ Benjamin DeMott,
“Put on a Happy Face: Masking the Differences between Blacks and Whites,” Harpers Magazine 291 (1995): 31-38.
6 Gardner C.
Taylor,
How Shall
They Preach (Elgin,
IL:
Progressive Convention
Baptist
Publishing House, 1977).
6
119
–
6. To concretize our
dialogue
with
Scripture
and our
dialogue
with each other
by developing projects
that send inter-racial teams into the prisons.
PCCNA
leadership
is
working presently
to structure its first major project
called
“Operation Joseph;”
a project that builds
upon
the Sing Sing
Prison
Project
model
developed by George Weber,
former President of New York
Theological Seminary.
7. To become more
inclusionary
rather than
exclusionary
in our vision and
ministry.
PCCNA leaders are
presently working
to focus on Hispanic
and Asian Pentecostalism in its 1996 Convention,
September 30-October
2,
1996 at Memphis, Tennessee.
I remember
very vividly talking
with
my
wife-herself a
highly trained
scholar-following
the final session of the
“Memphis
’94” Dialogue. Beyond
her visceral
responses
to the event -was her observation that racism has
historically
defined America
and,
to
simply give public expression
to
repentance
without
sounding
the
depths
of the economic,
social and
political purposes continually
served
by
the manipulation
of
people
of
color,
is to make these
public
events of repentance just
one more
“evangelical
fad.”
Days
later we wondered whether or not the
deeply
sincere and
genuinely repentant
white
pastor who washed
my
feet under the
prompting
of the
Holy Spirit
would or would not vote for Affirmative Action
given
the
opportunity?
There is this
perennial
tension between what
my
friend the late Dr. Howard Thurman called the
religion
of the inner
life,
of which Pentecost.alism is a major expression, and the demands of the
empirical
realities of human community.
We must forever be involved in Jesus’ instruction “Be
ye therefore
perfect,
even as
your
Father which is in heaven is
perfect” (Matthew 5:48).
That is to
say,
sometimes
(much
of the
time),
we are called
upon
to take stands
against simple-minded
definitions of
“unity” to make the
larger point
that
evangelism
and justice are
inseparable (cf. Luke
4:18-19).
Sometimes risks must be taken to
clarify
the issues that transcend circumscribed
categories
and
speak
to the
national, spiritual and
political
health. This is what is behind
my personal
involvement in the efforts to address this
recalcitrant, tragic reality
at the heart of 20th century
life-the color bar. This is what PCCNA is
attempting
to address.
Hopefully,
with some
degree
of success.
In his 1993 Paul
Anthony
Brick Lectures at the
University
of Missouri noted
author, teacher, historian,
John
Hope
Franklin reflected upon
Dr. W. E. B. DuBois’
remarkably
wise and
prescient
observation of 1903: The
problem
of the twentieth
century
will be the
problem
of the color line-the relation of the darker and
lighter
races of man.’ Distilling
more that two centuries of history this
premier scholar;
James B.
Duke,
Professor Emeritus of History, Duke
University,
said that the great challenge
of this decade of the 1990s is also this nation’s final
.
‘ W. E. B. DuBois, The Souls of Black Folk (Greenwich, CT: Faucett Publishers, 1961),23.
7
120
opportunity
to
prevent
the color
from being important
twenty-first
8
line a most
legacy for
the
century.
W. E. B. DuBois died in
August 1963,
the same
day
that Martin Luther
King
delivered his memorable “I
Have
A Dream”
speech
at the Lincoln Monument. DuBois was 97
years
of
age.
He had become disillusioned because the
problem
was as alive and as intractable in the 90th decade of his life as it had been 60
years
earlier.
William J.
Seymour
had died of a broken heart in 1922 because human
sinfulness, despite
the
outpouring
of the
Holy Spirit
and the revelation of God’s cosmic/historic eternal
purpose,
had allowed racism to
mitigate
that
purpose.
Bishop
Bernard
Underwood,
the last Chairman of the Pentecostal Fellowship
of North America
(PFNA)
and the Co-Chairman and guiding spirit
of the
Memphis Dialogue ’94, together
with other denominational leaders are convinced that the
Holy Spirit
is once
again gifting
Pentecostals with
yet
another
opportunity
to correct their earlier deception
of the
Holy Spirit ingenuity.
I am convinced that God’s
appointed, inspired,
and anointed prophetic
leaders are the
only
cure for America’s
social, cultural, political
ills and for the ills of America’s white-led nationalistic,
right wing
churches and the ills of America’s black-led
compromised,
left wing
churches. In the secular realm there was a fleeting moment when the nation
glanced
at General Colin Powell as a
possible
Presidential candidate-a man of
color,
of
experience, high
moral
principles,
who many thought might span
the ever
widening
racial divide in this nation and in the world. With the
help
of his
clear-sighted
wife he
wisely backed
away
from all the entreaties to become a Presidential candidate citing
the lack of “fire in his belly” for that
particular leadership
task. It was his way of
saying
he felt no
anointing
or call of the Lord to take on such a responsibility.
Not since Martin Luther
King
Jr.’s
prophetic, biblical, Christ-centered
public ministry (1956-1968)
has there arisen in this nation the
dynamic
leader that we would follow. The
night
before he was assassinated
(April 3, 1968),
he stood at the
podium
on the rostrum of Mason
Temple, headquarters
church of the Church of God in
Christ,
and declared that God had taken him to
“Pisgah’s” lofty height
and allowed him to see the Promised Land.
America,
black and white,
secular and
sacred, rejected
his vision and ever since has been paying
the
price
of that
rejection. King’s
vision was laid out in his volume,
Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos or
Community.9
The nation chose chaos and since
1968,
has been
experiencing
a
steady deterioration of life on a broad front. We are no
longer
able to transmit
8 Cf John Hope Franklin,
The Color Line: Legacy for the Twenty-First Century (Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press, 1993), 31.
9 Martin Luther King,
Jr.,
Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos or
Community (New York,
NY: Harper and Row Publishers, 1967).
8
121
to our children dignity
and
decency,
excellence and
elegance.
There is the wide and growing disparity
between rich and
poor,
between blacks and whites. There is
not
only
the color bar but also cultural racism as native Americans,
Hispanics
and Asians are
marginalized.
Someone has said that
history
is the
story
of human wounds that are either filled
by the healing
force of great men or wounds left to become gangrenous,
or short
of that,
left to become
disfiguring
scars that detail the costs
always facing
civilization.’°
American civilization now suffers from a number of wounds.
They stretch from the soul to the
economy
and touched us
all, regardless where we live on the social scale.” The PCCNA will have
difficulty
as it attempts to shift from the exclusivist
leadership paradigm
that marked its
predecessor
the PFNA to the inclusivist
leadership paradigm
that it must
adopt
if it is to be an
authentic, prophetic
voice in the
twenty-first century.
It is
challenged
to lead the church to
higher ground beyond Eurocentrism and
beyond
multiculturalism to
prophetic,
Pentecostal thought
and action. This means
taking seriously
the four crucial elements of
prophetic thought
that
my good
fiiend Professor Cornel West of Harvard
Divinity
School so brilliantly lays out.
1. Discernment. Comel West
emphasizes
the
capacity
for a broad and deep analytical grasp
of the
present
in light of the
past.
There has to be an accent on a nuanced historical sense. That is to
say,
the PCCNA must remain attuned to the
ambiguous legacies
of Pentecostalism particularly
and the
ambiguous legacies
of this nation
generally.
2. Connection. Comel West
highlights
human connection and the value of
empathy,
while not
losing sight
of the
humanity
of various peoples
and
lifting
the
importance
of connection to the same level as dogmatic
concerns. The
prophets
and the
apostles
wrestled with this issue.
3.
Tracking Hypocrisy.
We are
challenged
to
keep
track of
hypocrisy in a
self-critical,
not
self-righteous
mode. We are
challenged
to accent boldly
and
defiantly
the
gap
between
principles
and
practice,
between promise
and
performance,
between rhetoric and
reality.
We are challenged
to be
open
to
critique
even as we
critique
others. We must be ever in touch with our
complicitousness
with the
very thing
we are criticizing.
Crouch, “Op Ed,” New York Dai(v News, Saturday, 12 November 1995, 43. ‘° Stanley
zu There are some insightful, significant volumes that we ought not miss we
reading if are
to understand the
challenge
of reconciliation that we face in this nation
and also in civilization as a whole. See Jim The Soul
specifically post-modem Wallis,
of Politics: A Practical
and Prophetic Vision for
Change (Maryknoll, NY: The New Press-Orbis
Books, 1994); Robert Wuthnow, The Struggle jor America ‘s Soul (Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1989); and, Walter E. Fluker, They Looked For a City (Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1989).
9
122
4.
Hope.
While
hope
is most difficult in our times we must remain optimistic
that what we can do will make a difference. 12
Why
then did I
agree
to invest
time, energy
and
money
into the PCCNA? I did
so,
and am
doing so,
because I have
hope.
St. Paul’thy Apostle puts
it better than I ever could when he wrote to the church at Rome of his trials and
hopes.
He wrote:
… not only so, but we triumph even in our troubles. For we know that trouble
produces
endurance and endurance
produces character,
and character and this hope does not disappoint us since God’s love floods produces hope our hearts through the Holy Spirit which has been given to us (Romans 5:3-6, Moffat).
Looking
Backward to Go Forward
Leonard Lovett
I am disturbed about the future of racial reconciliation within the Pentecostal-Charismatic movement. To label what took
place
in Memphis
in October of 1994 the
“Memphis
Miracle” was
premature.
If we are
labeling
a “miracle” the historic
gathering
of
representatives from
major
Pentecostal-Charismatic denominations for the first time in almost a century,
perhaps
there
may
be some
justification
for the use of the term. In
hindsight
what took
place
in
Memphis
was no more than cosmetic to
say
the least. I am disturbed for several reasons which I will attempt
to elaborate in the
following pages.
When the Pentecostal
Fellowship
of North America was
organized
in 1948,
the
purpose
was to
promote fellowship among
Pentecostal denominations. African-American Pentecostals were excluded then and throughout
its
history only
token measures were taken to welcome Black
participation.
Control was a
primary
issue then and remains an issue to this
day.
While
Bishop
Ithiel Clemmons of the Church of God in Christ was chosen to chair the new
organization (Pentecostal/Charismatic
Churches of North
America),
it is questionable
whether he has received the
support given
to
previous chairpersons
of the
organization.
I now
suspect
that Clemmons was chosen as chairman of PCCNA out of white
guilt
rather than a genuine desire of whites to be led
by
an African-American. Until white Pentecostal-Charismatics make
good
the
promises
and commitments made
during
the
Memphis gathering
first
by supporting
the new chairman with their
resources,
all else will be written off as “much ado about
nothing.”
12 cm Cornel West, Prophetic Thought
in Postmodern Times
(Monroe,
ME: Common Courage Press, 1993), 3-6.
10
123
I have no more room on
my agenda
for
games.
When are we
going to face the fact that racism is an
integral, potent
and
virtually indestructible
component
of this
society?
Racism is
ingrained
and pervasive.
It is like cancerous cells that invade the normal
processes
of cellular
development.
Prior to the
Memphis
confab I drafted the Memphis Manifesto except
for the final
paragraph.
In
post-reflection
I now believe I was under
deep
conviction of the
Holy Spirit
when I wrote the
portion
that stated: “I
pledge
in concert with
my brothers
and sisters of
many
hues to
oppose
racism
prophetically
in all its various manifestations within and without the
Body of
Christ and to be
vigilant in the
struggle
with all
my God-given might”…
and “I am further committed to work
against
all forms of
personal
and institutional racism.”
It is unrealistic to
expect
us to
prepare
for a new future without honestly
and
realistically assessing
our
past.
The
key
words in the statements above are “to
oppose
racism
prophetically
in all its various manifestations.” I have scanned the media since last October
listening for at least one verbal
prophetic
indictment of racism from
key players in the
dialogue. (Maybe
the media is not the best
place
to look and listen since
they major
on
formulating
and
selling
news stories with their
pre-occupation
with
ratings).
I have
honestly
tried to listen for some minute evidence
pointing
to structural
change
within the Pentecostal-Charismatic movement. I do not believe that I am alone in saying
that the verdict remains the same as we look within the movement.
The recent O. J.
Simpson
verdict combined with the Million Man March
only
served to validate what
many
of us
suspected
but dared not verbalize. Time has a
fugitive quality
to it and has a
way
of
bringing hidden
things
to the surface. The media did not divide America on the two events mentioned
above,
it
merely
validated what
many
of us were thinking, feeling
and
living.
White America for the most
part
was sick on the
day
of the verdict. I
candidly
told a
seminary
class who wanted to discuss the matter that White America tasted in one event what we had lived with for
nearly
four hundred
years.
The church was no different from the
larger society.
I heard church people repeating
news
commentary referring
to the Million Man March condemning
Farrakan because
they
could not
separate
the man from the
message.
I am disturbed that the Black Church
spoke reactively
and too late while the white church was silent. Racism will
persist despite the cosmetics of countless “ecclesiastical
conclaves,” pseudo-political solutions and
“empty agreements”
which
promise change
without changing anything.
It is much easier to
reject
than refute the fact that racial reconciliation within the Pentecostal movement is no where near realization in our time. The
dialogue
was no more than a
temporary “peak
of
progress,”
a short lived miracle that will
eventually
slide into
11
124
irrelevance as racial movement
patterns
Our racial
xenophobia
discernment of human nature
within the Pentecostal-Charismatic
and
pervasive.
I was asked
structures is
only
and not a
body.
Likewise without
adapt
in
ways
that maintain and
give
credence to white dominance.
is
deep-rooted
prior
to the
dialogue
to
present
a
probing analysis
of the
problem
of racism within the Pentecostal-Charismatic movement and not to let anyone
of the hook. I tried to take the
assignment seriously.
In
my
I anticipated a post-dialogue reaction. We are often
outraged
because someone
“goes public”
with our most deeply-held private
sentiments. To be
“prophetic”
often means to
“go public”
and “sound the
trumpet
in Zion”
against
racism.
Personal inner
change
without
an idealist
illusion,
as
though
humankind consist of a soul
to
argue
that the White church a death blow to institutional racism
a
change
in circumstances and
a
change
in external circumstances
Fences and
Church.” I later formulated Building Bridges”
church has
requested Tonawanda,
New York.
inner renewal is an
illusion,
as
though
humankind were a product
of one’s social circumstances and
nothing
else. I am
prepared
in North America is not
prepared
to deal
within and without its ranks.
One
year prior
to the
Memphis Dialogue
on racism and reconciliation I structured a seminar entitled “How to
Develop
an Ethnically Inclusive
a seminar on
“Mending
on racism and reconciliation. To date
only
one
the
seminar,
it was the New Covenant Church in
The
pastor
congregation
is about
ninety-eight percent
Euro-American
The seminar was held two months
past
the
Memphis dialogue.
Several inquiries
were made but not one
single Anglo pastor
has
requested
either seminar.
us,
it is
sudden
is African-American but the
and other.
among
When I
say
I am disturbed over the future of reconciliation
for
pragmatic
reasons. For me the
“proof
is in the
pudding.”
“A tree is known
by
the fruit it bears.” The
problem
is too massive and pervasive
to vanish over
night.
It would be ludicrous for me to
expect
I believe
change
should
begin
with short term manageable goals.
1. Get to know
persons
unlike
yourself
in
settings
other than a
change.
religious
one.
3. Avoid
getting
2. Avoid like the
plague making
token and
superficial gestures toward
persons
who are different.
on
escapist agendas
such as
people
who sit around and
try
to
argue
cases for Affirmative Action
being
“reverse racism” and therefore unfair. The
problem
is that the modifier “unfair”
suggests two more or less
equal parties,
one of whom has been
unjustly
penalized by
an
incompetent African-Americans have not
simply been
subjected
first to chattel
judge.
The
reality
is that been treated
unfairly, they
have slavery,
second-class
citizenship,
12
bartered, dehumanized description
beaten,
125
They
have been exploited,
shamed and
Reconciliation
legalized
discrimination and cultural
stigmatization.
lynched, raped, excluded,
for
quiet
a while. The word “unfair” is hardly an
adequate
of their
experience.
4.
Stay proactive, speak prophetically
is best demonstrated rather than announced.
Reverberations From
Manuel Gaxiola-Gaxiola
all-white Pentecostal
fellowship
Charismatic geographically
movements
Canada,
admission that
any group Pentecostalism
part
of the movement:
Anglo-Saxons, when this
goal
is reached that
part
of
Christianity
people
of other Pentecostalism
races
began
possibility
Spanish
and live in
repentance.
Memphis
of all kinds of Pentecostal and America. It will also be
in North America:
blacks, Latinos, Asians,
to
sought by
all the
founding
The 1994
Memphis meeting
was much more than the
dissolving
of an
and the foundation of a multi-racial entity
that will be more
representative
in North
more inclusive because its intention is to embrace groups
and movements from the three countries
the United States and Mexico. The
meeting
was also an
open
that
pretends
to
speak
or act in behalf of
must include the
people
of all races that have become a
etc.
Only
will the PCCNA be
truly representative
of
with the
greatest impact
in the twentieth century.
The theme of racial reconciliation was
paramount
at
Memphis.
The meeting
was marked
by
a desire for a full return to Azusa
Street,
where blacks and Mexicans were the first to
worship together
even before
attend
Seymour’s meetings.
had heralded at Azusa Street the
promise
of a
really integrated church,
but almost
ninety years passed
before this became a
that would be
consciously
members of the PCCNA and other
groups
that will join it later.
The concern for racial
segregation
is not so
profound among
the
and
Portuguese speaking
churches both in
Canada,
the USA and in Latin America as it is in the two
Anglo-Saxon
countries.
the
conquistadors
abused and
exploited
that reduced the
negative
effects of interracial contact. One was the
large
number of mestizos that were bom
mainly
from
Spanish
or
Portuguese
fathers and native
women, who in a short time
outgrew
in numbers the
purely European
and in many cases became
part
of it by intermarriage. In the second
place,
there was no
segregation
in the
church,
and both the patron and his Indian
peon
attended mass
together,
were served
by
the same
priests
and
many
times the Indian children were the
godsons
and
Although admittedly natives,
there are two factors
population
the
13
126
goddaughters
lighter
educational and economic
status
aplomb
the same
way
that unconsciously
doctrinal
division, censurable, mainly
because
The mutual
experience
of
Thus the only
and
consciously
that In or
more
reproachful
and
groups
who
of the
early
and
of the hacendado and other
people
from the
upper classes. At the
present
time the
existing
kind of discrimination in Latin America is mainly economic and cultural and the road to the middle and upper
classes is not closed to
people
of darker skin and Indian features who
by
hard work and education make themselves
equal
to those of a
skin. A recurrent
phenomenon
in Latin American now is that of men of a humble
origin, especially Indians,
who have reached a higher
and are
marrying
women from the middle and
upper
classes. The man offers the woman financial
security and the woman lends the man the
pedigree,
social
prestige, poise
and
he needs to move around in social circles different to those in which he was
bom,
but in which he is now
fully accepted.
remains of discrimination in Latin America will
disappear
when
social,
economic and educational conditions are
improved.
The question
of color will
simply go away
as it has been
doing
since all Latin American nations became
independent.
At
Memphis
there also surfaced another field for
reconciliation, between the Oneness
segment
and the other kinds of Pentecostals.
all American Pentecostals
divided themselves
along
racial
lines,
there was also a
more acute and
perhaps
all the American Pentecostal
went each one their own
way
had been an
integral part
Pentecostal movement and had
worshipped
and labored
together, even now are
baptized
in the same
Spirit. This, then,
will have to be the basis for reconciliation between Oneness and other Pentecostals: the common
possession
of the same
Holy Spirit.
the
Holy Spirit baptism
was the basis for the
acceptance
of the
gentiles
into the Christian Church. Peter reminded the
participants
at the Jerusalem council that it was he who had witnessed the descent of the
Spirit
on the
people
at Cornelius’ house when he was
preaching
“the
message
of the
Gospel,”
to which he added: “And
God,
who can read men’s
minds,
showed his
approval
of them
by giving
the
Holy Spirit
to
them,
as he did to us. He made no difference between them and
us;
for he
purified
their hearts
by
faith”
8-9
NEB).
We must thank God that there is
hardly
a Pentecostal church or individual who does not admit that it is one and the same
Spirit
with which Christians
were all
brought
into one
body by baptism,
in the one
Spirit,
whether we are Jews or
Greeks,
whether slaves or free
men,
and that one
Holy Spirit
was
poured
out for all of us to drink”
(1 Cor. 12:13 NEB).
As Oneness Pentecostalism has
grown
in the Western
Hemisphere, we have noticed a difference between those in the United States and
in Latin America and
part
of the Caribbean. American and Canadian Oneness
people
seem to have tended to
stay
(Acts
15:
Canada and those
are
baptized.
“For indeed we
14
Evangelicals, excluded organizations demands
especially by
believe which doctrine
Oneness
Evangelicals.
127
away
from
significant
contacts with the other Pentecostals and other
and a
good
number of them believe that
they
have been
from
participation
in inter-church
fellowships
and
means of a
“simple” requirement
that
assent to a Trinitarian formula in which the word Person and Trinity
are never absent. Most American and Canadian Oneness
people
these are deliberate
ways
to exclude them even in those cases in
has little or
nothing
to do in matters of joint action in which churches
may engage.
To some other American and Canadian
leaders these exclusivistic
requirements
also look like premeditated
efforts to continue the
theological
wars that
raged
in the middle of the 1920s in the United States alone.
Another result of this
regional
difference is that in Latin America it is the churches founded
by
American and Canadian Oneness missionaries that seem to care less for
contacts, fellowship
and joint work with other
Most of them exclude themselves from
any significant contact with the others as soon as they arrive in a country.
are
very
different in most of Latin
America,
where we
figure that there are close to two million members of Oneness
churches, including
those in the United States and Canada that
speak Spanish
or
Most of these churches are autocthonous and
consequently
have been inflicted with the wounds of the
in the United States. Oneness and Trinitarian
Things
Portuguese.
have neither suffered nor New Issue
controversy
Pentecostals and other
Evangelical
government
leaders in several Latin respected
and in
many
cases some inter-church
organizations
would be CONEMEX which several Oneness
groups
believers in Latin America have
and
that
recognize Respectable
and
suffered
persecution
and needed to make a common front vis-i-vis the
and the Roman Catholic Church and thus
keep
in touch with one another. The
fellowship
is
mostly spontaneous
and
informal, and
very
few times are the Oneness
people
excluded
by
means of declarations of faith with which
they
do not
agree.
As a result, Oneness
American countries are
recognized
have become
spokesmen
or leaders for
the
importance benefits of Oneness
participation.
and
large
inter-church Latin American
fellowships
have no
objection
to
accepting
Oneness believers in their assemblies because of the
personal relationship between leaders of Oneness and Trinitarian
groups.
One
example
(Cortfraternidad Evangelica
are affiliated. Both CONEMEX CONELA
(Confraternidad Evangelica Latinoamercana)
the Lausanne Pact as a basis for
fellowship,
which instead of mentioning
the word
“persons,” simply
states: “We believe in one
God, Father,
Son and
Holy Spirit,”
which is
acceptable
to most Oneness believers. We could also remember
regarding baptism simply says,
“We believe
remission of sins.”
de
Mexico),
to
and
have
adopted
the
Apostles’ Creed,
which
in one
baptism
for the
15
128
We understand that at
Memphis
it was
clearly
felt that the Oneness issue cannot continue
being ignored,
that the mutual
feeling
is that there must be reconciliation between those who were sundered
by
the New Issue
controversy.
In our
opinion,
it is
necessary
to take the following steps
before a reconciliation can be achieved.
First, perhaps
the Oneness
people
themselves must
begin by
can talk to others.
They
would
dialoguing
with one another before
they
need to
revise,
define and
perhaps
redefine their basic doctrinal tenets and the core beliefs in which
they
all
agree,
for there seem to be
many marginal
tenets which are the cause for
separation
among
them.
and/or division
Second,
this
dialogue
should have as its main
goal
the reconciliation between those Oneness churches that have
split
or otherwise been in
conflict with one another.
the Trinitarian
In the third
place,
the other side of the
controversy,
Pentecostals and Charismatics should do their own
part by asking themselves if it is true that
they
have
deliberately
and
willfully
excluded the Oneness
people
from
fellowship
in inter-church
organizations,
and instead should endeavor to find a common
ground
of action for all the
churches.
Fourthly,
both
sides, doctrinal declarations should ask themselves
orthodoxy
non-Pentecostals,
should seek
including
that are
acceptable
to all and at the same time all
if
they
need these doctrinal statements
before they
can
engage
both in a
meaningful dialogue
and in common tasks that should be
guided
more
by
the
spirit
of love than
by
the desire for
and doctrinal correctness. Pentecostals would thus be honoring
their old
belief, very
few times
put
into
practice,
that we must seek the
unity
of the
Spirit…
until we come to the
very
distant
goal
of the
unity
of faith.
that the
Society
for Pentecostal Studies
or some of its members as
individuals,
could serve as a neutral and
appropriate ground
for
significant dialogue
and future encounters
among
the
parties
concerned.
Finally,
we would
suggest either as an
institution,
A
Hispanic/Latino
Samuel
Pentecostal and a
professor
Pentecostal
Response
Solivan
The
perspective
from which I have
read,
reflected and
responded
to the Pentecostal Reconciliation
dialogue
is that of a Hispanic American
of
theology
at Andover Newton Theological
School.
Several
days prior
to the
consultation,
Robeck of the event.
My
initial reaction was
joy,
but then it turned to
I was informed
by
Dr. Mel
16
I
immediately
leaders
129
and
half were there to
represent the other half
African-American
neglect
such a
disappointment.
asked Mel if he knew which
Hispanic
had been invited to the consultation. He then informed me that none were
invited,
and that this was billed as a reconciliation between Blacks and Whites. Of those
participating,
European-American
This was
very disturbing
to me. How could an event of
guided by
the
Holy Spirit intentionally
of people-Hispanic Americans-who have also suffered
and
bigotry?
How could it be that my
Black brothers and sisters who have
experienced
the dehumiliation
racism leave others who share in their
suffering
and
neglect
outside
Pentecostals Pentecostals.
reconciliation
large segment
at the hands of Pentecostal racism
of the
gate?
racism
perpetrated against
against
Is the
Holy Spirit only calling
for the
repentance
of
only
the sins of
African-Americans ? Is racism Hispanics
and Native Americans to be
ignored
or
justified?
Does the Holy Spirit
suffer from selective amnesia? How can this
happen?
responding before
European-American
I would like to
give my
assessment of
why
this has
happened by
to the
papers presented
at the
Memphis gathering.
But
I do, I must
say
most
clearly
and
unequivocally
that the Lord is to be
praised
for what did occur at
Memphis.
That reconciliation event is a watershed in racial relations
among
African-American and
Pentecostals in the United States.
Vinson
Synan
noted in his
address
that on the
day
of Pentecost
of all nations and cultures were
present
for the
Spirit’s
act of
turning humanity
Christ-ward. In Acts this seems so
not the absence of
people
of other cultures and
that have also been
injured
and often excluded invited to this table of reconciliation? It seems to me that this absence was not unintentional. Often in the
past European-Americans
to African Americans
they
had fulfilled their
responsibilities,
people
reconciliation, obvious.
Why
was languages
speaking
thinking
that Blacks
represent African-Americans also
historically
European-American
believed that
by
all have
other
people
of color. assumed to
speak
for all
minorities. This attitude is the result of
allowing
the world to dictate the conditions and the resolution of the conflict. The
impact
of
racism and
bigotry goes
much further than offending
African-Americans. The
Scriptures
call us to be reconciled with all those
against
whom we have sinned. Not
just
the ones that are more
politically advantaged
or
socially
obvious.
In a number of
papers
it was
pointed
out that in Acts
people
of different
ethnic, cultural,
and
linguistic groups
were filled with the Spirit.
I note that that which
separated
us from the other as Pentecostal Christians has been more than
just
issues of color or race. Race
may
be the most obvious. Another reason for our divisions and
bigotry
is related to our
linguistic
and cultural biases.
17
130
Black,
kinky-haired, brown-haired, and
blue-eyed
discriminated
against
Hispanic
Americans
span
the
spectrum
of color. There are millions of
Brown as well as White
Hispanic
Americans. We are
and blonde. We are
dark-eyed, green-eyed
Latinos. We are a rainbow
people.
When we are not
for our
culture,
we are for our
language. English ‘
speaking monolingual
North American Pentecostals often
dismiss, oppress,
and/or
ignore
the
presence
Latino Pentecostals because we
speak Spanish
and/or because we are
non-white.
On the
day
of Pentecost cultural
diversity multicultural,
for
respect mutuality hypocritical
and or contributions
made
by
it
interpretation American
stereotypical
Partnerships
partnerships
we were each
“Lords,” forgetting
the
Holy Spirit
affirmed the
linguistic
and
of the Church. The
Spirit
did not
suspend
the
multi-lingual
character of the
Church;
she
empowered
missions and
evangelism. Today
Pentecostals have often fallen
prey to a
political agenda
of
English only
that flies in the face of the
design of creation and the order of salvation. What makes us one is not the idolatry
of
language
but the
infilling
of the
Spirit.
Racism manifests itself in many ways.
Ethnic, cultural,
and
linguistic oppression
is one of them. The
tyranny
of the
English language
often
endangers
the
cultural, ethnic,
and racial
diversity
of the Church of Jesus Christ.
Several
presenters appealed
to mutual
respect.
What is needed is
for all
people
and not
just
between Blacks and Whites. A
of
respect
between Blacks and Whites alone is at best
and at worst a denial of the
dignity
of all people. Black and White
mutuality
is not
only reductionistic,
of
reality.
One that serves to maintain the status
quo
of
race relations.
Prophetic mutuality repents
and confesses
respect
for all of God’s
creation,
not just those who are most obvious or
politically expedient.
in ministry that are limited to WhiteBlack
categories
are
of convenience. What is
required
is not
partnerships
as if
with Christ
reconciliation
Mention
it is a biased
reading
and
that we as servants are
already
in
We must not
forget
Paul’s
in Romans 14: “Who are
you
to
relationship
to each other as servants.
admonition to the Romans and Jews
judge
one another and
you
to
despise
one another?” Our
partnership
is
in the
power
of the
Holy Spirit.
What we are called to do is to be reconciled with God and one another. Out of this
Spirit-filled
comes mutual service and love. The
mutuality
in this context is never a certain
group,
it is the
body
of Christ at
large.
was made of
congregations growing
because
they
were “colorblind.” God forbids us to be colorblind. God forbids that
growth come at the cost of colorblindness. Who I am is unknown
apart
from my
color.
My
color is a gift of
grace. My
color reflects the
diversity
of creation and salvation. To be a
Spirit-filled
Christian is not a call to become
colorblind,
to
ignore
or
give
no value nor attention to color or difference.
Rather,
Paul’s declaration that we are no
longer
Jews nor
18
things.
joins
us
together is racist for me
(white). Spirit said
I
thought the
black and white
monochrome
131
Gentiles,
males nor
females,
slaves or free is not an
appeal
to
ignore
or suspend
difference. It is a proclamation of the arrival of a new order of
It witnesses to the
inbreaking
of the
Kingdom
of God
among
us. It is a call to restructure human relations, not on the basis of that which distinguishes
us one from the
other,
but rather to consider that which
in light of and in spite of our
diversity.
Colorblindness
what it usually means is stop being who
you
are and be like
God is not colorblind. Christ was not colorblind. The
Holy
is not colorblind.
Why
should we be? Did God not create
us,
and
it was
good?
it
interesting
that an
appeal
was made to the
metaphor
of
rainbow. I ask
you,
have
you
ever seen a black and white rainbow? I have not. Yet what was celebrated and convened in Memphis was a
rainbow for the other colors of the rainbow were not invited. A true
shining through
of the sun in the midst of the rain is a multicolored
sign
of God’s
promise.
Let us beware of not
confusing what occurred in
Memphis
with a rainbow. It was at best a
picture
and not
living
color. Until
Latinos/Hispanics, Native
Americans,
and others are treated as members of the
body
of
there can be no
rainbow,
and the absence of a rainbow often means that there is still more rain to come and the Son can not shine.
As Dr. Lovett
noted,
“When the Pentecostal
America,
founded in
1948,
met at Des
Moines,
the
prayer
of Jesus in John
17,
that
they
all
may be ”
African American was extended an invitation…. So in the
Memphis meeting, history
is
repeated,
but now neither White nor Black extend an invitation to
Latinos/Hispanics
nor Native
Americans,
Christ,
people
of color. Will
Hispanics uninvited ones at that?
members.
which has Puerto
Pentecostal movement leaders extended
Fellowship
of North Iowa to demonstrate
one,
not one
nor other continue to serve as tokens and
of hundreds of thousands of
Among them,
the
largest
Mission
International,
yet
undone and needs Black/White
relations,
our
In the United
States,
Puerto
Rico, Canada,
and Mexico there are large
Pentecostal
fellowships composed
In Puerto Rico which is
part
of the United States there are very large
national Pentecostal denominations.
and oldest
being
La
Iglesia
de Dios
Pentecostal,
Rican missionaries
serving
all over the
world,
not only
in Latin America and Mexico. The same can be said of the
in Mexico.
Why
were not
Latino, Hispanic
an invitation to
Memphis?
Have we
again repeated the , history
of 1948? Have we after so
many years
still not learned our lesson that while one is left unattended and uninvited the table can not be served. The Lord of the household sends us forth to
compel
them all to come to the feast.
Memphis
was a foretaste, a rehearsal of what is yet required. Much is
reconciliation. While
Memphis
focused on
next
steps
must
bring
us to attend to the
19
132
reconciliation needed between Blacks and
Hispanics
and Whites with Hispanics.
Until then we
Hispanics/Latinos
stand outside the
gate
not because we chose to but because the
gate
was closed to us.
Could it be that we have not been invited to
speak
because
they
do not
yet
know we exist? Thank
you
Lord and
Holy Spirit
that we know you
know we exist and
you
filled us with
your
blessed and
empoweling Holy Spirit.
We
pray
for them for we know
they
exist and are our brothers and sisters. While we wait for them to know what
you already
know we will continue to work
your vineyard
until
you
return for us. We know you
know us and have
given
us a
prophetic
voice to
proclaim your Kingdom
and
Lordship among
the nations to all
people
of
every
tribe and nation. Amen.
Race, Gender,
and Justice
Barbara M. Amos
The Racial Reconciliation
Dialogue
held in
Memphis,
Tennessee in October
1994,
was indeed an historical and momentous occasion. I was indeed thankful for the
opportunity
afforded me to
participate. My selection to the executive committee will afford me the
opportunity
to contribute in a meaningful
way
as we seek to fulfill the will and
purpose of God relative to
unity
within the
body
of Christ. Tension is escalating in race relations in America. Race relations is
steadily moving
to the forefront of the
agenda
of social concerns in America. While this is not a new
concern,
it is
very apparent
that it is
seriously gathering momentum and
causing
the racial divide to widen. It is
my
contention that the racial situation of the Pentecostal tradition that necessitates the Memphis gathering
and the formation of the Pentecostal and Charismatic Churches of North America
(PCCNA)
is consistent with the racial climate of the nation. The church has a
long history
of segregation along
racial lines. We can see in
examining
the historical roots of racism in America how the
credibility
of the church has been seriously impaired
because of this
history.
Racism is not
exclusively
a Pentecostal concern but
necessity
is laid upon
the Pentecostal church because of its foundation
emphasis
of “oneness of the
Spirit” proclamation.
The
Memphis gathering represented
an
attempt
to address a
prevalent
and inevitable concern. It is unfortunate that the conviction of the
Holy Spirit
to reconcile the races is in
conjunction
and in
many
instances
trailing
the church’s secular
counterparts.
The motive of the
gathering
to
many
Americans is again suspect.
In
reflection,
I humbly submit the
following
in retrospect
.
20
133
relative to
my
involvement with the
Memphis experience
and its
impact upon my
life.
While I was not so naive to believe that decades of division could be abolished in a couple of
days,
I approached the
gathering
with an
open mind in anticipation of fruitful results in a move toward reconciliation. I must
readily
admit the overall
spirit
of the
meeting, including
the worship
services in the
evening,
was indicative of an effort to establish rapport
and interaction. The
presentations
were
thought provoking
and at times
dug
into some
extremely
sensitive areas. The individual
group discussions
following
the
presentations
allowed for much needed interruptions
between the
participants. My greatest
concern was that the allotted time frames were too brief to allow for the discussions to be as fruitful as
possible.
It was also
interesting
to notice that the participants
seemed to
automatically
break down and
gravitate
to those similar to themselves
racially
and even
denominationally.
I noticed this also in the hotel and as
people
interacted
socially throughout
the gathering.
It was
very
obvious that some of the
participants
and those in
leadership
were familiar with each other.
My
concern at the end of the
gathering
is whether or not we have
really
disbanded the
original team
(PFNA)
or whether we have
reorganized
the team and included more
players (PCCNA).
As
opposed
to
many
of
my counterparts,
I
approached
the
dialogue from a different
vantage point.
Aware that the
gathering
was a move toward racial
reconciliation,
I
experienced
the
seemingly carefully calculated racial mixture that I had envisioned. I was
disappointed
at the lack
of
female, youth
and diverse ethnic
participation,
however. As an African-American female who is
relatively young,
I am
always sensitive to these variables.
Knowing
that PCCNA is an
attempt
to foster racial reconciliation and that the
process
will be
potentially
slow and
painful,
I am
by
no means
minimizing
our efforts in
Memphis.
I must however
inject
that while we are
charged
to exorcise the demon of
racism,
the momentum must allow us to be sensitive to these other issues.
Being
a female in ministry has at times been
extremely
controversial. I must admit that at the
Memphis
Reconciliation
meeting
in October 1994,
I encountered brothers who refused to remain in
prayer
and dialogue groups
with
my
female
presence.
Other brothers in the
groups apologized
and seemed
appalled
and
embarrassed, by
a scenario that is relatively
routine to me as a
young
African-American female. This display
of
prejudice
and
bigotry-even
if classified
isolated–coupled with
my
lone female
presence
is indicative of a serious
malady
in the body
of Christ.
Again,
the
integrity
of the church is undermined. Equality
of humankind was
granted by
God before
equality
was
granted to citizens of the
United States
by
law and
equal rights.
Created in the image
of
God,
we must
develop
an
appreciation
for the
uniqueness
of
21
134
Scripture
disappointment
bodies. It is
hypocritical, simultaneously
condone
Repentance
is
reconciliation
(2
Corinthians
appearance
of Christian
experiences.
A
political
and economic
by
participation
in
of the
justice
all
persons
and the varied
particularities
combination of
social, biological, cultural,
factors makes each
person
or
groups
of
persons
distinctive. The
views all
persons
as creations of God in his
image
and hence should thus be
respected.
Reconciliation can not be limited to concerns of racial
prejudice
and discrimination. Such a limitation will be a
to the millions of women who
comprise
our church
to
say
the
least,
to affirm racial
equality
and
gender disparity
discriminatory practices
and/or silence on the issue.
in order for
past
silence and
non-response church
(African
American and
Caucasian)
on the issues that have plagued
us. Our Christian witness has been hindered and our ranks divided. We must
discover,
admit and confess our
prejudices.
We must denounce and cease our
discriminatory practices.
Sin and evil thrive best in
systems
and institutions created and maintained
by
evil hearts. These
systems
must be dismantled. God has
given
us a
ministry
of
5:17-18). Necessary
corrective measures must be taken. We must seek to be in full sincere
relationship
with all of God’s creation. Our efforts of reconciliation must extend
beyond formulation of token
groups
and
periodical meetings
that
give
the
of
harmony.
It is fruitless to meet
together
to
fellowship and
pray
if we are not
willing
to man the trenches to
pursue
the reconciliation. Policies and
practices
must be
put
on the scale of God’s
and be
weighed.
Devotion to God mandates our Christian involvement in the total liberation of all of
humanity.
Learned attitudes of evil in the hearts of
people
must be
unlearned,
and the
preaching moment must be utilized to this effect. Well-intended leaders who repent
on behalf of their churches and denominations
as the Racial Reconciliation
Dialogue
in
Memphis
given
which
they preside.
With the same fervor that we
of fornication and
drinking,
we can use the
opportunities
them to congregations
over
have attacked the sins
convey
these
in meetings such
must seize the sentiments to the
kitchen,
partners
in
creation,
word and deed an inclusive
gospel. honest. All
Constructive
power
of the
gospel
to attack the sins of
prejudice,
racism and sexism. The full embrace of the Christian
message
will make it
imperative
that we share on all levels. It is not
enough
to
fellowship
on “Love the Brethren
Day,”
or have annual “Women’s Week.” Invitation must be extended into
decision-making positions
of responsibility. The welcome mat must be
placed
not
only
at the door of the music room and the
but also at the door of the board room. We must become
power
and
participation,
Our
dialogue
must be
open
and
participants
must articulated heart felt concerns.
conflict is inevitable. Galatians 2:11-20
gives
us a biblical
We must
proclaim
in .
22
135
example
of Paul’s
challenge
to Peter relative to Jewish and Gentile relationship.
All
persons
must be held accountable for their attitudes and actions. The
Holy Spirit
that we
emphatically say gives
us
power
over devils and demons of the
world should
empower
us to
oppose
the evils that lurk within our own ranks. We must
struggle
to eliminate the ills that threaten our Christian witness. We must celebrate and affirm all of the members of the
body
as well as all of
humanity.
No
person
deserves or should be awarded
special
credit or commendation for
treating
others with
decency
and
respect.
What should be normal has become heralded as
charity
and
good
will.
Special
credit must not be awarded for what should be considered standard
procedure.
The
challenge
for the Pentecostal
leadership,
in
my evaluation,
is to dare to deviate from eloquent manuscripts, operation
in
spiritual gifts,
articulate
prophecy, and the conference circuit to confront the real issues
paramount
to establishing
a valuable and viable Christian witness to the world. Then and
only
then can we
present
and effective witness to the world. With the
help
of God, I forge ahead in this endeavor.
Racial Reconciliation
Some Personal
at
Memphis: Reflections
Cecil M.
Robeck,
Jr.
The events which
transpired
in
Memphis, TN,
on October
17-19, were
newsworthy
events at several levels. The
leadership
of the Pentecostal
Fellowship
of North America
(PFNA)
voted to disband the organization
after 46
years together.
This act was followed
by
these and other leaders
choosing
to vote into existence a new
organization, the Pentecostal/Charismatic Churches of North America
(PCCNA). These decisions were
newsworthy
because Pentecostalism has traditionally
had
great difficulty thinking
about
sickness, suffering,
and death. It is
generally triumphalistic
and it chooses to concentrate on health and life. What these leaders did in
Memphis
was to
recognize and admit to the
unhealthy
character of the
PF1VA,
and rather than praying
over it in futile
attempt
to
keep
it
alive, they
allowed it to die. In
fact, they
euthanized it. Then
they
aided in
giving
birth to a new organization
which
they hoped would, by
its interracial
character,
be healthier than its predecessor from the time of its birth.
The events in
Memphis
were
newsworthy
also because
during
these days
a
group
of Pentecostal leaders who had led and nurtured a fellowship
whose
membership
was made
up
almost
entirely
of white folks and whose
leadership
was
composed
for 46
years exclusively
of white
men, voluntarily
chose to
go
out of business. This decision was
23
136
newsworthy
because Pentecostalism
PFNA has
traditionally
way
for what I
especially
the
type
of
by
the
leadership
of the
and
acting
leadership
has
traditionally
also in
followed
immediately by
these same leaders
determining,
believe is the first time in at least
eight decades,
to share
power
with women and with African-American
leaders, by entering
into a new venture as
equal partners
with some of them. These facts alone were
Pentecostalism,
which had been
represented
had
great difficulty thinking
inclusively.
Pentecostals all too often have had a reputation of being an exclusivist
people
and Pentecostal led the
in perpetuating this exclusivist stance.
The events which
transpired
in
Memphis
were
newsworthy that a
significant
number of Pentecostal leaders in North
America,
and in
particular,
white Pentecostal
leaders, voluntarily
chose to submit themselves to a forum of
public
criticism. To be
sure,
it was focused criticism. It was criticism which was limited in scope to a
single
issue: racism. And it was
long
overdue criticism. But it should not
escape
our attention that the invitation to enter that forum of criticism was issued by
the
very
leaders who were
culpable
of the
very thing
about which they
invited criticism.
They
invited critics who
they
believed would speak
in love, but
who,
above
all,
would
speak
the truth.
They
chose to be confronted in the mirror of their
past
as well as the
present,
and
this, in a public forum.
in
Memphis, then,
were
newsworthy
because
in North
America,
and
especially
white
has had an
extremely
difficult time
tolerating any
form of
public criticism,
or for that
matter, any
difference opinion
from their own. To
my knowledge,
in the
history
of North
there has never before been a public forum in
exchange
between Pentecostal leaders and their critics was invited and made
possible by
the Pentecostal themselves. In too
many
cases there has
merely
been defensiveness and
These events Pentecostal
leadership Pentecostal
leadership,
American
Pentecostalism, which a constructive
retaliation.
willingness
place
in
Memphis relationships.
It
promised
of
leaders
a new set of
For these reasons
alone,
the death of an
organization
and the birth of a new
one,
the move toward
greater inclusivity
in
leadership,
and a
to entertain criticism of
any sort,
the events which took
promised
more. It
promised
new
ways
of
relating
to one another. And it promised
that North American Pentecostals would take another look at themselves in order to root out racism from their midst.
In the months which have followed the
Memphis event, impatience has
replaced hope
in the minds and hearts of some
people.
Others have
of
promises
which were made. Some have
the wisdom of
putting
in the new PCCNA. Still others
narrowness of
thinking
which excluded others from
joining
in at the
questioned questioned participating
the
sincerity
the PFNA to
death,
or of
have criticized the
24
137
birth of this new organization.
These
concerns,
of
course,
are valid concerns,
and
they
should not be
placed
on “hold” nor should
they
be allowed to fall from
sight.
For
Memphis
to have
anything
like ultimate significance,
more needs to be done.
Questions
need to be formulated and issues need to be resolved.
Memphis
was
strong
on
rhetoric,
but more
importantly,
it was
strong
on
good
will. For us to overlook this fact,
or to continue to criticize
any perceived
lack of action without offering realistic,
measurable solutions is for us to miss the
opportunity to build
upon
the
goodwill
and the
promises
which were made at Memphis.
Of all
people,
the
membership
of the
Society
for Pentecostal Studies is
capable
not
only
of
stating
the
problems
toward which Memphis pointed, they
are also
capable
of laying out
potential
solutions which have not
yet
been tried.
In the sixteen months which have
gone by
since the historic
inception of the
PCCNA,
I have learned two
things. First,
white Pentecostals are having
an
extremely
difficult time
understanding
the nature of racism. One
might
be
sympathetic
to this
problem
in
light
of the 250
year history
of
slavery
and racism and
subsequent years
of “Jim Crow” legislation throughout
the United States. We need to
help
our
people
to understand the
meaning
and character of
racism,
the
problem
is
fairly easily
illustrated.
Over the
past year
I have been invited several times to
speak
on the issue of racism. These invitations have all come from white Pentecostal churches which heard the
message
of Memphis and decided to
bring
the discussion home to see how
they might change things.
In one such church,
I was asked to
preach
an extended
message
on racism.
My sermon was
subsequently published
for further
study
in an adult education
program, complete
with
footnotes,
discussion
questions,
and a short
bibliography
on interracial
cooperation.
A
great
deal of
energy went into the
preparation
of this educational
program by the pastor
and the staff of this
congregation. Many people appreciated
the work and the
opportunity
to discuss this
very
difficult issue. The result was that some heard the
challenge
to abandon their racist
ways.
But others did not. Their denial came in three
ways.
First,
there were those who chose to hear the
challenge
as
politically motivated.
They
have not
yet
understood that
participation
in racist actions is a moral
issue,
not
necessarily
a
political
issue. It was uncomfortable for them to think about it as a moral
evil,
since that would call them to
change.
It was not uncomfortable for them to think about it as a political issue.
They
could dismiss it rather
easily,
because it was classified as a “liberal”
issue,
and these whites were “conservatives.” Their
theology
needs to be
challenged,
and it is
up
to us to find
ways
in which to
challenge
their
theology
which allows them to dismiss their own
complicity
in a moral evil
simply by labeling
it as politically
motivated.
.
.
25
138
Second,
there were those who in a sense chose to blame the victim.
On more than one occasion I was
told,
“You talk about
racism, you should see what those blacks did to me. That’s racism!” This
response reveals a basic
misunderstanding
of such realities as
prejudice (in
which any
race
may participate),
discrimination
(in
which
any
race
may participate),
and racism
(where only
those with
prejudice
and the
power to enforce their beliefs about others
may participate). They
need
help
in a basic
vocabulary,
a
grid through
which
they
can be
encouraged
to measure their actions.
Third,
there were those who felt overwhelmed
by
the
charge
of racism and threw
up
their hands. “I’ve never owned
slaves,”
said one Pentecostal leader to me. “I’m not even sure that
anyone
in my family
has ever owned slaves. But even if
they did,
what am I
supposed
to do?” Racism was a
mystery
to him. Once
again,
he did not understand what it
was,
and he felt
powerless
to do
anything
which
might bring about a
change. He, too,
needs to understand the terms of the conversation before he can do
anything
to make a
change.
Accusations alone will not
help
him move ahead. Criticism will
only
frustrate him. He needs information which we can
provide.
The second lesson I have learned in the
past
sixteen months is that our leaders do not
yet
understand the
problem any
better than our people
do.
They
are,
after
all,
the
products
of the same
culture,
the same
theology,
and the same educational
experiences.
What we have in our
leadership
is a number of individuals who have
gone
on record as supporting something
which
they
believe is
right,
the eradication of racism within our
respective
Pentecostal
denominations,
and the first tangible
evidence of their commitment was the
Memphis colloquy.
It was followed
by
two other
tangible demonstrations,
the birth of the PCCNA and the
adoption
of the “Racial Reconciliation Manifesto.” Each of these
steps
must be viewed as evidence of their
goodwill
and evidence of their
willingness
to
begin
the task of
implementing change. But it has become clear to me as I have
spoken
with a variety of white Pentecostal leaders
during
the
past year
that
they
do not have all the answers as to how to move ahead. I must hasten to add that I do not believe that Pentecostal leaders who are in the Black
community
or in any
Pentecostal
community
which was not a
participant
in
Memphis have all the answers either.
They
are
open
for
suggestions.
Pentecostal leaders do not realize that racism is not overcome through
an
event,
as
important
or miraculous as it
might be,
but rather through
commitment to meet the
challenge
whenever and wherever they
see it. Pentecostal leaders need
discernment,
a God-given ability to recognize evil,
and
wisdom,
a
God-given ability
to address the evil in such a
way
as to overcome it. The
attempt
to overcome racism must include the
putting
to death of the PFNA and the
giving
of birth to the PCCNA. But it is more than that. The
attempt
to overcome racism is
.
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139
more than
inventing
new
positions
in
leadership
structures within our respective fellowships
in order to find a
place
for ethnic and/or racial minority
candidates to serve. Their
presence
in such
positions
can contribute to the overall solution to the destructive
problem
of
racism, but more often
they
become
present
without
any
real
power.
It is a form of
marginalization
which
assuages
white
guilt
because
they
can point
to their success of giving a presence to a minority
representative, but
they
can now overlook the reason that
they
believed it was necessary
to
grant
the
presence.
The
attempt
to overcome racism is also much more than
simply finding
new African American or
Hispanic American or Asian American or Native American or ethnic Canadian pastors
to minister
among
their own.
Homogeneity may
be a useful tool for
growing
certain
types
of
churches,
but it does not
speak
in a positive way
to issues such as racism.
By segregating
Black
pastors into Black communities without
involving
White
pastors
and leaders in the heart of these same
communities,
or without
involving
Black pastors
in White
communities,
racism has not been
adequately addressed.
Furthermore,
the
attempt
to overcome racism is also much more than
giving
social or economic
advantage
to those who have thus far been at a demonstrable
disadvantage.
Each of these methods can be useful in
making
small contributions to the
larger problems
of
racism, but none of them is
adequate itself,
or even in concert with all the others so far named.
As much as we
might
wish that we were further down the road on redressing
the issue of
racism,
we must be realistic about our own expectations.
All of us after
all, are products
of our cultures. We do not have
anything
in our histories which can act as wells from which we can draw. What we have in common is one
Lord,
one
faith,
one baptism,
one God and Father of us
all,
one
body
and one
Spirit,
and one
hope
of our
calling (Ephesians 4:4-6).
We also need to acknowledge regularly
that in Christ we have been created anew as one new
humanity (Ephesians 4:15-16).
And while we share these
things together,
we have
differing perceptions
on who/what
they
are and what they
mean for us. At the
very least,
these
points
of
convergence between all of us demand that we
grow
into an ever
expanding
view of who or what the Church is. We need
help, theological help,
in discovering
a
genuinely
Pentecostal
ecclesiology.
These
points
of commonality
demand that we rethink our views of God
together.
We need
theological help
in
discovering
a
genuinely
Pentecostal
theology. Our claims to
sharing
the same Lord
requires
that we review
together not
only
how we have been
redeemed,
but what the demands are which together
we are called to live out under the
sovereign
rule of the One who has redeemed us. It means at the
very least, adopting
his
ministry as our
ministry (Luke 4:18-19),
and
exploring ways
in which we can do it with one another. In short, what
Memphis
has made clear to us is that
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140
new
questions
of Pentecostal
identity
must be addressed. Who or what
is a Pentecostal? How should that Pentecostal live in the One
Body
of
which he or she is a
part?
And what should be the role of that
Pentecostal in the world?
Memphis
marked the
beginning
of a “reconciliation
strategy”
for
effective Pentecostal
ministry
into the 21 st century. In
Memphis,
a baby
was bom. Babies need to be
nourished,
not criticized. Babies need to
be
handled, held, caressed, fed, exercised, encouraged,
and nurtured.
They
also need to be
taught
how to do
things.
Babies demand
patience.
They require
tolerance.
They
clamor for attention.
They
necessitate
understanding.
If it is our
privilege
to have
played
a part in the birth of
this
baby,
it is our
duty
to
help bring
it to
maturity.
We
may grow
impatient,
but we dare not
give up,
for to fail in that
regard may
be
worse than what we knew before the
baby
was bom.
If what we do is
merely
criticize without
bringing
new and
accomplishable
ideas to bear on the
issue,
we
may
end
up
with a
mentally
or
physically challenged baby
on our hands. This
baby,
the
PCCNA needs to
develop
its own
place
in the world of the 21st
century.
It needs to realize that it is not the old PFNA. It needs to see
itself as redefined. It is not
merely
a
repetition
of an old
regime using
old and
faulty
methods. It is
something
new. We in the
Society
for
Pentecostal Studies
(SPS)
have before us an
opportunity
to make a
contribution to the
process
of growth and redefinition
by offering
ideas
which will move the PCCNA ahead. If the PCCNA desires to
grow
and
mature,
it will need to take
seriously
the
input
of the SPS. It is in the
interrelationship
between the
community
of
scholarship
and the
community
of
pastoral leadership
where we can find our best
contribution to its growing effectiveness. If we are successful in making
a
positive
contribution
by helping
to tear down
racial, ethnic, gender,
class,
and other divisions
by working
with the PCCNA
leadership,
it
may
be
possible
to find ourselves in other forums where new
critiques
can be offered and taken
seriously.
Memphis, then,
is a miracle in the
making.
It is an event which
may .
yet prove
to have been a watershed in Pentecostal racial relations. But
it is
immature,
and needs our
help.
I believe that we should rise to the
occasion and
engage
the
challenges
which it poses to the SPS.
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