As a
Pentecostal Christian believer who comes from both Black Church and
multi-ethnic congregational experiences, we testify of a spiritual liberty that
comes from salvation in Jesus Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit. In this freedom in which “Christ has set us
free,” we declare that we are no longer bound by the “yoke of slavery” that
comes from “desires of the flesh,” and we press to “live by the Spirit” so that
we can remain free from desires of entanglement (Galatians 5:1, 16, NRSV). However, it is seemingly rare (if ever) that
I hear anything within my church context on the matter of being liberated from
social structures of this world that aim to keep certain folks (arguably even
some of us Pentecostal believers) subjected, poor, and enslaved even though
narratives in Scripture tell of instances in which people are released from
oppressive situations by the hand of God.
James H.
Cone contends in God of the Oppressed
that God in Jesus Christ is on the side of the poor and heavily afflicted, thus
making God a social and political God who not only gives attention to the true,
particular experience of African Americans, but seeks to be their Liberator (Cone 15-16,
74-75). The origin of this ethical
principle that Cone proposes is in the truth of Jesus Christ which is found in
the dialectical relationship between Scripture and tradition on one hand, and
the social context of African Americans on another (100-105). For Black Theology, Scripture becomes a source
out of which this form of theology operates because it tells of Jesus Christ—the
person of whom black people have been able to identify with in their struggle
for freedom. In their songs, stories,
and sermons, African American people have been able to express the Jesus whom
they have found in Scripture but have come to know in reality as the one who
has been able to understand their sufferings and be the Redeemer of them as
well (28-29, 101-102). Moreover, they
have been able to draw from the Church’s traditional proclamation of faith in
Christ, but they have also made an effort to infuse their African culture into
their understanding of Western Christianity.
This has been done as a means for blacks to take up an appreciation for
Jesus that does not compromise their possibility for liberation. Within the Christian tradition that has been
esteemed as the standard, there is no consideration for the poor, enslaved, and
oppressed in relation to the divinity and personhood of Jesus. Therefore, out of the tradition’s unwillingness
to do so comes the problem that hinders liberation (104-105).
What has
presented itself as the metaethical problem has been the universal theological
scholarship that has been based around “whiteness” without contemplating the
particularities of the black experience, namely the oppression that is present
within it (7, 48-49). Cone recognizes
that the Christian tradition adhered to by a white American theologian overlooks
matters of color in theological discourse because he or she has not been a
victim of oppressive violence and, therefore, has no religious or social context
that is relatable to that of black people.
For this reason, a universal theology is valued and the stories and
religious experience of black folks are not adhered to within this constructed system
of Christian thought (49). According to
Cone, this leaves black Christians questioning how they can “explain [their]
faith in God as Liberator of the oppressed,” especially since they have
undergone centuries of oppression that cannot be identified by white society
(173).
Because the
struggle of blacks cannot be identified in the history of white people
firsthand, Cone calls for blacks to construct a theology of liberation that cuts
loose from white structures and finds its center in Christ’s presence within their
struggle (179). In this effort, the task
of theology must be one that recognizes “the significance of the oppressed’s
struggle against inhuman powers,” the idea of God taking up the struggle, and the
ability to express God in the particular context of the struggle (90-91). The goal of this imperative is liberation;
however, it must be remembered by the black theologians who carry out this task
that the salvation that comes from God through Jesus Christ is the primary
source for human liberation (127).
Within the salvific
past, present, and future events of Jesus and in the narratives of Scripture, God
proves to be the Liberating God of history (51, 120-121). Knowing that Jesus Christ has and continues
to give the oppressed vitality and personhood through his life, death, and
resurrection, black people have been able to see Jesus as a real, historical
figure who is on their side (108-110).
Moreover, African Americans have been able to appropriate the “historical
character of liberation” found in Hebrew Bible and New Testament events to
their struggles for freedom and to their understandings of God’s ability to
make liberation historically real in their situations (140-141, 120-121). For example, Black preachers utilizing
narratives such as the Israelites being led out of slavery have been used in
contexts of black suffering as a way to evoke the hope and the proof that God
can deliver blacks out of situations and institutions of oppression (141). By recognizing the relationship between God in
Scripture and God in the realities of history, one can also discover what they
should do—just as these preachers begin to do themselves.
The theological
question, “Who is God?” should influence the ethical question of, “What must we
do?” When we understand who God is and what
God has done for the oppressed in Jesus Christ, we can know what to do to
ensure the liberation of people suffering from injustice (180). In the case of African Americans, knowing
what to do can begin by looking to both Scripture and the Black experience
relationally (188). Considering the
experience of the oppressed as well as the God who liberates people as evident
in Scripture is the adequate way of ensuring that black people in particular do
not remain under oppressive ideologies and structures—ideologies and structures
that did not take their experience into consideration to begin with, nor the
evidence that the God of the Bible is a Liberator (188-189).
Reflecting
back on my particular experience in the Pentecostal stream of Christianity, I
believe that the knowledge that comes from the African American exploration of
these theological and ethical questions is translatable to my tradition. Just as relating the social experience of
black people to Scripture in order to get an understanding on what to do for
the purpose of liberation, I would like to see how Pentecostal traditions can
adopt this same practice as a means of determining what we must do to see the
full liberation of the oppressed come to pass in light of God’s activity in Scripture. This exploration may not only encourage us to
recognize the oppressive social powers that keep people bound along with the
spiritual; it may also move believers of Pentecostal faith from places in which
they might find themselves socially oppressed.
Cone, James H. God of
the Oppressed. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis
Books, 1997.
Robert. I too have witnessed my tradition emphasize the liberative power of the Spirit, with no regard for the liberation of black and poor people socially. This has always been a point of contention for me, and I am so glad that you explored this dissonance in your post. I would love to know what you think it would take for traditions like yours and mine to move toward a fuller vision of liberation. What do you think holds them back? How has the dominant religious narrative been reified in our traditions? How did we let it happen?
ReplyDeleteI really like how you have been able to tie Cone's writing directly to your own experience in the Pentecostal church. Seeing how you have experienced the impact of the black struggle within your church life is especially salient to me since I have never been exposed to that reality. At one point you say that to know how to be truly liberated, we must know God. I would have liked to have seen more of how you see God. How has your conception of who God is impacted what you believe would be helpful in liberation?
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