Sincere apologies from this columnist to those sufficiently sick of the Barack Obama/Rev. Jeremiah Wright story that they are a hair’s breadth from an uncontrollable fit of projectile vomiting.
On March 1, 2007, when Rev. Wright blasted me, Sean Hannity and Alan Colmes for being too ignorant to even presume to speak on theology because we had not studied Black Liberation Theology (BLT), through his belligerent, imperious egomania, he effectively flung open the door for much of the potentially damaging scrutiny now being directed at this dubious gospel.
Black Liberation Theology is nothing new; it has been festering largely unseen within the Church since the ‘Sixties. Indeed, it is likely that it would have remained “hands off” if not for the Obama/Wright controversy, lest messengers be upbraided for attempting to deny blacks their religious freedom. “Attacking” black churches isn’t exactly politically-correct, be it with words or molotovs.
A Hidden Heresy
In the last year, and particularly since the airing of Wright’s sermon excerpts, certain biblical scholars and real theologians have seized upon the opportunity to publicly compare and contrast BLT with mainstream Christianity. As it happens, there was a substantial amount of information out there on the subject prior to Obama/Wright; now there’s little doubt it didn’t get nearly the amount of attention it merited.
One essay that has gained exposure in the last month or so is The Truth about Black Liberal Theology by Dr. Robert A. Morey, founder the California Biblical University and Seminary in Irvine, CA. Morey’s study is probably the most direct and succinct primer on the subject.
“The fundamental ideas of BT did not come from black thinkers but from such white European thinkers as Hegel, Darwin, Marx, etc. It is Euro-centric in its ideology although it is Euro-phobic in its rhetoric. Black liberal theologians are in reality “Uncle Toms” still licking the boots of their white, Marxist masters at such bastions of white liberalism as Princeton, Yale, Harvard, etc. They are the slaves of Karl Marx.”
- The Truth about Black Liberal Theology, Dr. Robert A. Morey
A point I’ve made many times in response to those who claim that black conservatives are Uncle Toms, race traitors, and things of this nature: Black civil rights activists (BLT proponents included) have long since been corrupted by the agenda of far Left whites, an agenda that has done infinitely more harm to black Americans than good. The individuals who engage in the aforementioned invective seldom have a solid working knowledge of the history of the United States, but with BLT, pundits and pastors are validated with an almost unlimited supply of credentials toward promoting this insidious movement.
“The goals of BT are to turn religion into sociology, Christianity into a political agenda, Jesus into a black Marxist rebel, and the gospel into violent revolution. They are more interested in politics than preaching the gospel.”
- The Truth about Black Liberal Theology, Dr. Robert A. Morey
This is evidenced in just about every excerpt we’ve seen of late; Jeremiah Wright, James Meeks and Otis Moss (Wright’s successor) seem wholly invested in accentuating the negative in every meaningful area of blacks’ lives, from their self-perception, to their worldview, to the evil of their “oppressors.” No doubt their advocates will accuse this columnist of having cherry-picked “snippets” of sermons to deliberately place said pastors in an unfavorable light.
“Reducing black identity to “victim” distorts the reality of true progress. For example, was Obama a victim of widespread racial oppression at the hand of “rich white people” before graduating from Columbia University, Harvard Law School magna cum laude, or after he acquired his estimated net worth of $1.3 million? How did “rich white people” keep Obama from succeeding?”
- Wright’s Theology as Victimology, Anthony B. Bradley
Another brilliant study of BLT was done in several essays and a dissertation by Anthony B. Bradley, an assistant professor of theology at Covenant Theological Seminary in St. Louis, MO. Excavating the roots of BLT, from Jeremiah Wright’s beloved James Cone, the chief architect of black liberation theology, to the contextual present, Bradley explains how BLT is about as far from New Testament Christianity as it could be. In the above paragraph, he refers to Rev. Wright’s assertion that “Barack Obama knows what it means to be a black man in a country controlled by rich white people.”
“The Black Church”
Pastors such as Wright speak of “The Black Church,” but there is no black church, or white church, or any-other-ethnicity church if the discussion remains confined to bible-based Christianity. The salvation of Christ transcends ethnicity, period. Those who embrace hatred, racism, judgment, etc., are either spiritually immature or have an unspoken, malignant agenda.
The “black religious tradition” referenced by Wright and other BLT proponents is not traditional, unless one counts the Marxist-infused “tradition” established in the ‘Sixties. Certainly black Christian Americans’ experiences have been socially and spiritually unique unto them. BLT’s “black church” as a cultural phenomenon however, is not the church that maintained blacks through the ignominy of slavery and segregation, bringing them through these not only with a sense of dignity, industry and self-worth, but grasping the gospel with far more dedication and understanding than many whites.
Pharisees in “The Black Church”
Like many people, I never heard the kind of swill proffered by Rev. Wright in a black church, and so did not identify BLT with churches in which the congregants were predominantly black. One might wonder why black pastors themselves do not speak out against BLT.
Well, take the story of Rev. Lainie Dowell, a Five-Fold Minister from Columbia, Maryland with a long history in the church and very impressive credentials in her own right…
“When it was not popular to do so, 20 years ago, I spoke out against the same kinds of rantings about white people preached by my black pastor and other black colleagues. In an attempt to intimidate me and shut me up, he conspired with cohorts and filed false police reports and court documents to have me arrested inside the church.”
- Rev. Lainie Dowell, April 17, 2008
So much for the question of why black pastors might not challenge BLT; gangsterism and conspiracies to discredit enemies using the law and the press are right out of the Marxist playbook. Being arrested inside one’s own church would likely stand as a pretty dissuasive example for a dissatisfied clergyman or clergywoman. For the record, Rev. Dowell’s pastor (also named Wright, no relation) not only preached Black Liberation Theology, but had a strikingly similar religious background to Rev. Jeremiah Wright.
When challenged by lay people, these pastors become belligerent and switch to “Pharisee mode” – pointing to their credentials, their degrees, the contention that no one but they can understand black religious and social history in America and relate it to a black congregation. We already have an example of their modus operandi when challenged by colleagues.
Faith Devoid of Faith
Finally: The incongruence with mainstream Christianity aside, Black Liberation Theology doesn’t even make sense. Churches and pastors which espouse BLT could not exist without one essential element: A white oppressor. The more one studies this heresy, the clearer it becomes that this element is even more important than Christ Himself.
Where then, one may ask, is the salvation of Christ in this theology? Theoretically, let us suppose that we awake one morning to find that everyone is black. Who is the oppressor then? Where is BLT’s credibility? They seem to know who their enemy is now however, it isn’t the same one that Christians at large acknowledge.
Dr. Morey maintains that BLT is of that Enemy, the devil. Many Christians may agree. Non-Christians may view it as general corruption of the church as an institution of cultural stability via far Left social engineers. The calculated outcome for practical purposes is the same.
In parts of America, there are enclaves of white supremacists who embrace forms of “Christianity” that foster perverted, quasi-Old Testament views of black Americans as latter-day Canaanites or the cursed descendants of one of Noah’s errant sons. Some other doctrines are even more bizarre. I would wager that 99 percent of whites in America find this as disgusting as I do. I submit that Black Liberation “theologians” ought to be viewed in precisely the same light, as both extremes are undeniably racist and can have nothing but deleterious effects on the harmonious progression of American society.
When I was in grade school, every now and then one of the other kids, having discovered I was of mixed race, would ask: “If the whites and blacks had a war, what side would you be on?”
I never answered these questions. It is profoundly sad and speaks to the sickness of our society that some of these people reached adulthood to find there were actually so-called religious organizations that were more than happy to sustain their spiritual, moral and intellectual retardation.
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steven deluca said,
A young white woman wrote a letter to the editor locally, two years ago, suggesting that men should not write about gender, the wealthy should not write about poverty and whites shouldn’t write about blacks. (Write about, or comment on, because if you are white, well-off and particularly if a white male you couldn’t possible “get it” about poverty, women, or race.)
Some of the Obama and Clinton supporters seem to hold to those views. The diversity crew - particularly feminists - are hard on white men and almost everyone seems to think that white men have no right to comment on race or gender, or Political Correctness.
When I read that woman’s letter I responded with a letter of my own. I didn’t write about a black man saving my life when I was a white boy in the housing projects or about having friends today who were poor, or rich, or white or black, or educated or uneducated. I would like to have had that chat with her but her bigotry towards well-off white men was so obvious I was sure it would be a waste of time. I didn’t feel the need to share my “credentials” or to define my humanity a bit for a woman as blind as she is and saying “I have black friends or poor friends or women friends ” is pathetic.
I did suggest that while she was pretending to be non-racist or non-sexist, or that she was removed from class issues it seemed she had many such issues with race, class and gender. I mentioned that for those of us who are white who have black relatives, and who had moved from extreme poverty to upper-middle class [ She doesn't think those people are around when about six percent of the very poor make that jump] and those of us who had black and white neighbors in our homes when we were children might have some insight into class, race and gender, even if we were white men. Those of us who are not bigots know that there are many men who do “get it” about gender - we know black and white men lost “brothers” they trusted with their lives in Viet Nam and many other wars too. We know that men of all races and classes were in the military and lived together in ways women rarely do. We know about gender not just from a feminist perspective but also because we were drafted because of our gender, or sent to coal mines, or we lost children in custody battles because of our gender, or lost DV cases because of our gender, or were sentenced to longer prison sentences because of our gender (as much as an influence as race) … I did write that those of us who had a brother beaten by blacks because he was white… for the crime of being white - and alone, when five black men saw him in the bean fields, working at age 12, … I wrote about how he was beaten and raped at gun point hitch hiking cross country as a young man and about how he died as a racist… Because he thought race had to do with his early beatings and his rape because racial comments were made… (Some of us have some views of race that are not PC but based on experiences she didn’t have in a college feminist studies class. ) I didn’t write that some of us “white males” might feel we had the right to “free speech” - the right she was extending to blacks, the poor, and women … particularly if we were of the gender who died by the hundreds of thousands to defend her right to free - if inane - speech. It’s an odd country where many woman and too many blacks only assume white men are clueless about gender, race and class issues or that women and blacks and the poor somehow should be protected from being confronted about their own bigotry. (I understand how liberal white and black college professors exclude black racism - but if someone attacks you because you are white it’s hard to write down on your college tests - to get a good grade - that blacks can’t be racist because they “don’t have institutionalized power.”)
My brother-in-law who had two black brothers and a black step-dad, watched one brother go to jail for murder, and another get killed by cops related to crime. He was the “token white boy” in his school and he had to run home almost everyday to avoid beatings for the crime of “walking while being white” - racial profiling isn’t just something that happens to blacks. But it was his black step-dad that treated him fairly and his white mom who was extremely abusive to him.
In the end of that letter I suggested that if anyone was racist, sexist and classist it was she.
Most people in American try to curb their bigotry, I believe that. Obama will get some votes because he is black and lose some because he is black. It’s going to be a long time before such things change in America, but we are headed in that direction. Most white people are willing to listen to his message and judge him for the content of his character and not the color of his skin. As a white man I belive that is true.
Sorry to use so many words but race and racism, poverty issues, religion and racial issues are a cyclone when they all come together for me, the perfect wave … add a measure of PTSD and give me a keyboard…whoosh, flames roll out… SD
May 14, 2008 at 1:24 pm
jgreenleaf said,
Hi Erik,
Fantastic piece! One recommendation though. The link dor Dr. Robert Morey’s article should be http://biblicalthought.com/blog/truth-about-black-liberal-theology/
He is also interacting in the comments section of his article.
May 14, 2008 at 3:56 pm