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White Jesus, white lies and Black liberation
by
Min. Paul Scott [Posted 28 August 2001]
(Min. Paul Scott is the founder of the
New Righteous Movement based in Durham, N.C., USA
He can be reached at operationmedia@yahoo.com.)
Picture a Black minister, preachin’ to an all-Black congregation with
a blue-eyed, blond-haired "Jesus" looking over his right shoulder. Even
as a child, I knew something was wrong with that picture. The
congregation would rise to their feet screamin’ and shoutin’ as an all
Black choir sang that when "he" comes back "he" will make us white as
snow. They sang loudly that we should "suffa" on earth
because "he" will give us a long, white robe when we get to heav’n.
I
remember walking out of church
thinking that I should reverence every white woman that I saw because
she might be an angel in disguise. But as they say, in the church, "When
I was a child, I thought as a child."
I cannot help but wonder, how my life, as
well as the lives of countless other Black boys and girls, would have
been changed if someone had told me that Judaism was one of the many
religions originally practiced by African people. If someone had only
told me that what is called "Christianity" was the recorded history of
a Black Revolutionary named Yeshua (Jesus is derived from a Greek word,
Yeshua was not Greek) who rebelled against the Roman Empire and tried to
teach the Black Hebrews a clearer understanding of the word of God.
But no one took time to tell me that the
picture of the blue-eyed, blond-haired "Jesus" hanging from the wall in
my parents living room was actually the family member of some European
artist from the 16th century who was commissioned by the leaders of the
white church to paint the Son of God in the image of a white man in
order to enslave and dominate the original people of the scriptures. So
I grew up thinking that I was God’s little nappy headed stepchild.
When our African ancestors were enslaved
and brought to America, they were taught a slave theology that made most
of them docile and submissive, however a chosen few of them saw through
the lies of the white man and embraced a Liberation Theology and
shouted, "Before I be a slave, I’ll be buried in my grave." Because it
was forbidden for the enslaved Africans to read, if "massa" sent a
preacher to tell them that God was white and they were a cursed people
who had no soul, or if he told them that they were blessed to have been
enslaved because if it wasn’t for slavery, they would still be
"heathens" who never would have gotten to know "tha lawd"—they believed
it. Most damaging was the teaching that to rebel against slavery was to
rebel against God.
What is most tragic is that this
mentality is still in the hearts and minds of Black people today.
Instead of seeing the Bible as a book to be read and understood, many
see it as a magical good luck charm and if we place it under our pillows
at night, we would learn "the word" by osmosis.
Because
many of us use the King James version of the Bible, written in Old
English, many feel that if "Jesus" talked like that surely he must have
looked like one of those Shakespearean actors from TV. Hollywood has
also pushed this lie that the people of the Bible were European, by
allowing white actors to play Moses and Jesus but making Black actors
play muggers and junkies.
As we look at the condition of Afrikan
people today, we can attribute the drugs, the Black on Black violence
and poverty to our being brainwashed by European "nationalism" under the
guise of religion. How else can you account for our perpetual misery?
How else can you account for the state of mind of our young Black boys
who think that they are thugs and gangbangers. Or our Black girls who
think that they are "hoes" and "chickenheads" unworthy of respect. No
one has told them that they are the people of God. No one has told them
that the "Jesus" that they hear about in church was the same color as
the one that they see staring back at them in the mirror. Can we really
expect to reach out for the Hip Hop generation with one hand while
clutching a figurine of a lily white "Jesus" with the other?
How else can you explain our inability to
respond effectively to the problems that have faced our people for the
last 400 years. Why do we accept racism, economic exploitation and
racial profiling? With all our fancy jobs and college degrees, we still
cannot find a way to stop crack from coming into our communities or AIDS
from spreading at an alarming rate. The reason that we tolerate such
injustice is that we are looking for a white man to come down from
heaven and save us and if we can’t have "Jesus" right now, any white man
will do.
What we need is Afrikan Liberation
Theology; a theology that reveals the TRUTH that will make us free.
Afrikan Liberation Theology gives us a theological foundation to fight
the battle for the upliftment of Afrikan people. This theology teaches
that the fight for Justice is not against God, as the white man has
taught us, but is your religious duty if you are truly a follower of
Yeshua, the Black Revolutionary Messiah.
African Liberation Theology recaptures
the scriptures from the white supremacist system and brings it back home
to the African people upon which they were based. Most importantly Afrikan Liberation
Theology challenges us to finally confront the question, "Can a white
Jesus save Black people?" Our current condition answers that question
loudly and clearly.
Copyright © 2001 FCN
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