Faith
and prayer have been the backbone of the African American community
since we came upon these shores. We have counted on our faith
leaders (the roll call would include Revs. Richard Allen, Absalom
Jones, James Walker Hood, Martin Luther King, Jr., Wyatt Tee Walker,
Jesse L. Jackson, William Barber, Vashti McKenzie, Barbara Williams
Skinner and many others) to articulate the justness of our cause and
to mobilize us to work for the justice that is called for in the New
Testament, especially in Matthew 25: 35-45. Our ministers are
revered leaders who often stand in the face of injustice. We are not
surprised, and indeed, encouraged, when their firm stands in the face
of oppression lead to collisions with the law. Still, when faith
leaders are treated harshly, it forces us to examine the injustice in
our system. When Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. wrote the Letter from
the Birmingham Jail in 1963, he chided white ministers who made a
public statement about his methods, suggesting that segregation
should be fought in the courts, not in the streets. His letter moved
the white faith community to confront some of the injustices of
segregation and to form alliances with the civil rights movement.
King
spent eleven days in the Birmingham jail in extremely harsh
conditions. But the oppressor does not learn from its excesses. On
June 12, nine faith leaders were shackled and held for 27 hours after
being arrested for praying at the Supreme Court. The multicultural
group of men and women are part of Rev. William Barber’s Poor
People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival
(https://www.poorpeoplescampaign.org/). Their effort is to bring
attention to the amazing inequality and moral bankruptcy of our
nation. Their prayers at the Supreme Court were extremely timely
given the court’s recent actions to make it more difficult for
people to vote in Ohio, and given the injustices, this court
continues to perpetuate.
Like
Dr. King, the nine who were arrested -- Poor People’s Campaign
co-chair the Rev. Liz Theoharis, D.C. clergy the Revs. Jimmie
Hawkins, Graylan Hagler and William Lamar IV, and the Revs. Rob and
Hershey Stephens from the Fort Washington Collegiate Church in New
York City) – were subjected to extremely harsh conditions. No
threat to anyone, they were shackled! Placed in handcuffs and leg
irons! Confined to roach-infested cells with nothing to rest their
heads on but a metal slab! This is the 21st century, but you
wouldn’t know it by the way these clergies were treated. Yet,
their actions and those of the Poor People’s Campaign are
writing the contemporary letter from the Birmingham jail. Their brief
incarceration, in the name of justice, is part of a larger movement
to bring attention to increasing poverty and injustice, even in the
face of economic expansion. Like Dr. King’s Poor People’s
campaign, this twenty-first century Poor People’s Campaign,
launched fifty years later, is an attack on poverty, racism, and
militarism, and also ecological devastation and our nation’s
“moral devastation.”
At
the 2018 Rainbow PUSH International convention on June 15, Rev.
Barber railed interlocking injustices that did not begin with our
45th President, but have been exacerbated by the depravity he
represents. In a rousing address that wove humor, statistics, public
analysis and a scathing attack on our nation’s immorality,
Barber argued that “the rejected”, which may comprise
more than half of our nation, will lead to the revival of our nation.
Who
would have thought that nine faith leaders would be among the
rejected? Who would have thought that Dr. King would have been? But
Dr. King eagerly embraced the status of “rejected.” He
once preached, “I choose to identify with the underprivileged.
I choose to identify with the poor. I choose to give my life for the
hungry. I choose to give my life for those who have been left out of
the sunlight of opportunity.” Rev. Liz Theoharris told
Democracy Now’s Amy Goodman that the conditions she and fellow
clergy experienced, while uncomfortable, were the same conditions
poor inmates experienced. That’s the power, in some ways, of
the Poor People’s campaign. Clergy and others are forcing the
issue, lifting their voices, making connections, claiming the
discomfort and pain of the rejected, embracing the fact that they,
too, are among the rejected.
To
shackle clergy simply for praying is to exhibit a peculiar form of
cruelty and inhumanity. Shackling is reminiscent of enslavement, is
a method of humiliation, is an attempt to use the harsh lash of
unjust law on the backs of those who pray for just law. Rev. William
Lamar IV, who has been arrested on three consecutive Mondays for
protest action said that the June 12 arrests and treatment were the
harshest he has yet experienced. In Washington, DC, people who are
arrested for protesting are usually given a ticket that requires a
court appearance and a likely fine. What did the shackling say about
the hollow sacredness of the “Supreme” Court?
Shackling
clergy for praying is like condemning the sun for shining. Unjust
law enforcement can shackle arms and legs, but not movements. Harsh
treatment of leaders in the Poor People’s Champaign only
strengthens resistance against injustice, racism, poverty, and
ecological devastation!
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