The
long-awaited justice for R. Kelly’s survivors finally came last
month when a New York federal jury found him guilty of racketeering
and sex trafficking. For nearly 30 years, underage black girls and
their families have tried to bring Kelly to justice. Now the question
being asked is: What took so long?
“The
entertainer had an expansive network of enablers around him, federal
prosecutors said, from his closest confidantes and employees to many
in the music industry who knew of the concerns about his behavior but
did not intervene,” wrote Troy Closson, a New
York Times
reporter covering law enforcement and criminal justice. Several
institutions failed these black girls, though, including the
judiciary, law enforcement and the black community and church.
In
2002, on the same day after posting a $750,000 bond on child
pornography charges, Kelly left the court to attend a children’s
graduation ceremony at Salem Christian Academy in Chicago. One would
think Kelly’s sing-along with the kindergartners would land him
back in jail. But accompanying Kelly from the courthouse to the
graduation was the renowned Rev. James Meeks, Kelly’s spiritual
adviser and senior pastor at the Salem Baptist Church.
In
2019, after the airing of Lifetime’s docuseries “Surviving
R. Kelly,” which sparked a national outcry, the seven-time
Gospel Stellar awardee bishop, Marvin Sapp, was called on the carpet
for his association with R. Kelly. In 2017, Sapp released a song
titled “Listen,” featuring Kelly. In an interview on the
black gospel radio show “Get Up!” in 2019, Sapp first
defended his position, stating they recorded the tune before the
controversy. Of course, you have to wonder what world Sapp had been
orbiting in since there had been controversy around Kelly for
decades. When Black Twitter pounced on him for his lame excuse, Sapp
said prayer was part of his reasons for releasing the song. “After
praying about it – in studying scripture – one of the
things that I think that all of us in the body of Christ need to
notice is that the message has always been bigger than the
messenger,” Sapp said. “I think many of us miss that.
When you study scripture, you will notice that when God decided to do
something great, He chose a flawed individual.”
Black
women have decried how black pastors have used self-serving
theological reasoning in supporting Kelly and the deleterious effects
it has had on them, reporting sexual abuse and rape, especially by
their male parishioners, deacons and pastors. Studies have revealed
that black girls, women and nonbinary individuals confront higher
domestic violence and rape incidences. Nearly 60 percent of black
girls are sexually abused before 18, and black women are killed at a
higher rate than other women.
@MsPackyetti
tweeted to Sapp, “There are women being abused in your
congregation, and pastors who take their example from you. Every day
you stay silent and support R. Kelly, you send the message that
abuse of black women is permissible – especially in the church,
the place we should be safest.”
According
to Rolling
Stone,
R. Kelly album sales have been up by 517 percent since his guilty
verdict, which is no surprise – it’s a trend that follows
controversy. But it begs the question: Are Kelly’s R&B and
black gospel followers the ones buying his music on the down-low
since it’s now taboo to do so?
In
a Religion
News Service
essay, Cheryl Townsend Gilkes has posed her question about R. Kelly’s
music to the church, “Will the Black church continue to sing ‘I
Believe I Can Fly’?” Gilkes, a native Cantabrigian
professor at Colby College and assistant pastor for special projects
at Union Baptist Church in Cambridge, notes that “from its
beginnings, gospel music has had a strained relationship with
commercial interests and secular artists.”
“I
Believe I Can Fly” first appeared on the soundtrack for the
1996 film “Space Jam,” and then in 1998 on Kelly’s
album “R.” At the 1998 Grammys that year, Kelly performed
the song backed by a gospel choir. Gilkes reminds readers that “I
Believe I Can Fly” resonates in the black community because the
trope “flight” has been a core theme in our culture since
slavery to the present day. The trope is expressed in black art,
literature and black liberation theology as a form of resistance and
inspiration. And it’s one of the reasons the song is sung ad
nauseam at funerals, weddings and graduations and in churches.
Gilkes
hopes the black church won’t sing “I Believe I Can Fly.”
I want the church to do more: Stop being on the down-low about
sexuality and sexual abuse, and develop an embodied theology. As a
child of sexual abuse, R. Kelly needed help. The girls Kelly held
captive and abused needed rescue from him. The black church missed
the opportunity to help both.
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BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board
member and Columnist, The Reverend Monroe is an ordained minister,
motivational speaker and she speaks for a sector of society that is
frequently invisible. Rev. Monroe does a weekly Monday segment, “All
Revved Up!” on WGBH (89.7 FM), on Boston Public Radio and a weekly
Friday segment “The Take” on New England Channel NEWS (NECN).
She’s a Huffington Post blogger and a syndicated religion
columnist. Her columns appear in cities across the country and in the
U.K, and Canada. Also she writes a column in the Boston home LGBTQ
newspaper Baywindows and Cambridge Chronicle. A native of Brooklyn,
NY, Rev. Monroe graduated from Wellesley College and Union
Theological Seminary at Columbia University, and served as a pastor
at an African-American church in New Jersey before coming to Harvard
Divinity School to do her doctorate. She has received the Harvard
University Certificate of Distinction in Teaching several times while
being the head teaching fellow of the Rev. Peter Gomes, the Pusey
Minister in the Memorial Church at Harvard who is the author of the
best seller, THE GOOD BOOK. She appears in the film For the Bible
Tells Me So and was profiled in the Gay Pride episode of In the Life,
an Emmy-nominated segment. Monroe’s coming out story is profiled
in “CRISIS: 40 Stories Revealing the Personal, Social, and
Religious Pain and Trauma of Growing up Gay in America" and in
"Youth in Crisis." In 1997 Boston Magazine cited her as one
of Boston's 50 Most Intriguing Women, and was profiled twice in the
Boston Globe, In the Living Arts and The Spiritual Life sections for
her LGBT activism. Her papers are at the Schlesinger Library at
Radcliffe College's research library on the history of women in
America. Her website is irenemonroe.com. Contact the Rev. Monroe and
BC.
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