Friday, March 28, 2008 

Sunday, March 23, 2008 

My Email to Weekends@cnn.com

Greetings,

My I start by saying that your question is framed in such a way that causes an attack on an area of theology that is taught in seminaries and divinity schools all around the country. Liberation theology is an approved area of study by the Association of Theological School (ATS).

My I state that courses are taught in Liberation theology (Black, Latino/a, Asian, Gay etc.) and classes are filled with students who are not just minorities or even heterosexuals. In fact in my James Cone course, the father of Black Theology, there were more white students present in the course who was taught by a white female faculty member who supports Black Liberation theology, then African American students.

The reason why liberation theology exists in areas according to racial/ethnic groups is because many agree that theology has historically been done from the perspectives of whites at the center. When theology is done with whites at the center, it has pushed minorities to the margin (Black, Latino/a, Asian, homosexual, poor, etc.). Therefore each racial/ethnic group has developed a theology that places their history and social standing at the center of the gospel.

As a result, I would argue that Liberation Theology in general, and Black Liberation Theology in particular, have been helpful to minority groups who attempt to identify with Christianity and their marginalized status in American society.
I would encourage CNN to have an interview with Dr. James Cone, the father of Black Theology and reach out to others Liberation Theologies such as Luis N. Rivera-Pagán for Latino/a Theology and Jung Young Lee for Asian American Liberation Theology.

Called For the Purpose of the Kingdom,

Courtney L. Clayton
Princeton Theological Seminary
Master of Divinity Candidate

Thursday, March 20, 2008 

It Hard Out Here For A Prophet!

I know…I know I have plenty of work to be doing tonight for this final semester of seminary and it is Holy Week, but this has been on my mind all day.

My thoughts have been sparked by the recent controversy surrounding Barak Obama and Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright. I find the attack on both Obama and Wright disheartening and out of context. Never in American politics has a presidential candidates pastor been at the center of such controversy.

-Why is it fine for those running for political office to prance into our Black Churches during the elections season and we see them no more until re-election time?

-Why do this same political leaders show up in our churches, when they seek to enforce a separation of Church and State (when considering 501(c)3 status) but not attend our churches during any other time of year and refuse our invitations to come to the community prayer vigil for poverty and police brutality?

- It is George Bush, isn’t it, who has publicly professed on numerous occasions that he speaks personally with God on how Americans should attack foreign nations? Does he even have a pastor?

-Why is it that with all that the Black Church has endured throughout American history that now the media has tried to take 30 years of prophetic preaching and condense it down to a 30 second sound bite?

Might I place these questions alongside what I see as the arrogance of America. This "above all others" mentality has caused me great pain. Why is it that this nation feels as though it is above critique in general and prophetic critique in particular? What is it that causes us to invade others and teach them "civilized" ways of living (colonization) and think we have no work to do here on our own soil? What is it about our nation that makes us sing "God Bless America" and America only?

***Jeremiah Wright said “the Government gives us the drugs, builds bigger
prisons, passes a three strike law and then wants us to sing God bless
America. No, No! Not God bless America. God damn
America. That’s in the Bible. (THE MEDIA ALWAYS STOPS THE SERMON
HERE…BUT WRIGHT CONTINUES) For killing innocent people: God damn America.
For treating senior citizens as less than humane: God damn America. For
sending off young men and women to die in a war that nobody understand: God damn
America.” ***


It is hard out here for a prophet.

Part of the notion is due to folks like (dare I say it) Prophetess Juanita Bynum and Prophet/Bishop E. Bernard Jordan. They have taken the name prophet and have sought to use it for “profit,” and the result of this causes a distortion in meaning. While folks come running to these prophetesses and prophets asking when will my financial breakthrough come, is my husband on the way or was the doctor wrong in his medical diagnosis, the prophets of old critiqued the government and sought to challenge the injustice taking place in society. Such biblical prophets as Isaiah, Jeremiah, Amos, Obadiah, Zephaniah, Haggai and John the Baptist spoke to the nations regarding social injustice and God’s displeased nature because of social sin.

Yet, the most prophetic of all biblical prophets was our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. He has not been (at least for me) a submissive/passive Savior. No, No! Jesus has gone to the margins, critiqued the Sanhedrin and attended to the least of these. His prophetic ministry was to completely reconstruct the social and religious arrogance which was plaguing society. This is the in-braking of the Kingdom Jesus spoke of (Shout out to Dr. Blount here)

What more has prophetic preaching in American done than follow the example of Jesus? Wright and so many others, despite the arrogance of this nation, have spoke “truth to power” and called out American publicly on it treatment towards the least of these. To be prophetic is a portion of our Christian responsibility!

Yet and still, it’s hard out here for a prophet!

Even our Lord and Savior Jesus demonstrate this. On this Holy Week we are reminded that for his critique of the social government that our Savior was crucified. The government sought to bury him, his message and prevent his political movement from going forward.

This is what the media is seeking to do today. When American stand on the brink of something new, something contagious, something that could bring forth positive change and reconstruction, the media assists in trying to crucify Wright, Obama and dare I say the future of this nation.

Yet, there is hope! Because despite the attempts to kill our Lord and Savior we are reminded that Christ entered death but returned triumphant. That the battle was won and the tomb could not hold him.

Obama, my prayer for you is that of the old Negro Spiritual, “Guide my feet, while I run this race…for I don’t want to run this race in vain.”

Wright, my prayer for you is also found in an old Negro Spiritual, “I've seen the lightening flash, I've heard the thunder roll, I've felt sin breakers dashing trying to conquer my soul. But I heard the voice of Jesus saying still to fight on. He promised never to leave, never to leave me alone. No, never alone, no never alone, He promised never to leave me alone, He'll claim me for his own…He promised never to leave me, never to leave me alone."
Yes, it is hard out here for a prophet, but somebody’s got to do it.

Sign me up!

About me

  • I'm Rev. Courtney Clayton Jenkins
  • From Cleveland Heights, OH, United States
  • I am a young woman in pursuit of her God given destiny. It is an interesting road to travel. I don't have it all together and a lot to learn. Step by step and day by day I keep pushing on. These are my thoughts about life, love, the Word and the world.
My profile
Powered by Blogger
and Blogger Templates

Pannasmontata calendar