Aaron Taylor

Now That History Has Been Made, It's Time For the Black Church To Reclaim Its Non-Violent Heritage.



Posted: Thursday, January 22, 2009

by
Aaron Taylor

On behalf of white evangelical Christians everywhere, I'd like to congratulate the black church for a well-deserved victory. The election of Barack Hussein Obama as the first African American president of the United States is a watershed moment not only for America, but also for oppressed people everywhere.

I wasn't around during the decade of the civil rights movement, but here is what I've heard. At a time when your people were considered less than human by mainstream America, you chose to love your oppressors. You faced the attack dogs and the fire hoses. You refused to ride in the back seat of buses. You broke down the walls of segregated high schools with your heads held high. You sang in mass to the tune of We Shall Overcome; and overcome you did.

My message to the black church is simple, but urgent. To my fellow black Christians I'd like to say thank you and please. Thank you for winning the struggle for civil rights but please, oh please, do not give up your non-violent heritage that made it possible. In a world where the very presence of nuclear weapons puts the human race in jeopardy, if there ever was a time for the message of non-violence to reclaim its rightful place in American history, that time is now; and you're the ones that can make it happen!

The irony is now that you have a man commanding the most powerful military in the world, the temptation is all too great to forget that, unlike the American revolution where victory came at the barrel of the gun, your victory came not by the power of might, but by the power of right. Your victory is a victory that came not from violence, but from non-violence.

Last year I was struck by the irony of hearing a speech by John McCain praising Dr. King for his life and legacy when, as I recall, it was Dr. King who said, The greatest purveyor of violence in the world today is my own government. Dr. King was the most vocal critic of U.S. foreign policy in his day and yet how often is he praised for his courage to face down his own government?

This year I'm struck by another irony. In a blog post entitled The forgotten heart of Kings dream, author Greg Boyd points out that every year he and his wife attend the annual Dr. Martin Luther King breakfast. This year the keynote speaker was four- star general Colin Powell. In Powell's speech, he attributed the greatness of America to the greatness of our soldiers throughout history, and even equated soldiers today with King's call to service. Colin Powell is perhaps one of the most honorable men to ever grace the U.S. military, and of course there are many honorable men and women serving in our armed forces today, but isn't it ironic that a message praising U.S. military might would be given at a service commemorating Dr. Martin Luther King?

All of the evidence from his books, speeches, essays, and sermons suggests that Dr. Martin Luther King believed that violence never achieves lasting solutions. Dr. King taught that non-violent redemptive love is the most powerful force for good in the world, especially when directed towards ones enemies. We all seem to know intuitively that Dr. King changed the world for the better, but few today seem to pay much attention to how he changed the world. Since September 11th, Kings values of loving the enemy and turning the other cheek are now viewed as hopelessly nave by mainstream American culture, including by many in the black church.

As a lifelong member of the Pentecostal/charismatic tradition, I consider the historic shift of much of black Pentecostalism from pro-peace to pro-war to be nothing short of tragic. I have a hunch that the influence of Christian Zionism has a lot to do with this, but regardless of the reason, its high time for black Pentecostals, and the black church everywhere, to reclaim its non-violent heritage.

American Christianity as we know it today is in desperate need of a reformation. For the first three hundred years of Christian history, Christians were thrown to the lions because they embraced the cross and renounced the sword. The vast majority of American Christians today have forgotten this. Who better can remind us of this than you? The media may mock you. The world may laugh at you. But one thing you can know for sure. If you can bring non-violence once again to the forefront of the American psyche, there's a white boy from Jefferson County Missouri cheering for you every step of the way.

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Aaron D. Taylor is the founder of Great Commission Society and the author of "Alone with a Jihadist" scheduled to be released in mid 2009. Aaron can be contacted at fromdeathtolife@gmail.com Aaron blogs at http://www.aarondtaylor.blogspot.com
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Top-level comments on this article: (2 total)
» left by Ronyae
3 years 15 days ago.
92 fans. Follow Ronyae on twitter!
Aaron,
 
Great article. and thanks for the info about Dr. King; a great man who has been spoke on, and quoted for years, but yet I still learn more and more of him as the years pass.
 
Thanks for sharing this with us.
» left by David Tanguay
3 years 9 days ago.
186 fans.
You delivered a good message in this article Aaron. Yes peace is the goal of many, only peace can only be brought about with peace.
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