Black liberation theology—the system that undergirded some of the major movements
Affirming the humanity of African Americans
The Pan African community is rich with a history of freedom-fighting and change-making, from Nat Turner’s insurrection to Marcus Garvey’s international Back to Africa Movement to the Civil Rights Movement. What many of these moments have in common is that they all encompassed a religious aspect that allowed their participants to connect spiritually to the struggle afoot.
Although Black liberation theology as a structured class of preaching wasn’t officially established until the 1960s, the philosophy has been used to fuel some of the most transformational moments in African American times. It was the glue that held the community together, the mantra that kept the spirit of hope alive.
Author of “Survival & Liberation,” Carroll Watkins Ali, explains that Black liberation theology is tremendous in its influence such that it empowers the African American church through racial and cultural relativity.
“In light of the realities of Black existence in a White racist system, Black liberation theology’s intent is to empower Black people,” she writes. “The God language of Black liberation theology encourages Black people to image God as Black like them… It is also liberating because it frees us from the oppressive image of the White God of Western Christianity who sanctioned slavery, and whose response to slaves in essence was ‘the best way to be a good Christian is to be a good slave.’ The Black God of Black liberation theology’s message to the oppressive circumstances of Black life in America today is ‘God is a God of the oppressed.’”
James A. Cone is often credited for establishing the religious movement in the midst of extreme change in the ’60s.
Theologian and minister, the Rev. Michael Mancha of Palmdale, Calif., says after graduating college, Cone recognized he was not prepared to preach to the Black matters at hand, which included Freedom rides, riots, and protests. He explained that, “worst of all, he felt that the theological training he had just finished had left him completely unprepared to address his own community.”
So then Cone, who connected Black power with Black liberation theology, found that it was through spiritual teaching that the movement would generate true freedom for Black people. But Mancha stressed that Cone’s perspective of Black power was not violent, but it was about affirming the humanity of Blacks and that only Black people knew the extent of White oppression.
Mancha stated: “I believe that Black liberation theology is a theology that unapologetically focuses on the specific faith and cultural needs of the Black American community, incorporating methods that are not considered as ‘mainstream’ Christian ideology (a hyper-focused attention on emotionless rationale, rejection of any and all occurrences of people of color in the Bible; etc.) usage of ‘cultural storytelling’ methods that are more inclusive of people of color and less fixated on Eurocentric perspectives; and an uncompromising recognition of the reality that is in the United States.”
Further, as society has transformed, Mancha and others agree that the method in which the philosophy and spirituality are taught has changed. Given that circumstances have metamorphosed at face value, African Americans ruminate on the underlying issues which are in need of redress. However, the consciousness of the conditions is minimal. Therefore, many view Black liberation theology as controversial and dangerous.
Mancha points to Miguel De La Torre, professor of social ethics at Iliff School of Theology in Denver, Colo., who subscribes to the notion. Professor De La Torre writes in “Doing Christian Ethics from the Margins” that due to the mental enslavement generated by the common establishment (societal norms, media, White supremacy, etc.), victims are sheltered from the realities of their conditions and therefore seek not to liberate themselves. As a result, however, it is the responsibility of those in positions of influence to educate those who continue to wallow in ignorance, thus Black liberation theology is a need.
“Few members of the dominant culture question the construction of their conscience. Accordingly, those who approach ethics from positions of power and privilege must remain vigilant during their moral deliberations lest they confuse what is ethical with what is their habitus. Their only hope is to move beyond their social location by forming relationships of solidarity with the marginalized,” De La Torre writes.
Mancha adds that due to the potency of the theology, the concept may be difficult for average “media-merchandized post-post modern” congregants. He said, however, that it is possible that Black liberation theology can render tremendous change in the Black community as has been evident with movements in the past and current establishments like the African Methodist Episcopal Church.
“Black liberation theology invigorates congregants, and consequently communities, to refocus on their respective areas of influence, and get busy making a positive difference now, not in the great bye-and-bye. And it can continue,” Mancha said.
“As a Christian, I denounce armed political rebellion and recognize Christ’s dominion and pragmatic, relentless, omnipotence within my life and upon this world, including all of its systems.
For me, Black liberation theology continues to be a profoundly effective tool that exists for clergymen/women to pragmatically work toward strengthening and mobilizing our communities.
Through which means? ‘By any means necessary’ of course.”
Church is a wonderful place for Christians, where people are healed, delivered from their past excesses, meet their mates, learn the scriptures and get doused in the Holy Spirit. Often, movies and critics mock such church happenings with exaggerative skits and scenes that demonstrate ladies dancing down isles and people falling to the ground, convulsing as if enduring a holy seizure. But some would credit the jokes to lack of understanding, or even to fear.
African Americans are a colorful people, who claim some of the most phenomenal talents, elaborate philosophies, and eccentric belief systems. One thing about Black religion and spirituality is that we know how to have us some church.
From the dancing and singing to the worshiping and preaching, when we get down, we get down. It would almost be appropriate to say that in church, temple, mass, mosque and whatever other service you can think of, we always seem to welcome in the spirit of the Higher Being, the ancestors, or respective spirits.
May 21 came and went, but nothing unusual happened. Or did it?
Did your sanctified and born-again grandmamma happen to go up in a whirlwind Saturday night?
What about your on-fire preacher? Did he vanish like the passing fog?
A lot of disappointed Christian believers stood around waiting for Jesus to return and take them up on chariots of fire to heaven in the sky. Some quit their jobs, gave away their possessions, and spent valuable dollars and time posting signs and standing on street corners to warn the unchurched of the end.
There are biblical warnings to deter mankind from indulging in homosexuality. Leviticus 18:22 clearly warns against men indulging in sexual relationships with other men, and what God thinks about it. It reads, 22) You shall not lie with a man as with a woman; it is an abomination.
Ralph Basui Watkins, Ph.D., associate professor and dean of African American Church Studies at Fuller Theological Seminary, is a minister at the First A.M.E. Church in Los Angeles. An unconventional preacher, he has taken excursions to Africa to seek out the truth about the religion he has followed so closely all of his life. When he began to investigate African spirituality and the roots of biblical texts, his discovery changed his perspective.


