Watching grandchildren do whatever it is they choose to do is one of the great, amazing blessings of being a grandparent. If one of my four grandchildren is anywhere, doing anything and I can get there--or, am allowed to be present!--I am there!
What follows in the video is a highlight reel from Wyatt's first season to play tackle football. You'll see him as #20 for the purple and gold Vikings. He's a great blocker, really steady on defense in the secondary or sometimes at linebacker, a hard driving runner at fullback (at times you'll note a pile of boys moving down the field at about 5 yards at a whack--usually Wyatt is under that file with the ball!), and, on several occasions this year, he breaks with the ball for long runs to the end zone.
I'll admit it is hard to determine who is doing what on parts of the video. Maybe it takes a granddad's eyes to catch it all. Watching helps me remember the fun of this season. At the same time, it causes me to remember and anticipate basketball (Wyatt and Owen), volleyball (Gracie), dance (Gracie), soccer (Wyatt, Owen and soon Henry), grandparent days and lots of other school related events!
Nothing better!
Enjoy!
Saturday, November 30, 2013
Friday, November 29, 2013
Coming in 2014!
2014 Urban Engagement Book Club (Hosted by
CitySquare)
Every FIRST
Thursday at Noon
Highland Park
United Methodist Church (at SMU), Room 120
3300 Mockingbird
Lane Dallas, Texas 75205
January 9
Outliers:
The Story of Success , Malcolm Gladwell
February 6
Black Like Me (50th Anniversary Edition), John Howard Griffin
March 6
The
Metropolitan Revolution: How Cities and Metros Are Fixing Our Broken Politics
and Fragile Economy ,Bruce
Katz & Jennifer Bradley
April 3
The
Other America: Poverty in the United States ,Michael Harrington
May 1
The Public School Advantage: Why Public Schools Outperform Private
Schools,
Christopher A. Lubienski & Sarah Theule Lubienski
June 5
Scarcity:
Why Having Too Little Means So Much, Sendhil
Mullainathan & Eldar Shafir
July 3
No Book Club: Summer Break
August 7
The American Way of Poverty: How the Other Half Still Lives, Sasha Abramsky
September 4
Why
Walls Won't Work: Repairing the US-Mexico Divide, Michael Dear
October 2
Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger
to America's Public Schools, Diane Ravitch
November 6
David
and Goliath: Underdogs, Misfits, and the Art of Battling Giants
Malcolm
Gladwell
December 4
Backlash:
The Undeclared War Against American Women, Susan Faludi
Every
THIRD Thursday at Noon
First
United Methodist Church, Crossroads Room
1928
Ross Ave Dallas, Texas 75201
January 23
Outliers: The Story of Success,Malcolm Gladwell
February 20
American Apartheid: Segregation and the Making of the Underclass,
Douglas Massey & Nancy Denton
Douglas Massey & Nancy Denton
March 20
The
Other America: Poverty in the United States,Michael Harrington
April 16
The Healing of America: A Global Quest for Better, Cheaper, and Fairer
Health Care, T. R. Reid
May 15
The Public School Advantage: Why Public Schools Outperform Private
Schools,
Christopher A. Lubienski & Sarah Theule Lubienski
June 19
David
and Goliath: Underdogs, Misfits, and the Art of Battling Giants
Malcolm
Gladwell
July 10
The Latino Threat: Constructing Immigrants, Citizens, and the Nation,
Second Edition, Leo Chavez
August 21
NAFTA
and the Politics of Labor Transnationalism , Tamara Kay
September 18
The
Smartest Kids in the World: And How They Got That Way, Amanda Ripley
October 17
The
DREAMers: How the Undocumented Youth Movement Transformed the Immigrant Rights
Debate
Walter
Nicholls
November 21
Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead,Sheryl Sandberg
December 18
Scarcity:
Why Having Too Little Means So Much, Sendhil Mullainathan & Eldar Shafir
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Thanksgiving 2013
Happy Thanksgiving!
As you count your blessings, I trust that great joy will follow, as well as reflection.
Today I will be with our family.
All four of my grandchildren will be with me.
It will be wonderful.
And, it will be better today for my little buddy, Chris or Christian, than it was just a couple of years ago.
Chris and his mom live in our building downtown. Chris' mom is a devoted provider. She keeps Chris on the right path.
Last week he showed me his report card--all As with one B. He had circled the B.
"See that circle?" he asked me.
"Yes, I do. What does it mean?" I replied.
"It means next time I'll have a 100 there!" he exclaimed.
I expect he will.
He told me that he wants to go to Oklahoma University and play football. I told him that both were great dreams, but in any case he could go to OU if he worked hard, football or no football. He smiled.
Chris is my buddy and I am his.
As I thank God for my family today, I'll find some time to thank God for Chris and his family as well.
I'm grateful he is doing well.
He'll have his chance, and that is everything.
As you count your blessings, I trust that great joy will follow, as well as reflection.
Today I will be with our family.
All four of my grandchildren will be with me.
It will be wonderful.
And, it will be better today for my little buddy, Chris or Christian, than it was just a couple of years ago.
Chris and his mom live in our building downtown. Chris' mom is a devoted provider. She keeps Chris on the right path.
Last week he showed me his report card--all As with one B. He had circled the B.
"See that circle?" he asked me.
"Yes, I do. What does it mean?" I replied.
"It means next time I'll have a 100 there!" he exclaimed.
I expect he will.
He told me that he wants to go to Oklahoma University and play football. I told him that both were great dreams, but in any case he could go to OU if he worked hard, football or no football. He smiled.
Chris is my buddy and I am his.
As I thank God for my family today, I'll find some time to thank God for Chris and his family as well.
I'm grateful he is doing well.
He'll have his chance, and that is everything.
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Amazing, interactive map
If you are interested in analyzing the poverty/income data for any zip code in the Untied States, look here.
What you'll find is an amazing, interactive map with the data buried just beneath your cursor!
What you'll find is an amazing, interactive map with the data buried just beneath your cursor!
Monday, November 25, 2013
Faith, alive and well on inner city streets
Consistently over the years, well-meaning people have asked again and again what we do at CitySquare to "share our faith" with the people we serve. Again and again, I've tried to explain that the matter and the issues of faith come up again and again in our various workplaces. The interesting twist, however, is the fact that our neighbors, those who come seeking our assistance in various ways, initiate conversations about spiritual things.
I've learned over the years that "faith" keeps poor folks going. Most would tell you that faith is about all they have upon which to depend.
One of the latest examples of this reality--it happens numerous times every day--can be viewed in the video below. I caught this "testimony" out at "the Corner" where I hang out on Thursdays. What this friend said just erupted from his heart after I asked him how he was doing.
And, I'll say again, it happens all the time in my world.
I've learned over the years that "faith" keeps poor folks going. Most would tell you that faith is about all they have upon which to depend.
One of the latest examples of this reality--it happens numerous times every day--can be viewed in the video below. I caught this "testimony" out at "the Corner" where I hang out on Thursdays. What this friend said just erupted from his heart after I asked him how he was doing.
And, I'll say again, it happens all the time in my world.
Friday, November 22, 2013
Images from memory
The following images were captured in the lobby of the Bank of America Oak Cliff Tower yesterday. Walking through the display moved me deeply.
Monday, November 18, 2013
Friday, November 15, 2013
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Bright future. . .bright students
This video conveys the beginning, hard work being engaged by the second class of JUST team members from Abilene Christian University working here at CitySquare.
I found it moving.
I hope you'll find encouragement as well.
I found it moving.
I hope you'll find encouragement as well.
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Wesley, poverty and democracy
Poverty, Sanctification and the Progress of English
Democracy
Larry JamesUnited Methodist History HX 7365, Fall 2013
Professor Tamara E. Lewis
From the earliest
days religious societies in one expression or another provided the backbone for
the Wesleyan movement to reform the Church of England and to renew the entire
nation. Regular, weekly attention to
religious devotion, personal discipleship and meaningful engagement with the
poor and downcast, both in and outside society membership, provided stability
and purpose to these groups, as well as growth for individual members and to
the expanding movement.
For
all the argument over issues related to assurance, predestination, perseverance
of the saints and other matters emerging from John Wesley’s ongoing dialogue
and struggle with Calvinism and Quietism, it is my contention that service to
and concern for the poor became increasingly important to Wesley and to his understanding of the
meaning and purpose of his work. So
important was this aspect of his understanding that the notion of “works of
mercy” became as important a “means of grace” as were “works of piety.” It
appears that as Wesley’s lifelong struggle with issues related to the assurance
of salvation matured, so did his commitment to the poor deepen. By the end of his life, Wesley had developed
a profound understanding of the poor, their struggles and the forces that
continued to oppress them. While his
life ended in expressed disappointment regarding the overall Methodist response
to the problems associated with poverty and an adequate Christian reaction,[1] it is my
contention that his work set the stage for dramatic advancements in democracy,
social concern and organized labor.
As
M. Douglas Meeks notes, it is
Wesley’s unequivocal insistence that the poor are at the
heart of the evangel and that life with the poor is constitutive of Christian
discipleship. There is widespread
agreement that, according to the practice of Wesley, ‘the poor in Jesus Christ’
has to do with the nature of the church and with salvation. Wesley’s ministry with the poor included
feeding, clothing, housing the poor; preparing the unemployed for work and
finding them employment; visiting the poor, sick and prisoners; devising new
forms of health care education and delivery for the indigent; distributing
books to the needy; and raising structural questions about an economy that
produced poverty.[2]
Wesley considered concern for the
poor by Christian disciples as a determinative factor in the process of salvation.[3]
Clearly,
the outdoor or field-preaching that ushered in and/or accompanied revival among
the people of the nation brought with it an egalitarian dimension that some
found offensive. Rev. Dr. Edmond Gibson,
Bishop of London, wrote a pamphlet against both the Methodists and their
“boldness to preach in the fields and other open space and inviting the rabble
to be their hearers.”[4] Wesley responded by reminding the Bishop that
the reason these people stand in need of salvation is that they never came to
the churches, the implication being that they were not invited or welcomed
there.[5] The Duchess of Buckingham expresses an even
stronger reaction in her letter to the countess of Huntingdon, referring to the
doctrines of the Methodist preachers as “most repulsive, and strongly tinctured
with impertinence and disrespect towards their superiors, in perpetually
endeavoring to level all ranks, and do away with all distinctions. . .. and I
cannot but wonder that your ladyship should relish any sentiment so much at
variance with high rank and good breeding.”[6]
The
egalitarian nature of the methods (even if unknowing) of Wesley and others who
reached out so effectively to the common people of the nation would result in
many unintended consequences vital to the emergence of a thoroughly democratic
society. Wesley’s account of his
experience preaching on the streets and later from a hilltop at Newcastle is
moving and indicative of the hunger of listeners for hope and for inclusion in
the social/religious life of the community and nation.[7]
In
my view, the fact that Wesley places increasing emphasis on ministry among the
poor grows out of his economic vision for the followers of Christ. His well-known dictum—“Earn all you can.” “Save all you can.” “Give all you can.”--became more and more
important to him as he and his movement aged.
Wesley considered a person claiming to follow Christ and, at the same
time, choosing to hold onto wealth while others suffered in need, antithetical
to the call of Christian self-denial and was in fact a “mortal sin.”[8]
Wesley’s
well-known claim that there is “no holiness but social holiness” indicates the
importance of works of compassion and justice to the essential process of
sanctification. In “The Scripture Way of
Salvation” (1765), Wesley declares, “Why that both repentance, rightly
understood, and the practice of all good works, works of piety, as well as
works of mercy (now properly so called, since they spring from faith) are in
some sense necessary to sanctification.”[9] He goes on,
"But
what good works are those, the practice of which you affirm to be necessary to
sanctification?" First, all works of piety; such as public prayer, family
prayer, and praying in our closet; receiving the supper of the Lord; searching
the Scriptures, by hearing, reading, meditating; and using such a measure of
fasting or abstinence as our bodily health allows.
Secondly,
all works of mercy; whether they relate to the bodies or souls of men; such as
feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, entertaining the stranger, visiting
those that are in prison, or sick, or variously afflicted; such as the
endeavouring to instruct the ignorant, to awaken the stupid sinner, to quicken
the lukewarm, to confirm the wavering, to comfort the feeble-minded, to succour
the tempted, or contribute in any manner to the saving of souls from death. This
is the repentance, and these the "fruits meet for repentance," which
are necessary to full sanctification. This is the way wherein God hath
appointed His children to wait for complete salvation.[10]
From the beginning
of his work in and with religious societies, and building on the history of the
varieties of such organizations, Wesley included work among the poor as a vital
part of his response to his experience of justification. How seriously he took these concerns can be
seen in how hard he and his followers worked to build institutional or
organizational “structures”(to borrow a term from Randy L. Maddox) to ensure that the poor were served by the
sanctifying activities of the believers.[11] It is equally clear that over time Wesley’s
efforts among the poor moved beyond simple acts of charity to include
empowerment strategies such as schools for poor children, employment programs,
loan funds and even parish-based wellness efforts stemming from his rather
innovative pharmacy work.
Wesley’s
attitude toward the poor included an unique sensitivity as to how Christian
acts of compassion, charity and justice would affect those served.[12] Wesley evidences a social understanding well
beyond his times when he defends the poor against the charge that their poverty
is the result of their unwillingness to work.
The following journal entry in February 1753 reflects Wesley’s heart and
understanding:
Thursday,
8 . . . In the afternoon I visited many of the sick; but such scenes, who could
see unmoved? There are none such to be
found in a pagan country. If any of the Indians in Georgia were sick (which
indeed exceeding rarely happened till they learned gluttony and drunkenness
from
the Christians), those that were near him gave him whatever he wanted. Oh, who
willconvert the English into honest heathens!
While
Wesley’s vision of a reformed church and a renewed nation through the work of
the Methodists did not materialize, I contend that the movement he helped
create and led resulted in the planting of important, revolutionary seeds that
bloomed in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Ironically, his social teaching did not
result in what he had hoped for during his day.
However, Methodist social doctrine informed the creation of a new,
robust form of social democracy that took seriously the needs of its people in
ways the church could not imagine.
Further, while not thoroughly radical, Wesley’s work, and especially the
organizational strategies of the societies, served very well the rise of labor in
response to the Industrial Revolution in England.
With this in mind, I’ll conclude with a description
of the work of the “Sheffield Society,” one of the many more radical labor
groups that began appearing on the English social, economic, political
landscape toward the end of the 18th century.
Reported by noted, Marxist historian, E. P. Thompson, who regarded
Methodism as an overall hindrance to social resistance; notwithstanding, I find the passage clearly
connected to the influence and form of the Wesley societies:
The
Sheffield Society originated . . . from a gathering of “five or six mechanics.
. . conversing about the enormous high price of provisions.” It grew so rapidly that by January 1792, it
comprised eight societies “which meet each at their different houses, all on
the same evening.” “None are admitted
without a ticket . . . and perfect regular good order kept up.” The societies met fortnightly, the General
Meeting, “at which some hundreds attend,” monthly. There were 1,400 subscribers to a pamphlet
edition . . .of the First Part of Rights of Man, which was read with avidity in
many of the workshops of Sheffield.” In
Mach 1792, after four months in existence, the society claimed nearly 2,000
members. In May a new method of
organization was adopted: dividing them
into small bodies or meetings of ten persons each, and then ten to appoint a
delegate: Ten of these delegates form
another meeting, and so on . . . till at last are reduced to a proper number
for constituting the Committee or Grand Council.[14]
[1] John Wesley, “Causes of the
Inefficacy of Christianity,” in John Wesley’s Sermons: An Anthology. Edited by Albert C. Outler
nad Richard P. Heitzenrater, Nashville:
Abingdon Press, 1991, pp. 550-557.
[2] M. Douglas Meeks, “On Reading
Wesley with the Poor, The Portion of
the Poor, pp. 9-10.
[3] Meeks, p. 11.
[4] “Chapter IX, Society and Class,”
John Wesley the Methodist, The Wesley Center Online, p. 3.
[5] “Chapter IX, Society and Class,”
p. 3.
[6]
Donald W. Dayton, “Liberation Theology in the Wesleyan and Holiness Tradition.”
On Public Theology website (http://www.pubtheo.com/page.asp?pid=111),
p. 5.
[7] “Chapter IX, Society and Class,”
p. 4.
[8] Randy L. Maddox, “’Visit the
Poor’ John Wesley, the Poor, and the Sanctification of Believers,” in The
Wesleys and the Poor: The Legacy and
Development of Methodist Attitudes to Poverty, 1729-1999. Edited by Richard Heitzenrater, Nashville,
TN: Kingswood Books, 2002, p. 62
[9] John Wesley, “The Scripture Way
of Salvation,” in John Wesley’s Sermons: An Anthology. Edited by Albert C. Outler and Richard P.
Heitzenrater, Nashville: Abingdon Press,
1991, p. 377; and Randy L. Maddox,
“’Visit the Poor’ John Wesley, the Poor, and the Sanctification of Believers,”
p. 65.
[10] John Wesley, “The Scripture Way
of Salvation,” p. 378.
[11]Randy L. Maddox, “’Visit the
Poor’ John Wesley, the Poor, and the Sanctification of Believers,” p. 66.
[12] Randy L. Maddox, “’Visit the
Poor’ John Wesley, the Poor, and the Sanctification of Believers,” p. 75.
[13]The Journal of John Wesley, edited by Percy
Livingstone Parker, Chicago: Moody
Press, 1951, pp. 205-206, Randy L.
Maddox, “’Visit the Poor’ John Wesley, the Poor, and the Sanctification of
Believers,” p. 75.
[14] E. P. Thompson, The making of
the English working class, New York:
Vintage Books, 1963, pp. 149-150.
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
The Peculiar Institution
John Wesley,
Slavery and the Failure of American Methodism
Larry
James
United
Methodist History HX 7365, Fall 2013
Professor
Tamara E. Lewis
In August, my master attended a
Methodist camp-meeting held in the Bay-side, Talbot county, and there experienced
religion. I indulged a faint hope that his
conversion would lead him to emancipate his slaves, and that, if he did not do
this, it would, at any rate, make him more kind and humane. I was disappointed in both these respects. It neither made him to be humane to his
slaves nor to emancipate them. If it had
any effect on his character, it made him more cruel and hateful in all his
ways; for I believe him to have been a much worse man after his conversion than
before.[1]
This
statement from Frederick Douglass presents in stark relief the juxtaposition of
John Wesley’s ethic and the troubling practice of the church which he helped
export to North America. Given the
teaching, personal conviction and activism of John Wesley regarding slavery,
how does one explain the failure of the movement he founded to embrace and
sustain those same values in its New World expression and experience?
John
Wesley’s views on human bondage combined clarity, passion, courage and an integrated
understanding of God’s creation of a common humanity. Wesley’s most definitive and comprehensive
teaching on slavery appears in his pamphlet, Thoughts Upon Slavery, first published in 1774.[2]
In the essay Wesley sketches slavery as an institution that creates capacity
and benefit for only the master, allowing slave owners to relate to their human
property “in the same manner as his cows and horses” (I.2). Wesley takes great pains to describe
geographically, politically and socially the delightful nature of the regions
in African from which slaves originated.
In his brief, but careful study of Africa, he effectively debunks the
pro-slavery notion that those captured and transported are being rescued from a
land “so remarkably horrid, dreary and barren, that it is a kindness to deliver
them out of it” (II. 1-11).
Wesley’s
evaluation of the African people encountered by European explorers and businessmen
presents an extremely positive, if idealized, view of the indigenous
population. His viewpoint is important
in light of the fact that as early as four decades earlier people began to
question the full humanity of Africans.[3]Again,
Wesley’s purpose is to counter the understanding that slavery brings great
benefit to Africans captured and transported to the New World for this
purpose. Speaking of the Fulis nation of
Senegal, Wesley observes,
The Fulis are governed by their chief men,
who rule with much moderation. Few of
them will drink anything stronger than water, being strict Mahometans. The Government is easy, because the people
are of a quiet and good disposition, and so well instructed in what is right,
that a man who wrongs another is the abomination of all. They desire no more land than they use, which
they cultivate with great care and industry.
If any of them are known to be made slaves by the white men, they all join
to redeem them. They not only support
all that are old, or blind, or lame among themselves, but have frequently
supplied the necessities of the Mandingos, when they were distressed by famine (II.
6).
Speaking
of natives of Benin,
. . . also very charitable, the Kind and
the great Lords taking care to employ all that are capable of any work. And those that are utterly helpless they keep
for God’s sake; so that here also are no beggars. . . . Upon the whole,
therefore, the Negroes who inhabit the coast of Africa, from the river Senegal
to the southern bounds of Angola, are so far from being the stupid, senseless,
brutish, lazy barbarians, the fierce, cruel, perfidious savages they have been
described, that, on the contrary, they are represented, by them who have no motive
to flatter them, as remarkable sensible, considering the few advantages they
have for improving their understanding; as industrious to the highest degree,
perhaps more so than any other natives of so warm a climate; as fair, just and
honest in all their dealings, unless where white men have taught them to be
otherwise; and as far more mild, friendly, and kind to strangers, than any of
our forefathers were. Our forefathers! Where shall we find at
this day, among the fair-faced natives of Europe, a nation generally practicing
the justice, mercy, and truth, which are found among these poor Africans (II.
11)?
Wesley makes clear the
scandalous manner in which slaves ended up in the colonies of North
America. By trickery and fraud, numerous
slaves were enticed to come on board ships where they were constrained and
carried away (III. 1.). Many other Africans entered the slave trade after their
European oppressors stirred up conflict and war among various tribes and
nations. The spoils of these unnatural
conflicts included prisoners who came to be sold as slaves to the traders
supplying a growing North American demand for laborers (III. 2.). Wesley also
documents the incredible loss of life during the passage to the New World (III.
5.), as well as the heart wrenching separation of families placed on the
auction block in the slave markets (III. 7.).
Clearly, John Wesley
adamantly opposed any form of human bondage as thoroughly unchristian and
terribly wrong. In 1788, Wesley used
much of the content of his pamphlet in a sermon he preached in Bristol, one of
the most active centers of slave trafficking.
The sermon caused a troubling stir in his audience that resulted in
something like a riot. [4] Given the realities of Wesley’s conviction
and the strength of his consistent message, as well as the extent of his
influence upon the preachers with whom he worked (including those sent to and
raised up in the colonies), how does one account for the manner in which these
teachings were so quickly compromised and ultimately set aside?
First, Wesley answered
the question, at least indirectly in his rather distressed sermon, Causes of the Inefficacy of
Christianity. Wesley feared that
personal holiness declined in direct proportion to the affluence of a disciple
of Christ. He mused in the sermon
whether or not,
. . . true scriptural Christianity has a
tendency, in process of time, to undermine and destroy itself? For wherever true Christianity spreads, it
must cause diligence and frugality, which in the natural course of things, must
beget riches. And riches naturally beget
pride, love of the world, and every temper that is destructive of Christianity.
Now if there be no way to prevent this, Christianity is consistent with itself,
and of consequence, cannot stand, cannot continue long among any people: since,
wherever it generally prevails, it saps its own foundation.[5]
Christians involved in
the slave trade found it to be lucrative.
As Methodism came to North America and co-existed alongside profitable
slave markets, many members of the movement, especially in the south, invested
in the business, often carried away by greed and its attendant benefits and
success. In Thoughts Upon Slavery, Wesley recognized the role of money and
greed as prime motivators in the slave enterprise. Of course, he railed against both in the
pamphlet.
It is far better to have no wealth, than
to gain wealth at the expense of virtue.
Better is honest poverty, than all the riches bought by the tears, and
sweat, and blood of our fellow-creatures (IV. 7.).
And
again,
Regard not money! All that a man hath will he give for hislife! Whatever you lose, lose not your soul: Nothing can countervail that loss. Immediately quit the horrid
trade: At all events, be an honest man
(V. 3.).
In
large part American Methodists were driven into support of slavery for strictly
economic
reasons.
Greed trumped faith.
Second, many argued simply that the
practice of slavery and the slave trade was
authorized by law. Slavery was legal. Not only was the peculiar
institution legal in secular law, a compelling argument could be made that
slavery was authorized in holy scripture as well. Clearly, many Christians in the New World
felt completely justified in supporting slavery thanks to the message of the
Bible itself.
Wesley seems to understand this reality. In Thoughts
Upon Slavery, Wesley argues in a most radical manner against the horror and
the evil of the slave trade. Setting
even scripture aside, he calls upon natural law and common sense:
I would now inquire, whether these
things can be defended, on the principles of even heathen honesty; whether they
can be reconciled (setting the Bible out of the question) with any degree of
justice or mercy. Notwithstanding ten thousand laws, right is right, and wrong
is wrong still. There must still remain
an essential difference between justice and injustice, cruelty and mercy. So that I still ask, Who can reconcile this
treatment of the Negroes, first and last, with either mercy or justice? (IV.
1., 2.)
Wesley’s hermeneutical instinct, leading to his “setting
the Bible out of the question,” begs a number of questions relating to social
and theological questions facing followers of Jesus today. Leaving that discussion for another day, it
is important to note a version of Methodism’s quadrilateral at work in Wesley’s
argument against slavery.
Third, American Methodists did not hold to Wesley’s views
on slavery, at least in part due to the thought and life practice of another
extremely important Methodist influence in and upon American colonists: George Whitefield.
If John Wesley influenced the clergy of England and to a
lesser degree those who first served the colonists, George Whitefield had a
larger influence on the American people.
Whitefield’s preaching during the Great Awakening commanded attention
and a following in the colonies. The
fact that Whitefield himself eventually owned slaves and argued that Georgia
make slavery legal surely had great influence on American Methodists. Whitefield’s support of slavery began as at
least a pragmatic consideration. His
efforts to begin and sustain a working orphanage in Georgia, led him to believe
that slaves would be needed to make the enterprise financially viable. He argued the same about the Georgia economy. Whitefield lobbied the trustees of the colony
to legalize slavery for economic reasons.
Citing the challenge of developing and operating his orphanage,
Whitefield argued, “Had a negroe [sic] been allowed, I should have had a
sufficiency to support a great many orphans, without expending above half the
sum which had been laid out.”[6]
One last thought concerning Whitefield: there remains much work to be done regarding his
position on slavery. Especially
important will be consideration of both his personal views on the importance of
evangelism and pietism, as well as his Calvinism and its effects on his views
of social reality and worldly justice. To
be sure, the observations of Frederick Douglas noted at the beginning of this
paper make very clear the irrelevance and hypocrisy of the prevailing faith
perspectives of growing numbers of Methodists from across the new nation.
[1] Frederick Douglass, Narrative
of the Life of Frederick Douglass, in The Classic Slave Narratives,
ed. Henry Louis Gates, Jr., (New York:
Mentor, 1987), 287 from a reference first discovered in Kyle Painter, “The Pro-Slavery Argument in the Development
of the American Methodist Church,” Constructing the Past: Vol. 2:
Iss. 1, Article 5.
[2] John Wesley, Thoughts Upon Slavery, 1774. Published by Global Ministries, The United
Methodist Church at www.umcmission.org/Find-Resources/John-Wesley-Sermons/The-Wesleys-and-Their-Times/Thoughts-Upon-Slavery.
[3] Brycchan Carey, John Wesley’s “Thoughts Upon Slavery” and the language of the heart, in The
Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library of Manchester, 85:2-3
(Summer/Autumn 2003), 272.
[4] Ibid, 277 which references
Wesley’s Letters vii, 359-360.
[5] Albert C. Outler and Richard P.
Heitzenrater, editors, John Wesley’s Sermons: An Anthology, 556.
[6] Kyle Painter, “The Pro-Slavery
Argument in the Development of the American Methodist Church,” in Constructing
the Past: Vol. 2: Iss 1, Article 5, 34-35