This blog is a visual articulation of MY views of the world around me. I will present various sides of arguments, and always sum them up with my own personal take.
My more entertaining/diverse/ridiculous/lovable blog can be found at http://mrjdjude.tumblr.com/ and I'll do all of my following from that blog as well!
Thanks and enjoy!
Catching Elephant is a theme by Andy Taylor
I wish I was more creative to think of a word, that begins with a B, to complete the title, but I failed. Please forgive me.
I have long struggled to rationalize my ever changing stance on Christianity with my growing interest in social justice and equality. I often talk about growing up in a conservative-southern-Black-Christian society and how that affected me. Having had been experienced to SO much since then, I realize how much my initial upbringing affected the way I see the world, especially same-sex relationships.
In a moment of full disclosure, I once voted against same-sex unions. I can’t even tell you why. It was my first chance to vote (I was much more of conservative Christian back then too) and I think I was overwhelmed by how many things there were on the ballot to vote for. I clearly remember not reading the proposition well, but I do remember saying to myself, “I believe gay people should be able to love who they want to but marriage is sacred.” It hurts me to know that was my stance at that time. I’m proud to say that I now see how limiting and hurtful that stance was and I’m glad I’ve moved to a better place on that issue.
As the debate on same-sex relationships wages on, I wonder how my community, the Black community, and more specifically the aforementioned community I grew up in, will respond. Will we realize that our homosexual brethren are asking for the same equality we fought fight for?! Will we use this moment as a blessingand finally acknowledge our own LGBT community, a community we, as Black people, have kept hidden?! Will we go the way of some “wayward” Christian evangelicals (and Manny Pacquiao) and continue to insist that we LEGALLY infringe on the civil rights of American citizens?!
I have been critical of Black people who have blindly followed President Obama and have sucked up everything he’s said, without hesitation. That’s why, although I don’t agree with them, I didn’t mind Tavis and Cornell going on their world tour debating Obama’s ideologies. While I think their impetus to do so was, for the most part, fueled by selfish and self-indulgent reasons (jealousy even?), I think that type of discourse is needed and should be welcomed (I mean, he’s a politician at the end of the day. All politicians should be have their views scrutinized, right?). I’m going to go on the record and saying I hope, that on this issue, Black people blindly follow Obama’s lead. He is doing the right thing on this one and even after intense debate and scrutiny the truth and value of his position will be justified.
While reading up on these issues (and getting lost in the myriad of “related” articles) I came across two articles that spoke most directly to my current feelings. The first one spoke to the rising numbers of Black atheists and agnostics. While I still consider myself a Christian (and a proud one at that!) I have to say that I have moved away from the church and the more restricting forms of Christianity. I’ll leave it at that as I feel like there is another blog post in there.
The second article speaks, in a similar fashion, to what I’m saying in this post. I’ve highlighted a section that resonated the most with me:
Self-examination is also necessary to ensure that opposition to this and other polarizing social issues is not a result of twisting either the letter or spirit of biblical teaching. My pastor often says that when you take a text out of context you end up left with a con. For example, while the Bible was used by many whites to justify slavery in our country, the course of history has made it clear that they were motivated more by the desire to maintain their privileged political and economic status than fidelity to the scripture.
What is our “privileged political and economic status” that we, as heterosexual Blacks, are fighting to maintain? The sanctity of marriage? Shit, we lost that a long time ago! So then what? For real, someone answer that for me, please!
Anyway, I’m going to wrap up this rant by saying I hope we, as a community, align ourselves with The President, Michael Eric Dyson, Will Smith, Jay-Z, and numerous others, and support same-sex marriage equality.
The older I get, the more I try not to pass judgment on people.
It’s a work in progress…
I highlight this article not to pass judgment on members of the Black community who are overweight or obese, or whathaveyou, but rather, to highlight the importance of staying physically active. I’ve always been a huge proponent of sports, and the value it can bring to one’s life, ESPECIALLY because it keeps people physically active.
The systemic inequalities Black communities have faced for centuries have resulted in a HUGE health disparity. We, as a community, need to do as much as we can, baby-step by baby-step, to do our part to fight for our health. Staying as physically active as possible is one way we can do that.
I LOVE reading Alice Walker’s work. This is a brief section of her essay “In Search of our Mother’s Gardens”, the title essay of her 1983 collection of essays. Reading this essay, you really understand how her own ideologies kept her from being the loving mother her daughter needed her to be. I remember my heartache at reading her daughter’s article (I wrote about it a little here, on my other blog). This essay, combined with the more I read in this book, and the more I find out about the “real” Alice Walker, the more I realize that one can fall victim to their own genius and ideals. It’s the sad truth about being an artist but it’s a truth, nevertheless; your artistry can be both your savior and your executioner.
This is a post from RVCBard and her blog “Love’s Labors Lost”. I’ve been reading this sister’s blog for quite some time; I was initially turned out to it because of her post about theater and race. In this one she talks about the process of writing her most recent play and articulates her feelings about writing from the “intersections”. Check it out!