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African
Americans are a religious
people. They have been religious before coming to this nation, but the
conditions under which they came and existed have generated further religious
fervor. Often people who are oppressed and enslaved find solace in religion;
that is what happened to Africans coming to America. In America, Africans were new and estranged
from their homelands so they sought the comfort and benefits that religion
offered. It offered them the only freedom they would know--through religion,
they could congregate with other Africans, they could learn to read and
write, and they could exercise organizational and leadership skills that
were forbidden outside of religion. It was religion that allowed many
to plot rebellions and escapes from a distant land and the unknown wiles
of a vicious oppressor. But as African Americans escaped through Christian
religion, it became a part of them. And although they escaped through
it, they did not escape from it. Today, the leadership of the black community
is found principally in the church. When black or white politicians want
votes, they go to the church; the Civil Rights Movement, following the
tradition of the freedom movement, made its seat inside the church and
its leadership and nurture were from the church. Even today, when the black community is most
financially stable and affluent, when our businesses have proliferated,
the center of life is still primarily in the church or the mosque. The
influence of the church is so profound that even when in nonreligious
or church meetings, many African Americans still respond with the call
that is familiar to the church, "Amen!" The church is
deeply ingrained in the black community's psyche. For blacks Sunday is
still a day that the vast majority find themselves in church or feel ashamed
that they are not there. This ingrained religious nature acts to develop
a gestalt of receptivity to the religiously unscrupulous of our
society. And because there are no recognized and enforced rules concerning
who can speak for God, any unscrupulous person or con man, designing to
merchandise religiosity can claim a calling from God and deceive many
who are so disposed to hearing from God, even when he has not spoken through
the con man. This is the condition that Jim Jones capitalized
on, killing 917 people, most of whom were black Americans. They sold all
their possessions and gave their wills and discernment to Jim Jones, a
con artist who claimed hat God was speaking through him. This was not
a new action, however, but history is short and often over looked when
that pull of a gestalt of receptivity blinds the minds of a people.
Even with the looming of Guiana in their minds,
many African Americans, in the light of the present atrocities exceeding
Jim Jones, still give their wills over to many ministers who have not
been called, not been tested, not been ordained, or licensed by any authority
other than by themselves. That type of circular certification is
dangerous and can not weed-out the con artists and the false representatives
who prey on African Americans because of their historically built-in proclivity
and receptivity to religion. Jim Jones often told his congregation
of African Americans that he had gone beyond the Bible and that they
should listen to him! And he concocted false healings and miracles
to buttress his claim. Likewise, many ministers with black congregations,
while not making such bold and blasphemous claims, still exercise similar
authority and power over many believers who submit their wills to them.
This thoughtless religious obedience because of a gestalt that has
been historically developed in blacks can pose a serious danger. It was a type of mindless belief-following
that caused the 920 + Africans of Uganda to sell all their possessions
and give them to defrocked Catholic priest and nun leaders because they
too had gone beyond the Bible and had declared that year 2000 was the
end of the world. Were these parishioners thinking, they would have
immediately separated themselves from that group. A correct reading of
the Bible is that: "It any man (person) transgresses and abides
not in the doctrine of Christ (New Testament Bible) he has not God."
Any pronouncement that the end of the world is upon us, must be compared
with what Jesus has said, viz., "...No man knows the hour that
the son of man shall appear." When one announces that Jesus will
return on a certain day, that is the clearest identification of that person
as one not called of God, if the Bible is the protocol that governs the
Christian's belief. Any pastor, minister, or another who attempts
to sway the Christian beyond the teachings of the Bible condemns himself
to error and separation. But if that congregation is thinking and not
carried or pulled beyond its rational mind by a gestalt of receptivity,
that congregation should be able to see that such a one is a con artist,
not a minister of God. Sadly, too many African Americans have followed
ministers who have taken them, plundering their resources, destroying
not only their faith, but also destroying their lives. From www.Gibbsmagazine.com
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