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How I Read Rev. Wright

After I wrote my well-received post on Rev. Jeremiah Wright and Black Conservatism, my former history professor contacted me and asked if I would like to lead a seminar on it for his African-American history class this term. I happily agreed. But when I met with him a few days ago, he said that we might have to change the topic. “Wright is old news,” he said.

But it seems he spoke a bit too soon. While Obama’s resignation from the Trinity Church was not precipitated by Wright but by comments from Rev. Michael Pfleger (who is not completely unknown to me but with whom I am far less familiar), it certainly has brought back into the limelight the Black Liberation Theology that Trinity preaches.

The knowledge of politically engaged people is, as a rule, wide but not deep, save for a few issues. I include myself in this. Even though I consider myself relatively engaged, my knowledge of most issues is basically what a reasonably intelligent person would glean from reading The Washington Post or The New Republic. That’s enough for me to feel reasonably okay talking about Iraq, or foreign policy, or economics, but it’s more accurate to say I possess information rather than expertise. It is rare that I would feel confident second-guessing the “factual” coverage on these issues, for example.

By contrast, I do consider myself to have a pretty deep knowledge of Black Political Thought — to the degree where objectively I simply have a stronger background than most of the mainstream media coverage of it. I’ve read from most major American Black political thinkers, left and right: Frederick Douglass, Booker T. Washington, W.E.B. Du Bois, George Schuyler, Stokely Carmichael, Huey P. Newton, James Cone, Derrick Bell, and Clarence Thomas (the only major missing name is Thomas Sowell). I’m sure economists want to gouge their eyes out when they see how the mainstream media covers budget questions, because I’m feeling the same way about how Black Political thinking is being utterly butchered throughout this whole campaign season. Unlike most people, I’ve actually read more of Jeremiah Wright than you’d get on YouTube or CNN clips. And having both that direct exposure to his works, as well as the background in Black Political Thought (and Liberation Theology specifically) to put it in context, makes all the difference in the world. It bothers me that people who have no relevant background in the field, have done no reading of the thinkers in question (not even Wright himself — let alone Cone or Carmichael!), feel so confident in making assertions on the subject. Do people do this in economics? I ask this seriously — I would not, I think, venture such bold opinions on an economics question, because I know I am no economist. Yet it seems when the subject is Whites talking about Black Political thinking, this restraint does not apply. And that is worrisome — it implies that Whites assume they automatically (by virtue of being White?) possess all the relevant knowledge by which to cast judgment.

A while back, I received in the mail two collections of Rev. Jeremiah Wright’s sermons: What Makes You So Strong (1993) and Good News: Sermons of Hope for Today’s Families (1995). I was supposed to review them, but never got around to it — so consider this my review. Over the past several months I’ve been perusing them, and it has created a strange disjunction between the portrayal of Rev. Wright and his Trinity Church, and the actual words he’s spoken and commitments he’s made as a pastor.

Read the Rest of this Post at The Debate Link

  • JSpencer
    Thanks for sharing this look at Black Liberation Theology - and Rev. Wright in particular. It's a refreshing and encouraging change from all the cherry-picked and expoited versions pushed by folks who are more concerned with sensationalism or pushing an agenda than the underlying truths.
  • Excellent post David. Easily the most thoughtful thing I've read all week.
  • SteveK
    Thank you for your thoughtful, well researched comments about Rev. Jeremiah Wright.

    As JSpencer and ChrisWWW observed the encouraging quality and thoroughness of your post is both refreshing and appreciated.
  • runasim
    Thanks so much, David.

    I can't be as even toned as the other comments, becasue I'm just plain mad.
    For months these manufactured contorversies have been swirling around, with few knowing what it was they were condemning, and fewer still wanting to know.

    True knowledge has been replaced by video clip knowlege, which is wrose than no knowedge at all, in many ways, becasue it meisleads so abysmally. People are left with the impression they know, when, in fact, they know zilch.

    The sad, the tragic part, is, that the video clip knowledge is bound to take precedence over sensible analyses. We're a culture still debating evolution, and the 9/11 conspiracy theory still is popular. So, what chance does an understanding of BLack Liberation theology stand?
  • i agree that this post is insightful. but i, too, am perplexed that 6 straight posts on TMV are about this topic. i'm trying to figure out how "we" strike a balance wrt election subject-matter. MSM won't help. how can we?

    i'm not denying that this is a dialog our country needs to have but i'm concerned that this is "obama's baggage". to give this issue legitimacy we need to discuss it outside of these "obama-pastor" moments. we do these concerns a disservice by tying them to this triviality.
  • daveinboca
    I agreed with Novak, Kemp, & Quayle back in the '90s on Farrakhan's call for self reliance. That's Emersonian, as well as Thomas Sowellian and Clarence Thomas-libertarian. The problem was Farrahkan's paranoid racism about Jews and you haven't really demonstrated Wright doesn't share that paranoid racism with his theories on AIDS, et al. Pfleger with the choir in the background urging his nasty racist remarks about HRC does demonstrate on tape that Obama is well out of the TUCC environment of self-reliance mixed with hatred.

    Whatever the TUCC is, it ain't Christian.
  • superdestroyer
    I think you overstate the idea that the black community really wants self-reliance. Given the overwhelmingly support in the black community for reparations, 8A contraqcting, quotas, set asides, and different admissions and hiring standards, I fail to see how anyone can believe that the black community support self-reliance.

    What percentage of the Trinity Church of Christ work for the government at any level? What percentage of the members at Trinity work for minority set aside contractors?

    Also, the way black America views education is very different than they way whites or Asians view education. Black America views education more like the Scarescrow in the Wizard of Ox in that a diploma means you are educated regardless of the actual level of knowledge.
  • runasim
    Daveinboca-

    A few weeks ago, by chance, I happened on a C-Span segment featuring a teacher and his HS poli-sci class. The teacher, a Jew, veered off on a long tangent about why he hates Germans- not Germans belonging to the Nazi party, not Germans of a certain era,, but all Germans today, now.

    The teacher gave a lesson in hate.

    Who or what should be condemned? The entire school, the teacher (although he was otherwise excellent in developing analytical thought in the class), the students for not protesing, C-Span for showing this ssegment?
    Who should be renounced and rejected?

    Or is it different when members of another minoity, other than blacks, still carry the vestiges of old wounds?

    I worked in NYC's diamond district for 20 years and was accepted as a very-much-minority Gentile to the extent what we could talk freely about a wide variety of subjects. My closest colleague said one day he would like to strangle all Arab babies at birth. Should I have condemned him, my bosses for hiring him or the entire diamond district?
    Instead of that, we talked about it,, learned to understand each other and remain close fiends to this day.

    The kind of condemnation you advocate leads to self-perpetuating cycles of back and forth hatred.
    What Obama did was to stay, debate Rev. Wright, (as those in the know testify he did) and emerge as his own man, with his own vision of how to go forward while hating no one.

    Obama's way is by far the most fruitful, and as I can testify from my own experience, by far the most effective way to get past hatreds..
  • runasim
    "the idea that the black community really wants self-reliance"

    Ah, the black community, so monolithic, right?
    i wonder what percentage of the white community are bigots or racists or
    devotees of Hollywood starlets., or this or that.

    The point is that Rev. Wright and his like have been trying to teach and inspire self-reliance where he found it lacking. Thatt's a bad thing now?

    You are arguing against yourself by a) asserting that self-reliance is lacking in the 'black community'. and b) condemming the church that is promoting self-reliance.

    We are not in the same white community. I can telll you that, for sure.
  • superdestroyer
    Rev. Wright's idea of self-reliance is not the same thing as how upper middle class whites or many in the Asian-American community. The congregation at Trintiy has the idea that self-reliance is getting the maximum number of dollars from the government either through civl service, government jobs, organizaing, etc. Self-reliance is definitely not the idea that private wealth and capital will be created in the black community.

    Look at Senator Obama. He started his career in Chicago as a community activist trying to get more money from the government. Neither Senator Obama nor his wife strated a business that would create private sector jobs in the black community.
  • SD,
    Most government welfare goes to the white population.

    What businesses did John McCain or Hillary Clinton start?

    What f***ing good did it do our country and its economy to have the "CEO President" George W. Bush running things?
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