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.
















