The Gathering, A Womanist Church. Irie Lynne Session

The Gathering, A Womanist Church - Irie Lynne Session


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matter; it means health is everyone’s right; it means there is no group of people upon whom everyone else can step up from at that group of people’s expense.” Because Bishop Flunder sees “a connection between hatred and abhorrence of LGBTQ persons and an idea that cheapens the value of women and girls,” City of Refuge has a robust LGBTQIA+ ministry. Rev. Dr. Jacqui Lewis, senior pastor of Middle Collegiate Church in New York City, explains that their first social justice issue was feeding folks with HIV/Aids, which then led to addressing economic injustice, then a living wage and paid time off. Dr. Jacqui and Middle Church operate with a global understanding that we’re all connected. She says, “If someone else is hungry, our stomachs are growling.” Racial justice became a key issue for Middle Church when Treyvon Martin was killed. That justice work put her squarely in the Black Lives Matter Movement. Middle Church, like each ministry studied, is anti-racist and pro-LGBTQ, where all voices matter.

      3.Communal Christology

      A womanist ecclesiology is informed by a communal Christology. Jesus invited a community of men and women to follow him, learn from him, love one another, and then communicate that transformational love in the world. Dr. Melva Sampson and Pink Robe Chronicles (PRC) demonstrate this communal element each Sunday morning in their Cyber Assembly on Facebook Live. For Dr. Sampson, the PRC community preaches with her. For example, if she references a website or quote during her sermon but can’t remember where it’s located, someone from the PRC community finds it and posts it in the thread. Dr. Sampson, a homiletics professor and practical theologian, describes her sermon offering as an “active communal approach” to preaching and explains: “We all preach it together because they (PRC community) have an active role in it. It’s not, ‘This is what I came to give you’—it may start out that way, but the PRC community is like seasoning on food; they enhance whatever dish is being made by me.”

      4.Organically Trauma-Informed

      5.Universal God

      Similarly, Dr. Melva Sampson experiences God as Universal as she embraces an Afro-centered Christian spirituality. In a sermon preached at the Festival of Homiletics in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Dr. Sampson made the following assertion:

      Upon hearing her words, those in attendance, particularly the Black clergywomen seated with and around Irie, erupted with thunderous applause. Dr. Sampson expressed in her sermon what all of them believed and have in one way or another claimed as true for themselves and their respective ministries—it is possible to mine the values, virtues, and culture of their African heritage and be followers of the life and teachings of Jesus Christ, all at the same time, because they believe they serve a Universal God. More specifically, Black Christian women who are clergy, social justice activists, preachers, biblical scholars, and theologians are finding healing and wholeness rooted in learning their ancestral African heritage and histories.

      6.Womanist Preachers as Primary Proclaimers

      In each of the ministries Irie explored, the primary preachers and proclaimers are womanist practitioners. Some are senior pastors with several paid staff members, as in the case of Dr. Jacqui Lewis and Dr. Maisha Handy. The word of liberation, transformation, and hope comes forth out of the mouths and bodies of Black clergywomen.

      Funding

      Irie discovered that, with the exception of Middle Collegiate Church, each ministry


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