Honoring African American Elders: A Ministry in the Soul
Community. Anne Streaty Wimberly, editor. San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass Publishers, 1997, 185 pages, a Preface, References, and
Index.
[1] Honoring African American Elders: A Ministry in the Soul
Community, I found to be an interesting book. The title in
essence captures the editor's intent to cause the readers to
reflect on community. I feel the author is reaching out to African
Americans, especially young folks who do not claim, respect or
adequately learn from the foundation provided by their elders.
[2] This was accomplished through the author's use of various
essays to bring this message home. The book emerges from an
Interdenominational Theological Center (ITC is the world's largest
African American seminary located in Atlanta, Georgia)
participation in the Georgia Multidisciplinary Center for
Gerontology for Historically Black Colleges and Universities. The
faculty team's participation in this project led to efforts to
develop a curriculum in gerontology for seminary students.
[3] The book is divided into two parts. The first part, which
includes four chapters, is devoted to the cultural and religious
basis for giving honor to elders in the African and African
American community. Three chapters written by the editor (a
Christian educator) and one chapter written by an African biblical
scholar seek to define honor and community, provide a biblical and
African basis for understanding what is meant by elders, and
propose a model for ministry that focuses on the elders. Especially
gripping were the stories of Janice Gresham about her
congregational program Reaching Out to Senior Adults (ROSA) in
Chapter 4 and the use of Howard Thurman's discussion on commitment
in Chapter 3. Dr. Temba Mafico's words on elderhood in traditional
Africa serve as mechanisms for commentary on the traditions and
mores one finds in the African American religious community.
[4] The second part of the book focuses on the practice of
ministry in the soul community. The "soul community," earlier
defined as the way of being found in African American congregations
(p. 10-12), is central in bestowing honor on African American
elders. In six chapters, written by a professor of sociology of
religion, a professor of pastoral care and counseling, and a
Christian educator, the reader is introduced to and led to reflect
on how to honor and include elders in the life of the soul
community. The call in this section of the book is to develop ways
of including the resourcefulness and wisdom of the elders in the
church as a soul community. These could include, but are not
limited to, the elders' roles as "storytellers, Bible interpreters,
and guides in practical wisdom in the ritual life of the church as
a soul community" (p. 171).
[5] I offer an example of how the editor's purpose relates to my
experience. First Baptist Church in my hometown of Princeton, New
Jersey claimed as its own Deacon Norman Whiting's spirit-filled
insightful prayers and Ms. Dicey May Robinson's touching
testimonials about how God has moved in her life, and these people
are brought to mind by the book. These reflections show the
importance of retaining and constantly gleaning from collective
memories of our community elders, who are indeed the repository of
the communal memory, the history and the faith story that is
foundational and the very grounding of our own ministries.
[6] Michael Dyson in his book Reflecting Black: African
American Cultural Criticism (Minneapolis: University of
Minnesota Press, 1993) reminds us that recalling our roots is an
ethical imperative, something not to be lost. When we remember our
community traditions we tap into some deep truths about life that
are both crucial and instrumental for our survival. If we lose
touch with these values and embrace only the values of some of the
young members of our community, we find that they want to leave the
soul out of community and put the 'I,' 'Me,' or 'My' into
community.
[7] I suggest this book could be used as a text for counseling
or sociology majors, Christian education courses, seminary pastoral
care and counseling courses, a parish Adult Sunday School Forum or
as a resource for anyone in ministry. The questions for reflection
included at the end of each chapter are one of its strengths.
[8] We must always be an intergenerational community; that's
where the community vision comes from, that vision which guides us
and without which a people would perish.
© August 2002
Journal of Lutheran Ethics (JLE)
Volume 2, Issue 8