[1] The next three issues of the Journal of Lutheran Ethics will
focus on various dimensions of the theme: "Ethics and Family: An
African American Perspective." The theme emerged in conversations
with several members of the Conference of International Black
Lutherans (an association of African and African American Lutheran
teaching theologians and bishops in the Lutheran communion). Many
of us have been concerned about the role of the African American
family in shaping ethical behavior. Many questions emerge about
what we are teaching and transmitting to the next generation of
African Americans, especially those who hold membership in the
Lutheran communion. Will the African and African American religious
tradition and values continue to be central in the lives of both
communities in this new millennium?
[2] Similar concerns were raised at the Conference of
International Black Lutherans in its 1999 conference in Wittenberg,
Germany. After a pre-conference gathering, African and African
American women wrote a report encouraging partnership between
members of both sexes. Moreover, no fewer than five (5) of the 38
Theses produced by the gathering relate to relationships between
African and African American women and men. For example, Thesis 11
says, "We assert that God has called all Christians, men and women
together, to be a community of servants to the whole of creation."
While there may be many interpretations of this Thesis, one
interpretation is tantamount; God calls African and African
American women and men, as a community, to care about the elders of
the community. A part of caring includes knowing, understanding,
and having the capacity to teach and receive values that have
sustained both communities in our long hard journey in the world.
And that is certainly one of the crucial roles of the elders in the
African American community.
[3] The Holy Bible is a second source of our theme. Since
African American Christians are people of the Bible, what does it
mean when we hear the Fourth Commandment, "Honor your father and
your mother [parents]" (Ex. 20: 12; Deut. 5: 16; Mark 10:19)? In
the first instance, this means that the Bible presents normative
understandings of ethical principles and moral behavior expected by
God. Through various sorts of literature, the Christian community
is confronted with God's wishes for how human morality is to give
God glory and honor. Second, our theme reveals that the content of
the Bible is constantly shaped by the context of the people. The
African and African American experiences of racism, sexism, and
classism are critical factors that contribute to our understanding
of ethics and family. While the civil rights movement enhanced the
life of some African and African Americans (e.g., the middle class
has grown), an overwhelming majority of the African American
community is poor, undereducated, without health care, and
economically disadvantaged. And, with a disproportionate number of
African American young people in prisons, fueling that vast prison
industrial complex, what does it mean when Luther says in his
explanation of the Fourth Commandment in the Small Catechism that
we are to "honor, serve, obey, love, and respect" our parents? Some
people even suggest that the young people are operating with value
systems derived from the world rather than from the Word of
God.
[4] The church and family in the African American community have
been intimately connected. Noted scholars like John Mbiti, Mercy
Amba Oduyoye, Emilie Townes, and Peter Paris point critically to
the central role of the church and family in the formation of the
ethical value system of African people. These two institutions have
played and continue to play a prominent role in shaping the ethics
and moral behavior of African American people. In fact, when one
talks about the family, one is also talking about the church. More
recently, African American scholars in the ethics and pastoral care
disciplines reveal the deep connections in moral discourse between
the family and the church. In fact, these scholars show the deep
connections between African and African American experiences of
family and church.
[5] Spirituality, ethics, and morality are ultimately
interdependent in ways significantly different among African people
than what is promoted by the Western world. For example, the
Western world emphasizes rugged individualism. The self is
autonomous in its being, thinking, and doing. On the other hand,
people of African descent on the continent of Africa and in the
Diaspora emphasize community. The community makes the self what it
is to be, think, and do. The adage that it takes a village to raise
a child reinforces the difference between Western thinking and
African thinking.
[6] A word should be said about key terms of the theme. "Ethics"
is used in the broadest sense to mean those principles that guide
moral behavior. For example, justice is a universal principle that
is central to enhancing the life of God's people in society. The
specific meaning of justice, however, is particularized by the
context of African Americans. Racial justice; that is, just
treatment of African American people in all aspects of life, is a
specific moral behavior expected of Christians and all religious
people.
[7] "Family" is also understood in a broad sense. While there is
a diversity of families within the African and African American
community, as within all communities, family goes beyond the
typical Western notion of "nuclear" family. Family includes all
relationships, blood or otherwise. Usually the word "kinship" or
"extended family" points in this direction. Family, then, is used
to mean both the formal and informal relationships developed and
nurtured by the people. Family also suggests that African American
people are shaped by a common experience (e.g., race) and so
develop a sense of peoplehood that has persisted for more than four
centuries in North America.
[8] Finally, the phrase "African American perspective" is a
broad term. There is a rich diversity of perspectives within the
African American community. Some folks are liberal and some are
conservative. Some people understand themselves as being Americans
and some see themselves as being African/Black Americans. African
American is used to designate a connection to the spiritual and
cultural heritage normally associated with the continent of
Africa.
[9] The next three issues of the Journal of Lutheran Ethics are
an opportunity to enter into some conversation about various
dimensions of ethics and family from an African American
perspective. The August issue begins with the Bible. One of the
African American community's premier biblical scholars explores a
biblical and theological understanding of the African American
family and its moral significance. Another aspect of life in the
African and African American community is the role and importance
of elders. The book review will focus on the importance of ministry
with and by African American elders. Two opinion essays will focus
on mentoring and the importance of community in shaping the moral
behavior of the community, one written by an African American
pastor currently serving in an African American urban congregation
and the other written by an African American teaching
theologian.
[10] The September issue will focus on moral guidance in
congregations. It is commonly understood in the African American
community that preaching is a primary, if not the primary way,
through which moral guidance is given in the African American
church. The book review will focus on the contributions of a book
of sermons by one of America's popular preachers and will be
written by a pastor who served an urban congregation. Two opinion
pieces will reflect on moral guidance, one from a layperson who is
active in an urban African American congregation and one from a
pastor currently serving in an urban African American congregation
and on a synodical bishop's staff. While preaching is critical in
dispensing moral guidance, pastoral care is increasingly becoming a
key skill for African American religious leaders. The scholarly
article, written by an African American teaching theologian in
pastoral care, will focus on pastoral care and moral guidance.
[11] The October issue will focus on church leadership. The role
of the priest or pastor is critical in modeling and transmitting
sound, biblical ethical principles and behavior. Equally important
is the role of lay people and the exemplary lives they live daily.
The book review will focus on the nature of leadership provided by
both clergy and lay people, especially in urban areas. It will be
written by one of the elders in African American Lutheranism who
has served as a pastor, executive director of a social ministry
agency, and in various capacities related to leadership. Several
opinion pieces will touch on various dimensions of leadership:
youth, education, and leadership training respectively. The
scholarly piece will focus on leadership and the family and will be
co-written by the first African American Lutheran teaching
theologian and a doctoral student in Bible.
[12] These three issues mean to enhance the church's public
conversation about ethics, morality, and family from an African
American perspective. While the book reviews, opinion pieces, and
scholarly essays emerge principally from African Americans within
the Lutheran communion, they will certainly enhance the Church
Catholic's conversation on issues like human sexuality, racism,
sexism, and classism from a multicultural point of view.
Furthermore, these issues will demonstrate how one part of the
Lutheran communion, active lay people, parish pastors, and teaching
theologians within the Conference of International Black Lutherans,
expresses its faith and ethics in a contextually sensitive manner.
And so, in the words of one of the Lutheran church's popular public
theologians, Dr. Martin Marty, "Let the conversation begin!"