"Plain Theology for Plain People" by Charles Octavius Boothe |
By Walter R. Strickland II
March 7, 2018
History is recounted by the wealthy and powerful. Throughout
America’s history of racism, slavery and segregation prohibited blacks from being
protagonists in the Christian narrative. For example, there is often mention of
Jonathan Edwards and John Frame in the American Christian story, but rarely an
acknowledgment of John Chavis or John Jasper. In general, the American
Christian story told in most evangelical college and seminary classrooms
include African Americans as marginal characters and only in relation to the
dominant culture.
This results in false perceptions of God’s work—namely, that
God primarily works through the wealthy and powerful. People assume that the
white protagonists have everything to teach and little to learn from those who
have been excluded. Learning about historical figures like African-American
pastor Charles Octavius Boothe (1845–1924) not only shows God at work outside
the dominant culture, but it also exalts Christ as the redeemer of every ethné.
Who Is Charles Octavius Boothe?
Boothe was born on June 13, 1845, in Mobile County, Alabama,
as the legal property of Nathaniel Howard. At the age of 3, Boothe learned the
alphabet from lettering on a tin plate. At 14, he was sold to attorney James S.
Terrel, and he began working as an office boy at a law firm in Clark County,
Mississippi.
Mid-19th-century legal practice was rooted in biblical
logic, which required young Boothe to explore Scripture on a regular basis.
Over time, his exposure to Scripture drew him to salvation. In 1860 he
testified that he “reached an experience of grace which so strengthened me as
to fix me on the side of God’s people.”
At the conclusion of the Civil War, Boothe’s passion was
racial uplift in a society that denied blacks’ humanity before God and the
Constitution. At the age of 22, Boothe began teaching for the Freedmen’s Bureau
and lecturing regularly at Booker T. Washington’s famed Tuskegee Institute. In
the early 1870s, Boothe was a preliminary member of the Colored Baptist
Missionary Convention that founded Selma University. He later served as the
university’s second president (1901–02). Boothe desired to promote literacy so
former slaves could read the Bible for themselves and escape the oppressive
interpretative practices that had made the Christian faith a tool of black
subservience.
Boothe’s devotion for education notwithstanding, he was,
most importantly, a churchman. He established and ministered in two churches:
First Colored Baptist Church of Meridian, Mississippi, and Dexter Avenue
Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama. (In recent decades, Dexter Avenue
Baptist Church received international attention because of its role in the
civil-rights struggle and the leadership of its 20th pastor, Martin Luther King
Jr., after whom the church was renamed—King Memorial Baptist Church.)
While in the pastorate, Boothe maintained an itinerant
teaching ministry, conducting literacy and theological training for emancipated
slaves and their children. He wrote Plain Theology for Plain People as an aid
for his theological seminars. Writing with the average sharecropper in mind,
Boothe set out to spare others the frustration of traversing the lofty
theological rhetoric of other texts. His book provides a definite system of
organization while allowing simplicity of language and structure to prevail. It
wasn’t until my doctoral studies that I discovered Plain Theology for Plain
People.[1]
Boothe’s Significance for Me
My theological education offered me a love for Scripture and
a theological framework, but it unintentionally taught me that people of color
have little to contribute to theological discussions. I had well-intended white
professors who assigned white authors and invited white guest lecturers. In
order to become more like my Caucasian professors, I began to squelch
everything in me that didn’t correspond to them in order to do “real theology.”
I began stripping away my blackness in order to fit the evangelical theological
mold. At that time, I only entertained theological inquiry that emerged from
culturally white space; I developed a bias against African-American
theologians; and I belittled the rich heritage of the black church. I was
miserable.
But when I encountered Boothe’s writing, it helped me resist
the assumption that whiteness equals faithfulness, and it granted me freedom to
be instructed by believers outside of my racial and cultural background without
feeling like I needed to lose parts of myself in the process.
Plain Theology for Plain People is significant for my story, and it should influence the evangelical approach to theology.
Boothe for Evangelicalism
Boothe demonstrates that theology can emerge from various
contexts. In evangelical circles, however, certain contexts have been given
almost exclusive priority. Formal theology has been disproportionately
conducted by white men, and their perspective has been standardized. Thus
“well-read” evangelicals can gain that label despite never interacting with
theologically faithful traditions outside the dominant evangelical culture.
By normalizing a particular context, issues that arise outside of that context are often dismissed as illegitimate. In fact, theological development from non-white contexts are often only deemed “proper” when they engage issues pertinent to white culture and conform to “authorized” conclusions. This explains why issues that disproportionately affect non-white communities—like systemic injustice, racial oppression, economic inequality, and human rights—have received scattered engagement among evangelical theologians and ethicists.
The reality of white cultural dominance in evangelical
spaces is consistent with what we know to be true of fallen humanity—we’re
self-interested creatures. All people (white and non-white alike) are
interested in the issues most pressing to us and aren’t likely to deeply
contemplate the circumstances of another. So cultivating diverse church
communities is important, since it necessarily expands our concerns beyond our
experience.
Reimagining the evangelical tradition to include voices that
have been obscured isn’t just good for marginalized Christians—it’s good for
all Christians. Theology from every context offers valuable contributions. The
mature theologian takes his or her seat at the table of theological discourse
and both enriches and is enriched by the exchange. Different perspectives taken
together embody a more robust vision of faithfulness and affection for Christ
than they could ever manage alone.
PS - "To be clear, this was not the first time that I
discovered any African-American theologian, but it was the first time I
discovered Boothe."
Source: https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/day-i-discovered-african-american-theologian/
No comments:
Post a Comment