I have friends in my life that I am, frankly, scared to talk to for fear of losing them. I know, if I say or do the wrong thing, I could set them off fairly easily. These are folks who experience singularity—opinions and understanding which differs from theirs—as violence. Many churches experience a great deal of turnover as congregants go from church to church, forming and then severing bonds with extended families. Our emotions always close to the surface, the resulting petty behavior makes it virtually impossible for us to sustain mature social organisms. Of all the people in the world, we seem to forgive each other the least.
in my Christian experience, the black Christian community is
often the demographic least like Christ. We are so very quick to
anger. We are so very thin-skinned. A community of toes
perpetually stepped on. We are competitive, envious and
vengeful. We hold grudges unto death. We over-dress for church
(the new trend in white Christianity being polo shirts and
khakis, with cappuccino machines in the lobby), wear too much
cologne, too many jewels, and go to great lengths and expense to
have a shiny new car at all costs. We look down our nose at
people who have less than we do. We experience a rush of
exuberant gratification just knowing our expensive car and
expensive clothes sets us above our lessors in the congregation.
I'm puzzled by this. By the rude behavior. By the contempt we
show one another. Many of us come to church and, gripped by the
Holy Ghost, dance and wail and run and carry on, but no sooner
have we hit the pavement outside than we are already tearing
someone down, passing someone without a smile or handshake, or
otherwise writing off someone's humanity. Like toddlers with car
keys, our emotions completely unchecked, we snap into Loud Angry
Negro Mode at the drop of a hat, and feel justified in doing so.
Shoot, who does she think she is? This dichotomy is so
pervasive, so deeply entrenched in the black church, that it has
achieved an odd level of common acceptance. It is ingrained in
our communal DNA. Aunt Esther, the histrionic black church lady
with the big hat, telling us off with fiery eyes and snarling
tones: Jesus chasing the money changers from the temple.
But we're not Jesus, and we're not defending Mosaic Law. We are
emulating the abusive and exploitive behavior we ourselves have
suffered under. From our parents and grandparents dating back to
the plantation, the aggressive tone of the slave master. The
vengeful demeanor, the darting, narrowed Clint Eastwood eyes,
belong not to Jesus the liberator but to Massuh the repressor.
My best guess about our white counterparts in the Christian
community is their atmosphere is more a reflection of the social
evolution of the last two centuries—khakis and cappuccino—while
our atmosphere is, in large measure, not materially different
from our churches of the late 1950's to mid 1960's. The giant,
gregarious church lady hats. The sing-song preacher hoop. The
almost comical over-the-top fashion. The severe pyramid power
structure and the ruthlessness required to ascend it. The
pastor, worshipped almost as a god himself.
We are a product of our experience, currents that run deep
within us and we have, perhaps irrevocably, integrated the
plantation experience with the Christian experience to the point
where, in a great many black Christian circles, the two are one.
The pastor, simultaneously empowered and corrupted by a huge ego
which is fed daily by the slavering, simpering, unconditional
obeisance of his flock, is most typically lost somewhere in the
tall grass, spending a great deal of time, energy and money to
keep the church distracted from the fact he actually has not
much in the way of a vision for the ministry and has few if any
actionable goals or articulated objectives for the community his
church is located within. Most of these guys are simply content
to run in circles on the corner their churches are located on,
being the star of their Sunday ritual and king of their
respective donut shops. I doubt anyone could pastor a black
church today without demonstrating both strength and resolve,
though most can and do pastor churches without demonstrating
much in the way of humility or compassion. As a culture, the
crack of the whip is a sound perhaps diminished from our ears
but deeply set into our psyche. It is something we respond to.
But Jesus never cracked whips to draw people to Himself. Jesus
was and is not a taskmaster. This whip cracking, forced upon a
great many pastors, handed down from generation to generation
and manifested in us—this Church Folk mentality—is what it is:
emotional and psychological bondage. The economic effects of
slavery linger in our community, but the emotional scars are
much harder to reconcile, detect, and heal. As a community, we
are stuck in a kind of social adolescence, having been infants
set adrift by the Emancipation, separated by a caste system of
people telling us what to do and when to do it.
The white church's atmosphere reflects the maturation and
spiritual growth of white America. The black church reflects the
struggle and continued challenges of a race populated here at
gunpoint. We are the product of a forced matriculation into a
society that, in large measure, still does not value us. Where a
great many white Christians see opportunities, a great many
blacks see challenges. A great many whites see valleys, while a
great many blacks see hills. The black church's knee-jerk, petty
behavior—more apropos of high schoolers than deacons—makes it
virtually impossible for us to grow and sustain mature social
organisms.
Many churches experience a great deal of turnover as congregants
stay long enough to build relationships that ultimately come
crashing down as alliances and agendas shift, or as people begin
to feel threatened by new ideas or new people. Many people move
through an ongoing cycle of going from church to church, forming
and then severing bonds with extended families as they repeat an
endless loop of finding happiness and common ground, only to
have those relationships sour. The Reverend Neil Brown, Youth
Minister of Emmanuel Missionary Baptist Church and author of the
PraiseNet column, Holla! at Neil Brown put it this way,
“Relationships are like milk in the fridge,” Neil says. “You've
got to maintain them. You've got to keep them from going sour.
You've got to watch those expiration dates.”
Some relationships do, indeed, have expiration dates. And, in
attempting to be a grownup, I have frequently labored with some
people longer and gone farther than I should have. When a
relationship becomes toxic, and you have exhausted avenues of
fixing the problem, then, yeah, it's time to pull the plug. The
fact is, you can often find yourself being in relationship with
someone who is not in relationship with you. Being worried about
someone who is never apparently worried about you. Constantly
giving to someone who only seems to be taking from you.
These kinds of people are often classified as narcissists. Most
of them never realize this is, in fact, what they are doing–
taking without giving and draining your good will and your
Christian love without giving anything in return. Relationships
should, ideally, be a two-way street. Sometimes I pick up the
check, sometimes you pick up the check. Relationships should be
like Social Security: you pay into the system over the years and
it should be there when you need it. Imagine the disappointment,
the hurt, we suffer when finally it is our turn to lean on
someone we've been propping up for ten years, only to discover
they are not there for us.
Being friends with someone who is not being a friend to you is
not a healthy relationship. It is more like co-dependence, where
you are getting some kind of narcotic hit out of being this
person's doormat, and they are getting a buzz out of your
continued servitude. That is not a relationship worth
maintaining because it is not a relationship at all, and you are
being less of a friend to that person as an enabler: someone who
feeds this person the narcotic they need to stay in this
un-Christ-like state. More often than not, these narcissists are
the ones who are so innately insecure that they will drop you
like a bad habit the moment you stop providing their narcotic.
They will invalidate years of servitude (let's call it what it
is) on your part over the smallest perceived slight on your
part. At the first sign of your asserting your own individuality
over their voracious need for validation, they'll bolt and burn
the relationship. These are people who can routinely use and
abuse you, then exclude or otherwise take advantage of you—
routinely doing you gross emotional harm— and will inevitably
end the relationship before they will admit their wrongs or
apologize for them. The fact is, narcissists are, for the most
part, incapable of even seeing how self-absorbed they are, have
no concept at all of the damage they routinely inflict on you,
or the failing grade they earn as a friend. These are people so
wounded, so damaged, so incredibly insecure, apologizing would
cause them to burst into flames.
These are people who poison and eventually destroy one
relationship after another and it's never their fault. You buy
these folks a cup of coffee and they complain and complain and
can never see the historical record of car wreck and house fires
they have caused over the years, or the fact that their circle
of friends seems to always be peopled by comparatively new
acquaintances. They have few, if any, friends in their inner
circle whom they have known longer than five years. If your
circle of acquaintance consists mainly of people you've known
five years or less (and you're older than, say, ten), then you
have a relationship problem. It really is that simple. People
certainly grow apart, and lives move on, but there is, to my
observation, an increasingly pervasive problem within the black
church community of rapidly-changing alliances and friends quick
to burn bridges and trash relationships over petty differences.
I have friends in my life that I am, frankly, scared to talk to.
When I am over their house, I feel uncomfortable in my own skin.
For, I know, if I say or do the wrong thing, I could set them
off fairly easily. These are people inclined to find fault and
who are easily rubbed the wrong way. The best and easiest way to
be around them, the way they enjoy me, is for me to agree with
them. To be in a Zen Buddhist mode where I am one with their
reality and their understanding of the world. What they can't
understand is, this diminishes me as a living soul. I cease to
exist because, for me to actually exist would be experienced by
them as a threat. They experience singularity—opinions and
understanding that do not agree with theirs—as violence. They
experience me, the Actual Me as opposed to the Their View of Me,
as an assault and they go on the defensive, getting their back
up. I have friends who go from zero to agitated in a matter of
seconds. Whose skin is so desperately brittle they can be
mortally wounded by just a wrong look. I don't care to be around
these people, because, when I am, I have an enormous knot in my
stomach, and I am inclined to simply agree with them, with their
reality, to appease them and protect our "relationship."
“It's no fun walking on eggshells,” says Jason Gaulden, a Senior
Fellow at The El Pomar Foundation. “We don't want to talk about
it, but a lot of our community's insecurity goes back to the
plantation days, where we were made to believe we were nothing
and certainly had nothing.
“It goes back to the old analogy about the grass being greener
on the other side of the fence. But, you see, that's not the end
of that analogy. The complete analogy would suggest that the
grass is greener on the other side because the neighbor on the
other side of the fence works harder at it. We are looking in
from the brown side, without stopping to notice how much work
our neighbor is putting into his lawn. We are often quick to
blame, quick to envy and slow to forgive– not seeing the larger
picture of what it took to get that grass as green as it is.
“The white community's green lawn is built on family tradition
and resources going back generations, while the black community
is still, in large measure, accruing resources and building
their own infrastructure and sense of identity.
“Jim Collin's book, Good To Great [2001, HarperCollins; ISBN:
0066620996], has a chapter called, 'Confronting The Brutal
Facts.' Before we as a community can overcome our own
shortcomings in the area of relationships, this is what we have
to do. “
To be sure, some relationships should be ended. I mean, the
above mentioned “friendship” is no friendship at all. It's just
me with this movie running through my head where these people
are my friends. But they're not my friends, they're their
friends. I don't exist as an individual but only as an extension
of their narcissism. Reconciling narcissism and Christianity is
a tough task. Christ could hardly be thought of as a narcissist.
He was divinely aware of the individual beauty and purpose of
each soul within His orbit. He accepted people as He found them.
He didn't write anybody off. I have to stop and ask myself what
I'm getting out of these relationships, out of expending energy
and time going out of my way to make them feel secure, when they
seem barely aware of my very existence.
I had this dream once where I was cooking dinner and, as I
waited for my friend to arrive, I started tidying up the house.
And, as I tidied the house, I suddenly realized– she wasn't
coming. I just instinctively knew it. The phone would eventually
ring and she'd have some excuse, but she wasn't coming over.
And, it was as if I heard God ask me, Why are you cooking dinner
for people who are not coming?
We need to stop cooking dinner for people who are not coming.
Those of us who can maintain relationships need to stop enabling
those who cannot: people who trade us like baseball cards and
dismiss us when we no longer serve a useful function in their
lives. People who take us, our unique purpose on Earth, and our
special-ness, for granted, choosing only to use us as fuel for
their chronic self-absorption. PraiseNet contributing editor Joy
Banks, who holds a master's degree in Christian Counseling,
asked me, “Yeah, but look here: Who's cooking dinner for you?
You're so busy cooking for everybody else, but who's looking out
for you?”
Jesus teaches us to espouse a kind of godly selflessness and
humility, but Joy told me Jesus never intended us to cease to
exist, or to exhaust our resources and our lives indulging the
whims of narcissists. In fact, our Christian duty is to not
enable un-Christ-like behavior. Part of learning how to maintain
healthy relationships is the process setting boundaries, of
pruning unhealthy or toxic relationships from our lives, as the
unhealthy relationships will, certainly, choke out the healthy
ones.
Of all the people in the world, we seem to forgive each other
the least. We, who should be endowed with the power, the ability
to imitate the limitless grace of our Creator, and who should
exhibit gifts of the Spirit which include patience and
longsuffering, are often the worst examples of human intolerance
and, frankly, immaturity. A people of toes perpetually stepped
on. We jump from church to church. From friend to friend. From
relationship to relationship. From bed to bed. Often, without
explanation, we simply stop calling. Stop speaking. There's been
some damage, some hurt, but we feel (or know) holding the
offending party accountable will mean the end of the
relationship, so we just let it go. And then the next hurt, we
let that one go, too. And the one after that. And the twelfth
one.
Pastor Jim Dotson, of Trinity Missionary Baptist Church, said
the reason we have such difficulty sustaining relationships is,
“We don't fight enough. We repress our differences and
eventually separate, rather than giving those differences a good
airing out. Conflict inspires closeness, as in any conflict two
or three will group together in one opinion, two or three in
another. At the end of it all, at least two of you have
strengthened your bond in some way.” Serving overseas in the Air
Force, Pastor Dotson, a retired Colonel, said, “We had three
common bonds that drew us together overseas: language, food and
hair products. It was difficult to get hair products for people
of color, and, of course our common language and desire for
American food drew us closer together. People who arrived
strangers, from different states and different communities,
forged bonds that endure to this day.”
Dotson successfully defended his pastorate recently in a court
battle that ended, sadly, in a church split with a group of
people founding a new church two blocks east of Trinity, one
block north of Relevant Word Ministries and one block east of
St. John's Baptist Church which is, itself, one block north of
Progressive Church of God In Christ. Five churches within a
three-block radius. Five building funds. Five congregations who
politely pass one another in the street.
Christopher J. Priest
15 November 2002 / 3 May 2009
editor@praisenet.org
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