
There is love here. Family. Relationships that span generations. The Black Church in America is, in fact, an intimate portrait of America, with roots deep into centuries of struggle and hardship. The church wears its legacy proudly. It informs our traditions, culture and liturgy. Our greatest strength, however, is also, in many cases, our greatest weakness. We are so invested in our culture, in our tradition, that maintaining those tenets has become, in many cases, the church's entire purpose. The black church in America exists, in large measure, simply to perpetuate itself.
				
				
The 
				black church is not unique in this.
				It is, likely, mankind's nature to look for rules and, where none exist, to invent them, complicating the elegance and 
				simplicity of the Gospel by creating a hierarchy where none 
				should be. We have, all of us, of all ethnicities, created 
				our own Sanhedrin. Our own Sadducees. We have re-sewn the temple 
				veil and reinstated the temple rules, long after Christ suffered 
				and bled to do away with all of that. “I'm not the most learned 
				of pastors,” The Reverend Larry L. Broxton, Pastor of Christ 
				Memorial Baptist Church in Savannah, Georgia, said, “but, 
				beginning in the rural South at the turn of the 19th century, 
				black Christians have brought into the church (especially the 
				southern black Baptist church), old traditions that had either 
				been taught in error, or have no basis in Scripture whatsoever.”
				These traditions are now so deeply rooted within the church, 
				many ministers and pastors— caught between these traditions and 
				an education which illuminates the doctrinal error of many of 
				them— often face a daunting challenge of educating faulty 
				doctrine out of our churches.
				
				“The pastorate taught me that school is an environment for 
				learning but the pastorate is not a place to use it 
				immediately,” Dr. Henry F. Johnson, Interim Pastor of Friendship 
				Missionary Baptist Church, observed. “Education is important 
				because knowledge is power, but you must know when to use it and 
				how to use it. I have found that it is more important to love 
				the people and establish a relationship in the first couple of 
				years of the pastorate. During this time you use your education 
				as you preach, teach, counsel, and exercise you administrative 
				gifts.”
				
				The best reference for black church culture that I've seen is 
				Church Administration in the Black Perspective by Floyd Massey, 
				Jr. and Samuel Berry McKinney. They cover much of this in great 
				detail, my observations here being a poor man's condensed 
				version of their wonderful book.
				
				There is absolutely no scientific basis for my observations 
				here. These are the subjective observations of someone who has 
				spent 43 years in black churches. Your mileage may vary. These 
				are traditions we need to take a fresh look at and consider what 
				is truly worth keeping and what should be done away with.
				
				The good news is, if you are not black, most black churches give 
				you a kind of waiver on these do's and don'ts. We do not expect 
				people who are of other cultures to know these things. But black 
				worshippers who transgress these unwritten rules are considered 
				barbarians. People who wipe their mouths on their sleeves and 
				pass gas in crowded rooms. African Americans are simply required 
				to know these rules, all of them, in great detail, even though 
				there is fairly little formal training in church etiquette and 
				protocol available to us. It is part of our oral tradition, a 
				terribly inefficient means of passing down important details of 
				our culture, especially the overly complex layers of common 
				practice the black church, and uniquely the black church, 
				burdens itself with.
				
				A visitor to our churches might find himself overwhelmed by it 
				all, or, more likely, would not notice because we simply forgive 
				their ignorance and don't even bother pointing these things out 
				to them. But, if we mailed them, say, a pamphlet of do's and 
				don'ts a week or more before their visit, they might be better 
				prepared for their visit, much as we'd study a foreign culture 
				before journeying to that city.
				
				It makes sense for visitors, especially visitors who plan on 
				participating in leading worship, to consult with someone on the 
				specific etiquette for the church they are visiting. Paul said, 
				When I am with the Jews, I become one of them so that I can 
				bring them to Christ. When I am with those who follow the Jewish 
				laws, I do the same, even though I am not subject to the law, so 
				that I can bring them to Christ. When I am with the Gentiles who 
				do not have the Jewish law, I fit in with them as much as I can. 
				In this way, I gain their confidence and bring them to Christ. 
				But I do not discard the law of God; I obey the law of Christ. 
				When I am with those who are oppressed, I share their oppression 
				so that I might bring them to Christ. Yes, I try to find common 
				ground with everyone so that I might bring them to Christ. I do 
				all this to spread the Good News, and in doing so I enjoy its 
				blessings. —I Corinthians 9:20-23 NLT
				
				It is obviously our reasonable responsibility to find out ahead 
				of time what is and what is not an accepted practice.
				
				Most of the difference between pastoring white and black 
				churches (and I've done both) are matters of culture and education. Black folk don't 
				read. It's a fact. The sad statistic is that whites read more 
				than blacks because reading has always been an intrinsic part of 
				white culture, while blacks have relied on a largely oral 
				tradition. Black church folk, especially, do not read. They 
				listen. It's what we have been conditioned to do. We take 
				orders. We follow instructions issued to us from the pulpit. In 
				the tradition of the black church, there is a great deal of 
				jockeying for position. There are a lot of titles, many chiefs 
				and few Indians. Everybody is Director of Something. Everybody's 
				a boss. In our culture, it's extremely important to know who is 
				king of which particular donut shop because, transgressing or 
				missing this person will result in political retribution against 
				your agenda or ministry.
				
				Many leaders in the black church are retirees with, frankly, not 
				much more going on in their lives than being the head of This 
				Auxiliary or That Board at church. As a result, the politics of 
				power at church are their main preoccupation, and they bring the 
				rules of political engagement into God's house where they 
				clearly do not belong. Many leaders in the black church will 
				fight and fight dirty to either attain power or retain power. 
				They will block progress just because an idea or ministry 
				doesn't speak specifically to them. If they, as individuals, do 
				not understand or appreciate something (youth ministry is the 
				best example), the answer is a resounding “no.” It is for this 
				reason that one church I know, with hundreds of thousands of dollars in the 
				bank, only has one working PC in the office, and that PC is an 
				old 600 MHz Celeron running Windows 98. Appeals to upgrade the 
				one PC in the whole church were routinely denied chiefly because 
				those in power are older men who do not use PC's and do not 
				understand why they are important to the efficient operation of 
				a church.
				
				The older members gravitate towards power because the younger 
				congregants are, frankly, too self-absorbed to be bothered. The 
				younger generation is still building families or looking for 
				spouses or in school or concerned about career and family and, 
				frankly, leave an inordinate amount of the work to the church 
				elders. So the weight of blame cannot fall entirely on the 
				elders, if it weren't for them, many of our churches would be 
				forced to close their doors. However, this schism has created a 
				Them Versus Us mentality were the elders distrust the judgment 
				of the younger generation. And, as a result of being continually 
				denied, the younger generation, the 30-somethings and 
				20-somethings, give up and retreat from the political process. 
				The elders win, yaaay! But the church, a prestigious and 
				important community hub, limps along with one W98 machine on an 
				AOL dialup account that goes out over the church's main phone line, 
				such that when the church secretary is online, callers to the 
				church receive a busy signal (the trustees voted “no” for 
				voicemail. Waste of money). Yes, in today's church. As I write these 
				words.
				
				Ours is a tradition, therefore, of listening rather than 
				reading. It's how the elders were brought up. It's why we have 
				no computers, no internet, no web site, no newsletters. It's why 
				our churches, in large measure, do not publish. Do not 
				contribute to our culture beyond the pulpit oratory. Ours is not 
				a culture of literacy but of advocacy. And this mindset, deeply 
				ingrained in our church elders, is the likely reason why so much 
				of this layered add-on ritualism endures. 
				
Black folk don't read. Black folk don't study. Many of us can't find books in the Bible. We are quote-ologists, quoting scripture we have heard repeated in the sanctuary for decades. Most of us have absolutely no idea about the origins of these rules and traditions, or why they are so out of line with proper doctrine. Which brings us right to the door of the office of the pastor. In overwhelming measure the pastor has failed to educate the black church as to proper doctrine. In large measure, the black pastor has, sadly, capitulated to the sweeping tide of ignorance, rather than swim upstream of the plantation mindset.


