Hymn:
“Lift Every Voice and Sing” – James Weldon Johnson (1871-1938)
Tune:
LIFT EVERY VOICE
In
his address on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial to honor the fiftieth
anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech, former
President Bill Clinton repeated the phrase that we who follow after King should
“put our shoulders against the stubborn gates holding the American people back.”
I listened to the speech on NPR today, and with
all the music running through my mind and all of the day’s talk about human
rights, I thought I should reflect briefly on an African American hymn-line. This is probably THE African-American hymn.
The
fact that this revered song of the black church community was totally unknown
to me until its inclusion in The Baptist Hymnal 1991 published for a predominantly
white, mainly southern denomination speaks strongly to me on this day. It is a
text replete with wonderful imagery of the liberating power of our common
Christ… the Savior common to all
races, tribes and colors.
I
am a pacifist at heart. I believe that a fight (war) is a last-resort to solving
any disagreement. I am such the conflict-avoider that I have often been
trampled by those who are not! That is why to me the amazingly peace-filled
demonstration March on Washington on August 28, 1963, is monumental in our
history. That day’s rhetoric along with many other events along the way have
stood to point out to us the dark past
of the mistreatment of minorities in this country… and other countries around
the world.
The
people of faith – those who turn to the great God of heaven and earth to find
their compass for life – have been able to learn from past wrongs and have
joined in the peaceful-when-at-all-possible fight to right those, often taking
an unpopular stand among their own kind… even amid their own congregation
and/or denomination.
While
much evil has been accomplished in the name of God over the years, and the
cross has been (and still is) the banner for some un-godly causes, that same old rugged cross has remained the emblem of suffering and shame --
and it has been the symbol of freedom and equality for any and all people, even
those with whom we disagree and for those who look and/or act differently than
we.
The
line which follows today’s is “Sing a
song full of the hope that the present has brought us.” We have, in other
words, been taught and have learned from the dark past… and we have emerged as
enlightened, changed people who in this present day have had hope delivered to
us.
If
you don’t really know this great hymn, find it in print (Google it if nothing
else) and study the pain and victory encapsulated in its stanzas. Whatever your
political bent or your roots, you will likely find yourself empowered to join
in the chorus of all who believe in human rights… civil and otherwise. Then
together people of all colors, opinions and lifestyles may lift every voice and sing till earth and heaven ring, ring with the harmonies
of liberty.
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