“Summer Reading List for Young Adults”

A Summer Reading List for Young Adults

  1. Neil Degrasse Tyson, “Astrophysics for Young People in a Hurry”
  2. Min Jin Lee, “Pachinko”
  3. Yanick Lahens, “Moonbath”
  4. Andrew Sean Greer, “Less: A Novel”
  5. Chinua Achebee, “Things Fall Apart”
  6. Paul Kalanithi, “When Breath Becomes Air”
  7. Elizabeth Acevedo, “The Poet X: A Novel”
  8. James Baldwin, “If Beale Street Could Talk”
  9. Imani Perry, “Breath: A Letter to my Sons”
  10. Rupi Kaur, “Milk and Money”

*** Select five books from the list to have a delightful reading📚summer in the world of great books. If you’re like me, I would just read all ten books to have a more productive and amazing summer time.

Happy Reading 📚!

What is Christianity?

What is Christianity?

Christianity is a lifestyle. Christianity is how you treat people with love, compassion, care, understanding, and empathy. Christianity is the Jesus’ way to be in solidarity with the poor and the oppressed. It is also to hate all falsehood, human oppression and exploitation, and all forms of injustice that dehumanize people and reduce them to non-beings. Being a Christian means more than reciting a prayer to accept Jesus as your Lord and Savior. It is how you respond to and treat people who are different from you, even those who reject your Jesus, your Christianity, and your God. Christianity is more than words or head knowledge. It t is action. It is reconciliation. It is peace. It is unity. It is hope. It is love. Christianity is love for people because God is love and God loves all people.

“On God, Love, and True Religion” (Part I)

“On God, Love, and True Religion” (Part I)

The Thing that most fascinates me in life is not success, sex or money (although they are important incentives in my life), but God’s relentless and loving presence in human quest for him through religion and spirituality.

(Allow me to state this parenthetical statement: I understand very well that all religious traditions do not teach the same doctrine nor every form of spirituality is parallel to each other. For example, Christianity proclaims the divinity of Jesus Christ and claims that Jesus is the only way to God, whereas Islam confesses Mohammad as the Final Prophet of Allah. Vodou and Hinduism teach there are multiple ways to God through the Lwa and gods or the Vodou lwa and gods in Hinduism are various expressions and manifestations of one true God. Some religious scholars parallel various religious traditions with their geographical locations and cultures. For example, in Africa, one finds African traditional religion; in Asia, one encounters Taoism, Confucianism, Buddhism, Hinduism, etc. In the Arab world, one meets Islam, and in Europe, one finds Christianity. [this perspective on religion and geography has been challenged by various scholars and thinkers] Hence, the distinction between world’s religions is evident. The interesting thing is that our world embraces religious pluralism, cultural relativism, heterogeneous narrative, and epistemological difference. Nonetheless, what remains a paradox for many people, as it pertains to religion, are the following questions:

1) Are all religions true?
2) Do they all (religious paths) lead people to God?
3) Do the people from different religious systems or traditions worship the same God?
4) Does God approve all religions of the world?
5) How does one know which religion is true and not a deviation from God’s original plan for humanity?

  1. Does it matter what religion one chooses to embrace?
  2. Is it okay to blend various religious traditions and rituals?
  3. What if all religions have it wrong?
  4. What if all religions are different manifestations of human delusion about God?
  5. What if there is only one true religion?
  6. What if Jesus is the only way to God?

By religion, I seek to convey the idea of God’s loving movement and disruptive intervention in cultures and religions of the world to draw people to himself and to create a new and distinctive human race that will honor him and spread his name. This particular perspective on religion does celebrate cultural diversity and value various religious traditions. Nonetheless, it does insist that God transcends our religious imagination.

True religion is also a way to experience and receive divine love, grace, and care. True religion boasts in God’s solidarity with humanity and the oppressed of the world; correspondingly, it forces us to depend daily upon God to provide orientation, wisdom, and guidance in this life of despair and hostility.

True religion promotes human interdependence, reciprocity, and solidarity with one another—as men and women who are created in the Imago Dei.

Food for the Soul!

“The Presence of Truth: On the Logic and Nature of Pure Reason and Reasonable Faith”

“The Presence of Truth: On the Logic and Nature of Pure Reason and Reasonable Faith”

I still believe one can be a good person of faith, in my case, a Christian, and a good and critical scholar. While pure reason makes room for intellectual curiosity, a reasonable faith should welcome the rigorous process of intellectual adventure and experimentation.

Faith can seek understanding in the academic world (the life of the mind) and the academic world can benefit greatly from the life of faith. One does not have to compromise his or faith in the academia in order to gain status or reputation. Comparatively, one should not kill reason to redeem faith or rehabilitate religious piety.

The life of the mind can be nourished from multiple and not only from one source of truth and understanding. It is against pure reason to continue to sustain the notion that the academia is the only venue that fosters a rigorous human intellect and leads to a revolution of the mind.
The life of the mind should not be devoid of passion and the intersectionality of knowledge.

Similarly, the life of faith, grounded on an ethics of liberation and human flourishing in all aspects of life, possesses inherent attributes to revolutionize human relations and make us more human and compassionate toward one another. A reasonable faith can be construed as a habit of the mind that forges a strong rapport between two realms: faith and reason. Both must depend on each other to make us more reasonable, logical, relational, interpersonal, and more compassionate. The life of faith should not be devoid of reason and the interdisciplinary nature of human piety.

A faith that is strong is a faith that aims to find truth in all places of wisdom even when the discovered truth challenges one’s beliefs and brings a level of discomfortability to the life of faith. Reason is not the sole sphere of knowledge nor is it the only source of wisdom. One should seek knowledge and understanding in all credible repositories even if it that journey may lead to a radical reorientation of one’s intellect and a revolutionary reinvention of the self.

Truth should be the catalyst to bind the life of the mind and the life of faith.

My Two New Books Have Been Released!

In the midst of the coronavirus crisis, good news is still a possibility associated with joy. Hence, I am pleased to announce the publication of two new books with #wipfandstock publishers:

“Theologizing in Black: On Africana Theological Ethics and Anthropology” (April 15, 2020)

***The sequel to this book is tentatively titled “The Being of God in Africana Theological and Philosophical Tradition.” I’m excited about this new terrain of research and writing.

and

“Revolutionary Change and Democratic Religion:

Christianity, Vodou, and Secularism” (April 15, 2020)

Both texts can be ordered online.

***I would like to thank those who have written endorsements for both texts. I appreciate your rigor, encouraging words, & constructive feedback.

Happy reading!

#theologizinginblack

#revolutionarychangeanddemocraticreligion

Click on the link below to order your copy

***The sequel to this book is tentatively titled “The Being of God in Africana Theological and Philosophical Tradition.” I’m excited about this new terrain of research and writing.

https://wipfandstock.com/theologizing-in-black.html

“The Problem of the ‘Christian unity’ language in Christian (Evangelical) Culture”

“The Problem of the ‘Christian unity’ language in Christian (Evangelical) Culture”

Christian unity does not guarantee cosmic peace, political stability, and earthly comfort. Why do some Christians in this culture like to talk about unity in Christ and harmony in the body of Christ, but refuse to discuss the pressing issues that lead to disunity and disharmony in the Church and society? What are the contributing factors associated with this mental state of fear and Christian disengagement with these urgent matters?

Arguably, unity is a costly adventure and humble attitude. Like unity, harmony is sacrificial and an intentional doing. Unity will not come until Christians actively get engaged in genuine and honest conversations, such as the social, class, political, economic, cultural, racial, gender, sexual, ideological, etc. issues that have divided the body of Christ, dehumanized delinquent children and single mothers, and marginalized the poor, the needy, the racialized populations, the undocumented immigrant populations in this country, etc.

Christian unity is not a smoke screen for Christians to hide their dangerous political ideologies and choices, theological tribalism, and moral superiority. We should not think of Christian harmony as a safety net to cover up the sin of racism and xenophobia, and prejudice toward the undocumented immigrant and the religious other. Rather, it predicates upon the willingness to be changed and the openness to be challenged.

Harmony requires the discipline of listening to other’s pain and suffering, as well as their stories and their histories. The concepts of unity and harmony in the church and in society are associated with the biblical concept of justice and Christian discipleship. This is an overwhelming issue in the Gospels, the letters of Paul, especially in the Prophets.

For example, Jesus, the founder of Christianity and the spiritual head of the Christian church, was a controversial figure. Regularly, he would engage in verbal fights and heated arguments with the people in the church (i.e. the temple), the Pharisees, the Sadducees, and other individuals in society that had both religious and political influence in the culture—over pressing social, political, and religious issues that bore tremendous effects on people’s living conditions and future—especially the marginalized groups, the vulnerable, and the poor populations. Jesus actively preached and taught on both spiritual and societal matters. He did not say, “Folks: we are all Jews, let’s get along. We are all children of Abraham and let us just worship the God of Israel, our common Father and Creator.” He made sure his audience and those who did not want to listen to him know that social and political issues mattered to God; the triumph of the Kingdom of God and justice in society mattered to God; and the spiritual life and salvation of all people were also vital concerns to God. While Jesus gave priority to the reign and justice of God in the world, he was equally attentive to how problems of (moral and ethical) injustice and inequity, systems and structures, and unequal distribution of wealth were affecting the poor and the disadvantaged in his own society. Followers of Christ are called to imitate him, to love people like him, to act like him, and to have the mind and spirit of Christ. Jesus defended the weak and the poor in society; correspondingly, he has called his followers to do likewise.

Second, Paul, the most influential religious figure in the Jesus Movement and the second most controversial figure in the history of early Christianity after Jesus, was attentive to moral, ethical, and spiritual matters. For example, in his letters to the Christian churches in Galatia and Corinth, he directly addressed some of the major concerns of his culture, and the urgent factors that were affecting the church and human flourishing and the common good in society; they included the problems of poverty and hunger, sexual morality, gender ethics, political issues and ideologies, cultural differences and ideologies, ethnic pride and privilege, racial tribalism and preference, equality and equity in society, divorce, marriage, death, war, etc. Like Jesus, Paul did not just say to the Galatian and Corinthian Christians: “Folks, we are just ‘one in Christ.’ Let’s just focus on saving the soul of the lost, and forget about existential problems in society.”

Finally, it is important to note that both Jesus and Paul were also preaching and teaching about unity in the church and harmony among the people of God. Correspondingly, both religious figures were calling both men and women, and boys and girls to get right with God and to live justly before God and in harmony with their neighbor. Yet both of them understood clearly that some earthly forces in addition to spiritual matters were affecting the human experience and flourishing in the world—contributing to a history of pain and suffering, a catalogue of alienation and dehumanization, and a life of despair and bankruptcy.

The question that lies before the individual Christian and the American church is as follows:

What is God calling you to do? What is Christ calling the American church to do?

As a follower of Christ, Christians are morally responsible to inquire about the contemporary societal forces—public policies, state laws, county laws, etc.—that are detrimental to the welfare of their neighbor and other political decisions and choices that are impacting the living conditions of the marginalized, the homeless, the needy, the racialized, the politically-alienated, and the economically-disadvantaged populations in their community, city, and country. If the individual Christian keeps avoiding these complex issues, perhaps, he or she does not understand the transforming power of the Gospel in politics, society, and in the public sphere. If the Christian church in America is silent on those crucial matters, she is probably not imitating Christ and walking in his footsteps.

Christian unity is an active force in society that could potentially contribute to both holistic transformation and spiritual renewal of the people in culture. It is a discipline that requires the process of nurturing and reinvention; it makes a clarion call upon us for moral redirection and a christocentric orientation toward God and one’s neighbor. As Dietrich Bonhoeffer warned us, “There is no way to peace along the way of safety. For peace must be dared, it is itself the great venture and cuan never be safe. Peace is the opposite of security.” In the same line of thought, unity in the body of Christ or harmony among the people of God in society is not a project that seeks to preserve individual safety, status, privilege, and national pride. Christian unity calls for the urgent death of Christian nationalism, American exceptionalism, and ethnocentrism. It renounces all the external forces and privileges that become a hindrance to be committed totally to King Jesus and to serve in compassion and act in justice toward one’s neighbor. It is a call to self-denial and total obedience for the sake of imitating and following Jesus in this life. Christian unity does not guarantee cosmic peace, worldly treasures, and earthly comfort; nonetheless, like Christian compassion, it does seek the best interest of one’s neighbor and empowers individuals to act in a manner that promotes the dignity of the most vulnerable and to care for the marginalized groups in society.

“What Germany and Haiti Have in Common: The Christian Church in Germany and Haiti, and The Great Moral Paradox of the Christian West”

Happy Wednesday, Folks!!!

“What Germany and Haiti Have in Common: The Christian Church in Germany and Haiti, and The Great Moral Paradox of the Christian West”

From the late 1930 to 1940s, in Germany, many German churches and theologians supported Nazism and Hitler faithfully, leading to the annihilation of thousands of Jews. Comparatively, from the 1950s to 1970s, in Haiti, the Christian church, both Protestant and Catholic expressions, supported the Duvalier Regime relentlessly and many members of the clergy were in fact macoutes (boogeyman), leading to the execution of thousands of Haitians. (During the heyday of Hitler, many Jews traveled to Haiti to escape Nazism and were welcomed with Haitian citizenship.)

Interestingly, one of the great moral paradoxes in Church history in the West is that Christians have been supporters of dictators, totalitarian leaders, fascist leaders, slave masters, slave traffickers, and individuals who have committed horrendous crimes against humanity. In fact, some of them are/were christian dictators, christian totalitarian leaders, christian fascists, christian slave masters, christian slave traffickers, etc.

Jesus was correct when he warned his disciples,

“Not everyone who calls out to me, ‘Lord! Lord!’ will enter the Kingdom of Heaven. Only those who actually do the will of my Father in heaven will enter” (Matthew 7:21).

“Be careful not to practice your righteousness in front of others to be seen by them. If you do, you will have no reward from your Father in heaven” (Matthew 6:1).

He even denounced the evil practices of “church leaders” and the “theologians of the church” by declaring:

“Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You are like whitewashed tombs, which look beautiful on the outside but on the inside are full of the bones of the dead and everything unclean. 28 In the same way, on the outside you appear to people as righteous but on the inside you are full of hypocrisy and wickedness” (Matthew 23:27-28).

“Beware of the teachers of the law. They like to walk around in flowing robes and love to be greeted with respect in the marketplaces and have the most important seats in the synagogues and the places of honor at banquets. 47 They devour widows’ houses and for a show make lengthy prayers. These men will be punished most severely” (Luke 20:46-47).

*** Do not follow Jesus at a distance; rather be a faithful imitator of Christ, have the mind of Christ, and let the spirit of Christ dwell in you!

“The Ethics of Social Media Posting and Offering Feedback”

“The Ethics of Social Media Posting and Offering Feedback”

  1. Show civility ( i.e. respect, friendship) and care when you leave a comment on someone else’s post.
  2. Do not attack the person’s character; address the idea being discussed in a respectful and dignified manner.
  3. Choose your word carefully and gently; the power of death is in the tongue, and it will destroy friendship and bankrupt relationships.
  4. Use your post to uplift people, cultivate and strengthen friendship and relationships, encourage your audience toward resilience and self-care, and to strengthen our individual and collective striving toward human flourishing and the common good.
  5. Posts or comments that do not build up individuals or the social media community should not be written at all; they may hinder the possibility to foster good and sustaining relationship and friendship.
  6. Before offering a feedback on a post, make sure you read the intent of the post responsibly, think critically, and read it with care and understanding.
  7. If you’re not sure about the intent of a post, ask the writer for clarification and enlightenment; do not make false assumptions and voice accusations.
  8. Before offering a comment on a post, control your emotions such as anger, frustration, verbal abuse, etc.
  9. Do not use the social media space to spread hatred, racism, xenophobia, sexism, and any form of verbal or intellectual violence toward an individual, an ethnic or racial group, or a particular community; in all things, acknowledge the dignity of all people by recognizing they are image bearers of God.
  10. Do not verbally abuse your audience and friends through careless and irresponsible rhetoric or language.
  11. It is important to know through the social media sphere, people, who may not know you personally or intimately, are allowing you in their world and space; take it as an unmerited invitation and an undeserving privilege, but as an opportunity to know each other, to make the (social media) world a better place for all, and to build better human relationships and stronger social networks.
  12. Remember it is not an obligation for you to offer a comment or a feedback on every topic and even on a subject of interest.
  13. Do not police your friends, especially individuals you just met via a social media platform, through social interactions and virtual interplays.
  14. Do not expect for your friends and social media associates to offer a response on your most original and innovated post or feedback; some of us are still introverts and prefer to message you in private.
  15. Be kind and considerate to one another when posting on a social media platform and offering feedback on a topic of interest.

“Resurrection Sun-Day”

“5 But the angel said to the women, “Do not be afraid, for I know that you seek Jesus who was crucified. 6 He is not here, for he has risen, as he said. Come, see the place where he lay.”

— Matthew 28:5-6

#HeIsRisen

#ResurrectionSunday

Haitian Art: “Jesus 2018 Acrylic on Canvas” by Frantz Zephirin

“Shame Him and Make Him Go Away: An Easter Poem” by Celucien L. Joseph

They put him on an unfair trial–the greatest trial that shakes the earth;

The jury misjudged him and fabricated lies about him; the people mischaracterized and cheated him; the leaders chastised and shamed him; and they all found him guilty for a crime he did not commit–lies that are forgiven and guilt that is forgotten;

They whipped him until his body bore bruises, his soul abuses, and his heart humanity’s challenges–the body that bears the world’s pain and gives new birth;

They made him carry a cross they fashioned for his destiny–the cross of pain, of sorrow, of humanity’s hope;

They hang him on a tree to be lynched– a tree that gives passion, redemption, satisfaction, and resurrection;

They handed him over to the soldiers to be oppressed–yet he is their hope and Savior too;

While still hanging on the lynching tree, they mocked him; they insulted him; they gave him sour wine mingled with gall to drink; and they spat on his face in shame–the Savior’s saliva that brings the abusers’ sweet healing and the oppressors’ restoration;

They crucified him so he could die–the death that fuels new life and salvation too;

After he breathed his last breath in shame, he was declared dead at last–he is the breath of life and resurrection of life;

They put him in the tomb and buried him in shame–the tomb of despair and of glory too;

They sealed the tomb of shame with a rock so he will not go away–the seal of humanity’s destiny and their stone of safety.

Hold on, Sir!
Hold on, Madame!
Wait, boys and girls!
Don’t move, children!
Tarry, young people!
Don’t go away, citizens of the world!

Wait until the morning hour;
the new Sunday for the seal to be broken;

for the stone to be rolled away;

for darkness and death to lose the fight;

for the Son to be set free;

for the Sun 🌞 to rise again;

on the Resurrection Sun-day!