“Engaging and Citing Walter Brueggemann” (Day 1)

“Engaging and Citing Walter Brueggemann”

Starting today (June 18) and for the next thirty days (July 18), l will be posting excerpts from two influential works by Walter Brueggemann in celebration of his life, ideas, and work, especially his enormous influence on my life as a theologian and Old Testament scholarship. The great Professor passed away on June 5, 2025; he was 92 years old.

The two favorite books of mine that I will be quoting from are “The Prophetic Imagination,” first published in 1978 by Fortress Press, and “Theology of the Old Testament: Testimony, Dispute, Advocacy,” originally published in 1997-the year I graduated from High School—by Fortress Press. I call this series of posts “Engaging and Citing Walter Brueggemann.”

Let’s begin with our first statement:

“Here it is argued that they were concerned with most elemental changes in human society and that they understood a great deal about how change is effected. The prophets understood the possibility of change as linked to emotional extremities of life. They understood the strange incongruence between public conviction and personal yearning. Most of all, they understood the distinctive power of language, the capacity to speak in ways that evoke newness ‘fresh from the word.’ It is argued here that a prophetic understanding of reality is based in the notion that all social reality does spring fresh from the word. It is the aim of every totalitarian effort to stop the language of newness, and we are now learning that where such language stops we find our humanness diminished.”

—Brueggemann, “The Prophetic Imagination,” p. 9

“Vwa Papa m”(“Voice of My Father”)

“Vwa Papa m”
(“Voice of My Father”)

Pawòl Papa redrese yon pitit kite nan move chemen.
Li pèdi espwa lè papa pa la.
Vwa Papa swiv pitit la tout kote li ye.
Li se yon repozwa lè li nan soufrans.
Papa pote ampil kè kontan ke n paka mezire.
Li se prezans ki toujou la lè tout lòt moun ale.

Lè silans lavi vin pi fò,
se fòs Papa a ki kalme nanm yon pitit ki boulvèse.
Sa plis ke lanmou
Papa a remonte kouraj pitit li ki te kraze.
Vwa Papa a fò epi klè
Li proteje pitit lan lè gro vag lanmè vin pou ranmase l.
Papa se espwa lavi.
Non li se pwomès ki pap jan m fayi.
tankou yon gwo limyè ki klere pi lwen pase zetwal k ap leve.

Sajès papa trase chemen lavi.
Li gide pitit li lè li nan dout ak krent.
Nan limyè fòs papa, li vin tounen yon gason jan papa l te reve l.
Nan mitan tanpèt ak silans,
vwa papa a kontinye sonnen,
li rafrechi nanm pitit gason an jiskaske tout bagay fini.

“Voice of My Father”: A Father’s Day Poem

As we celebrate Father’s Day tomorrow, I wrote this new poem to salute all the fathers and sing their praise. This poem is about the meaning and legacy of a father.

“Voice of My Father”

The father’s words reclaim a wandering son.
Hope is far when he is not near.
The father’s voice follows the runaway son.
He stepped into his pain,
bringing him joy too deep to be measured.
He is the presence that lingers when the world walks away.

When silence grows louder, the father’s strength calms his troubled soul.
Beyond the limits of love,
he rebuilds the broken courage of his son.
The father’s voice, powerful and loud,
turned his steps away from raging storms.
He carried the promise of hope
like a lighthouse beyond the rising star.

The father’s wisdom paves the pathway of life,
guiding a son through fear and doubt.
Mirroring the father’s strength, he becomes a man of his father dreamed.
Through storms and silence, the father’s voice echoes,
refreshing his soul until the end of all things.

#FathersLove

#VoiceOfMyFather

#FatherhoodLegacy

#SaluteToFathers

#PoetryForDad

#HonorYourFather

#FatherAndSon

#MenOfCourage

#DadWisdom

#StrongFathers

#HealingWords

#LighthouseDad

#FatherhoodMatters

#SpokenWordPoetry

#PoeticTribute

#LegacyOfLove

#CelebrateDads

#FatherStrength

“Love That Stayed”

“Love That Stayed”

He took your breath away—
but I breathed life into your soul
so you could survive the silence.

He captured your eyes—
but I was the one who wiped your tears
when no one else saw you crying.

He watched you suffer
and walked away from your loneliness—
but I stepped into your pain
and brought you joy from within.

He loved you for what you could offer—
but I cherished you beyond reason,
beyond condition, beyond love’s limits.

He gave you moments of pleasure—
but I gave you dreams too big for the world,
and joy too deep to be measured.

I am the love he couldn’t be.
I am the comfort he never gave.
I am the voice that stayed
when silence grew loud.

I am the love that stayed.

We Did Not Leave for Luxury: On Haitian Migration and Displacement

“We Did Not Leave for Luxury: On Haitian Migration and Displacement”

We did not leave for luxury.
We left for life.
For breath, for bread,
for a break in the storm.

We crossed borders with broken Creole
and pockets full of memory.
We built churches in Brooklyn,
sent remittances from Miami,
prayed in Montreal,
and marched in Chile.

We are not lost.
We are scattered seeds
of a homeland still burning
in our bones.

#HaitianDiaspora #HaitianImmigrants #ForcedMigration #HaitiToTheWorld #DiasporaVoices #CreoleSouls #DisplacementStories #MigrationMatters #GlobalHaitians #HaitiInExile #ImmigrationTruth #FromAyitiToAbroad #TikTokActivism #CaribbeanMigration

The Duvalier Regime – Fear, Power, and Resistance

The Duvalier Regime – Fear, Power, and Resistance

The Duvalier dynasty ruled Haiti with an iron fist from 1957 to 1986—first under François “Papa Doc” Duvalier, then his son Jean-Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier. This regime was marked by brutal repression, cult of personality, corruption, and the infamous Tonton Macoutes, a paramilitary force that terrorized the population.

📚 Key Texts to Explore:

François Duvalier: A New Autocrat for Haiti by David Nicholls

Papa Doc and the Tontons Macoutes by Bernard Diederich

Haiti: The Duvaliers and Their Legacy by Elizabeth Abbott

Watch the video for more key texts on rhe subject matter.

These works reveal the deep scars left by the Duvalier era—and the enduring spirit of resistance among the Haitian people.

✊🏾📖 Know history. Resist tyranny. Honor the survivors.

#DuvalierRegime #HaitianHistory #PapaDoc #BabyDoc #TontonMacoutes #BlackHistory #Haiti #Dictatorship #Resistance #Liberation #PostcolonialStudies #SilencingThePast #MichelRolphTrouillot #HumanRights #TikTokEducation #AfroCaribbeanHistory

Liberation Theology: Some Key Texts

“Faith on the Frontlines: Voices of Liberation Theology”

Liberation theology is where faith meets justice. Born in the struggles of Latin America, it calls for action against oppression and solidarity with the poor. Thinkers like Gustavo Gutiérrez, Leonardo Boff, and James Cone challenged the status quo, declaring that true theology must liberate. Their bold ideas still echo today wherever people fight for dignity and freedom. ✊📖

LiberationTheology #FaithAndJustice #TheologyOfLiberation #GustavoGutierrez #LeonardoBoff #JamesCone #BlackTheology #FreedomFaith #JusticeMatters #PropheticVoices #FaithOnTheMargins #TheologyForThePeople

Black Liberation Theology: Some Key Texts

“God of the Oppressed: Black Liberation Theology Speaks”

Black Liberation Theology is a prophetic voice rising from the pain and power of the Black experience. It declares that God is on the side of the oppressed and that faith must be a force for justice and freedom. James Cone, the father of this movement, alongside thinkers like Katie Cannon and Cornel West, reimagined theology through the lens of Black struggle, dignity, and resistance. ✊🏾⛪️🔥

BlackLiberationTheology #JamesCone #KatieCannon #CornelWest #GodOfTheOppressed #FaithAndFreedom #LiberatingFaith #TheologyFromBelow #JusticeAndJesus #PropheticTradition #BlackTheologyMatters #FaithInAction

Black Church Studies: Recommended Readings

“Rooted in Faith, Rising in Power: Black Church Studies”

Black Church Studies explores the rich theological, cultural, and political legacy of the Black church in America. It is a field rooted in the spiritual resistance of enslaved Africans and shaped by the prophetic witness of leaders like Howard Thurman, James Cone, Katie Cannon, and Cheryl Sanders. This discipline honors the church’s role as a sanctuary of hope, a center for justice, and a voice for the voiceless. ✝️🖤🔥

BlackChurchStudies #JamesCone #KatieCannon #HowardThurman #CherylSanders #FaithAndJustice #PropheticTradition #BlackTheology #ChurchAndLiberation #SacredResistance #SpiritualPower #TheologyOfThePeople

The Haitian Revolution (1791–1804): Recommended Texts

🔥 The Haitian Revolution (1791–1804) was the first successful slave revolt in history—and it changed the world! 🌍

Led by heroes like Toussaint Louverture, Jean-Jacques Dessalines, and Henri Christophe, enslaved Africans in Haiti rose up against French colonial rule and declared the first Black republic. 🇭🇹✊🏾

This was not just a rebellion—it was a radical fight for freedom, dignity, and humanity.
Haiti didn’t just break chains. It broke the system.

HaitianRevolution #ToussaintLouverture #JeanJacquesDessalines #BlackHistory #Haiti #FreedomFighters #RevolutionaryHistory #Decolonize #BlackLiberation #HaitianPride #WorldHistory #HaitianTikTok #AyitiPapPeri #ResistAndRise 🕊️🔥🇭🇹