PROGRAMS
| BLACK CHURCH INITIATIVE
National Black Religious Summit 12 on Sexuality
The Dawn of a New Day
By Reverend Carlton W. Veazey, President and CEO, Religious Coalition for
Reproductive Choice
As an African American pastor, I have worked for more than a decade to bring
hope and healing to the Black Church community by breaking the silence about
sex and sexuality. Today, reflecting on the just-concluded 12th annual National
Black Religious Summit on Sexuality (July 9-11, 2008), I can see that the
Black Church is undergoing a radical change. In place of the silence bred
from fear and ignorance, we now see our youth and adults affirming God’s
good gift of sexuality and seeking the wisdom to live responsibly as spiritual
and sexual beings.
You can just look at the high rates of unintended pregnancy and HIV/AIDS
to know that the silence about sex in the African American church community
has been disastrous. The fact that more than 740 clergy, educators, lay leaders
and youth came together last week at the National Black Religious Summit on
Sexuality to learn, talk and pray about sexuality issues is a breakthrough.
And the fact that so many people have taken action to address the problems
we face is an unmistakable sign that we are at the dawn of a new day.
Those who know the Black Church know what I mean when I say that talking about
sex was taboo. We pastors turned our heads rather than acknowledge teen girls
in our own congregations becoming pregnant, young men and women suffering
HIV, and domestic violence and sexual abuse being perpetrated in the most
upstanding families, including clergy families. We acted as though we did
not know that the abortion rate among African American women is more than
three times as high as that of White women.
We shattered the bonds of silence at last week’s Summit on Sexuality.
Former U.S. Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders challenged us to “start
doing what we say” as Christians. A health system that leaves 47 million
without basic insurance is a betrayal of the values that we as Americans say
we hold dear – the values of fairness and justice.
She challenged us to face up to the fact that many of us are guilty of child
abuse- of saying we love children but allowing children to go without the
basic necessities of life. Having children is a serious, lifelong commitment.
We need to fund comprehensive sex education – including but not limited
to education about abstinence - and contraception so people have the information
and means to plan their pregnancies.
The Black Church – and our society at large - shows enormous respect
and concern for the fetus, as do I. But I am also pro-choice because I believe
women are moral agents, with the God-given ability to make conscious decisions
and to know when to bring or not bring a child into the world. To people who
attack me for being pro-choice and call me a “babykiller,” I say
there’s something wrong with a society that is pro-life for the fetus
but aborts the child through inadequate health care, poor education, and lack
of opportunity.
During the 12 years of the National Black Religious Summit on Sexuality, the
Black Church has become more accepting of women in ministry and of individuals
who are gay and lesbian in church leadership positions. But we are far from
finished in breaking the silence about sexuality in our Black churches. We
are still exploring what faith communities can do to improve sexual health,
family relationships and communications, youth development, women’s
lives, and parental responsibility. Hundreds of leaders of the Black Church
have taken part in this movement to bring about a new vision of what it means
to have “the abundant life,” as Jesus called it. A new day is
dawning, but what it will bring depends on our will to continue to move forward.
For more information about the Summit, contact 202-628-7700 or info@rcrc.org.
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