The Religious Cancer of Racism
By James H. Cone
People often ask me whether I am still angry as when I wrote Black
Theology and Black Power. When I hear that question I smile to contain
my rage: I remain just as angry because America, when viewed from the
perspective of the black poor, is no closer to Martin Luther King, Jr.'s
dream of a just society than when he was killed. While the black middle
class has made considerable economic progress, the underclass, despite
America's robust economy, is worse off in 1998 than in 1968. The
statistics are well known, yet they still fail to shock or outrage most
Americans.
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Reprinted from Risks of Faith: The Emergence of a Black Theology of Liberation,
1968-1998 by James Cone. Copyright © Beacon Press.
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America is still two societies: one rich and middle-class and the other
poor and working-class. William J. Wilson called the underclass "the truly
disadvantaged," people with few skills to enable them to compete in this
technological, informational age. To recognize the plight of the poor does
not require academic dissection. It requires only a drive into the central
cities of the nation to see people living in places not fit for human
habitation.
What deepens my anger today is the appalling silence of white theologians
on racism in the United States and the modern world. Whereas this silence
has been partly broken in several secular disciplines, theology remains
virtually mute. From Jonathan Edwards to Walter Rauschenbusch and Reinhold
Niebuhr to the present, progressive white theologians, with few exceptions,
write and teach as if they do not need to address the radical contradiction
that racism creates for Christian theology. They do not write about
slavery, colonialism, segregation, and the profound cultural link these
horrible crimes created between white supremacy and Christianity. The
cultural bond between European values and Christian beliefs is so deeply
woven into the American psyche and thought process that their
identification is assumed. White images and ideas dominate the religious
life of Christians and the intellectual life of theologians, reinforcing
the "moral" right of white people to dominate people of color economically
and politically. White supremacy is so widespread that it becomes a
"natural" way of viewing the world. We must ask therefore: Is racism so
deeply embedded in Euro-American history and culture that it is impossible
to do theology without being antiblack?
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Progressive white theologians, with few exceptions, write and teach as
if they do not need to address the radical contradiction that racism
creates for Christian theology.
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There is historical precedent for such ideological questioning. After the
Jewish Holocaust, Christian theologians were forced to ask whether
anti-Judaism was so deeply woven into the core of the gospel and Western
history that theology was no longer possible without being anti-Semitic?
Recently feminists asked an equally radical question, whether patriarchy
was so deeply rooted in biblical faith and its male theological tradition
that one could not do Christian theology without justifying the oppression
of women. Gay and lesbian theologians are following the feminist lead and
are asking whether homophobia is an inherent part of biblical faith. And
finally, Third World theologians, particularly in Latin America, forced
many progressive First World theologians to revisit Marx's class critique
of religion or run the risk of making Christianity a tool for exploiting
the poor.
Race criticism is just as crucial for the integrity of Christian theology
as any critique in the modern world. Christianity was blatantly used to
justify slavery, colonialism, and segregation for nearly five hundred
years. Yet this great contradiction is consistently neglected by the same
white male theologians who would never ignore the problem that critical
reason poses for faith in a secular world. They still do theology as if
white supremacy created no serious problem for Christian belief. Their
silence on race is so conspicuous that I sometimes wonder why they are not
greatly embarrassed by it.
How do we account for such a long history of white theological blindness to
racism and its brutal impact on the lives of African people? Is it because
white theologians do not know about the tortured history of the Atlantic
slave trade, which, according to British historian Basil Davidson, "cost
Africa at least fifty million souls?" Have they forgotten about the
unspeakable crimes of colonialism? Author Eduardo Galeano claims that 150
years of Spanish and Portuguese colonization in Central and South America
reduced the indigenous population from 90 million to 3.3 million. During
the twenty-three-year reign of terror of King Leopold II of Belgium in the
Congo (1885-1908), scholarly estimates suggest that approximately 10
million Congolese met unnatural deaths -- "fully half of the territory's
population." The tentacles of white supremacy have stretched around the
globe. No people of color have been able to escape its cultural,
political, and economic domination.
Two hundred forty-four years of slavery and one hundred years of legal
segregation, augmented by a reign of white terror that lynched more than
five thousand blacks, defined the meaning of America as "white over black."
White supremacy shaped the social, political, economic, cultural, and
religious ethos in the churches, the academy, and the broader society.
Seminary and divinity school professors contributed to America's white
nationalist perspective by openly advocating the superiority of the white
race over all others. The highly regarded church historian Philip Schaff of
Union Seminary in New York (1870-1893) spoke for most white theologians in
the nineteenth century when he said: "The Anglo-Saxon and Anglo-American,
of all modern races, possess the strongest national character and the one
best fitted for universal dominion."
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Seminary and divinity school professors contributed to America's white
nationalist perspective by openly advocating the superiority of the white
race over all others.
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Present-day white theologians do not express their racist views as
blatantly as Philip Schaff. They do not even speak of the "Negro's cultural
backwardness," as America's best known social ethicist, Reinhold Niebuhr,
often did and as late as 1965. To speak as Schaff and Niebuhr spoke would
be politically incorrect in this era of multiculturalism and color
blindness. But that does not mean that today's white theologians are less
racist. It only means that their racism is concealed or unconscious. As
long as religion scholars do not engage racism in their intellectual work,
we can be sure that they are as racist as their grandparents, whether they
know it or not. By not engaging America's unspeakable crimes against black
people, white theologians are treating the nation's violent racist past as
if it were dead. But, as William Faulkner said, "the past is never dead;
it is not even past." Racism is so deeply embedded in American history and
culture that we cannot get rid of this cancer simply by ignoring it.
There can be no justice without memory -- without remembering the horrible
crimes committed against humanity and the great human struggles for
justice. But oppressors always try to erase the history of their crimes
and often portray themselves as the innocent ones. Through their control
of the media and religious, political, and academic discourse, "they're
able," as Malcolm put it, "to make the victim look like the criminal and
the criminal to look like the victim."
Even when white theologians reflect on God and suffering, the problem of
theodicy, they almost never make racism a central issue in their analysis
of the challenge that evil poses for the Christian faith. If they should
happen to mention racism, it is usually just a footnote or only a marginal
comment. They almost never make racism the subject of a sustained
analysis. It is amazing that racism could be so prevalent and violent in
American life and yet so absent in white theological discourse.
President Clinton's call for a national dialogue on race has created a
context for public debate in the churches, the academy, and the broader
society. Where are the white theologians? What guidance are they
providing for this debate? Are they creating a theological understanding
of racism that enables whites to have a meaningful conversation with blacks
and other people of color? Unfortunately, instead of searching for an
understanding of the great racial divide, white religion scholars are doing
their searching in the form of a third quest for the historical Jesus. I
am not opposed to this academic quest. But if we could get a significant
number of white theologians to study racism as seriously as they
investigate the historical Jesus and other academic topics, they might
discovered how deep the cancer of racism is embedded not only in the
society but also in the narrow way in which the discipline of theology is
understood.