The Lack Of Equity For Women In The Black Church
While the gifts and labor of Black women are consistently
exploited in black churches (and in white churches too) they are regularly
excluded from leadership and critical conversations at the highest
denominational levels. Black women’s intersectional identity that casts them
not only as racially subordinate, but as gender, and class subordinate, as
well, therefore, indicts interracial, interdenominational conversations that
“celebrate” racial reconciliation as inherently insufficient for the work of
justice as it relates to the entire black community, male and female.
While statistics indicate that black women comprise 85-90%
of black church membership, personal experience confirms that without black
women administering the ministry, praying for the pastor, teaching the
children, singing in the choir, cooking in the kitchen, answering the phones,
photocopying the bulletin, giving the tithe and the offering, and witnessing
and testifying to the goodness of the Lord on Wednesday nights, there is no
Black Church.
The absence of black women from the black church is evidence of
the Black Church’s moral failure and ecclesial fraud as it relates to gender
equity. It misrepresents the face of false identity and serves as
yet another shining example of sexism in the black church.
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