Posted on 07/03/2007 10:19:10 AM PDT by Between the Lines
PORTLAND, Ore. -- Joseph Santos-Lyons is this city's first homegrown minister of color in the Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations, the church that proudly represents the far left pole of American religion.
During the UUA's recent national General Assembly here, Santos-Lyons was "fellowshipped" (the equivalent of a large-scale ordination), a milestone for the liberal UUA, which is 92 percent white, by its own estimates.
But as he assumes his minister's mantle, Santos-Lyons is speaking out about the elephant in the room: Liberals embrace multiculturalism in theory, he says, but there's a reason the UUA and other progressive movements, from anti-war to environmentalism groups, remain nearly all white.
Liberal whites are no more comfortable with race issues -- and often more defensive -- than their conservative counterparts, he and other congregants say. The points of tension are telling: Should discussions of racism focus on white privilege and the inherited responsibility for historical wrongs, especially slavery? Does creating separate ministries for people of color divide an organization based on unity? And should the ethics of transracial adoptions be questioned?
"A habit of liberals is to want to fix everything on the outside," says Santos-Lyons, 34. "But we don't turn inward and fix ourselves."
The Rev. William Sinkford, the first minority president of the UUA, said some uneasiness is generational. The church and many of its leaders, black and white, were at the front lines of the civil rights movement.
"Many of us thought we were going to solve racism and poverty," said Sinkford, who is African American. "To come to terms with the unfinishedness of that work is almost acknowledging a failure for my generation."
Historically, liberal movements have been predominantly white, upper-middle class phenomena, said Portland political pollster Tim Hibbitts.
"In the '60s and much more so now, there is a kind of radical chic-- the boomers who listen to Joan Baez in their Beemers and who haven't lived a terribly hardscrabble life and have adopted liberal views because they can afford to," he said.
Santos-Lyons, who is mixed Asian American and white, said he decided to speak out about race now because the UUA is at a turning point.
A series of events -- flare-ups between members, funding decisions and hiring choices for positions of power -- has led to discouraging conclusions for many minority members, he said. Some have left the faith.
Santos-Lyons is used to shaking things up -- his personal blog is titled "Radical Hapa (Half Asian Pacific American)," and he learned his organizing techniques from Chicano activists at the University of Oregon who led boycotts on behalf of vineyard workers.
He took those sensibilities to his church, leading the UUA's campus ministry and field organizing office during the past decade. He said the UUA is too quick to see people like him -- who are adamant about minorities having their own identities and coalitions -- as militant or radical.
"People tend to see people of color meeting together as adversarial," he said.
The Rev. Manish Mishra, the leader of the UUA's multicultural ministries organization, said the faith and its leadership are sometimes unfairly blamed for issues that affect "all of white liberal America."
"It's not easy for liberal America to hear that what we believe about ourselves may not be true," said Mishra, an Indian American who says he is one of only three Hindu ministers in the UUA.
To focus on funding decisions, the sheer number of minorities or discomfort among otherwise well-intentioned people "is a very superficial analysis," he said.
Many minority Unitarian Universalists regard the 2005 General Assembly in Forth Worth, Texas, as symbolic. There, two Korean Americans who had been adopted by white families came to speak to a denomination that, by anecdotal accounts, has one of the highest rates of transracial adoptions.
The title under which the two adoptees spoke? "Transracial Abductees."
"You could see the discomfort on people's faces," said Meggie Dennis, a Korean American adoptee. Like Santos-Lyons, also an adoptee, the UUA was the church of her white parents.
"Many of us grew up in a white suburban church where nobody wanted to point out how a child was different, so race was just not talked about," Dennis said. "That set us up for a sudden identity crisis because we had not learned about our cultures."
Petra Aldrich, a Boston-based anti-racism trainer for the UUA, said Unitarian Universalists have an insecurity that stems from the faith's lack of theological structure.
"Because we don't all believe in the same thing, people look for structure and commonality in how we behave, who we are or who we aren't," said Aldrich, who is white, "whether that's people who wear batik or people who are not racist."
Sinkford said he is trying to take the UUA to the next step -- truth and reconciliation.
During the General Assembly, Sinkford challenged fellow Unitarian Universalists to address reparations for slavery -- specifically $1 million dollars that had been promised, but not paid in full, by the UUA three decades ago. It was controversial then, and it is controversial now, he said.
"Many of our churches with beautiful steeples on the New England coast were built with money from the slave trade," he said. "We have to be able to tell the reality of our history. This is spiritual work."
Is Christianity about the sins of the individual? Or sins of the group?
“Unitarians Find They’re Almost Universally White”
OMG! We must execute them now.
They should rename the church to “The Church of White Guilt.”
If they had the courage of their convictions, perhaps they’d off themselves.
I’ve been to a Unitarian Church. It ain’t a religion - its group therapy.
Is Unitarianism Christian?
...said Mishra, an Indian American who says he is one of only three Hindu ministers in the UUA.
Not really.
“The Church of White Guilt” is a fitting name.
Say what you will about the Jim Jones' cult, they put their money (or Kool-Aid) where their mouth was, I'll give 'em that.
Unitarianism: The Church for those who don’t believe in God.
Its best they perform a kool-aid ceremony like that other famous anti-racist cult leader Jim Jones.
Try impossible.
My favorite quote from the article.
The word God didn’t appear anywhere in that article.
“Some have left the faith”
What faith? They have no faith.
My sister (who took me) made the mistake asking what I thought...
They left a giant burning question mark on my lawn.
It’s the “Church of Seinfeld.” A Church about nothing.
From the UU website http://www.uua.org
Because of the flexibility in our faith, people hold many different views on almost all spiritual issues. Unitarian Universalism accommodates a wide range of beliefs.
God: A belief in God is welcomed but not required within Unitarian Universalism. Eighty-one percent of Unitarian Universalists believe in God, and 19 percent do not believe in God. Visit the pages on Atheism, Theism/Deism, and the links on the right for more information.
Afterlife: One theological issue many people are curious about is Unitarian Universalism's view of the afterlife. Historically, Unitarians believed in a traditional Christian Heaven and Hell, while Universalists believed in Universal Salvation; that is, that everyone will go to Heaven. Today, some Unitarian Universalists believe in Heaven, some in reincarnation, and some in no afterlife at all. Unitarian Universalism is primarily directed towards this life, not the next.
Sin: More than 150 years ago our Unitarian forbearers rejected the theological doctrine of original sin. They believed, as we do today, that people are inherently good, and that it is our most precious gift, free will, that allows us sometimes to act wrongly, rather than predestination or external temptation. While the traditional concept of sin is no longer part of Unitarian Universalist theology, a small number of Unitarian Universalists believe that divine consequences attach to all of one's actions. Others believe in general karmic effects or the principle of reciprocity, that all actions have corresponding consequences. Still others find no compelling evidence for any direct, external spiritual repercussions for either good or bad behavior. Despite these variations in beliefs, all Unitarian Universalists share a deep obligation to act with justice and compassion in accordance with Unitarian Universalist values.
Morality: Many people ask how we can have religious morals without agreeing on whether heaven, hell, judgment, sin, and damnation exist. Most Unitarian Universalists would probably tell you that their own moral code has little to do with their ideas of the afterlife, and more to do with their actions in this life. Unitarian Universalist morality is grounded in our religious principles and the sources of our faith, as well as in each individual's beliefs and experiences.
What we don't believe: Though Unitarian Universalism doesn't tell its members what to believe, not all beliefs are acceptable within our faith. Beliefs that are hateful or go against our principles wouldn't fit within Unitarian Universalism. As Marshall Hawkins writes:
"One could not be considered a Unitarian Universalist and believe that subscription to specific doctrines or creeds are necessary for access to God or spirituality or membership in our congregations. Unitarian Universalists could not believe that God favors any group of people based on any inherent qualities, such as skin color, gender, sexual orientation, physical ability, etc.—or that any group of people is more worthy of access to opportunities than any other as a result of these qualities. We don't believe that autocratic, undemocratic or overly hierarchical systems are appropriate methods of organizing our congregations or the larger society. We don't believe that humanity has the right or moral authority to exploit the environment or other life forms with whom we share this planet."
I noticed that too.
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