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Milmon F. Harrison. Righteous
Riches: The Word of Faith Movement in Contemporary African American Religion.
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005.
Paperback 192 pp. $19.95
Milmon F.
Harrison’s book “Righteous Riches,”
expands the study of African-American religion through his exploration of the
emergent popular religious movement: Word of Faith. At publication, Harrison’s
work was the first treatment of Word of Faith as a legitimate and distinct
religious group, despite the movement’s high visibility and recent scholarly
interest in televangelism and megachurches. Though Harrison locates Word of
Faith in the historical context of New Thought, evangelicalism, and
neo-Pentecostalism, he argues that Word of Faith adherents are distinct in
their dedication to a contractual reading of Scripture that affords believers
the ability to positively confess their divine right to wealth, health, and
prosperity. Besides beginning the conversation on Word of Faith, Harrison makes
three important contributions in Righteous
Riches. First, Harrison works against believers who claim that Word of
Faith is a unique and unparalleled religious expression by placing the movement
in a religious lineage. Second, Harrison moves away from heavy-handed
criticisms of Word of Faith by closely studying the “lived religion” of three
current and former members while paying attention to the ways they negotiate/d
membership in Faith Christian Center, a Word of Faith church. Finally, Harrison
offers leads for exploring the attraction between Word of Faith beliefs and its
adherents. Ultimately, while Righteous
Riches successfully argues that Word of Faith does not represent a new
religious innovation, Harrison’s evaluation of the racial dynamics in the Word
of Faith movement are unsatisfying. As a starting point, Righteous Riches is an important foray into gaining a fuller
appreciation of historical, technological, economic, and international contexts
in which Word of Faith becomes a useful foil for examining the relationship
between media, race, and religion.
Looking into the
study of megachurches and seekers and finding nothing but white middle class
suburbanites, Milmon Harrison believes that studying an urban African-American
church will offer fresh insight. While Harrison is not explicit about the
historiographical position of his text as a part of a dialogue on the nature of
“the black church,” he is in
conversation with figures like Carter G. Woodson, W.E.B. Du Bois, and
Orishatukeh Faduma who sought to forward “the black church” into social empowerment
and progressive reforms. These individuals saw the primary function and value
of black religious life in its social utility. In contrast, Harrison’s text
adopts a model of reform and empowerment invested in the radical individualism
espoused by Word of Faith, emphasizing the validity of individual religious
experience and feeling over corporate social reform. However, Harrisons shift
in understanding the location of instrumental value in African American
religion, does not leave him far from the readings of Du Bois, Woodson, and
Faduma. In the chapter “Prosperity in African American Religion” Harrison
argues that the fundamental character of African American churches lies in
their ability to attend to the physical and material conditions of life, an
assertion that continues to locate the most fruitful analysis of African
American religion in its instrumental value.
Working against
models that analyze African American churches in terms of systemic oppression,
immigration trends, employment, and social pressures intended to historicize
and explain black religiosity, Righteous
Riches focuses on the experience of individuals, personal empowerment, and
self-reporting. Harrison combats readings of Word of Faith as a consumer driven
religion by giving voices to the claims of the “everyday theologians,” whose
un-interpreted accounts line the pages. In doing so, Harrison overemphasizes
the claims of believers and the primacy of theology, without locating believers
perspectives in their interesting and important economic, racial, and
historical contexts. While it is compelling to hear the accounts of three Word
of Faith believers, Righteous Riches
does not offer a rich context for understanding the religious claims beyond
their face value. This results in a text that relies heavily on quotations from
believers with only occasional summary and synthesis of obvious themes such as
the importance of the Word, the characteristic dress of ministers, and pressure
to participate in small groups.
Harrison’s
analysis of Word of Faith is not just about filling a gap in scholarship. As a
former participant in the Word of Faith community he writes about Harrison is
invested in offering legitimacy and a balanced perspective to a movement with
no shortage of detractors. Opponents of Word of Faith claim that the movement
is corrupt, cultish, and exploitative, its members ignorant, brainwashed and
gullible. In the midst of this turmoil,
Harrison works hard to validate the worldviews of believers to render them
religiously legitimate, coherent, and non-controversial. For example, while
Harrison correctly credits New Thought and neo-Pentecostalism as influences on
Word of Faith, he fails to consider factors in the formation of these beliefs,
or non-religious influences on Word of Faith.
Despite an extended discussion of Father Divine as a predecessor of Word
of Faith, Harrison fails to mention the shared New Thought and Pentecostal
origins, or the correspondence between Father Divine’s emphasis on proper
speech and his divinity with Word of Faith ideas of positive confession and the
claim that all true believers are “little gods.” Indeed, Harrison never
discusses the Word of Faith “little god” thesis, one of the most controversial
beliefs of many of the most popular ministers. While bringing this fact into
the conversation would invalidate the movement for some readers, historians
strive to locate people and events in their fullest context. Without
appreciating the relationship between Father Divine, New Thought, and Word of
Faith we cannot understand them.
A primary
curiosity of Harrison’s work is the tension in his focus on Word of Faith as a
movement illustrative of African-American religiosity and his open
acknowledgement that a large number of believers are white and Latino. Harrison’s
desire to explore racial differences in religious meaning between blacks and
whites gets lost in a book that claims to consider only one population within
Word of Faith. Despite Harrison’s concerns about providing a corrective to the
focus on white megachurches and “seeker” churches, he offers little analyses
that convince the reader of differences in the messages, reception, or
character of African-American Word of Faith believers.[1]
Ironically, despite setting out to understand African-American religion, only
one of Harrison’s three main interviewees was an African-American—the other two
were Ukrainian and Jewish. Furthermore, there were no racial comparisons made
between the three main informants. Indeed, after reading the book I was
convinced that social class—Harrison describes Word of Faith as a “poor
people’s movement”—played a more critical role than race in the movement’s
appeal.[2]
To this reader, Harrison’s passing reference to the correspondence between
Reaganomics, television, and the burgeoning of Word of Faith in his conclusion
offered a powerful opportunity to ground the movement in history.[3]
Instead, Harrison repeatedly appeals to a closed system of black religious
movements, drawing parallels between the material focus of Word of Faith and
Sweet Daddy Grace, Father Divine’s Peace Mission, and Reverend Ike to prove
that African-Americans have a history of material and spiritual closeness.[4]
In doing so, Harrison locates Word of Faith on a natural religious trajectory
from survival, to better living, to prosperity, the logical conclusion of a
religious trend.[5]
In his conclusion,
Harrison returns to the enduring question of meaning in Word of Faith. He
posits that Word of Faith beliefs allow adherents to individually assert
control over their lives, offer a religious explanation for transition into a
new economic class, and have power over the system of capitalism that prevents
them from achieving wealth. At bottom, Word of Faith allows believers to make
sense of socioeconomic mobility, spiritually affirm capitalism, and uphold
American consumer culture.[6]
While the appeal of Word of Faith to individuals dealing with the anxiety of
social mobility is compelling, Harrison’s thesis that African-Americans are
attracted to prosperity-based movements because of the consistent collapsing of
the material and spiritual, at best, needs additional proof. While it may be
the case that African-Americans are drawn to Word of Faith for reasons
circumscribed by race, for example the effect of race on economic status,
Harrison’s argument leads to the problematic conclusion that other races and
ethnicities experience distance between their religions and their everyday
needs and wants. Putting aside the difficulty of such a claim, Harrison offers
no alternative explanation for understanding the mass interracial appeal of
Word of Faith. While understanding the appeal of Word of Faith to African
Americans is interesting, the role of racial interaction and difference in
predominantly black churches led by white pastors, a comparative consideration
of racial dynamics within a church, or a consideration of historical precedents
outside of African-American religion would likely result in better data for
understanding the way that race shapes religious experience.[7]
By studying a church that was predominantly African-American without
systematically and comparatively exploring race as a factor in the reception of
the message, Harrison missed an important opportunity to understand the extent
to which African-American religious life remains “peculiar.”
While Harrison did
not provide a satisfactory analysis of the questions of race, and
multi-racialism, Righteous Riches
provides a starting point for understanding even more about the relationship
between American consumerism, media, and religious belief. Throughout Righteous Riches, Harrison gestures
towards the importance of television to the spread and maintenance of Word of
Faith, noting the inextricable ties between religious broadcasting and Word of
Faith preachers (T.D. Jakes, Benny Hinn, Paul Crouch, Creflo Dolar). Indeed,
Harrison notes that the aesthetic sensibility of Word of Faith churches are
shaped by the colors, style, and presentation of televised Word of Faith
programs. Perhaps, if Word of Faith beliefs represent something different on
the religious landscape those differences might not be found in the idea of
positive thinking, claims to offer material benefits to believers, or the
appeal of the movement to the disenfranchised. Instead, the integral role of
media in shaping theology, building visual cultures, targeting and attracting
believers, creating racial and interracial identities, and legitimizing
religious claims may indicate a rich field of exploration.
[1] Harrison, Righteous Riches, 16. [2] Of course,
no consideration of class can leave out the way that race operates to
systematically disenfranchise people of color thereby making class an issue
tied closely to race. Ibid., 148. [3] Ibid.,150.
[4 Riches,135.
[5] Ibid.,134 [6] Riches, 159. [7] Ibid., 14.
Dianne M. Stewart.Three Eyes for the
Journey: African Dimensions of the Jamaican Religious Experience
Oxford University Press, 2005.
xxi + 332 pp. $74, cloth;
$24.95, paper.
Stephen Dove, University of Texas
at Austin
Although
Liberation Theology defines itself in terms of representing marginalized
populations, especially in Latin America and the Caribbean, this theological
movement has almost entirely confined itself to expression through Christian
terminology, symbols, and identity. In
turn, Liberation Theology has inadvertently marginalized many of the region’s
other religious traditions that represent communities at the fringes of society
by excluding them from the theological conversation of liberation. In Three
Eyes for the Journey, Dianne M. Stewart seeks to open the door of
Liberation Theology to Caribbean religious traditions that derive much, and at
times all, of their identity from outside of Christianity. By providing an in-depth recasting of the roots
of African-derived religions in Jamaica, Stewart demonstrates how these
religious expressions offer their own contributions to theological discourse in
general and to a theology of liberation in particular. The author rightly acknowledges that this work
can only serve as a stepping-stone in the larger project of developing in-depth
theological analysis of African-derived religions. However, Three Eyes for the
Journey offers a significant first step in that direction by convincingly
demonstrating that many religious traditions in Jamaica that are often
interpreted as primarily Christian but with syncretistic elements may be better
defined as African-derived religions at their core with certain Christian
elements attached to them to increase social respectability. As such, Stewart uses historical evidence to
establish a new set of theological categories that acknowledge the use of
African thought and practice by Caribbean religions to provide answers in the
face of slavery, emancipation, racism, and poverty in the region.
Stewart organizes
her work around five concepts she finds common to African-derived religions in
Jamaica: Libation, Incantation, Offering, Visitation, and Communion, each
representing a different stage in the “genealogy” of African-derived religions
in Jamaica. In her first chapter,
“Libation,” Stewart offers a new perspective on Black religious expressions in
Jamaica during the slave period, paying particular attention to African strains
of practice and theology that migrated to the colony. Stewart is especially interested in recasting the practices of
Myal and Obeah as related and fully-formed religious systems rather than as
antithetical good and bad forms of African magic. The second chapter, “Incantation,” evaluates the attitudes of
Europeans toward Black religion on the island, especially the political and
missionary instillation of anti-African views in the lives of Jamaicans and
their institutions. Stewart maintains
that the transferring of this negative view of all things African to Blacks by
Whites resulted in both the repression and the masking of African religious
identity in post-emancipation Jamaican religion. In her third chapter, “Offering,” Steward applies the arguments
developed earlier in the work to the historical and contemporary Jamaican
religious traditions of Native Baptists, Revival Zionists, and
Rastafarians. In this discussion, she
demonstrates how each of these religions makes use of African-derived theology
and how each either embraces or disguises that connection. The fourth chapter, “Visitation,” begins the
work of exploring the role of African religious legacies in the ongoing work of
theological development, especially in terms of liberation. Through discussions of reappropriated
symbols and particular attention to how Kumina religion can inform womanist and
feminist theology, Stewart demonstrates the untapped perspectives offered by
African-derived religion. Following
this exploration, Stewart uses her final chapter, “Communion,” to invite a
broader community of scholars to take seriously the contributions that
African-derived religions can make to theological discussions precisely because
they are African-derived.
The value and
strength of Three Eyes for the Journey
lies primarily in Stewart’s large-scale reinterpretation of religious traditions
native to Jamaica. Stewart provides
thought-provoking evidence that these religious traditions are not simply
“Black cultic expressions of Christianity,” but in fact, owe much more to
African religions than they do to European Christian orthodoxy. Thus, rather than understanding Black
Caribbean religions as syncretistic Christianity, Stewart makes the opposite
claim that they are primarily African religions with minor elements adapted
from Christianity. This thesis opens a
door to a Black theology that moves beyond Black Christianity, a method of
investigation that can easily be applied beyond Jamaica and beyond even the
Caribbean. In order to accomplish this
dramatic shift in describing Jamaican religion, Stewart demonstrates
proficiency with a wide variety of Jamaican sources ranging from colonial
missionary journals to contemporary accounts by active practitioners.
Unlike her
strength in the realm of Jamaican studies, however, Stewart uses few primary
sources from Africa and relies heavily on generalizations from secondary
accounts to make links between African and Jamaican practices. Stewart makes it clear that African and
Jamaican religious experiences are only related and not identical, but her
thesis would benefit from more research into concrete and symbolic connections
between the two. Stewart’s deep
knowledge of Jamaica and wide survey of the island’s religious history and
practice also causes her to make use of a number of terms that receive little
definition in the work itself. The lack
of such definitions renders the book much more useful to readers established in
the field than to newcomers. Similarly,
although Stewart explores beautifully the qualitative differences between
African-derived and Christian-based religion in Jamaica, the book includes no
quantitative comparison of these movements.
While quantitative analysis is certainly not the focus of this work,
even a basic overview of Jamaican religious demography would make this work
more approachable to readers less familiar with Jamaican religion.
Ultimately, the
fresh approach and challenging interpretation of Jamaican religion offered in Three Eyes for the Journey outweighs the
few weaknesses of the work. While this
book is aimed primarily at scholars already familiar with Jamaican religion,
Stewart’s challenge to take more seriously the African roots of Black Caribbean
religions will be valuable to any reader concerned with theologies of
liberation or with Black religious history anywhere in the Western hemisphere. Stewart has surely opened a new chapter in
the worthwhile, and not easily resolved, debate about the extent to which
African religions impacted, and continue to impact, Black religion in the
Americas.
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