Loving your Black neighbor as yourself A guide to closing the space between us

Chanté Griffin

Book - 2024

"An inspiring and actionable guide to fight racial injustice by fulfilling Jesus's call to love our neighbors-starting with our Black Neighbors: our Black colleagues at work, the Black parents at the PTA meeting, the new Black family at church"--

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2nd Floor New Shelf 261.8/Griffin (NEW SHELF) Checked In
Subjects
Published
Colorado Springs : WaterBrook [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Chanté Griffin (author)
Physical Description
xx, 229 pages ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780593445594
  • Before You Begin
  • Part 1. Love
  • Love Is …
  • 1. Love Yourself
  • 2. Robbed of Love
  • 3. Love Withheld
  • 4. Love Poured Out
  • Part 2. Loving Your Black Neighbor
  • Love + Wokeness
  • 5. Loving Through Cultural Lenses
  • 6. The Black Love Lens: Intimacy in Neighborhoods
  • 7. The Black Love Lens: Intimacy in the Church
  • 8. The Black Love Lens: Honor
  • 9. The Black Love Lens: Stand Up
  • 10. The Black Love Lens: God's-Gifts
  • 11. The Black Love Lens: God's-Gifts from Partners-in-Love
  • 12. The Black Love Lens: The Spirit of Love
  • Part 3. Go and Do Likewise
  • "Lift Every Voice and Sing"
  • 13. Transforming the Road
  • 14. "Stony the Road We Trod"
  • On Chanté's Shelf
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
Review by Booklist Review

Author, artist, and advocate Griffin was born a church baby whose world was "completely Black" until age ten, when she moved to a new neighborhood that didn't see, and didn't love, Black people. In this first solo book, she recounts experiencing racism and receiving comments that "sowed death" in her young life. Griffin learned, and now relates to others, how racism always produces pain and death in those targeted and in those who harbor it. She powerfully unpacks the parable of the Good Samaritan, and paints a stark picture of a Black neighbor as the proverbial man, beaten and robbed, lying on the roadside as others pass by. Griffin extends the parable to illustrate how people may even blame the beaten man. She is generous, wise, and patient with explanations and in providing prompts for readers to take time to reflect with "heart checks" and "prayer pauses." Griffin's book is a valuable guide full of hope and practical steps, "a love tome meant to love and honor the Black community."

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

White Christians can harness their faith to better support the Black community in church, at work, and beyond, according to the wise and broad-minded debut from Griffin, a contributing writer for the Washington Post. Advising that a strong spiritual grounding is "the foundation from which we love ourselves and our neighbors," Griffin encourages readers to draw on God's grace and forgiveness to set aside their pride and honestly assess whether they've been guilty of racism or racist microaggressions. After doing so, readers can begin to "close the space between you, God and your Black Neighbor." Foregrounding "racial humility," or the willingness to admit fault and learn from others, Griffin suggests such concrete steps as consuming Black news publications and other media sources, living in a racially diverse neighborhood to offset redlining and unequal resource distribution, and making one's church more hospitable to Black congregants. Interweaving biblical analysis, prayer, and step-by-step guidance, Griffin outlines a clear vision for replacing performative allyship with a lifelong engagement on matters of racial justice. The result is an actionable resource for believers looking to build a more equitable world, starting from within. (June)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Chapter 1 Love Yourself Create in me a clean heart, O God. Renew a loyal spirit within me. --Psalm 51:10, NLT I ran into walls as a toddler. And into sliding glass doors. Turns out I needed glasses, like my father, his mother, and her siblings. And not the cute, stylish kind you can buy from a hip brand like Warby Parker. Imagine a two-year-old with a small body, a big head, and lenses so thick her eyes doubled in size! True to my four-eyed persona, I was kind of a nerd in school. I loved to get good grades on tests, assignments, and pop quizzes--plus, I was doing all the extra credit because the only thing better than an A is an A+. Case in point: When I was around ten or eleven, I was determined to ace the eye exam at the optometrist's office, even though I have astigmatism, and let's not forget--I used to run into walls. When I arrived at the eye doctor's office that afternoon for my annual exam, I started to memorize the eye chart: "D, C, T, P . . ." "What are you doing?" my mom asked as she caught me reciting the letters. My mouth remained silent, but my face clearly communicated that she had caught me. "Don't do that," she warned. "The doctor needs to know what you can and can't see so he can give you the right lenses to see clearly." When dealing with difficult racial issues--be it racism, unconscious bias, the sin of partiality, racial prejudice, microaggressions, or anything else--everybody wants to ace their eye exam. No, I didn't say anything racist! you declare. No, I didn't do that racist thing! you insist. And no, I'm definitely not racist! you protest. It's easy to hold shame for not seeing your Black Neighbor clearly. It's also easy to avoid admitting there's a deficiency or to cover up the deficiencies in your vision by reciting "D, C, T, P . . ." But when someone calls you out for saying or doing something racist, you can choose how to respond: Do you allow fear, pride, and shame to wrap themselves around you like a protective blanket, refusing to confess, furthering the pain you've caused? Or do you love yourself, trample shame under your feet, and eagerly undergo an eye exam so you can receive new lenses? Love Yourself Fully When we were children, our parents or guardians regularly took us to the doctor and dentist to make sure our bodies were functioning well. They did this because they loved us and they knew we wouldn't go on our own. Think about it--how many eight-year-olds are like, "Mom, you know what I want for my birthday? A trip to the dentist!" But today as adults, we take ourselves to the doctor, the dentist, the optometrist, the cardiologist, and more. We take ourselves to appointments because we want to be well. We also recognize that when we aren't well, it affects us and everyone around us. For instance, if we don't realize that we need new lenses to see clearly, we will go around running into walls and people. If we stay in denial about the fact that we need lenses, we will continue running into things, hurting ourselves and others. Loving ourselves doesn't stop at doctor visits, though. In contemporary American culture, we commonly define loving yourself as taking good care of your physical and emotional health by eating well, exercising, carving out "me time," visiting a therapist, and maybe retreating to the spa with your friends or to the man cave with your buddies. Yes, loving yourself can include all of this, but loving yourself also means tending to your spiritual and relational health just as you would your physical and emotional health. Loving yourself requires a multidimensional, holistic love. The concept of multidimensional love isn't new. In Deuteronomy 6, when God's commandments were given to the Israelites, he said to love him multidimensionally, "with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength." In fact, loving God multidimensionally is so important that Jesus called it out again. In Luke, a religion expert attempted to test Jesus on the law, asking Jesus what he must do to live with God forever. Jesus agreed with the expert's answer to the question, including the addition of loving one's neighbors: " 'Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your mind'; and, 'Love your neighbor as yourself.' " God's love for us, and our love for God, is the foundation from which we love ourselves and our neighbors. Loving ourselves multidimensionally, in partnership with the Spirit of Love, is one of the truest ways we love ourselves. If you love yourself, then you are willing to look at the parts of yourself that need a doctor's tender, loving care. You are willing to receive the wellness package the Spirit of Love has for you, which includes being honest with yourself, God, and your Black Neighbor about the full condition of your heart. Hearts have eyes--if not literally, then definitely metaphorically, according to Paul Baloche, who penned the popular worship song "Open the Eyes of My Heart." Our hearts hold our innermost beliefs, and they reveal how we see and resultantly treat our Black Neighbors. If we allow our hearts to be examined, they reveal how much (or little) love we have for those neighbors and the ways our love needs to be purified. Our hearts house our fears, our insecurities, our pride, and the parts of us we don't wanna acknowledge. In fact, we don't always know what's in our hearts until someone shows us the results of our eye exam. Beloved, love yourself by being honest about any ways you haven't viewed your Black Neighbor properly. Allow yourself to be wrapped in God's forgiveness and love. When you seize the opportunity to confront the sin of racism as an opportunity to love yourself, then despite how horrible getting called out may feel, you will embrace it as a gift from God. A gift that can close the space between you, God, and your Black Neighbor. Prayer Pause Confronting any racism in your heart is no easy task. You may think, Chanté, I don't need to do this--I'm fine! Or your physical heart may be racing a little because you're afraid of what you may see. Either way, I encourage you to be open to what the Spirit of Love may show you. Whatever it is, it will be good for you and your Black Neighbor. Before we move forward, let's pray for guidance and support from the Spirit of Love. First notice the posture of your body: Are you tense? Holding your breath? Take a deep breath, in and out, allowing any tension to leave your body. Then pray this breath prayer. (Breath prayers promote calm and can help your physical body connect with your spirit. As you inhale and exhale, pray the words silently.) Breathe in: Spirit of Love, talking about racism is hard. Breathe out: Remove any fear or shame I may have. Breathe in: Give me courage for an eye exam. Breathe out: Give me grace to love myself anew. Love Yourself: Recognize That Your Heart Could House Racism In 1906, a Black preacher named William J. Seymour led the Azusa Street Revival in California. Blacks, whites, and their Chinese, Mexican, and other neighbors worshipped God together freely during the event. Bishop Ithiel Clemmons, a historian for the Church of God in Christ, wrote, "The interrelatedness of holiness, spiritual encounter, and prophetic Christian social consciousness attracted people of all races to the Azusa Street revival. It was an egalitarian, ecumenical, interracial, interclass revival that for about three years defied the prevailing patterns of American life." A white preacher, G. B. Cashwell, excitedly traveled six days from Dunn, North Carolina, to Los Angeles to experience the Holy Spirit at Azusa Street and to receive the supernatural gift of speaking in tongues. But when he arrived, Minister Cashwell felt uncomfortable during the multiracial worship service. Although he wanted to receive this new spiritual gift, he didn't want a Black leader to lay hands on him so he could receive it. He turned to prayer to address the discomfort he felt. As he prayed, the Spirit of Love revealed the racism in his heart that was preventing him from receiving more of God's love and power. He had to choose: Would he submit to God, or would he submit to racism? Would he submit to being under the spiritual leadership and authority of the Black leaders at Azusa Street? Would he allow his Black Neighbors to come close physically and spiritually? Ultimately, Minister Cashwell submitted to the Spirit of Love, and in turn, the Spirit of Love gave him new heart lenses. Society's dividing wall--which insisted he and his Black Neighbors remain separate and maintained he was in some way superior--fell in his heart. As Pastor Seymour laid hands on him, Minister Cashwell humbly received a rich spiritual gift through his Black Neighbor and spoke in tongues. Excerpted from Loving Your Black Neighbor As Yourself: A Guide to Closing the Space Between Us by Chanté Griffin All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.