Members of the First African Methodist Episcopal Church's dance troupe perform during a service to celebrate President-elect Barack Obama in Los Angeles. (AP Photo by Ric Francis)
by Mark Silva
In an election campaign that cast a harsh spotlight on the most "incendiary'' words of President-elect Barack Obama's longtime and former pastor, the first Sunday after the election of the first African-American president brought another focus to the pulpits of black churches from coast to coast.
"At Apostolic Church of God on Chicago's South Side, less than two miles from Obama's home, jubilant Sunday services were peppered with references to the election and calls to be grateful for his victory,'' the Associated Press reports in a survey of Sunday singings of praise for a historic election.
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"We thank the Lord for this second Sunday (in November) after the first Tuesday," Apostolic's Dr. Byron Brazier said to resounding applause and cheers from the mostly black congregation. "This is a wonderful time to be alive."
Obama, who parted ways with the Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago and its former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, after Wright's divisive words from the pulpit forced the presidential candidate to sever ties with a longtime mentor, had spoken at Apostolic on Father's Day, in his first address to a congregation after leaving Trinity.
See what other pastors across the country had to say to today on this, the first Sunday since a landmark election:
By ALLEN G. BREED
AP National Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -- Jubilation, pride and relief permeated pews and pulpits at predominantly black churches across the country on the first Sunday after Barack Obama's election, with congregrants blowing horns, waving American flags and raising their hands to the heavens.
"God has vindicated the black folk," the Rev. Shirley Caesar-Williams said as a member of her Raleigh congregation, Mount Calvary Word of Faith Church, brandished a flag and another marched among the pews blowing a ram's horn.
"Too long we've been at the bottom of the totem pole, but he has vindicated us, hallelujah," the Grammy-winning gospel singer cried. "I don't know about you, but I don't have nothing to put my head down for, praise God. Because when I look toward Washington, D.C., we got a new family coming in. We got a new family coming in. And you know what? They look like us. Amen, amen. They look like us."
In the historically black New York City neighborhood of Harlem, Obama buttons and T-shirts were as prevalent in the pews as colorful plumed hats, while in a church in the former capital of the Confederacy, a young girl handled a newspaper with a photo of Obama and the headline, "Mr. President."
At Los Angeles' oldest black church, ushers circulated through the aisles with boxes of tissues as men and women, young and old, wept openly and unabashedly at the fall of the nation's last great racial barrier.
And on the day that the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. famously called "the most segregated day of the week," black and white Christian clergy members asked God to give Obama the wisdom and strength to lead the country out of what many consider a wilderness of despair and gloom.
At Hungary Road Baptist Church in a working-class suburb of Richmond, Va., the service was part celebration, part history lesson, led by a pastor who had felt the sting of the Jim Crow South. The Rev. J. Rayfield Vines Jr., pastor of the predominantly African-American congregation, paused briefly as he recalled the indignities he endured but did not bow to while growing up Suffolk, in southeastern Virginia.
"I was there when you had ride in the back of the bus," Vines said under a simple cross illuminated by eight light bulbs. "I was there when you went to the department store and you couldn't try on the clothes. I was there when they had a colored toilet and a white toilet."
The pastor said he shared his humiliations Sunday to help give those "who had not tasted the bitterness of segregation ... an idea why we all shouted."
Inside Harlem's Abyssinian Baptist Church, member Sheila Chestnut, 61, proudly wore a rhinestone Obama pin on her suit lapel.
"I am so happy," she said. "I cried so much. I never thought that in this lifetime I would live to see an African-American become president of these United States."
When the Rev. Calvin Butts invited the congregation to stand up "and give God praise for the election," several hundred churchgoers rose as one, lifted their hands and gave a sustained cheer, then chanted, "Yes we can! Yes we can!"
At Apostolic Church of God on Chicago's South Side, less than two miles from Obama's home, jubilant Sunday services were peppered with references to the election and calls to be grateful for his victory.
"We thank the Lord for this second Sunday (in November) after the first Tuesday," Dr. Byron Brazier said to resounding applause and cheers from the mostly black congregation. "This is a wonderful time to be alive."
Obama spoke at Apostolic on Father's Day in his first address to a congregation after leaving his longtime church, Trinity United Church of Christ, following inflammatory remarks there by his former longtime pastor and others.
In Los Angeles, tears flowed freely at the First AME Church during the raucous two-hour service of house-busting music and prayer. There were some white and yellow faces among the congregants, and the Rev. John J. Hunter felt the need to let them know they were not being left out.
"The smiles on our faces are not gloating looks of victory," he said. "The smiles on our faces are not the sign or any symbol that it is now our time and our chance to get even. Rather, the smiles on our faces are expressions of thanksgiving."
At a white church in Mississippi, where roughly nine in 10 whites voted for Republican John McCain, the scene was more muted.
The neighborhood around the Alta Woods United Methodist Church in Jackson has seen its demographics shift from white to black in recent decades, and most of the parishioners have moved to the suburbs. While the Rev. David W. Carroll recognized Obama's election as a "historic shift," he spent just as much time praising McCain's patriotism in defeat.
"As the crowd began to boo a little bit ... he quieted them down and said, 'Now is not my time, but I'm an American first and I will serve the president-elect,"' he said. "In a loss, he showed us still how he could win through his service."
In his Web message last week, the Rev. Gregg Matte of Houston's mostly white First Baptist Church decried a society that has turned to government as its savior. "Today," he wrote, "Hollywood is our pastor, technology is our Bible, charisma is our value and Barack Obama is our President."
But from the pulpit Sunday, Matte asked the 1,000 or so mostly white faces staring back at him to "lift up President-elect Obama" even if he wasn't their choice on Tuesday.
"Regardless of whether you voted for him or not, he's now our president come Jan. 20," he said. "So we're going to come behind him and pray for him and pray for wisdom, that God will give him wisdom and be able to really speak to his heart."
Perhaps nowhere was the weight of history more palpable Sunday than at Atlanta's Ebenezer Baptist Church, from whose pulpit King spread his message of inclusion and across from which he lies entombed.
When the Rev. Raphael G. Warnock tried to put into words what it meant for Obama to win Virginia, where the first American slaves landed nearly 400 years ago, his words were drowned out by applause and cheers from a capacity crowd whose faces captured the spectrum of the human rainbow.
"Barack Obama stood against the fierce tide of history and achieved the unimaginable," he said. "But he did not get here by himself. Give God some credit. He is the Lord."
But while he told the congregation that it was a time for celebration, he also reminded them it was a serious time.
"We still have a whole lot of work to do," he said. "You have two little girls who will grow up in the White House. Around the corner, you have two little girls who will grow up in a crack house."
Among those in attendance was the slain civil rights leader's sister, Christine King Farris. She was reminded of her brother's prescience.
"As he predicted the night before he left us, 'I may not be with you, but as a people we will reach the promised land,"' she said stoically. "That promised land was realized Tuesday. Yes, it is our promised land."
Contributing to this report: Associated Press writers Gillian Flaccus in Los Angeles, Andrew Adler in Atlanta, Karen Matthews in New York, Steve Szkotak in Richmond, Karen Hawkins in Chicago, John Porretto in Houston and Timothy R. Brown in Jackson.










Comments
Obama was running for President, not black President or African American President. He has stayed away from the racial overtones of Jackson and Wright, or he would never have been elected. Obama has always given thinks to the grandparents that raised him. Luckily, he was not shaped by the civil rights struggles of the 1960. Why is it, that the word Black must be in the acheivement of African American. You cannot measure success by a group but indivdually. Whites do not measure by groups, but stand individually. Barack Obama is the President of this free nation, and should not be referred to as the black president or the African American President, but the President of this country. Obama brings honesty to the Office of the President as an individual that stands on his own. Obama would never have been elected President, if we did not have confidence in his decisions, and race does not play a part. However, it has everything to do with policy decisions and honesty; which is a something, that we have not seen in the Bush Administration.
Posted by: M Knight | November 9, 2008 10:44 PM
For the last two decades, the Republicans have steadily purged themselves of all moderates, of anyone who did not toe the party line, of anyone who did not support the party leaders with every fiber of their being.
Under leaders like Tom DeLay and a dozen other of the top far-right powerbrokers, apostasy was ruthlessly punished. Moderates were primaried out, the religiously or socially tolerant were excoriated, the legislatively balanced were forced from their positions -- all in service to a supposed permanent ideological governance, one that valued ideological purity over all else. Over knowledge, over experience, over common sense, over the very fabric of the law -- the ideology of hard-right conservatism trumped it all. Toe the line, and you were granted jobs in the administration, or positions of leadership in Iraq, or plum committee assignments. Voice disapproval -- you were nothing. You woke up the next morning to a White House Press Secretary declaring that you were a disgruntled brat, one with emotional or mental impairments that were responsible for your pitiable desertion.
After twenty years of purging, all the Republicans have left is that hard-right extreme. They shoved everyone else out willingly: it seems hardly surprising that now, faced with the fruits of it all, they are finding that all constituencies of the nation that they sought to condemn, belittle or purge are no longer interested in supporting them now.
I have no particular interest in them learning this lesson, of course. As far as I am concerned the last thirty years have proven modern conservatism to be not just ill conceived, but paranoid, divisive, willfully incompetent, obtusely premised, and in sum utterly valueless to the nation -- a waste of political oxygen. Something to be burned at the stake, and the ashes scattered, never to be heard from again.
A few years ago, Republican strategists were crowing about a new "permanent Republican majority". As of last Tuesday night, Republicans are a regional party with a narrowly defined ideology and abysmal support among the next generations of voters.
And all it took was Republicans stinking up the place on every conceivable level, dragging the nation into botched war efforts, corruption in the Department of Justice, and the possible collapse of our entire financial system.
Posted by: DrainYou | November 9, 2008 10:46 PM
African Americans Support Obama
By Ferd Berfel
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CHICAGO - After the stunning revelation (reported yesterday in The Swamp) that one of this year's presidential candidates is in fact Black, comes this shocker-- most African Americans voted for him!
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In his Sunday Sermon, the Rev. Kirby Durwood, pastor of Chicago's First Church of the Burning Bush of God in Christ said "Can you believe it? A black President! And we voted for him."
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Difficult as that is for me to grasp, experts confirm that Barack Obama is in fact an African American, and polling data indicate that Blacks voted for him in overwhelming numbers.
Posted by: Ferd Berfel | November 10, 2008 6:19 AM
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Posted by: DrainYou | November 9, 2008 10:46 PM
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That's unadulterated bunk. If a fraction of what you wrote were true, then one would expect orthodoxy among Republican politicians. To the contrary, however, we see scads of Republicans in Congress who simply haven't a conservative bone in their body. Conservatism, especially that of the Barry Goldwater school, places great emphasis on keeping government honest, fiscally austere, transparent, and accountable. In addition, in orthodox conservatism, social issues pale in importance to maintaining a minimalist government that provides a safe environment for society to work out its own issues. Barry Goldwater, in fact, was a social Libertarian. How many Republican Senators and Congressmen adhere to these ideals? A small handful fit the bill to some degree, but most do not.
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In other words, what has happened over the last 30 years is the exact inverse of what you described. What really happened is that the political heretics have hijacked the Republican Party and have excommunicated the orthodox. Neo-cons, with their militant Wilsonian foreign policy, their corporate socialism and anti conservative fiscal policies, simply do not represent the traditional values of the Republican Party. It is precisely because of these changelings and their policies that the conservative base and most independents abandoned them at the polls. It is only because conservatives still believe in small government, responsible fiscal policy and free enterprise that they will remain a viable political force - with or without the Republican Party.
Posted by: John W. | November 10, 2008 6:08 PM