Lift Every Voice and SingLift every voice and singTill earth and heaven ringRing with the harmonies of LibertyLet our rejoicing riseHigh as the list'ning skies, let it resound loud as the rolling seaSing a song full of faith that the dark past has tought usSing a song full of the hope that the present has brought usFacing the rising sun of our new day begunLet us march on till victory is wonStony the road we trodBitter the chast'ning rodFelt in the day that hope unborn had diedYet with a steady beatHave not our weary feetCome to the place on which our fathers sighedWe have come over a way that with tears has been wateredWe have come, treading our path through the blood of the slaughteredOut from the gloomy past, till now we stand at lastWhere the white gleam of our star is castGod of our weary yearsGod of our silent tearsThou who has brought us thus far on the wayThou who has by thy mightLed us into the lightKeep us forever in the path, we prayLest our feet stray from the places, our God, where we met theeLest our hearts, drunk with the wine of the world, we forget theeShadowed beneath the handMay we forever standTrue to our GodTrue to our native land
As part of a celebration of Abraham Lincoln’s birthday on February 12, 1900, “Lift Every Voice and Sing” was first publicly performed by 500 school children at the Stanton School in Jacksonville, Florida. The school principal, James Weldon Johnson, wrote the words and Johnson’s broth3r Rosamond set them to music. The children continued to sing the song, popularizing it for generations to come.Later, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People(NAACP) adopted the song as the Black National Anthem.In calling for earth and heaven to “ring with the harmonies of Liberty,” thelyrics spoke out subtly against racism and Jim Crow laws—and especially the huge number of lynching’s accompanying the rise of the Klan at the turn of the century.By the 1920s, copies of “Lift Every Voice and Sing” could be found in Black churches across the country, often pasted into the hymnals. Thewords to the poem/song and another poem by Johnson can be read on theCivil Rights Movement Veterans website.Learn about the history of “Lift Every Voice and Sing” in(UNC Press, 2018) by Imani Perry.
Exposing the underbelly of Armstrongism in all of its wacky glory! Nothing you read here is made up. What you read here is the up to date face of Herbert W Armstrong's legacy. It's the gritty and dirty behind the scenes look at Armstrongism as you have never seen it before! With all the new crazy self-appointed Chief Overseers, Apostles, Prophets, Pharisees, legalists, and outright liars leading various Churches of God today, it is important to hold these agents of deception accountable.
Herbert Armstrong's Tangled Web of Corrupt Leaders
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This makes me wonder how many COG services mentioned Dr. King this weekend. Somehow, I doubt many did.
ReplyDeleteI'm also reminded of the MLK Day sermon Joseph Tkach Sr. gave in Pasadena in the late 80s. The video was sent to all churches, in which he said: "There should be no prejudism in God's church."
He said it twice, and they didn't edit it out of the video - even though no such word exists. Before "cringeworthy" was a word, that was.
... how many COG services mentioned Dr. King this weekend.
ReplyDeleteAfro-Americans are the Canaanites. They should have been exterminated when they occupied Palestine back in the days of Joshua. They are supposed to be enslaved. Genesis said so. Our great and bold White American forefathers were right to enslave them. Our forefathers were just carrying out the will of God. Liberals want us to feel ashamed but we were being righteous servants of God. God hates it when good is called evil and evil is called good. God's church believes in segregation. And besides, they and the other Gentiles will always be Israel's servants.
Not. (At least for me.)
I've been watching African American themed movies this evening to get into the spirit for tomorrow. What an awesome national treasure our African American citizens have given us!
ReplyDeleteBB
NEO
ReplyDeleteYet in 1977 Herman Hoeh sermoned at the black (by law) South African Feast site, starting "Why are WE gentiles here?
As published in the Worldwide News (or whatever it was called at the time.
nck
Many blacks believe that they are Israel and Jesus was black. Though there's no way of proving this, I have no problem with the possibility. Does it really matter whether white Europeans are Israel or if Africans are Israel or if neither are Israel? It doesn't to me, neither case can be proven nor disproven. Who cares!
ReplyDeleteHave a great Martin Luther King day!
I have 1% sub-Saharan blood in me, my great, great, great, great (not sure exactly how far back) grandfather was a slave who fought in the Revolutionary war, listed as mulatto in the records.
km
NCK:
ReplyDeleteSome nuances. Hoeh identified West African Blacks as Canaanites. And West Africa, it was thought, was where most of the Afro-Americans came from. Hence, the parallel between Ancient Israel/Canaanite Minority and Modern USA/Afro-American Minority. A warm fuzzy for all the BI fans.
I found a webpage that carries Hoeh's article entitled "The Origin of the Nations!". The webpage makes available the original PDF of the article and also a transcribed HTML text block. In the original article Hoeh wrote the following in the topical section on Canaanites (this is a nice Hoehvian transfer of identity for all the Southern Armstrongists):
From North Africa the dark-skinned Canaanites migrated to West Africa and are called
"Negroes" today."
But in the HTML text block, someone edited in the following statement in the same topical section in reference to enslavement:
"Many have quoted this in direct reference to the Negro. As brothers of Canaan, the Negroes have shared the same position in life, but Negroes are not Canaanites."
I don't know who this "editor" was and what the precise motivation was. But the HTML text block is not the same as Hoeh's original article.
In any case, the Canaanites were not just Gentiles but were held to be specially cursed in Genesis. Hoeh would not have seen the South African Blacks as Canaanites. He might have felt less averse to including himself as a Gentile with the South African Blacks for this reason.
NCK - Addendum
ReplyDeleteI should add, the modern day Canaanites are the Lebanese as determined in the research of Dr. Spencer Wells (a video produced by the National Geographic Society is on YouTube). The ancient Canaanites were haplogroup J like their cousins, the Israelites, and Black Africans almost entirely fall into the hapogroup E range. I am not sure how the Genesis prophecy of being enslaved turned out in history. I don't think the Phoenicians were ever much enslaved.
If what you say is correct then where Hoeh went wrong is that the Phoenicians and their brothers the Carthaginians both had colonies/trading posts in the North and West of Africa.
ReplyDeleteOf course completely different haplos then the native peoples. The Phoenicians were traders.
I travelled the entirer Phoenician sphere and saw settlements in Morocco. This year I went to see Carthage. Not many black men there are found, lots of olive.
nck