The
Audacity to Hope
By Jeffrey Broadnax
I hadn’t yet been born when Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. pricked
the conscience of the nation with the audacity to hope that America would live
out the true meaning of its creed that “all men are created equal.”
Less than
three weeks after I entered the world, President Lyndon Johnson signed the
Voting Rights Act of 1965. With the stroke of a pen, he granted fair and equal
access for people of color to exercise their right to vote. This mandated full
payment of the check known as the Fifteenth Amendment and an end to a century of
justice denied.
In April
1968, a few months before my third birthday, a single gunshot echoed on a
Memphis balcony, accentuating a seismic paradigm shift that had reverberated
through the conscience and culture of American society. The shot may have
silenced the dreamer, but the seeds of Dr. King’s God-inspired vision of
imminent entry into the “promised land” had already been planted.
|
I burst with
pride to realize that now for young blacks “President of the United States” is
no longer a pipe-dream answer to the question, “What do you want to be when you
grow up?” |
I am amazed
that 40 years after people with the audacity to believe things could change bore
signs declaring “I Am a Man,” they can now bear signs declaring “Change We Can
Believe In” as they elect the first black President of the United States of
America.
As a
43-year-old African American male, I am humbled by the sweat, tears and blood of
those whose impassioned struggle enabled my children and me to live in a nation
where we are judged primarily by the content of our character. I burst with
pride to realize that now for young blacks “President of the United States” is
no longer a pipe-dream answer to the question, “What do you want to be when you
grow up?”
How blessed I have been to grow
up able to drink from any water fountain, gain any level of education, ride any
bus, buy any house, speak to any person and be an advocate for any cause within
my sphere of reference. My greatest joy, however, is knowing that God granted me
the ability not only to taste the fruit of the promised land called “equality,”
but he equipped me, as a pastor, to be a tour guide and an ambassador of his
love, justice and peace.
As I watch
President Obama be sworn in, I feel my heart, my history, my hopes and my
cultural passport indelibly stamped with the term “American.” At last the weave
of history seems to be blending black, brown, yellow, red, white and blue into
one beautiful tapestry of hope.
The man who had the audacity to
hope that a majority of Americans would embrace his vision and vote for him
despite color, race, name or party affiliation put his hand on the Bible with
his wife and two daughters by his side and swore to lead this nation into its
God-ordained future.
January 20,
2009, marked a new beginning. In the shadow of such luminaries as George
Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and Abraham Lincoln, President Barack Obama’s
swearing in synthesized a segregated American past, an integrated American
present and a united American future.
I pray that
the novelty of his being the first African-American President will be eclipsed
by the content of his character. I pray his vision, his leadership, and his
convictions will be seen through his diverse upbringing and not simply the color
of his skin.
I am hopeful about President
Obama and excited for our generation and the generations to follow. As I reflect
on 1968 and Dr. King’s “I have seen the Promised Land” speech, it thrills me
that one more obstacle to equality for African Americans has been hurdled.
I find
myself wondering how things must have changed for the Israelites when after 40
long years of wandering in the wilderness on their way to the Promised Land they
finally entered it. Forty years of experience had to be converted to wisdom and
action as they were no longer mere travelers, but vested inhabitants and
stewards of a great responsibility.
I think
that today, like Israel, we must embrace and remember our long journey even as
we enter the new land with all the resolve and courage we can muster. There are
giants in the land, but in joy and determination we must trust God and
persevere.
I believe America should feel
empowered by President Obama’s election. We have a fresh opportunity to further
unite these United States of America, and if we will, we can also have the
audacity to believe that God has granted ours and future generations the
strength to share, at home and abroad, true liberty and justice for all.
CO
Jeff Broadnax
is a pastor of several congregations in the New York area.
Copyright 2009

Photos: Wikimedia |