“Now to him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that worketh in us” (Ephesians 3:20 – King James Version) My genuine hope and primary purpose for the Ephesians 3:20 Faith Encouragement and Empowerment Blog is to assist all people of faith, regardless of your prism of experience, to grow spiritually toward unconditional self-acceptance and develop personally acquiring progressive integrity of belief and lifestyle. I pray you will discover your unique purpose in life. I further pray love, joy, peace, happiness and unreserved self-acceptance will be your constant companions. Practically speaking, this blog will help you see the proverbial glass in life as always half full rather than half empty. I desire you become an eternal optimist who truly believes that Almighty God can do anything that you ask or imagine.

Thursday, March 19, 2020

Fourth Personal Pathway to Healing - Painstakingly Acquiring Faith - Part V


Fourth Pathway – Painstakingly Acquiring Faith – Part V

A hard analysis of your previous life determines whether you are living the life you imagined in your youth.  Do you redirect your choices, time and priorities to actualize your heartfelt dreams and goals?  If you made a wrong turn on the road of life, take a detour that leads you back to your chosen path?  Deprivation forces a person to reflect.  I imagine the loss of power compelled Churchill to rethink its privilege and purpose.  What would he do with political power were he to regain it?  How did he lose it?  Does arrogance, fear and tunnel vision explain his defeat?  Is there an overarching purpose to his service that he uniquely would accomplish were providence to grace him with another opportunity?  These questions and any you formulate may prove helpful to you as you live through your version of a wilderness experience.

Shortly after her death and worldwide state funeral, Time published an exposé regarding Mother Teresa’s serious and lifelong doubts in her faith.  David Van Blema’s article, “Mother Teresa’s Crisis of Faith,” appeared in the 23 August 1997 edition.  To a spiritual confident, she writes, “Jesus has a special love for you.  As for you, the silence and the emptiness is so great.  I look and do not see; listen and do not hear.  The tongue moves in prayer but does not speak.”  Van Blema, perused sixty-six years of her correspondence with ecclesiastical associates.  He characterizes her private spirituality, “an arid landscape from which the deity had disappeared.”  The editor of a collection of her letters offers “for nearly the last half century of her life she felt no presence of God whatsoever ‘neither in heart or in the Eucharist.’”

These revelations undoubtedly shock average people of faith.  It is difficult to believe that a saint in the Church experienced such a lengthy period traversing “the dark night of the soul.”  With an open mind, we could learn a tremendous amount about authentic faith which includes hard questions, doubt, irony, mystery and leaven of bewilderment.  Mother Teresa’s interesting life teaches disciples to discard formulaic, simpleminded statements of faith.  Disciples are not parrots.  The walk of faith often involves contradictions wherein Almighty God appears silent and indifferent.  His failure to intervene feels humiliating.  Spiritual platitudes, however prevalent and commercially profitable and religious formulas utilizing assonance and alliteration, do not suffice to empower someone to persevere through these difficult times. 

The Bible allows for Mother Teresa’s perplexing decades of questioning God’s presence and seeking authentic communion with Him.  Ages before she lived, Jeremiah’s questions foreshadowed her questions.  He offers a fierce complaint and lament (Jeremiah 20:7-18); in fact, the prophet curses the day that he was born!  “Cursed be the day that I was born!  May the day my mother bore me not be blessed.”  This passage concludes with a pivotal question for all people of good faith.  “Why did I ever come out of the womb to see trouble and sorrow and to end my days in shame?” Sequential hurtful experiences compel that question from anyone who wrestles genuinely for pragmatically significant faith.  Notwithstanding her compelling efforts to enlighten the consciousness of disciples regarding the most vulnerable members in the human family, Mother Teresa understandably became disillusioned as her work paled in comparison with illimitable human needs.  Jeremiah’s dark questions became hers.  Elsewhere Jeremiah asks, “Why is my pain unending and my wound grievous and incurable?  You are to me like a deceptive brook, like a spring that fails.”

Whether through the lenses of Jeremiah, Churchill or Mother Teresa, disciples can navigate the treacherous terrain of emotional and existential wilderness.  Questioning does not negate faith.  Asking hard questions strengthens a disciple’s relationship with God.  However painstaking, this process of wrestling with God is a certain pathway to healing.

Faith can be intensely practical.  It is regrettable that so many believers exaggerate faith in God.  I recommend we demystify faith.  Unfortunately, leaders of the “Gospel of Health and Wealth” movement speciously speak of having “super faith.” One of these persons once said he had God’s special phone number.  With a financial gift, viewers and listeners of his programs obtain this secret information.  It is more classified than any secrets held by the seventeen intelligence agencies of the United States government. Nonetheless, in absolute contrast, Jesus says faith the size of a mustard seed can move a mountain. (Matthew 17:20) You essentially need the equivalent of less than a milligram of weight, drop of water or grain of sand to resolve any dilemma.  Simply stated, you need willingness to believe that things can be different.  Are willing to merely entertain the idea that you can surmount any challenge with God’s help.  Will you affirm, “There is a solution?”  “I will not allow any problem to define me.”  “I am victorious in all matters.”  I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.”  (Philippians 4:13) “I am more than a conqueror through Christ who gives me the victory.” (Romans 8:37) “I sought the Lord who heard my cry and delivered me from all my fears.” (Psalm 34:4)   These affirmations reflect genuine faith in God’s ability to heal.  Believing that healing is possible is necessary to obtain it.  To overcome your childhood and formative trauma, you must have faith that it is possible.  Still, the requisite faith is very practical and commonsensical.  Believing with your whole heart that continual healing will unfold.

Affirmation is a form of practical faith.  Repeatedly, forthrightly and specifically stating your wholehearted desires is a means of demonstrating faith in God’s willingness to intervene favorably in your challenges.  Affirmations arise from the oceans of a person’s heart and psyche.  Lingering in pain motivates a person to seek healing.  Each time a person articulates a desire for healing, he or she prays.  Consistent and daily periods of affirmation are powerful means of achieving healing from past pain.  The opening verses of Genesis reflects the power of the spoken word.  God speaks creation into existence. His words are the manifestation of His architectural plans for the Earth.  Before He speaks, His ideas remain silent and dormant within His mind.  Similarly, many of our dreams and hopes remain unformed in our subconscious. Like undefiled treasure in the ocean, these creative possibilities live within our inner world until we voice them aloud.  Affirming them as your heart’s deepest desires is an act of faith.  Stating positively your heartfelt intention to accomplish your dreams and goals fulfills the intention and meaning of Hebrews 11:1. “Faith is the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things unseen.”  Affirmative words exist as substance of our intentions and evidence of our faith until our desires and dreams manifest physically.  Daily repetition of our intention to achieve our most heartfelt ambitions declares our faith.  These affirmations remove lingering vestiges of victimhood.  They yield self-determination thereby assuring us that we can make proactive choices in daily living.  This liberty results from healing which faith makes possible.

Fourth Personal Pathway to Healing - Painstakingly Acquiring Faith - Part VI


Fourth Pathway – Painstakingly Acquiring Faith – Part VI

Depending upon shifting circumstances, it is easy to abandon faith and lapse into fear.  Repeated defeats naturally coalesce in depression and demoralization.  Disciples often quote Proverbs 3:5-8 which directs them to trust God and subordinate their preferences to God’s will.  He will direct their paths and lead them toward the best possible choices.  Negativity and fear are understandable responses when these verses fail to materialize.  How do disciples respond when God’s favor and direction do not emerge?  They question the worth of prayer and other spiritual disciplines.  Self-reliance seems preferable to faith in God.  God’s silence leaves disciples to fend for themselves.  Instead of seeing the light at the end of the tunnel, bleak situations hurl disciples backwards.  Everything again appears dismal and old fears immediately arise.  Feelings of abandonment by God recur.  Isolation.  Desolation.  Captured.  Imprisoned.  Tortured emotionally with hopelessness yet imagining walking freely into the brilliant sunlight.  The range of these thoughts and feelings yield a startling, frightening and horrible conclusion.  “My life is a cruel joke by day and an endless nightmare by evening.”  Abandoning faith in God seems appropriate to God’s apparent abandonment.  These volatile eruptions of fear displace faith.  I suggest disciples honestly embrace these emotional tempests.  Attempting to quiet them with church clichés equates with using a garden hose to put out a raging California wildfire.  Retreating to affirmation and meditation keenly resolve spontaneous injuries of mind and heart.  Affirming heartfelt desires, clarifying gut-level intentions and mediating upon creative ways to achieve them eradicate unexpected fear and return you to the pathway of healing.

Listening to music is a practical pathway to healing.  An author illustriously notes, “Life is at once beautiful and painful.”  This dualism expresses truths within human experience.  Childhood trauma while exceedingly painful equally hold many memories of love, compassion and inexpressible beauty.  The taste of favorite childhood foods never leaves your palate.  I attempt to replicate my late beloved paternal grandmother’s sweet potato pie because the first bite reminds me of her unconditional love and graciousness.  Memories of our house filled with people, food, games and laughter during the holidays comprise a sacred space in my heart.  The sight and smell of sunflowers are very impressive.  I recall how those flowers withstand the blistering heat of July in South Carolina.  As a kid, I thought, “How amazing and wonderful that these beautiful flowers remain pretty despite the brutal heat!”   They are my most favorite flowers as they remind me of the beauty that my African American Southern, religious and humble upbringing contained notwithstanding its formidable challenges.  Chief amongst the most healing reflections is the music of my childhood.  Weekly, I retreat to the dog days of summer as I listen to gospel, jazz, soul and R & B songs of yesteryear.  Every Saturday, regardless of what I am doing or where I am, I find a radio station that plays this music.  My inner person travels at the speed of light to joyful childhood innocence and bliss.  That music reminds me of the best of my cultural heritage.  On the first Sunday of each month, my soul hurries to our family pew in the church of my rearing.  With perfect remembrance, I participate in the observance of Holy Communion as the ritual rehearses God’s act of unconditional love in the sacrifice and gift of Jesus Christ.  I hear and sing enduring hymns of the Church. 

Three hymns in particular always pull me out of the quicksand of depression and doubt.  “Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing” is a prayer to see God’s grace and goodness in every situation.  In the final stanza, the lyricist appeals to God to bind his heart with grace as a fetter to prevent idolatry and his wandering heart from serving other gods.  “Guide Me O Thou Great Jehovah” is a triumphant song that declares a disciple’s victorious transition to eternal life.  Disciples enjoy blessed assurance that the Lord stands at the shore of the chilly Jordan River to assist any trembling son or daughter to cross over into heavenly bliss.  As disciples mature in faith, they confidently respond to inexplicable crises.  They cease to allow circumstances beyond their control to overwhelm them.  My most favorite hymn, “It Is Well with My Soul,” joyously declares “whatever my lot, it is well with my soul.”  The lyrics affirms God’s overarching presence, comfort and grace from cradle to grave and in the afterlife.  This is not a song of resignation, accommodation and defeat.  This hymn reflects a disciple’s steadfast faith in Almighty God notwithstanding difficult and contradictory circumstances.  Its author penned these words after learning of the death at sea of his entire nuclear family.  Bitterness and cynicism would have been reasonable and understandable.  Remarkably, that tragedy generates some of the most often sung words in Christendom.  The hymnologist resolves to trust God.  Time, one of the great healers, is good to this man.  Reciting this hymn is a means of healing from past pain.  A theology professor became paralyzed as resulting from sustained domestic violence within her marriage.  The verbal and physical brutality which she suffered suspended her ability to read and write, critical functions of her vocation as a teacher and scholar.  For nearly two years, she could not engage either activity.  Bewilderment swelled her head and consciousness as she experienced such devastating behavior from a person claiming to love her.  During a leave of absence, she found healing in taking the Eucharist and its assurances of God’s unfailing love.  More specifically, she took refuge in the promises of resurrection.  The power of Christ’s example in experiencing two unjust trials, brutal beatings, taunts and crucifixion empowered her to withstand her trauma.  The Christian concept of resurrection gave her hope to heal and regain her life.  In addition, she found great solace in listening to music.  “Music soothes the savage beast.”  That maxim captures one of the most effective means of her pathway to healing. 

Like the previously referenced professor, many disciples receive illimitable hope from taking the Eucharist.  As 1 Corinthians 11 delineates, celebration of Holy Communion reminds disciples of God’s sacrificial love in Christ.  The celebrant rehearses Christ’s steadfast love toward humankind.  Christ does not flinch but fulfills His destiny of offering salvation to humankind.  The atoning life and sacrificial love of Christ reflects God’s holy character.  “God is love.” (1 John 4:6) The Eucharist continually imparts and reaffirms God’s unfailing love for each disciple.  His love is the highest form of love; it is agape which means redemptive and restorative.  Divine love heals human brokenness.  The miraculous healings in the Gospels are acts of God’s love not merely supernatural deeds.  Essentially, the Eucharist is a hymn of God’s love.  Participating in this ritual as often as a disciple can is a pathway to healing. 

“Thank you” is a powerful prayer.  Gratitude is an empowering and self-determinative response to difficulty and perplexity.  Being thankful that you survived childhood and formative trauma is one way to heal.  Undoubtedly, many persons are so debased and disheartened by their past that they are not able to grow beyond it.  They turn to alcohol, drugs, food, workaholism, isolation and other types of addiction to erase their pain.  These self-destructive behaviors terminate in emotional, psychological, existential and physical death.  Thankfulness opens the mind to new horizons of consciousness.  The ability to create and dream is vital to achieving a happy, joyous and free life.  Poverty’s most debilitating effect is its propensity to smash the hopes and ambitions of the unfortunate persons who grow up in its vice.  Over the expanse of human cultural, racial, ethnic and linguistic diversity, we cannot know the countless gifted and intelligent persons who did not contribute to the betterment of humankind because poverty viciously broke their imagination and industry.  Nevertheless, it is a personal achievement to give thanks for surmounting these challenges.  You are grateful your past and pain built a formidable character within you.  You are the person who you have become because your past compelled you to achieve, succeed and refuse to yield.  Willingness to offer thanks in response to hardship means you did not allow the past to overwhelm you.  It signals your personal development and spiritual growth.  It reflects healing from distant trauma.  Being grateful in all situations is a method of healing and demonstrating faith.  Appreciation of the people, experiences and possessions that enrich your life prepares you to receive more. 

Fourth Personal Pathway to Healing - Painstakingly Acquiring Faith - Part VII


Fourth Pathway – Painstakingly Acquiring Faith – Part VII

“Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the Word of God.” (Romans 10:17) The Bible and other sacred literature remain as enduring depositories of faith.  I suggest disciples choose several verses to memorize and recite to strengthen their faith.  Repeat these verses as many times as necessary to allow them to seep deeply within your unconscious.  Be able to recite them silently in your sleep.  The Israelites taught their children to internalize the scriptures.  They told them to recite the Word of God as they left and returned to their houses.  They recalled God’s promises upon awaking in the morning and lying down for sleep in the night.  Within their daily affairs, they surrounded themselves with God’s love and grace as evident in His Word.  As you heal from past pain, adopting several Bible verses as divine promises of restoration strengthens your faith.   

A few verses in Isaiah and a verse each in Deuteronomy and the Psalms reignite the flame of my faith in bleak times.  The author of Isaiah 50:7 speaks with limitless confidence and trust in God.  He says, “Because the Sovereign Lord helps me, I will not be disgraced.  Therefore, have I set my face like flint; and I know that I will not be put to shame.”    Notice the high opinion of God the author holds.  The theologian, J. I. Packer, posits that disciples who trust God think highly of Him.  Isaiah addresses God as the “Sovereign Lord” thereby characterizing Him as an omnipotent being to whom the prophet appeals to resolve any dilemma.  With the aid of an all-knowing, ever-present, all powerful and benevolent Supreme Being, Isaiah knows disgrace will not befall him.  Colloquially, with God on his side, how could Isaiah possibly fail?  With the blessed assurance of success, Isaiah develops fierce determination to pursue his ambitions and goals.  He describes his resolve as “flint-like.”  Flint is a gray or black stone that looks like glass.  Isaiah’s intention parallels the impenetrable substance and lucidity of this rock.  Accordingly, the prophet repeats, “I know that I will not be put to shame.”  If struck by steel, flint ignites.  Isaiah’s faith enflames his willingness to achieve his goals as he genuinely relies upon God.

Fear impedes healing.  It robs countless persons of peace of mind.  Its turmoil distracts people from their priorities as they preoccupy themselves with myriad problems.  People waste precious time, energy and resources embroiled in unnecessary fights.  Fear of humiliation imprisons disciples in unproductive conflicts.  There are those battles that organically erupt in daily living.  Medical diagnoses can be unfair.  Unjust terminations due to budgetary shortfalls and internal politics occur each day. Other relational and vocational challenges cumulatively create paralyzing fear in the minds and hearts of many disciples.  Yet, Isaiah offers tremendous encouragement: Isaiah 41:10, “So, do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed for I am your God.  I will strengthen you and help you; I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.”  The assurance of God’s presence obliterates fear.  The certainty of God’s unfailing love yields healing from substantive relational pain and emotional injury.  With God standing beside them, disciples need not fear anyone or anything.  God tells them to resist despondent feelings.  “Be not dismayed for I am your God.”  He promises to strengthen them and enable them to triumph in any adversity.  Faith in God’s trustworthiness and guidance during a long and seemingly unending challenge destroys fear.

Howard Thurman, premiere African American Baptist mystic theologian of the twentieth century, likens faith during difficult times to headlights on a dark and dreary road.  Consider driving while lost on a Southern dirt road in dense woods.  You long for the main road.  Loudly whistling leaves, hooting owls and wildlife noises increase your heart rate.  Fears of imminent injury or death floods your mind.  With a panting heart, sweat drenched clothing and childlike anxiety, you drive frantically and speedily.  God’s overarching presence and protection are headlights to lead you.  Darkness compels you to draw closer to God.   Isaiah 42:16 says, “I will lead the blind by ways they have not known, along unfamiliar paths I will lead them; I will turn the darkness into light before them and make the rough spaces smooth before them.  These are the things that I will do; I will not forsake them.”  This verse offers tremendous growth in faith.  Periodically, disciples face every conceivable challenge relating to health, finances, employment, marriage, family and emotional well-being.  Total darkness eclipses God’s presence and power.  Through Isaiah’s voice, the Lord promises to lead any aimless disciple.  Blind followers will receive divine guidance as they progress through the darkness.  God pledges to lead them along new and previously untraveled paths.  Open-mindedness and creativity are vital spiritual tools in tough times.  That is the time “to think outside of the box.”  It is crucial to explore different passageways to your destiny.  Quite possibly, your previous internal challenges and difficult experiences blinded you from seeing who you are.  Although you planned sought financial gain, material acquisition and noteworthy reputation, you become open to God’s guidance and provision toward a different vocation.  Your time in the wilderness demands your full and undivided attention.  Then, the Lord can instruct you.  He changes your conceptions about ambition, success, fame and money.  You leave the wilderness with a new understanding; in serving other people, you find inner healing and wholeness.  Forsaking a victim’s complex is critical to continual healing.   

Furthermore, God pledges to turn the darkness into light and make the rough spaces smooth.  Faith in God’s ability removes internal obstacles to your growth.  Your life can change in unimaginable ways if you trust God.  Accepting God’s unconditional love affirms your faith in Him.  Seeing yourself as a unique child of God fosters self-acceptance.  The darkness that permeates your soul is a wholesale ignorance of your unique character.  Carl Jung posits everyone remains incomplete until he or she embarks upon the interior journey that reveals “the undiscovered self.”  An interdependent relationship with Almighty God discloses your unique self: the singular, unparalleled, irreplaceable, matchless and distinctive character that you possess as a gift of God.  Each person has a definitive and matchless personality.  Most unfortunately, countless persons expend extraordinary resources of time, money and energy striving to be someone else.  They fall prey to the wizardry of marketing and advertising.  They embark upon useless quests to improve and perfect ourselves.  Clothing, plastic surgery, “makeovers,” cosmetics and other fashion products are the means through which they transform themselves into Cinderella.  They miss the blessing of living unique and incalculable lives that God graciously gives.  They stumble in existential darkness as they remain ignorant of who they are.  Clarity about your “Self” equips you to handle daily struggles and obstacles.  As God reveals the inimitable gifts, He gave you, He equally reveals myriad ways to utilize them.  Hence, God makes the darkness light before you.  God promises He will not leave nor forsake you.  He does not abandon you to your circumstances.  Learning to trust Him is an important component of your relationship with Him.  Though the darkness hides God, His glory remains.  You may not feel Him.  You may not hear Him.  Still, He is with you.  Faith in the healing process means you trust God to carry you when you faint.  Assuredly, God orchestrates your circumstances to yield healing within your brokenness.

Fourth Personal Pathway to Healing - Painstakingly Acquiring Faith - Part VIII


Fourth Pathway – Painstakingly Acquiring Faith – Part VIII

The Psalter concludes the twenty-seventh psalm with a bold declaration of faith.  “I remain confident of this; I will see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living.”  (Psalm 27:13) Repeated recitation of this verse is an affirmation that healing emerges unquestionably.  Note the Psalter does not expect it “in the sweet by and by.”  He pronounces his faith in the present tense, active voice and indicative mood.  Definitively, he resolves to experience healing as he acquires tremendous blessings and joys.  The Psalter correlates his confidence with his belief in God’s faithfulness.  He wants his soul to be fully alive.  He refuses to be imprisoned to a hurtful and unresolved history.  He will not live a life beneath his potential and abilities.  He discards demeaning and belittling sayings he heard in early life.  He trusts God to extend grace and kindness to effectuate healing.  Additionally, the Psalter demands these blessings “in the land of the living.”  An indescribable, blissful and illimitable heaven is not imminent.  Thus, it is not acceptable to wait for its unfolding.  To that end, the Psalter affirms God will bestow complete and progressive healing.  In a previous verse, Psalm 27:10, the Psalter proclaims God’s trustworthiness in frank and forthright terms.  “Though my mother and my father forsake me, the Lord will receive me.”  This statement is a divine guarantee of healing.  God assures you that He will comfort and sustain you.  He sees your inner essence.  He knows who you are.  He sees beyond the scars and pain of your past.  He foresees the manifestation of your gifts, abilities and endowments to serve Him.  He uses broken vessels to majestically, magnificently and marvelously share His illimitable grace with humankind.  The Psalter offers a progressive faith in God’s willingness to heal.

Healing is a gift for recipients who believe steadfastly in its possibility.  These persons refuse to allow childhood trauma and formative pain to define them.  They stop complaining about life’s inherent unfairness.  They accept the proverbial cards that God providentially deals them.  They remain true to the dreams, ambitions and ideals of their youth.  They persevere despite any obstacles.  They employ spiritual disciplines to triumph over adversity.  They absolutely refuse to live beneath their potential.  They serendipitously acquire “true ambition” which a spiritual teacher and author defines as “a deep desire to live usefully and walk humbly before the grace of God.”  They comprehend their simple and profound right to be happy in this life. 


Friday, August 31, 2018

Gratitude for the Life and Legacy of Aretha Franklin


Gratitude for the Life and Legacy of Aretha Franklin


Today, as we celebrate her life and seminal contribution to music, I am grateful for the life and legacy of Aretha Franklin, the undisputed “Queen of Soul.”  I woke up hearing “Respect” and “Natural Woman.”  Then, I recalled two of my favorite Aretha songs, “Muddy Water” and “Rock Steady.” I paused and considered how deeply I along with countless others am so deeply affected by her death.  It signifies the passing of a generation of distinct and self-determinatively African American Rhythm and Blues and Soul singers and artists.  Mostly popular in the 1970s, these performers and musicians furthered the expansion of Black consciousness through their unapologetic African and African American style, clothing, hairdos and performance art.  As I write, very fond memories of listening to James Brown, Larry Graham, Whitney Houston and Aretha Franklin among other artists on WWDM in Sumter, SC as my siblings and I prepared for school during the week and completed chores on the weekend.  I spent several childhood summers in Miami with relatives; there we listened to these artists in WEDR.  The lyrics of their songs offer hope to persevere within personal trials and encouragement to seek a better tomorrow despite contrary circumstances.

Whereas pain, challenge, injustice and hardship are prevalent within the African Diaspora, these artists assisted listeners in finding self-determination, resilience and other internal resources to surmount their daily struggles as they progress toward the lives that they imagine in their youth.  The beauty and majesty of their music extend to anyone who listens with an open heart and abundant soul.  Distinguished among them, Aretha Franklin rightly deserves the characterization, inimitable.  Beyond being unique and incomparable, to be inimitable is to be superlatively distinct and thus incapable of imitation. Regardless of how talented any artist is or how hard anyone tries, he or she cannot perform any of Aretha Franklin’s work as she did.  Essentially, she “owned” every song she recorded and performed.  Whether an aria, anthem, blues, gospel, folk hymn, jazz, soul, spiritual or another genre, she sang as if it were just written for her.  Amongst her generation of artist, she possessed this unparalleled ability and range to perform within myriad genres without sacrificing quality.  Whether with a jazz band, symphony or within a studio, she gave an impressionable and indelible performance each time. 

The daughter of a famous pastor and nurtured within the context of the vibrant Black Church culture of Detroit, Franklin’s voice and performance style resounds with the deep and wide spiritual and soulful roots she developed.  Accordingly, her music touches a listener’s soul.  Momentary liberation from boredom, oppressive feelings and daily difficulties usually followed the first sounds of her recordings.  Responding often with a silent “Amen” occurs when hearing one of the enduring hymns of the Church or a real-life blues song like “Muddy Water.”  Unsurprisingly, you spontaneously break into your famous dance moves with the first chords of “Rock Steady” or a comparable song.  In addition to surmounting sad situations and various obstacles, her music fuels creativity and inspires a person to believe that the life he or she envisions is indeed possible.

I imagine a treasure trove of stories of her tribulations, friendships, social activism and anonymous participation in the struggle for freedom and justice exist.  Future biographers will detail the interesting, dramatic and mysterious dimensions of her life of which we were not privy.  These writers will introduce us to a more holistic portrait of her humanness.  Combining her story with her music will more greatly inspire us.  In the interim, I offer thanksgiving for her six decades of enriching the lives of hundreds of millions of adoring and appreciative fans.  Mostly, I am grateful that she taught us the importance of “Respect” in all relationships.  It seems inconceivable that any future artist will ever dethrone the “Queen of Soul.”

How magnificent that future generations will inherit and enjoy her music as we have!   

Monday, March 26, 2018

Remembering and Celebrating The Late Tinya L Banks, Esq.


Remembering and Celebrating the Life, Love and Legacy of
The Late Tinya L. Banks, Esq.


With brief shock, obvious grief, deep sadness and great regret, I recently opened my Facebook page to learn of the untimely death of my friend and college contemporary, the late Tinya L. Banks, Esq.  After a few moments of reflection in which I began the slow and difficult process of accepting that her parents, extended family, close friends, legal colleagues, clients and those of us who knew in college are poorer because she is no longer physically with us.  Still, I spent an hour or more searching the web verifying this unfortunate news.  As this brilliant lawyer taught and often reminded me when we spoke, I needed evidence before reaching any firm conclusions; “emotions however passionate and sincere ultimately do not prove anything.”  My online search with the miniscule hope that my eyes initially deceived me yielded the fact that I am left irreversibly to rely upon my memories of many conversations to further relate to my friend.  My sadness persists as I wish we could speak and laugh again.  My emotions combine anger, regret, sorrow and hope for healing for her beloved parents and others who share this profound loss.  Primary amongst my thoughts and feelings is an overwhelming gratitude for Tinya’s life, love and legacy.

With heartfelt and enduring gratitude, I celebrate my friend and college contemporary from whom I learned many things.  I cannot remember the first time I met this Virginia heartthrob whose striking auburn hair, piercing hazel eyes, pretty face and sculpted and statuesque physique immediately caused double takes.  Upon speaking with her, it became evident that she was a Southern Belle without pretension.  Deeply and unapologetically Southern, Tinya’s individuality and authenticity removed regional provincialism, cultural assumptions or any attempt to peg her personality based upon uninformed presumptions.  Very proud and knowledgeable of her Southern and African American roots, Tinya once chided me and other college contemporaries for catching up to her as we took an African American Studies class.  Still, she personified the very best in what we assume of well-reared Southern ladies; elegance in dress, formality in speech, talent in preparing and serving tasty cuisine, finesse in presentation and poise and exacting manners in all situations whether formal or casual.  One encounter with Tinya yielded appreciation for her keen intelligence, laser-like analytical mind, impatience with nonsense, internal resourcefulness, penetrating wit and great sense of humor.  Epitomizing the very best of the Southern “Steel Magnolia,” Tinya’s formidable character, insistence upon truth and rationality, ability to relate to everyone and willingness to bear whatever burdens she justly or unfairly incurred were amongst her most attractive qualities.  I greatly admire her grace, inner fortitude, patience and humility as she lived with a debilitating health challenge without complaining or yielding to self-pity.  What an amazing example of spirituality and personal strength!

As I offer grateful reflections upon Tinya’s life, my mind speeds in reverse to our college years.  During our time at Dartmouth College, three political issues predominated public discourse.  One major political party questionably utilized a right to life position as a litmus to determine legitimate religiosity and patriotism.  Social and religious conservatives adhered steadfastly as proponents of capital punishment.  Joined by economic conservatives, these citizens tolerated the vulgar racism of institutional and legal apartheid in South Africa and fought every effort to compel American companies to divest their holdings.  In our many impromptu dorm conversations with classmates and contemporaries, Tinya did not tolerate the obvious contradictions and fallacious reasoning of those policies.  With the precision of a surgeon’s scalpel, she excised anyone’s attempt to perpetrate superstitions, hypocrisy and unbridled emotions as representative of well-reasoned positions affecting millions and hundreds of millions of human lives.  Her laser-like mind eradicated balderdash regardless of anyone’s eloquence.  Silence often followed her incisive questions. 

At the time, I favored capital punishment.  Tinya once rebuked me, “You sit there and have the unmitigated gall to call yourself a Christian and believe that imperfect human beings have the right to usurp a perfect God and determine the conditions of another imperfect person’s death.”  With the prism of a few decades of professional experience inclusive of social justice advocacy and community service, I thank my late friend for sowing those seeds of truth and insistence upon integrity in public policy.  Additionally, Tinya warned us against allowing our emotions to exceed our analysis and demands as we strove to force the college administration and trustees to demonstrate honesty and intellectual respectability in its verbal condemnation of apartheid by divesting the College’s funds from any company doing business in South Africa.  Her insight proved prophetic and correct as the College eventually divested because its leaders grew weary of the continual and widening rift in the Dartmouth community rather than moral and ethical correctness.  Those conversations foreshadowed the future and successful career of a member of the Virginia legal community.

A graduate of the famed Marshall-Wythe Law School at the College of William & Mary, Tinya first practiced law as an associate at the venerated civil rights firm, Hill, Tucker and Marsh.  The named partners of this firm contributed significantly to dismantling legal segregation in the State of Virginia.  There, Tinya served average citizens by resolving their legal challenges without judgment of their personal backgrounds or misguided choices.  In the words of Kipling, she was able “to walk with Kings [and] not lose the common touch.”  As an expansion of the civil rights legacy that she inherited as an attorney, Tinya allowed “all men to count but none too much.”  Regardless of whom she encountered, she remained quintessentially and unapologetically Tinya. A gifted lawyer, she worked toward a just resolution for her clients seeking and combining logic, truth, moral pragmatism and balance. 

During our perennial lunch conversations in Richmond and Hampton when my business travel took me there, she shared how she detailed the legal process to clients to disavow them of their sanctimonious claims of possessing “the Truth” in their testimony.  Instead, she informed them that they now possessed an aggressive advocate who would argue on their behalf before a neutral party, the judge or jury, hopefully to obtain a fair and reasonable settlement to very personal and subjective disputes.  As I mourn her death, I grieve the loss of what she would have accomplished as an attorney.  With such a fiercely judicial temperament, Tinya unquestionably would have distinguished herself as a state or federal jurist.  As our nation progresses irreversibly toward religious, ideological, and cultural pluralism, we need judges who possess the intellect, character, self-determination and cultural identity to treat all citizens with equality and justice.  I harbor not even a scintilla of doubt that my late friend would have been a superb jurist equal to her years of service to her clients.  Accordingly, I join them and her legal colleagues in expressing thanks for her life and legacy as a member of the Virginia bar.

To some degree, each of us is a teacher.  Life affords everyone to share uniquely some aspect of his or her individuality.  Each of us is a unique child of God possessing a distinct opportunity to share God’s love through mission and purpose.  I celebrate God’s inimitable expression of Himself through Tinya’s personality.  Anyone who spoke with her just once left with a definite impression of her self-acceptance, self-regard and self-determination.  Authenticity and individuality were traits and lessons that she imparted to anyone who encountered her. 

Again Kipling’s immortal words are appropriate.  “If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you; but make allowance for their doubting too,” Tinya possessed an inner gravitas and chutzpah that exempted her from the need of excessive external validation.  Comfortable in her skin as Tinya, she graciously extended to others their freedom of expression and pursuit of joy and wholeness in life.  Her formidable example taught others to pursue a similar inward journey.  Additionally, integrity was a natural outgrowth of her individuality.  Intolerant of silliness, hypocrisy, excessive and manipulative emotions, and fallacies that masquerade as reason, Tinya responded affirmatively to these character defects with a lifelong commitment to congruence of thought, principles and deeds.  Tinya appropriately held herself to the high standards of integrity that she expected of other people.  Truth and integrity complement each other with exacting congruence like a hand in a tailored glove.  Tinya’s disdain for hypocrisy emerged from her willingness to accept her shortcomings and further her willingness to develop personally and grow spiritually.  She would not tolerate devious and rhetorical flourishes to excuse untoward behavior.  Essentially, she demanded truth personally and professionally.  I suspect several of her legal colleagues could attest to her unwavering insistence upon truth as imperfect, constantly erring and self-centered human beings could derive it.  Individuality, integrity and truth are life’s most significant principles remain as three lessons that my friend imparts to us in the legacy of her too brief life.

As I continue to celebrate Tinya’s life with thanksgiving that exceeds the fresh grief stemming from her recent death, I am cognizant of the enduring pain that Tinya’s passing causes her beloved mother and father and extended family.  She greatly loved, respected and admired her parents.  Expressing condolences seem meager considering the depth and breadth of their very personal and abiding loss.  I hope the genuine expressions of those of us who were very blessed to know Tinya will yield healing and comfort.  Moreover, I pray they feel our limitless gratitude for the incalculable gift they shared with us and humankind in Tinya’s life.  The infinite and qualitative nature of her contributions will surpass the brief period of journey amongst us.  I hope that fact daily allows them to delve into their private treasure troves of sacred memories, conversations and experiences with her that slowly diminishes the potency of their grief. 

The hard and necessary question, Why,” inevitably arises in the deep recesses of an unjustly bereaved person’s mind and heart.  Is there a reasonable explanation to satisfy us who terribly miss such a talented, gifted, beautiful and funny person who bountifully enriched our lives?  For the foreseeable future, we who knew Tinya will ask that question in a million different ways.  Chances are a satisfactory answer will not emerge.  Ironically, as we ask these difficult questions and grapple with our loss, we increasingly obtain greater acceptance and gratitude for the remarkable person Tinya remains in our minds and hearts.  I extend affirmative meditations and heartfelt prayers to her parents, extended family, close circle of friends and all persons who share in their loss that our mystical union will remain a source of comfort, healing and grace as we journey without Tinya’s physical presence.  We have the blessed assurance that her eternal light will guide us toward brighter and rewarding days as Tinya would not want us to linger endlessly in grief and pain.

Tinya was a very proud, unreserved, unabashed and self-determinative Black woman.  An African American Studies class we took laid a foundation for innumerable conversations about WEB DuBois’ concept of “double consciousness” as it relates to African American identity.  She absolutely refused to define herself as a Black woman in reaction to the dominant culture’s standards of beauty, intelligence, poise and demeanor.  An individual above all social influences, Tinya equally rebuffed collective and commercial trends in the Black community to define who a Black woman is.  Resistant to boarding any emotional bandwagons, Tinya proactively defined what it means to be a Black woman in the United States.  My preceding description of my college contemporary and friends details her existential definition of being a Black woman.  I will always admire her ability to simply and definitively be Tinya notwithstanding pressures to conform to an ethereal socially acceptable persona.  Some people never achieve her remarkable self-acceptance and genuineness. 

Her dislike of social pressures and encroachment upon personal identity and expression fueled her interest in studying intra-racial prejudice.  The color line within the Black community remains a source of immeasurable pain.  Acquiescence to the dominant culture’s idea of beauty greatly irritated her.  Believing that attractiveness was obvious if a woman had straight hair, light skin, straight nose and slim physique.  Interestingly, though Tinya possessed those physical features, she rebuffed compliments solely because of them.  That shortsightedness devalued and ignored her intrinsic character. Her offense included her concern for all women of color who faced similar disrespect and violation of their uniqueness because they did not demean themselves by conforming to society’s trivial standards of beauty.  Tinya especially condemned these erroneous concepts in the African American community that furthered racial stereotypes and created the fallacy of monolithic thinking, expression and values within the Black community.  A quintessential individual who did not need external validation or group affirmation, Tinya exemplified the very best of anyone’s characterization of a strong, smart, intuitive, gifted, compassionate and beautiful Black woman.

Unquestionably, Tinya’s former clients and legal colleagues share this penetrating loss of a defiant, fierce and resourceful advocate.  Whether personal or professional, anyone who gained admission to Tinya’s inner circle of consciousness and compassion became the recipient of her undaunted courage, laser-like intelligence, loyalty and generosity.  Through her legal career, she demonstrated her passion for people and her advocacy for social justice and equality.  Attorney Banks did so outside of public view per se.  Enduringly, I admire her insistence that genuine advocacy for the most vulnerable persons constitute a personal and professional lifestyle.  Otherwise, opportunists and charlatans manipulated the emotions and unfortunate circumstances of people gullible enough to trust their rhetoric though it does not comport with reality.  Not one to publicly criticize anyone, Tinya practiced her principles in her legal and personal affairs.  Her commitment to truth and justice through her legal practice undoubtedly served her clients well. She leaves us an incredible gift and example of how to advocate for one’s beliefs in service to other people.

The quest for truth remained important to Tinya.  She did not suffer fools gladly.  Intellectual dishonesty was particularly appalling to her.  She rebuffed the ideological smugness of left and right leaning positions that refused to wrestle with contrary ideas and evidence.  As she dedicated herself to the lifelong quest of acquiring truth to the degree that any subjective human being, a captive of his or her prism of personal, cultural and linguistic prism, could know it, Tinya respected persons who willingly and humbly employ reason, evidence and scientific methods.  She possessed the security to live with unanswered questions and linger within inexplicable dilemmas until honest, logical and morally pragmatic resolutions emerged.

I thank Tinya for her contribution to my progression toward moral pragmatism.  She repelled the combination of emotions and definitive moral statements which usually have a gloss of petrified personal piety and sanctimoniousness.  Such declarations overlooked obvious contradictions in daily human living.  They further ignore the complexities and contexts in which people struggle to find meaning in their lives.  As an attorney, she suspended her personal beliefs to represent clients who as subjects of systemic causes and structures may not be responsible for the crimes for which they were indicted.  Self-righteous social commentators of all ideological persuasions manipulate the unbridled emotions and uninformed opinions of the masses with simple-minded condemnations of vulnerable, minimally educated and economically disadvantaged citizens.  The most regrettable outcome of these fallacies includes the continual practice of capital punishment, wrongful convictions of persons without adequate legal defense and their unjust long-term incarceration.  Women and children in domestic situations are particularly susceptible to becoming victims of legal errors and miscarriages of justice.  A lawyer at heart, Tinya insisted upon personal humility which tempered moral absolutes with a frank acknowledgement of one’s own incapacities and recognition of life’s inherent lack of fairness.  She responded with an intellectually respectable moral pragmatism that demanded us to wrestle in the mud of human living.

Tinya’s witticisms especially about current affairs reflected her tremendous sense of humor.  Any conversation with her would leave you in stitches.  Her ability to joke with you indicated her friendship, concern and honesty.  Once, I stopped by her office to pick her up for lunch.  She greeted me with the affirmation, “Victor, you look really good.  Didn’t know what to expect.”  I said in response, “Okay, I want you to say that when I am seventy.”  Not one to mince words even in a light moment, Tinya wryly said, “Only if it is true.  Take care of yourself and I will say it.”  Those funny and sharp jabs continued throughout our lunch and conversations over our friendship.  I loved listening to her especial way of utilizing humor to reduce complicated legal affairs within the grasp of laypeople. Vividly, I recall her collaboration with another attorney in the creation of a dog and pony show defense for their clients which the judge bought lock, stock and barrel.  Tinya reminded us that we cannot take ourselves too seriously as life’s irony and mystery mocks people who do so.

Meekness and grace are culminating lessons from Tinya’s life that I celebrate.  Often, people confuse meekness and weakness.  Maintaining strength under pressure faithfully attending to one’s professional and personal obligations are hardly descriptive of a weak person.  Rather, those attributes reflect the formidable character of an iron lady and her boundless dedication to her craft and client as well as her unfailing love for her family and friends notwithstanding an ever-present health challenge.  Rightly, few people were aware of the details of this daily dilemma in which Tinya lived.  With genuine and exquisite meekness, she bore the burden of illness without complaining, excessive anger, bitterness or self-pity.  With an equally potent and elegant grace, she absolutely refused to allow it to define or limit her.  How incredibly impressive of Tinya to maintain her legal practice as long as she physically could.  In a Herculean manner, she daily bore the bags of cement of her illness without surrendering’ “To strive, to seek, to find and not to yield.”  Ever the African American Southern lady of poise and culture, Tinya taught us how to handle personal adversity with inner fortitude and divine favor.

During the weeks of my composition of this commemoration, I painstakingly and increasingly accept the reality of Tinya’s death which remains somewhat surreal as I am partially flabbergasted that someone who possessed immeasurable gifts to share with humankind is no longer alive.  I deeply feel this loss of a dear friend and college contemporary whose character enlightened and enriched my life.  It seems unfair that an extended illness would deprive her clients and legal colleagues of a brilliant and dedicated lawyer.  Unquestionably, it appears unjust and harsh that her parents, extended family and close friends would lose someone who uniquely personified love, light and life for them.  Glacially, my grief becomes the heartfelt reflections and celebratory gratitude that I share above and retain forever in my mind and heart.  Each time I think of Tinya, I vividly see her indelible beauty.  I hear her sharp wittiness, laser-like analysis and stomach-aching humor.  Each reflection yields spiritual manna for the soul.  As death is powerless to erase her eternal spirit and ever-increasing gift of love, she lives forever in the mind and heart of everyone who knew and loved her.

Finally, as I join her parents, extended family and circle of friends in celebrating Tinya’s, I continually express praise and gratitude to Almighty God for the unique expression of divine love, grace and service revealed through her invaluable legacy.

Grant unto our dearly departed sister and Thy daughter, Tinya, rest O Lord.  Graciously admit her to the communion of saints, the heavenly hosts and the goodly fellowship of the eternally redeemed.  Be Thou kind, O Lord, and receive Tinya into Thy direct presence.  Let Thy love and light perpetually shine upon her.  Grant unto Tinya rest O Lord and let Thy light eternally shine upon her.


Perpetually grateful for her life,
Victor M. Singletary
Dartmouth College Class of 1987

Monday, May 1, 2017

Resurrection in Everyday Life: "Hubris to Humiliation to Hope":

Resurrection in Everyday Life: “Hubris to Humiliation to Hope”

A recent daily meditation offers a most poignant and promising reminder for jaded disciples whose personal circumstances appear to eclipse God’s presence thereby negating His unquestionable faithfulness.  A religious leader in a developing country had become immeasurably distressed and dismayed.  Following a lengthy period of strenuous ministry efforts, he saw very little consequence or significance.  A visiting missionary from a Mid-Western state noticed this man’s despondency and spoke these words of encouragement and empowerment.  “God can change anything in three days.”  Emboldened by these words, that religious leader found resilience and persevered.  That reference to the resurrection reminded him of the divine power and resources available to him on any day.

At a book signing forum, I heard a radio station marketing director’s personal story of resurrection.  She traversed in the drama of her life three major acts with equal number of scenes.  Her story begins with her immature and rather prideful defiance towards her parents and family in her decision to forego college.  She refused to apply and enroll.  Instead, she resolved to pursue a career combining acting and modeling.  She acquired an agent and dreamed of unimaginable success, unbridled stardom and millions of dollars. 

Initially, she believed that her agent was a well-intentioned man who sought the best opportunities for advancing her dreams and goals.  She obtained a brief television spot. Sooner than she anticipated, auditions dissipated and her ambitions flickered.  A drought of prospects ensued and lingered.  To her considerable chagrin, she found herself dancing in strip clubs.  While financially lucrative, this type of gig hardly catapults anyone to fame and fortune within acting and modeling.  Yet, she still naively trusted her agent who harbored ulterior motives.

Suddenly, he arranged a modeling assignment in the Caribbean.  The job paid well yielding $2500 for her.  Upon her arrival, she realized that this assignment lacked integrity.  After a meaningless photo shoot, she and the agent had dinner with an associate and friend of his at an upscale restaurant.  At the end of the meal, the men had a “tongue in cheek” exchange that seriously disturbed her.  “No, she is not ready yet.”  She heard those words even though she cannot remember the question that warranted that response.  As she reflected on the conversation, she finally realized that her “agent” intended to prostitute her.  He had always planned to be her pimp.  Somehow, she graciously escaped that potentially dreadful possibility. 

Upon her return to New York City, circumstances worsened.  She acquiesces to a photo shoot with a questionable national adult magazine.  Later, she shares copies of the pictures with her mother.  Her mother views the photos, hands them to her and silently walks away.  That silence echoed rather loudly in her mind and heart.  Hurled into the lowest experience of her life by her initial pride and defiance, she travels to the South and spends time with her grandmother to regroup.  This time of emotional, psychological and existential convalescence required that she convince her grandmother that she had not been “knocked up,” an African American saying for pregnancy.  Evidently, her grandmother was not agreeable to rearing anymore children.  Nonetheless, that period in the wilderness resembled the prodigal son’s epiphany in the pig pen when he came to his senses.

Eventually, she waited tables upon her second return to New York City.  One day, she served a man whom she retrospectively characterizes as an angel.  She had not seen him before and she has not seen him since that day.  Spontaneously and somewhat inexplicably, he said to her, “I want you to return to school.”  He finished his meal, paid with an appropriate tip and left.  In an hour, he returned to the restaurant with all the information that she needed to apply and enroll in school.  In due course, she returned to college and graduated with her bachelor’s degree.


Moreover, she experienced resurrection from her rejection by her parents and family.  As she concluded her remarks, she summarized her personal journey from hubris to humiliation to hope.  In waiting tables, a job she previously thought was beneath her talents and abilities, she received God’s amazing grace therein acquiring enduring hope.  She quoted Jeremiah 29:11, “For I know the plans I have for you, says the Lord; plans to prosper you and not to harm and to give you hope and a future.”  She encourages everyone to believe that God has a plan for him or her.  Her story of her experience, strength and hope yielded an overwhelmingly positive response from the audience.