Category Archives: Gender Justice

Memorial Service for Orlando, June 15th, 8-9 pm

Join us in a vigil of prayer, silence, conversation, and creative expression to remember the lives of those killed and injured at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando. We will grieve the senseless bloodshed and pray to end violence and discrimination against LGBTQIA+ people everywhere.

Offered by The Abbey, Baptist Church of the Covenant, Beloved Community Church, Birmingham Friends Meeting, Covenant Community ChurchPilgrim Church UCC, Saint Junia UMC, and Woodlawn UMC.

We will meet outdoors between Beloved and The Abbey, weather permitting (131 41st Street South, Birmingham, AL 35222). If it is raining, we’ll be inside one or both of the buildings.

Contact Jennifer Sanders for more information.

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Central Alabama Pride Parade Saturday, June 11th, 8 pm

Join us to march in the Central Alabama Pride parade Saturday, June 11th, and let our neighbors know that Beloved is a place for all people!

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Lineup and registration at 7 pm on 7th Ave. S (corner of 30th St. S). Parade starts at 8:30.

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We will be walking on foot, carrying Beloved’s banner and handing out brochures.

Contact Donny Humphrey with any questions.

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Moral Revival, June 6th, 6:30 at New Pilgrim Baptist Church

Monday, June 6, 6:30-8:30 pm

New Pilgrim Baptist Church

708 Goldwire Place SW

Birmingham, AL 35211

RSVP on Eventbrite

The Revival: Time for a Moral Revolution of Values, led by the Rev. Dr. William J. BarberII, Rev. Dr. James A. Forbes, Jr., Rev. Traci Blackmon and Sister Simone Campbell, aims to be the catalyst for a resurgence of moral political activism among people of conscience and faith leaders. Far too much of our national political discourse and activity have been poisoned by the dominance of regressive immoral and hateful policy directed toward communities of color, the poor, the sick, our children, immigrants, women, voting rights, the environment and religious minorities. We still have too much racism, materialism and militarism.

Our country is in need of a moral revolution of values to champion the sacred values of love, justice and mercy in the public square. We cannot remain silent.

 

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Lenten Reflection from Rev. Lawton Higgs: Praxis

Luke 4: 5-8 Then the devil led him up and showed him in an instant all the kingdoms of the world. And the devil said to him, “To you I will give their glory and all this authority; for it has been given over to me, and I give it to anyone I please. If you, then, will worship me, it will all be yours.” Jesus answered him, “It is written, ‘Worship the Lord your God, and serve only him.'”

Romans 10: 11-13 The scripture says, “No one who believes in him will be put to shame.” For there is no distinction between Jew and Greek; the same Lord is Lord of all and is generous to all who call on him. For “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved.

Continue reading Lenten Reflection from Rev. Lawton Higgs: Praxis

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Lenten Reflection from Palmer Maxwell: Hands of Women

Listen to Marta Gómez singing Manos de Mujeres (translation below).

Hands of Women Continue reading Lenten Reflection from Palmer Maxwell: Hands of Women

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She Matters forum at First Congregational UCC

SheMatters

WHAT: An open forum engaging the community-at-large, community organizations and community leadership in healthy discussion concerning the documented incidences of police brutality involving African American women in 2015 around the United States.

WHEN: Saturday, November 14, 2015, 10 a.m. – 1 p.m.

WHERE: First Congregational Church, 1024 Center St. North, Birmingham, AL 35204

Continue reading She Matters forum at First Congregational UCC

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PrideSpeak: LGBTQ+ Spoken Word at Beloved Thursday, June 4, 2015

Earmark your offering to support Central Alabama Pride!

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V-day at Beloved

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SPECIAL PERFORMANCE! Join us this Valentine’s Day, (Saturday, February 14th) from 7-9 p.m. at Beloved for a staged reading of “A Memory, A Monologue, A Rant and A Prayer,” a collection of pieces by world-renowned authors and playwrights.

Presenters at this performance will include Laura Secord, Anne Bailey, Shaunteka Curry, Salaam Green, Cynthia Drake, Johnny Coley, DeJuana McCary, Mimi Latoine and Alicia Clavell.

These diverse voices rise up in a collective roar to break open, expose, and examine the insidiousness of violence at all levels: brutality, neglect, a punch, even a put-down. All proceeds will benefit the YWCA Central Alabama‘s Domestic Violence Services and Programs.

A complimentary buffet featuring Mediterranean soups, salads and appetizers will be offered. Wine may be brought for personal use. Suggested donation: $10 at the door.  All proceeds will go to Central Alabama’s YWCA Domestic Violence Services and Programs.

Limited seating. Arrive early or email/text reservations to Neko:  205-542-9689, neko.uchina@gmail.com.

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On shame

“If you remove the yoke from among you, the pointing of the finger, the speaking of evil, if you offer your food to the hungry and satisfy the needs of the afflicted, then your light shall rise in the darkness and your gloom be like the noonday.

The Lord will guide you continually, and satisfy your needs in parched places, and make your bones strong; and you shall be like a watered garden, like a spring of water, whose waters never fail.” Isaiah 58:9-11

Every Sunday, I tell my flock at Beloved Community Church:

“No matter where you have been, no matter what you have done, no matter what has been done to you, you are still precious in the eyes of God.”

I say this every week because I know that shame keeps so many people from walking into the wide-open arms of a loving God. So many of us have internalized a corrosive shame not only for mistakes we have made and wrong turns we have taken, but for who we are and even for what others have done to us.

People have pointed their fingers at us (ok, even the middle one), shamed us, to the point that we believe the lies they have told us about ourselves. Many of us have internalized a shame for who we are, or for who we are not. Our parents may have convinced us that we just were not enough – not good enough, not smart enough, not pretty enough, not strong enough, not giving enough; somehow we failed them when their lives didn’t measure up.

Some hear every day that there is something shameful about who they are as a people. For African-Americans, this dehumanizing public shaming has been codified, enshrined in custom and law, and justified by scripture. If you want to think that this no longer happens, look to last week’s release of a federal Department of Education study documenting that Black children make up about 18 percent of children in preschool programs in schools, but almost half of those who are suspended more than once. Preschoolers are being shamed and internalizing that shame, and it is corrosive to the soul.

But it’s not just race – it’s also about gender. Girls start to see themselves as sex objects as young as 6 years old. They are losing their sense of self-worth as children and it is corrosive to the soul.

Public shaming happens to anyone who loves someone who society or community says they should not love. Certainly same-sex lovers are shamed. So are interracial couples and those who fall in love outside their religion, or tribe, taken literally or metaphorically.

And then there is the victim’s shame – what someone did to you becomes your own shame. The shame of the victim of rape – think of the girls who were tormented to the point of suicide after reporting gang-rape by popular football players.

Think of the shame someone feels when his or her spouse has had an affair – even though s/he has done nothing wrong. Children often internalize shame about their parents’ divorce, unless parents are intentional about reassuring them that it is not their fault. Victims absorb the shame of their own wounds.

Jesus didn’t deal in shame.

When I read the story of “the woman caught in adultery,” as it is commonly called (she was caught practicing adultery all by herself, right?), I think about the pointing of fingers, the public shaming. She was dragged into the public square, surrounded by men ready to stone her to death for her sin. This was what the religious law allowed.

Instead of pointing his finger at this sinful woman or even at judgmental and hypocritical men, Jesus knelt down and used his finger to draw in the sand. Without looking anyone directly in the eye, he said, ‘you who is without sin throw the first stone.’ The men slowly walked away, some dignity and integrity intact.

Instead of pointing his finger at the woman, he stood up and met her eye to eye.

He said to her, “Woman I do not condemn you. I will not shame you.”

He would not throw the first stone. He would not cast shame. He set her free, with the possibility of new life.

It’s tough to resist blame and shame, especially if you have been hurt or threatened. It’s tough to see the image of God in every person.

Sometimes it feels a lot better to point that shaming finger than to do something else with it even if it means drawing in the sand, to keep from pointing it at someone else, causing them to feel shame or blame.

But what abundant life we are promised when we learn to cease the pointing of the finger, the casting of shame.

-Rev. Angie Wright

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