Again, for these street novenas, materials, such as candles, photos, and other creative expressions and ex votos are, like everything else, optional and adaptable. We encourage you to share your practices, suggestions, as well as any other feedback here. As stated in our newsletter introducing Street Novenas: “What is most important is that we find ourselves belonging to something larger than ourselves, an ever-evolving and adaptable tradition, a spacious community. Mystery. Love. The Really Real.”
What we are suggesting is something transformational. As we know all too well, a changed statue or statute can only go so far if we don’t change hearts, minds, systems, behaviors, and relationships.
Is prayer enough? Certainly not. However, a collective intention not only has the possibility of changing our own hearts and habits but the hearts and habits of others, in this case I am thinking specifically of myself as a privileged white person. May my heart and habits be changed.
And, like a Morphogenic Field, may the unseen forces that carry information across time and space link with and influence others of this same self-organizing system, through a collective and cumulative memory. The more repetitive an act, such as a novena for racial justice, according to this hypothesis, the greater the power for it to resonate and replicate – with potentiality for further innovation and evolution.
May we be like candles. May we be clothed with sun. May we let our light shine, as Sister Rosetta Tharpe proclaims here, from 1960. More importantly, especially if we are “opportunity hoarding” white people, may we ensure that all lights may shine, here and around the globe, now and into the future, igniting and illumining racial justice and celebrating, by putting at the center and decentralizing ourselves, the countless contributions of black Americans.
This summer I will be reading Rev. Dr. Valerie A. Miles-Tribble’s recently published book Change Agent Church in Black Lives Matter Times: Urgency for Action. Rev. Dr. Miles-Tribble is Associate Professor of Ministerial Leadership and Practical Theology at the Berkeley School of Theology (formerly American Baptist Seminary of the West) and Chair of Women's Studies in Religion (WSR), at the Graduate Theological Union (GTU), in Berkeley.
Please email if you would like to join me in an online reading circle of this impactful book: “Volatile social dissonance in America’s urban landscape is the backdrop as Valerie A. Miles-Tribble examines tensions in ecclesiology and public theology, focusing on theoethical dilemmas that complicate churches’ public justice witness as prophetic change agents. She attributes churches’ reticence to confront unjust disparities to conflicting views, for example, of Black Lives Matter protests as ‘mere politics,’ and disparities in leader and congregant preparation for public justice roles. As a practical theologian with experience in organizational leadership, Miles-Tribble applies adaptive change theory, public justice theory, and a womanist communitarian perspective, engaging Emilie Townes’s construct of cultural evil as she presents a model of social reform activism re-envisioned as public discipleship. She contends that urban churches are urgently needed to embrace active prophetic roles and thus increase public justice witness. ‘Black Lives Matter times’ compel churches to connect faith with public roles as spiritual catalysts of change.”
This summer, I donated to the Greatest Needs Fund at the Jesuit School of Theology (JST-SCU), an international theologate, at the GTU, to help support our dedicated, prophetic, and visionary students, whom I serve, with their unexpected costs that resulted from the pandemic.