December 12, 2013
Open Letter to Presiding Bishop-Elect Joseph W. Walker III and the “By Invitation Only” Attendees of the Inaugural Meeting of the SHIFT
Brothers,
How an initiative begins significantly affects how it goes forward.
We read with interest the well-crafted December 9  press release  of the coming “SHIFT,” a new initiative spearheaded by Rev. Joseph W. Walker III, Presiding Bishop-Elect of the Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship. We paid special attention to the quotations and looked at the pictures. What a curious title: “Rebranding in the body of Christ: The Ultimate Leader Shift.”
As we read the letter, we became increasingly more disturbed and troubled. Although our first response was “no women were in the room,” in fact our concerns are deeper. It was just sinful and wrongheaded
for a group of men to gather without active, real participation of women. We want to be clear about what disturbs us in this moment. Generally, we ignore lists of “100 most influential,” “10 best preachers,” etc.—how could we know who are the 10 best preachers, given all the powerful preachers who will never have a stage? So we read “chosen ones” and
“greatest movement” with a grain of salt. But if those gathered intended to communicate an inclusive, progressive, dynamic, forward thinking agenda, your images and rhetoric failed you.
The  post-letter from Bishop Walker—apparently written in response to comments made about the  absence of women—said “a number of women who were invited… many were unable to attend” (though there were NONE present). We are hard-pressed to believe that all those busy men could come to the SHIFT meeting, but not one woman was available at the time. Quite frankly, if scheduling the meeting proved to be that problematic for women only, then one would be forced to rethink its planning strategies and organization. In the interest of being in solidarity with your womanist sister clergy, if this initiative really intended to be “new,” “progressive,” and “bold,” we think our Womanist/Black Feminist allies in the photo ought have refused to meet or release anything without a critical mass of sister leaders present, not as tokens, but as full participants. If there were men in that room who were in fact appalled by the lack of female representation because they did not know beforehand who would attend, we would hope that our brother allies would publicly declare their disappointment that a meeting with no women present was not rescheduled.
That’s what solidarity and ally-ship look like.
We’ve been chastened not to call black male church leaders out in public. We’ve been told that we have misunderstood. The rising bishop responded
in his follow-up letter in what he called “a teaching moment” that we should “ask questions” rather than assume, presumably to correct his errant critics. We say that the gathered brotherhood of clergy should make their commitments clearer. What exactly do they hope to accomplish on behalf of the church? Does it matter to anyone other than women that women are invisible in a gathering of putatively this import? The Bishop’s letter read like a justification for  male privilege. The usually “invisible cloak” of arrogance and male-only leadership was visible. All the rhetoric sounded like everything we’ve ever heard from male-dominated meetings.
As Womanists-Feminists-preachers-scholars-activists our responses come from several places. We are not making assumptions. Your press release and its attending images speak volumes. You are not interested in iconoclastically breaking from tradition. You’ve made clear that even if women were invited their insight, input, or wisdom was not considered significant enough for the group to wait. Indeed, the notion that women have to be “included” is itself a male privilege power move. Surely, you are aware that most black churches are comprised of as much as 80% female membership. We also know  that women do the majority of the work of the church, without whose labor the organization and mission would fail. To be crystal clear, women’s gifts and capacities in all aspects of church leadership are as critical to the survival, relevance and progression of the church as men’s. Are women not already included in God’s plans?
You’ve communicated—loudly—that  (male) “Generals” would strategize and tell all the foot soldiers what to do. A clear inference one gets from your invitation to meet is that God only calls “Generals” who are notorious and already “celebrity” preachers, i.e., those considered “important” and “special” people. Only those with thousands of members know anything about impact or leadership. We understand. That presumption makes sense in an entrepreneurial understanding of the church, where faithfulness is measured only in dollars and size. It smacks of religious elitism. What could an inner-city pastor with only a few members who’s faced gangs and helped people who are poor and struggling to thrive possibly have to offer? You’ve communicated that the hierarchical, “Fathers-know-best,” male-centric table works for you and you’ll scoot over and cram in a couple more of some you deem “worthy.” It is presumptuous and ill thought-out.
We will take you at your word that you didn’t intend to communicate most of the above, if you’ll take our word that’s how many people who care equally about the future of the church received it.
Intent and impact are two very different things. Be clear. Images matter. Rhetoric matters.
In this climate in which the black church finds itself on the brink of becoming irrelevant in the public’s eyes and where black preachers are portrayed on TV as money-grubbing pimps in the pulpit, it would seem that preachers serious about redeeming the times and restoring the reputation of the black church would be committed to justice that reflects genuine shared leadership with women. More than 27 years ago, Rev. Prathia Hall challenged the black Baptist Church on its rampant patronizing exclusion of women, and we find ourselves having to do the same. Dr. Renita Weems once asked, “What will it mean in the history of the church if record droves of women experience and accept their call and we go on with business as usual?” By your omission, you dishonor the legacy, ministry and lives of the biblical general Deborah and prophet Huldah; the church house leader Chloe; and deacon Phoebe and co-workers in the gospel Euodia and Syntyche. You dishonor the work and ministry of women such as Jarena Lee, Septima Clark, Ella P. Mitchell, Brenda Piper Little, Shirley Prince, and Bishop Barbara Harris, and countless of notable and unnamed others.
The challenge with critiquing SHIFT and movements that exclude more of God’s people than they include is that onlookers immediately think it's personal. Religious male-centered leadership is "normal" and “sacred” and any attempt to question it is deemed perverse or personal. Our call is not for women to have access to patriarchal power, but that we all work together to create new, healthier, more humane—and therefore more godly—systems. We ask you to consider, not only those at the table you’ve spread, but those who are not present. We believe such consideration is central to the ministry of Christ. Women are invisible at the table, but so are many others, including, self-identified same-gender loving Christians. As you consider what or who has their feet on the necks of those you want to liberate, consider whose necks your feet may be holding down. Self-reflection and self-critique are deeply important in justice work.
In response to your invitation for dialogue, here are a few questions to get the dialogue going: How do leaders who claim to fight for justice not know that sexism—excluding women or
only including them as afterthoughts—is just as vile and sinful as racism and that it takes intentionality to transform, if in fact you intend to do so? How do self-proclaimed Womanist allies not include women and men who are Womanists and/or Black Feminists in the shaping of vision? Womanist/Black Feminists are not concerned only with the “inclusion” of women in public religious life. That’s about numbers. As people of faith, committed to the cause of radical inclusion, justice and love, we would be remiss in our integrity and derelict in our respective vocations, if we did not speak to injustices and oppressions as evidenced by this introduction of your initiative. We are interested in vision and shared influence and the building of the Commonwealth of God, beloved communities where everyone is valued, heard, protected, and helped to thrive, even if we disagree with them on a number of fronts. Jesus modeled this expansive community best and thus was persecuted for it by self-styled religious movers and shakers of his day.
One last point. You can understand, can’t you, why talk about “core family values” by a fraternity of male preachers raises concern for many of us? We have seen from this last election cycle what happens to women, poor families, and same-gender loving people when right-wing conservatives draft laws and draw up policies in the name of God and family values. Is SHIFT an initiative of black men merely reflecting the same toxic politics and policies? In other words, who is permitted to sit at the table and to fully participate as self-possessed
people? Are single people okay as single, or are they people who need to get married? What about single people who’ve adopted children and built families on the village model—a very African approach to family? Is there room for LGBTQ families already among your ranks, or is yours a movement bent on silencing, demonizing, or maligning them? Is there enough emotional, theological, and intellectual bandwidth within the organization to partner for social change with people with whom you don’t agree? I wonder what would happen if you thought Dream Defenders, New Black Man (in Exile), Moral Monday activists or Black Youth Project members, leaders of The Fellowship of Affirming Ministries, for example, were just as important collaborating partners FROM THE BEGINNING?
Bishop Walker noted that women’s full inclusion is a key priority. If so, one social justice organizer said, “If you say it’s for ‘us,’ don’t do it without us.” A noted activist once said that if you’re comfortable with everyone in the room, you’re not leading a revolution.
Finally, you may ask: “What do you want to happen?”
We want this group to commit that all future SHIFT meetings will include women religious leaders around the table, clergy and lay, pastors and academics—the presence of women whose voices you admit are critical and crucial to participating with male religious leaders in redeeming the times and redeeming the future of the black church.
We want members of the group to publicly acknowledge that, though you may not have intended the slight, this first gathering was sinful and flawed by these exclusions. If this exclusion was not the intended message, take a good faith opportunity to correct that error.
We raise these concerns and questions because it is faithful and just to do so.  As catalyst for this letter, Dr. Valerie Bridgeman, along with any number of the undersigned are willing to be in an open dialogue with Bishop-Elect Walker and any of those in that first meeting.
In the Struggle and in the Spirit,
| 
Rev. Valerie Bridgeman, Ph.D. 
Biblical and Homiletics Scholar 
President & CEO of WomanPreach! Inc. 
Board of Trustees, Samuel 
DeWitt Proctor Conference 
Dr. Iva E. Carruthers 
General Secretary 
Samuel DeWitt Proctor Conference 
Rev. Carolyn Ann Knight 
The Seminary Without Walls 
Smyrna, Georgia 
Bishop Yvette Flunder 
Presiding Prelate, The 
Fellowship of Affirming Ministries 
Pastor, City of Refuge 
San Francisco, CA 
Rev. Leslie D. Callahan, Ph.D.  
Pastor, St. Paul's Baptist Church Philadelphia, PA 
Jaha Zainabu, Poet 
Rev. Maisha I. K. Handy, Ph.D.  
Pastor, Rize Community Church Associate Provost Interdenominational
   Theological Center 
Robert Hoggard  
Founder & President  
American Baptist College Affiliate of S.C.L.C 
Matthew Wesley Williams 
Lithonia, GA 
Rev. Donna M. Vanhook 
Burlington, NC 
Rev. Marsha Foster Boyd, PhD Englewood OH 
Rev. Cedrick Von Jackson 
The Rev. Wil Gafney, PhD Chair of the Biblical Area and Associate Professor, Hebrew, Jewish and Christian Scripture The Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia 
Min. Jamie Eaddy 
Rev. Dr. Emma Jordan-Simpson 
Executive Pastor 
The Concord Baptist Church of 
Christ, Brooklyn, NY 
Rev. Andrea Clark 
Assistant Pastor 
Antioch Baptist Church 
Tulsa, OK 
Rev. Quincy James Rineheart, 
M.Div., S.T.M. 
Rev. Dawnn M. Brumfield, 
Associate Pastor 
Urban Village Church 
Chicago, IL 
Ashon Crawley 
Pastor Michelle E. Freeman, 
M.Div., Houston, TX 
Min. L. Proverbs Briggs, Atlanta, GA 
Rev. Dollie Howell Pankey, MACM, MTS 
Pastor, St. James Christian Methodist Episcopal
  Church Jasper, Alabama 
Rev. Catharine A. Cummings, M.Div. 
Pastor, Wesley UMC Church, Springfield, MA 
Rev. Earle J. Fisher, M.Div. Senior Pastor of Abyssinian Baptist Church (Memphis) Adjunct Instructor of Contemporary Theology at Rhodes College 
Rev Dr Mitzi J. Smith, Ph.D 
Obery M. Hendricks, Jr., Ph.D. Professor, Biblical Interpretation New York Theological Seminary Visiting Scholar of Religion & African American Studies, Columbia University 
Min. Hazel M. Cherry, Oakland, CA, 
M.Div. Candidate 
Howard University School of 
Divinity 
Bishop Andre L. Jackson 
Founding Pastor, New Vision 
Full Gospel Baptist Church, East Orange, NJ 
MA in Practical Theology/ M.Ed Candidate 
Regent University, VA 
Rev Candace
  Lewis, United 
Methodist clergy 
Rev. JoAnne Marie Terrell, PhD Associate Professor of Ethics, Theology, and  
the Arts 
Chicago Theological Seminary 
Rev. Dianna N. Watkins- 
Dickerson 
Chaplain, USAF 
Larry T. Crudup 
M.Div. Candidate 
Perkins School
  of Theology 
Rev. Rosalyn R. Nichols, D.Min. Organizing Pastor, Freedom's Chapel Christian Church (DOC) Memphis, TN 
Min. Guy Sebastian Johnson, Leesburg, VA, M.Div. Candidate Lancaster Theological Seminary 
EL Kornegay Jr., Ph.D. CEO/Founder 
The Baldwin~Delaney Institute 
Chicago, IL 
Liz S. Alexander, Seminarian 
Chicago, IL 
Candice M. Benbow 
Durham, North Carolina 
Dr. Irie Lynne Session 
Senior Pastor 
The Avenue - Warren Avenue Christian Church | Dallas, Texas MDiv. Black Church Studies Concentration
  | Brite Divinity School DMin. Transformative Leadership & Prophetic Preaching | Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity School 
Rev. Dionne P. Boissiere, M.Div. Consultant, WomanPreach! Inc. 
& Director, Women’s Center   
New York Theological Seminary 
Rev. Stephanie A. Duzant, MSW  
Hollis, Queens NYC 
Min. Louis J. Mitchell 
South Congregational Church 
Springfield, MA 
Minister Rhonda
  White-Warner, M.Div., D.Min. Candidate, SF Theological Seminary 
Founder Alabaster Jar 
Ministries, Oakland, CA 
Toby D. Sanders, Pastor 
Beloved Community 
Rev. Reginald W.
  Williams, Jr. Pastor, First Baptist Church of University Park 
University Park, IL 
Bishop John Selders Pastor Amistad UCC & Bishop Presider Interdenominational
   Conference of Liberation Congregations and Ministries 
Rev. Marilyn E. Thornton, Director/Campus Minister 
The Wesley Foundation at Fisk 
University, Nashville, TN 
Rev. Wm. Jermaine Richardson 
Dr. Safiyah Fosua Assistant Professor Congregational Worship Wesley Seminary @ IWU | 
Brittney C. Cooper, Ph.D. 
Departments of Women's & 
Gender Studies &
  Africana Studies 
Rutgers University 
Rev. Dr. Jeremiah Wright 
Board of Trustees, Samuel 
DeWitt Proctor Conference 
Myia Williams-Sanders 
Rev. Martin L. Espinosa 
Senior Pastor 
Ray of Hope Community 
Church, Nashville, TN 
Rev. Vivian Nixon, Chief 
Executive Officer College and Community Fellowship and Founder
   
Education Inside Out Coalition 
J.T. Thomas, Cleveland, OH  
Rev. Dr. Gary V. Simpson 
Senior Pastor 
The Concord Baptist Church of 
Christ, Brooklyn NY  
Associate Professor of Homiletics,  
Drew Theological Seminary 
Keri Day, PhD 
Professor of Ethics & Director of 
Black Church Studies,  
Brite Divinity School 
Rev Toni DiPina, Pastor Rockdale Congregational Church Northbridge, MA 
Rashad D. Grove  
Rev. Carla A. Jones  
Jeralyn B. Major 
Charles Bowie, Ph.D 
Rev. Carla Patterson 
Associate Minister 
Friendship Missionary Baptist 
Church, Charlotte, NC 
Rev. Vanessa
  M. Brown 
Karlene Griffiths Sekou, MPH, MTS 
President 
Dignidad International 
Cambridge, MA 
Rev. Felicia Y. Thomas 
Rev. Carla Patterson 
Rev. Alisha Lola Jones, M.Div. 
CEO & Founder 
InSight Initiative, Inc. 
Rev. Margaret Aymer, Ph. D. 
Associate Professor 
Interdenominational  Theological 
Center 
Min. Brenda Summerville, M.Div. 
Chicago, IL 
Roger A. Sneed, Ph.D. 
Associate Professor of Religion 
Furman
  University 
Rev. Andre E.
  Johnson, PhD.  
Pastor, Gifts of
  Life Ministries, Memphis, TN 
Dr. James L Netters Associate Professor of Rhetoric & Religion and African American Studies,  
Memphis Theological Seminary 
Rev. Althea Bailey 
Rev. Yvette A. Assem, M.Div. Womanist Missionary 
Language of the  
Black Woman's Touch 
Min. Robin P. Sessoms, M.Div. 
Rev. Dorothy Harris, J.D., Pastor 
Unity Fellowship Church of 
Columbia (Maryland) 
Carla E. Banks 
Rev. Toni Dunbar, D.Min.  
Associate Pastor & Dean 
City of Refuge United Church of 
Christ, Oakland, CA 
Executive Director, YA Flunder 
Foundation 
Founder &
  Director, Refuge Leadership Development Institute 
Rev. Gwen Thomas, M. Ed. Author, LGBT activist, & Huffington Post blogger 
The Rev. Canon Terence 
Alexander Lee, Rector 
St. Gabriel's Episcopal
  Church, Hollis, NY 
Rev. W. Jeffrey Campbell, Executive Director 
Hudson Pride Connections 
Center, Jersey City, NJ 
Evan R. Bunch 
Pastor Genetta Y Hatcher 
Detroit, Michigan 
The Rev. Fr. Marcus G. Halley, 
Associate Priest 
St. Andrew's Episcopal Church - Kansas
  City, MO 
Rev. Dr. MarQuita Carmichael 
Burton 
Rev. Don Darius Butler, Pastor Tabernacle Community Baptist Church 
Milwaukee, WI 
Rev. Raphael G. Warnock, Ph.D. 
The Historic Ebenezer
  Baptist 
Church, Atlanta, GA 
Dr. Tony McNeill, DWS, Director of Worship &
  The Arts 
Historic Ebenezer
  Baptist 
Church - Atlanta, GA  
Min. Davica Williams-Warren, M.Div., Miami, FL 
Rev. Frank A. Thomas, Ph.D. 
Director of the Academy of  
Preaching and Celebration 
The Nettie Sweeney and Hugh T. Miller 
Professor of Homelitics  
Christian Theological Seminary 
Rev. William I. Spencer 
Min. Kymberly McNair  
Social Justice Coordinator  
Antioch Baptist Church  
Bedford Hills, NY 
Dr. Teresa Fry Brown 
Director Black Church
  Studies Program 
And Professor of
  Homiletics 
Emory University,
  Atlanta, GA 
Rev. Dr. Yolanda
  Pierce,  
Director, Black Church
  Studies 
Princeton Theological
  Seminary 
Dr. Sharon Ellis Davis 
Director of the Center
  for African American Ministries & Black Church Studies and  
Adjunct Professor 
McCormick Theological
  Seminary 
Chicago, IL 
UCC Pastor 
Rev. Kimberly G.
  Walker, Pastor 
Village of Hope CME
  Church 
Stone Mountain, GA 
Joshua Crutchfield 
Nashville, TN 
Rev. Dr. Judy Cummings 
New Covenant Christian
  Church 
Nashville, TN 
Rev. Dominique C.
  Atchison, M.Div. 
Associate Minister  
Brown Memorial Baptist
  Church 
Sacred Conversations on
  Race Coordinator 
Connecticut Conference
  UCC 
Rev. Chaka S. Holley,
  MSW, M.Div. 
Dr. Lynne S. Darden 
Assistant Professor New
  Testament 
Interdenominational
  Theological Seminary 
Atlanta, GA 
Rev. Cassandry Redmond,
  M.Div. 
Christian Methodist
  Episcopal Church 
Richmond, CA | 
Renita J. Weems, Ph.D. 
Biblical Scholar 
Nashville, TN 
Pamela R. Lightsey, PhD 
Boston University School of Theology 
Rev. Asa J. Lee 
Arlington, VA 
Rev. Carolyn Hutchinson 
Temple Hills, MD 
Rev. Rashad D.
  Grove, Pastor  
First Baptist Church of Wayne Wayne, PA 
The Rev. Dr. Violet Lee 
Tamura A. Lomax, Ph.D., Assistant Professor 
Department of Gender, Sexuality and Women's Studies 
Virginia Commonwealth 
University 
Darnell L. Moore writer and activist 
Estee Nena Dillard 
Rev. Cherisna Jean-Marie 
Atlanta, GA  
Rev. Tawana
  Davis 
Executive Minister 
Shorter Community AME Church Assistant Coordinator, Rocky Mountain District Women in Ministry 
Rev. Dr. Alice Hunt, 
Chicago Theological Seminary 
Chicago, IL, UCC 
Jamall Andrew Calloway, S.T.M. Associate Minister 
Mt. Aery Baptist Church, Bridgeport, CT 
Rev. Benjamin Ledell Reynolds,  
PhD student 
Chicago Theological Seminary 
Fallon Wilson, M.A., ABD University of Chicago 
Rev. Karyn Carlo PhD 
Rev. Dr. Cheryl Townsend Gilkes 
Assistant Pastor
  of Special Projects 
Union
  Baptist Church 
Cambridge, Massachusetts 
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Professor 
Colby College, Waterville, Maine 
Rev. Charisse R. Tucker, 
Minister of Administration 
St. Paul's Baptist Church,  
Philadelphia, PA 
Terry T. Hocker, Sr. 
Pastor/Founder 
Bound By Truth And Love 
Ministries, Cincinnati, OH 
Rev. Jamie D. Hawley, Chaplain 
University of Michigan 
Rev. Kendal Brown 
Dean of Students 
Lancaster Theological Seminary 
Rev. Melva L. Sampson 
M. Brandon McCormack, Ph.D., Assistant Professor
  Departments of Pan-African Studies and Humanities (Religious Studies) 
University of Louisville 
Charlotte Caldwell 
Rev. Brian Foulks 
Lexington, SC 
Lisa Ann Anderson 
Rev. Osagyefo Sekou 
Pastor for Formation and Justice  
The First Baptist Church in  
Jamaica Plain (Boston, MA) 
Rev. Dorian Mendez-Vaz, President &
  Founder  
Within Her Reach, Inc. 
Min. Ryan Hawthorne, M.Div. Princeton Theological Seminary 
Rev. Kimberly Henderson 
Philadelphia, PA 
Rev. Raedorah C. Stewart, MA Preacher, Poet, Mother of a Son 
Rev. T. Renée Crutcher, Founder/President 
Sankofa Ministries & Tellin' Our 
Story Publishing, Inc.  
Atlanta, GA 
Min. Kamilah Hall Sharp, J.D. M. Div. Candidate 
Memphis Theological Seminary 
Bishop Dwayne D. Royster, 
Senior Pastor, Living Water 
United Church of Christ General Secretary, Higher Ground Christian Fellowship International 
Dr. Donique McIntosh 
Associate Pastor 
Namaste' United Church of 
Christ 
Minister Kelli X, M.Div 
Madison, TN 
Rev. Sharon L. Bowers 
UMC Pastor 
ITC Alumna 
Rev. James A. Hardaway, M.Div., MACE 
Pastor, Mount Gilead AME Church, Columbus, GA 
Rev. Stephanie Buckhanon 
Crowder, Ph.D. 
Keith Crawford, Jr. | 
