Thursday, August 22, 2013

Lee Daniel's The Butler giving new meaning to servitude!


Lee Daniel’s The Butler giving new meaning to servitude!



Recently I was invited to speak some words of inspiration at my family reunion.  I had learned prior to the reunion that my great grandfather Doc Patterson was a butler for a family in Cherokee County, AL.  Because I love to use movies in my sermons I had to incorporate Lee Daniels’s The Butler into my speech!
            After my words of inspiration a family friend approached me about slavery, the Lord and how slavery could not be a good thing for Black people. First off I never said it was a good thing. Slavery is nothing to be glorified! Slavery was an evil event in the history of the U.S. and Black America. I said that my great grandparents Doc and Lula Patterson worked hard to give their children opportunities and they did it as servants.
            Humbling yourself to service in any capacity is discipline.  It’s challenging and should never be taken for granted.  One of my favorite scenes in the film is when Dr. King tells Louis that maids, butlers, nannies and other domestics have defied racist stereotypes by being trustworthy, hardworking and loyal.  They maintain other people’s household and raise other people’s children.  They have gradually broken down hardened and hateful attitudes.  Their apparent subservience is also quietly subversive.  Being a servant you appear to have no voice but in reality your actions speaks volumes to your service!
            Through the film we saw examples of servitude to different things for example, the master’s mother Vanessa Redgrave taught Cecile how to serve her family in the big house and Clarence Williams III taught Cecile how to serve in the world as a free Black Man. Louis trying to serve his people by fighting against his country while is younger brother Charlie was serving and fighting for his country. 
            Like Cecile Gains my great grandfather wanted a better life for his children and he did what he had to do to obtain it and so on and so forth. When you dedicate yourself to service it’s a great sacrifice! You put yourself last to make someone else first!
            Isaiah 53:4-5 speaks of the greatest sacrifice and service to us, "Surely he took up our pain and bore our suffering, yet we considered him punished by God, stricken by him and afflicted. But he was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities; the punishment that brought us peace was on him and by his wounds we are healed." 
            Isaiah 53:7 goes on to say, "He was oppressed and afflicted, yet he did not open his mouth; he was led like a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before its shearers is silent, so he did not open his mouth."  Cecile saw and heard so much during his service in the White House but he never open his mouth to speak against it! Cecile Gains affected change in the White House by speaking up for the well-deserved raises for the Black staff. 
            Serving and service looks different for people.  Sometimes its quiet and sometimes its loud. Sometimes it’s dangerous and sometimes it’s humbling. But no matter how it is presented it still produces the same outcome…Change!