The Black Church (BOOK REVIEW)
The Black
Church:
Where Women Pray and Men Prey
by Deborrah Cooper
Amagination Publishing
Paperback, $21.95
212 pages
ISBN: 978-1-105-63687-5
Book
Review by Kam Williams
“If
you are a single black woman regularly attending church and tithing, or you are
a woman with children that accompany you to church, please open your mind to
the expressed dangers within the walls of your house of worship, because far
too often, black women go to church to pray to God, and black men are there to
game on, feed on and prey on them like predators…
The
ills suffered by women in black churches under patriarchal philosophies of male
superiority are shocking. Throughout the pages of this book are real stories
about churches and the pastors that run them.
These
are true accounts of men charged with spiritual enrichment and development of
communities—behaving in damaging, abusive ways toward women and children… My
goal always has and always will be to expose uncomfortable truths in black
culture in relationships.”
--
Excerpted from the Introduction (pgs. xvi-xviii)
It’s hard
to imagine that whoever coined the phrase, “The closer to church, the further
from God,” could possibly have had as long a laundry list of complaints about
Christianity as disbeliever Deborrah Cooper. Actually, Ms. Cooper’s issues are mostly
with the black males in the Black
Church, whether in the pulpits
or the pews.
This
fearless feminist levels so many accusations against brothers it’s frightening.
But she does make a persuasive case by way of a compelling mix of statistics
and anecdotal evidence.
She chides
black females for being the most religious demographic in the country, since they’re
getting little out of religion besides pie-in-the-sky promises. Meanwhile, their
pastors are pressuring them to tithe 10%, even though such a directive is apparently
nowhere to be found in the bible.
The author further
alleges that an unholy arrangement exists whereby African-American women are
basically being exploited by pimps posing as preachers. She says that these ruthless
exploiters zero-in on the vulnerable and lonely with low self-esteem, make them
dependent, promise them riches, and use a combination of seduction and
intimidation to keep them under control.
Her
incendiary verbiage will undoubtedly strike most folks as extreme, but Cooper sees
stirring up controversy as her only hope of shaking sisters out of the
doldrums. That’s why she summarizes by saying, “As long as black women allow
themselves to be dazzled by fast-talking black men and their weapons of
religion, we will always be at the bottom… Church leaders have proven
themselves to be undeserving of your devotion or of your respect, and most
certainly undeserving of your money.”
A damning indictment
of black ministers as little more than predators in cleric’s clothing.
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