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SEBTS lecturer examines North American Christianity
Baptist Press staff
January 30, 2015
4 MIN READ TIME

SEBTS lecturer examines North American Christianity

SEBTS lecturer examines North American Christianity
Baptist Press staff
January 30, 2015

Derek Hicks, assistant professor of religion and culture at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, N.C., was the 2014 Page Lecture guest speaker at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary last fall.

Hicks, who researches and teaches in the area of African American religion, is the author of Reclaiming Spirit in the Black Faith Tradition and a contributor to several other works.

The Page Lectures bring key theologians to campus to deliver two lectures on a subject of concern to the Christian community.

Hicks’ first lecture was titled “A Reclaiming Past: Considering the Historical ‘Others’ in the North American Christian Tradition.”

He presented two statements from others that were influential on his Christian faith: “My faith is stronger today in the loss of my first son than it ever has been” and “You seem smart, why are you a Christian?”

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Derek Hicks

“My faith perspective was a bit deeper than I had initially given it credit,” Hicks said. “It was more complex and messier than what I had initially thought. This ultimately caused me to ask several questions of my own.”

He explored the reality of why so many African Americans chose to convert to Christianity throughout a history of hardship. The faith that Hicks’ forefathers possessed impacted his life. He was raised in the church and baptized at the age of seven.

Oral traditions passed down by his grandmother were especially influential. “She knew firsthand how faith in God would overcome anything,” Hicks said. “African Americans have articulated … a reclaiming spirit, a spirit that governs the nature of their Christian expression for those who have had to endure this world as others.”

He believes that African Americans had an ability to seek something good out of the bad. They “sanitized a soiled form of Christianity so they might be transformed, so they might be seen [as] new creatures not simply in terms of sin nature but also as whole people in God’s sight,” he said.

Hicks pointed out that “by cleaning up Christianity, they were able to draw upon its cleansing properties to present their lives anew.”

“Cleansed, healed and empowered by the blood,” he emphasized. “The resulting nature of this faith tradition gives hope to the others and is articulated in the words of Jesus Himself, the one who is most worthy to be emulated in African American tradition.

“Black faith has traditionally been an active expression, a liberating posture, one that takes this Christ-event and makes it live, alive in these experiences through what I call reclamation,” Hicks said.

In the following lecture, titled “The Gumbo Pot: Theological Education as a Complex Brew,” Hicks focused on how these topics relate to academics. The two questions he highlighted were “why study African American Christianity?” and “but were they saved?”

Using the metaphor of a “melting pot” and gumbo stew, Hicks said there is one “folk” represented in a melting pot.

“I am more of a gumbo man,” Hicks said. “This is not a neat or tidy dish, thus it is not a melting pot. Gumbo is a complex brew of flavors oddly coming together to form an exquisite experience of taste. Gumbo is cultural to be sure. … It exhibits colorful expressions of a given community. Gumbo binds a community and it is tied to a general posture of fellowship and cooperation.”

A lack of contact and fellowship in a community will lead to fear and hatred among people, Hicks said, voicing a view of Christ that calls Christians to have a moral responsibility to embrace inclusion and selflessness.

Hicks called for theological education to promote deliberate dialogue concerning diversity and to recruit and retain diverse faculty, students and staff. Theological education also should alter structures to help those from underrepresented backgrounds and to strengthen preparation in the classroom for global citizenship.

Underscoring the value of diversity to the audience, he said a melting pot “is not inherently a bad thing. I just prefer the flavors, the distinctiveness and the complexity that comes with the gumbo pot. If not for the gumbo pot I would not have some enduring friendships both on the right and left that catapulted me to where I am today.”

To watch the Nov. 4-5 lectures online, please visit http://multimedia.sebts.edu//.

To view photos from chapel, please see https://www.flickr.com/photos/southeastern/sets/72157646288323930/.