Worship Across the Racial Divide: Part II of Interview with Gerardo Marti
I'm pleased today to post Part II of our interview with Gerardo Marti about his new book Worship Across the Racial Divide. Part I of the interview is here.
Many of the
people you interview in your book kind of innocently reproduce what scholars
would call notions of racial essentialism -- black people as essentially more
"spiritual" than others, for example, obviously an old trope in
American religion. Is there a way in which racial diversity in churches, if
anything, tends to strengthen these kinds of views, or do they break them down?
Across
all churches and all of the interviews, there exists an overarching belief that
the best kind of worship orients around a universally idealized image of Blacks
singing gospel. African Americans are universally believed to experience
authentic worship more profoundly than any other racial-ethnic group. Superior
worship is a racialized “gift” that comes from “suffering” and imparts their
music with the character of “soul.” And gospel music is believed to be the only
legitimate form of musical expression since it preserves a racial heritage and
is rooted (in their minds) the suffering and oppression experienced by blacks.
Even
when diverse congregations have proportionally more non-whites than whites
(nine of the twelve congregations), the pursuit of differences is consistently
marked in terms of more “blacks,” more “Hispanics,” and sometimes more
“Asians.” Racialized stigmas attach to different ethnic and racial groups with
respect to preferred styles of music and worship, and these notions are not
evenly distributed. The agenda of “diversity” means that it becomes a publicly
defined goal. In my observation, the pursuit of “diversity” becomes centered
mostly on blacks, and “black music” emerges as a priority. A key vehicle
becomes forming an “inspiration” or “gospel” choir. Gospel choirs take a
privileged role in diverse churches. The question, “Have you seen our gospel
choir?” becomes a point of pride, an indication that the church is firmly
committed to the principle of diversity
.
.
In
short, the goal of diversification in the American church appears to be
accentuating notions of racial essentialism rather than removing them.
One of the
subheadings in the book is "Worship Leaders Carry the Burden of
Diversity." Tell us basically what you mean by that important concept.
By
their position, whether paid or volunteer, worship leaders, music directors,
and church musicians who design liturgical processes bear much of the weight
for the perceived corrections and visionary expectations for diversification.
They carry
out the mandates of pastors and the (often capricious) desires of congregants
in the way each believe they should be accomplished. Worship leaders are given
broad, “visionary” imperatives without specific direction of how to fulfill
them. They implement ill-conceived diversity efforts with little support, no
training, and often only obligatory enthusiasm. Even the best-trained musicians
do not have the versatility to switch musical styles quickly, repeatedly, and
with variety, in addition to being able to recruit, lead, and conduct
less-trained volunteers who are often expected to come from various ancestral
backgrounds and play multiple musical genres. Worship leaders are not prepared
for issues of diversity.
Since
lead pastors cannot expect the attendance of a congregation to further
diversify overnight, the weight of evaluation comes in assessing the “sound” of
the music. Mandated diversity through music coupled with unclear standards of
assessment leaves worship pastors scrambling to clearly show diverse musical
styles in a way that their lead pastors will recognize as diverse. That leads
to recruitment on the basis of “conspicuous color” and the introduction of
highly stereotyped “ethnic” music, especially “black” music. Even the often-discussed
solution of hiring a black worship leader sidesteps more serious
considerations. In fact, black worship pastors—operating as unofficial
“diversity officers” of the congregation—may be the most burdened of all.
In their book
DIVIDED BY FAITH, Emerson and Christian Smith provide a very skeptical argument
about whether white Christians can understand the structural mechanisms which reproduce
racial inequality in American society. Do you agree with their assessment? And
can racially diverse churches do much about that if they indeed reproduce the
individualistic theology which Emerson and Smith see as being behind white
Christians' failure to understand this fundamental issue?
Religion
as an abstract social force is not capable of eliminating racial divisions, yet
particular elements of religious life can be and certainly are used as tools to
accomplish specific religious imperatives. Despite reinforcing ethnic and racial
differences through assumptions and stereotypes, my own work reveals how
churches indeed do–often inadvertently–promote racial diversity in their
churches. Multiracial churches structure for diversity in ways that actualize
the racial and ethnic integration of their ministries, but not in ways they
intend.
Diversity
happens because members are more likely to stay in a congregation if they find
ways of being involved and feeling connected with others in the church. The music
ministries of a congregation demand a considerable amount of planning and
preparation. As diversely recruited members become involved in the musical
ministries of their church, they do not necessarily see themselves as working
to diversify their congregations, but they do see themselves as contributing to
their church. And by being part of their church, they succeed in accentuating
the diversity of their church through their involvements. They place
themselves in a position to know and be known by others, so recognizability and
relationships between people through music are more important than the acoustic
sound.
In
short, diversity happens—even without the intention to diversify—because music
and worship create practical spaces of interaction where cross-racial bonds are
formed. Through participation in worship music of the services (both in
following direction and hearing performances) members come to feel connected to
each other and are supportive of each other as part of the same “church family.”
Very briefly and
concisely, what is the most important take-away point that you hope readers
will get from your book?
It’s
ironic -- beliefs of racial authenticity and performance promote profound
assumptions of racial difference; however, such beliefs simultaneously drive
the imperative to include people of diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds into
worship ministry structures. The active incorporation of diverse people in the
performance of worship music creates structured opportunities for the creation
of genuine community. In the end, the musical liturgy of a church is a
strategic mechanism for putting conspicuously diverse people in public,
deliberate, and cooperative interaction with other members in a congregation.
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