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Biography
Woodie White is currently Residing
Bishop for the Illinois Area of the United Methodist Church. He grew up
on Lennox Avenue in the heart of Harlem, and by his own admission was a
troubled kid. His journey from there to Bishop is a challenge to all of
us. His most recent book is Confessions of a Prairie Pilgrim, a book of
meditations taken from a weekly column. [Biographical information is correct as of the broadcast date noted
above.]
"Being
Upbeat in a Downbeat World"
It is an audacious invitation: The Psalmist dares to ask that God search
hearts, know thoughts, to see if there be any wicked way in heart and
mind.
I was a student in Boston University when I was required to take
clinical training in some hospital. I decided to do that training in a
mental institution. There, once a week, I would spend a day trying to
provide some ministry to those who had lost their way mentally. The
mornings were difficult as we worked with patients, but I discovered the
afternoons were even more difficult. For in the afternoons those of us
who were students spent hours with psychologists and psychiatrists and
chaplains, not now looking at patients, but rather looking at ourselves,
trying to discern what it was in us that we needed to know better, what
made us tick, where were the hidden places in us that we did not want
revealed. It was a difficult time indeed. It was more difficult to look
at me than it was to look at others.
The Spirituals in their simple verse, but in their profound message,
seem to get right to the point of things theologically and worldly. In
one of their moving verses you hear these words:
It's me, it's me, it's me, O Lord,
Standing in the need of prayer.
Not my father, not my mother
But it's me, O Lord,
Standing in the need of prayer.
Not my sister, not my brother,
But it's me, O Lord,
Standing in the need of prayer.
It's me, O Lord. "Search me, O God and know my heart, try me and know my
thoughts and see if there be any wicked way in me. Lead me in the Way
Everlasting."
A little girl was overheard saying her prayers one evening. Her mother
heard her say these words: "O God, make the bad people good and the good
people nice." I suppose when we get down to it, all of us - the bad
people and the so-called good people - need to have time to look inward,
to see if there is any wicked way in us. For even good people are not
always nice. They are not nice to others and often not nice to
themselves. Taking time to look inward is awesome, sometimes
frightening; we don't like what we see.
It seems that now many people don't want to take responsibility for
themselves. "Everything is wrong except me. The government is wrong, the
church is wrong, politics is wrong, my neighbor is wrong, and, in my
case, my wife is always wrong, but I am always right." We don't want to
look at ourselves. But we must, for maturity requires that we own
responsibility for those actions for which only we have responsibility.
"Search me, O God, and know my heart, try me and know my thought, and
see if there is any wicked way in me." In my most honest moments I know
the prayer of that Spiritual is really my prayer. It's me, it's me, it's
me, O Lord, standing in the need of prayer. Not my father, not my
mother, not my sister, not my brother, but it's me, O Lord, standing in
the need of prayer.
I have a good friend who is a banker. Some months ago he gave me a book
of prayers. That's most unusual - a banker giving a bishop a book of
prayers - but it has become one of my most treasured books. It is called
A Book of Private Prayer by a Roman Catholic Priest. In it he shares his
utmost dreams and frustrations and aspirations. In one of those prayers
he talks about how he wants to be better known by God. He wants to own
his own faults and failings and then he makes this haunting observation:
He says, "I suppose God is more offended by my evasions and excuses than
by my glaring failures."
I suppose God is more offended by our evasiveness, by our excuses, than
by our failures. I challenge you, I invite you, to take time in the
quiet of your room, the quiet of your home, and ask that haunting
question asked by the Psalmist, "See if there be any wicked way in me.
Search my heart, my thoughts." Dare you stand naked spiritually before
God and ask God to look at your attitude toward your neighbor, towards
those who may look differently or speak with a different accent. Your
attitudes towards those who may be of a different class or group or
nation or opinion? Dare you show your naked self to God, asking that God
search you?
I suppose that none of us are all that we would like to be - none
perfect, none righteous. And the words of the Spiritual certainly are
ours: "It's me O Lord, it's me, O Lord, standing in the need of prayer."
I want to blame government and politicians. I want to blame church and
social services. I want to blame spouse and members of my family. But
too infrequently do I look at me - my faults, my failures, the places I
need to grow to become a better me. Yes, it's me, it's me, it's me, O
Lord, standing in the need of prayer.
There's this cosmic link from the appeal of the Psalmist to a Cross, a
Cross on which One died for us all - One who stands waiting and able and
willing to help us. We are able to ask God to look at us only because we
know that after the searching, after the revelation, that whatever is
found there we do not have to bear all by ourselves.
There is a marvelous little story about two Japanese monks who were
travelling along a muddy road. They came to a bend in the road and there
they saw a lovely young woman dressed in silks and satins and a
beautiful gown. She was trying to cross the muddy road without getting
her gown soiled. It was an impossible task. One of the monks immediately
moved through the mud, lifted her ever so gently, and then carried her
to the other side. As he did that, his companion, Ekido, looked with
utter horror, not saying a word, but obviously displeased with what he
saw. The two, Ekido and Tanzan, continued their journey. But Ekido said
not a word for the rest of their journey. Finally, as night came, he
could no longer hold his discomfort and anger and he said to his friend,
Tanzan, "Why did you touch that young woman? You know it is against our
belief for us to do that and yet you lifted her. Why did you do it?"
Where upon Tanzan said to Ekido, "My brother, I left her along the road.
Are you still carrying her?"
Yes, we are able to stand before God with this plea: "Search me, O God.
It is me, it is me, it is me." We are able to stand before God only
because we know that whatever is found, whatever seen, that we don't
have to carry it all alone. The burden is too heavy, the attitudes fixed
- some from childhood through adulthood - they are heavy and we wonder
what we can do about them.
There is One who comes at the point of owning our thoughts, confessing
our sin, standing stripped of pretense and standing in utter honesty,
and who says, "I can take the attitude and change it. I can take the
behavior and change it. I can take your arrogance and make you more
humble. I can take your prejudice and make you an open, new creation."
It's me, it's me, it's me O Lord, standing in the need of prayer. And
the Lord says, "You don't have to carry it all by yourself. You don't
have to carry that load all of your life. You don't have to be the way
you are. You can be better."
When I was a boy I remember a song that was sung by the late singer,
Bing Crosby. "You can be better than you are." Isn't that a wonderful
promise? I no longer have to hold attitudes and hatred. I no longer have
to be gripped and held firmly by habits that do not help me. I no longer
have to hate, but I can become a loving, new and caring person. But only
when I'm willing to stand before God and acknowledge that I'm not as
nice as I ought to be, nor as faithful, nor as kind, nor as committed,
nor as generous. Then ask God to take what God finds and where there is
any wicked way in me, help me to become a better person.
It's me, it's me, it's me O Lord, standing in the need of prayer. Not
political parties, not political leaders, not my adversaries, not my
friends, but it's me O Lord.
So I pray that you will be willing to stand in that moment of quietness.
You know what you need to bring to God. Is it a habit, an attitude, some
little quirk that you know is preventing you from being the best you
that God would have you be? In the quiet of your room, will you stand,
will you kneel, will you sit, and say with those profound words of the
Psalm, "Search me O God, know my heart, try me and know my thoughts, see
if there be any wicked way in me." Because "it is me, it is me O Lord,
standing in the need of prayer."
And then you will discover the words of our Lord, "There is no sin so
terrible that God's love cannot forgive." In that moment you will
discover the possibility that is yours to be a new person - a new person
in spirit, a new person in heart, a new person in mind. What an
opportunity is yours because that is the kind of God whom we serve -One
who loves and cares for us and who searches us out in our most difficult
and in our most unlovable moments. It's me, and it's you, standing in
the need of prayer.
Let us pray: Search me O God and know my heart. Try me and know my
thoughts and see if there be any wicked way in me. Then lead me in your
Way Everlasting.
Interview with Bishop
Woodie White
Dave Hardin:
Woodie, you told us, in an earlier show, how
you grew up in a pretty tough part of Harlem as a troubled kid. Obviously, some
changes have taken place. Tell us some of the turning points in your early life,
would you?
Bishop Woodie White: Yes, the turning points
were always people, never programs per se, but individuals who took time to
correct me, to show what I call "tough love." A teacher who was tough but
loving, a pastor who was tough but loving, a Christian Education director -tough
but loving - and especially a man whose life did not demonstrate all that he
taught, interestingly enough, but who had the good sense to put me in the right
direction.
Hardin:
Who was this man? Was he a pastor or an
uncle?
White: No, he was my God-Father, and
literally, a Godfather.
Hardin:
So you had a real role-model, which is pretty
important. One of the things that I hear about, and I think one of the most
troubled areas today, is the inner-city youth. Huge drop-out rates from the High
Schools, a lot of anger, a lot of unemployment, a lot drugs and not very many
answers for this part of our society. What are some of your thoughts on how we
can get at this problem?
White: I'm convinced that there is no
substitute for caring people because caring people can take a little and do a
lot with it. You can have a lot of things and not have people who care and my
feeling is you won't accomplish as much. I think people in the church, people in
the community, must never abdicate their personal responsibility to show, as I
say, tough love - to be able to correct, but to be able to show those you are
correcting that you really love them and care about them. I think that's one of
the things that is sorely needed today.
Hardin:
You mentioned that you had a mentor that
changed your life. I'm really an enthusiast about mentoring. I'm told that young
men particularly need a role model and that they are hard to come by in the
inner-city, in the Black community and the other parts of the inner-city
community. How do we get at that? Do you agree with me and how do we find these
mentors?
White: Yes, the interesting thing that
happened in my life, I was challenged by a man - I was talking hip, I knew the
lingo, I had my own little walk and my own nickname - and one day I used slang
to convey a thought and to my surprise, he challenged me. He said, "That kind of
communication won't help you in life and you've got to learn to communicate
better than that." I was surprised because I saw him as a role model and in fact
he seemed to evidence in his own life the kind of model that I was trying to
project. But he said, "I am not the kind of model that you need."
Hardin:
How old were you when you really sensed the
presence of God in your life and had some kind of personal involvement or
relationship with the Lord?
White:
All my life. I never had any trouble
with sensing the presence of God in my life. My trouble was with the
church. But I always knew there was a presence of God, I can't remember
a time when I did not feel God's presence.
Hardin:
How about the decision to go to
seminary. What did that come from?
White: From a woman who,
again, challenged me. I had intended to be a lawyer, and she said, "You
are not going to be a lawyer, God is calling you to do something else."
I was amazed and I do believe that God speaks through people and people
can help us hear God's call even when we are not listening.
Hardin:
Before you became Resident Bishop of the
Illinois Area, you were General Secretary of the Commission of Religion
and Race. What kinds of things were you facing, what kinds of racism
were you dealing with in the church at that time?
White: At that time, we were
dealing with legally constituted, segregated structures where black
people were in one structure, white people were in another structure and
hispanic people were in another structure. Part of my responsibility was
to help develop a structure in which all people were to be united and
treated fairly. This was during the '60's and the early '70's. Then, of
course, racism was more overt than it later became to be in the
beginning of the '80's at any rate.
Hardin:
How about today? Are we making
headway, are we losing some ground?
White: I think we are losing
ground. I'm sorry to say it. I think we are especially losing ground in
the North. I happen to feel that if the North had done as much to deal
with race relationships in the last 20 years as the South has done, the
whole country would be at a better place. Racism is a lot more subtle in
some places and then in some other places we are seeing some more overt
expressions of racism. We seem to have given up completely on the idea
of having an authentically integrated society. I think we still prefer
to be in our own separate worlds.
Hardin:
I'm sure you are right. What is one
of your dreams for the church, what would you like to see happen?
White: I dream that one day
our society can live out this wonderful American creed that we have,
where all people will be accepted as they are and all people will have a
chance to excel and have the potential and opportunity to be fine,
productive citizens.
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