Thursday, January 31, 2008

The unholy trinity

Churches must recognize the spread of HIV/AIDS as a justice issue and overcome pervasive stigmas about the disease if they are to live out the gospel in their communities, according to panelists at a special interest session on “The HIV/AIDS Pandemic” during the New Baptist Covenant celebration January 31.

The issue is plagued by “an unholy trinity of silence, shame and stigma,” said Raphael Warnock, pastor of the historic Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta. Warnock said HIV/AIDS, once considered a disease of gay white men, now affects a disproportionate number of both men and women of color. African Americans make up just 12 percent of America’s population, but account for more than 50 percent of persons newly diagnosed with HIV/AIDS, he said.

AIDS has become the leading cause of death among black women aged 25-44, he said, but “As the epidemic has swung to people of color, the money has not followed the epidemic.” The response would be different if there was a proportional increase among white women, he said.

The spread of AIDS is “inextricably connected to America’s growing prison-industrial complex,” Warnock said. With more than two million people in prison, most for non-violent offenses, many men are leaving prison after participating in homosexual encounters, then returning to the general population to infect their wives and girlfriends, he said.

D. L. Jackson (right), pastor of Liberty Baptist Church in Chicago, said HIV/AIDS has also begun making inroads among senior adults, many of whom are uninformed and don’t think they are at risk.

Carla Nelson, education facilitator for Canadian Baptist Ministries, said churches should respond to the AIDS pandemic by simply “being the church” – accepting others and reaching out to them as Christ did.

“We must end the isolation and turn the stigma around,” she said, speaking of a Rwandan pastor on the outskirts of Kigali who led his congregation to make it a matter of pride to be tested for HIV and to sponsor “guardian groups” to care for those who suffer from the disease.

Malcom Marler (lower right), who has worked since 1994 as a chaplain in an AIDS clinic at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB), went beyond seeing HIV/AIDS as a needed field of ministry.

“I believe HIV/AIDS is not only a calling for the church to respond to in practical and caring ways,” he said. “This disease offers the opportunity for the renewal of the church” because getting to know people with HIV/AIDS can remind the church “what grace is all about.”

“If we’re going to find Jesus, we’d better go find people with HIV,” Marler said. “If we get it right on grace, everything else will fall into place.”
Participants talked about practical means by which churches can minister to those who suffer from HIV/AIDS.

Church leaders need to take the lead in getting tested, the panelists said, as a way of encouraging others who need the testing but might be afraid to get it. “Ministers have to set the example,” said Warnock. “Deacons and trustees and people who’ve been married for 60 years – if they all go, then people at risk can get lost in the movement.”

Jackson described a residence facility his church founded for persons and families affected by AIDS. Called “Vision House,” the ministry provides housing at reduced cost, a wholesome environment, and counseling services, he said.

All four speakers emphasized the importance of education, and not just in special seminars. Nelson cited a Ugandan study showing that children who do not attend school are three times more likely to contract AIDS by their early twenties than children who are educated.

Warnock said being informed is essential. “We need to educate our children and not be afraid to talk about sex in church,” he said.

Marler echoed his thought: “We’ve always had a hard time talking about sex or drugs in the church, but we need to talk about the people we are called to be with, to rediscover where Jesus already is.”

People need to know that they don’t have to be afraid of people with HIV, Marler said. They need to know “You can’t get it from sitting beside them, hugging them, being baptized in the same water with them, or taking communion together” he said.

When people are well informed, they don’t have to suffer from “AFRAIDS,” he said – “A Fear Related to AIDS.”

4 comments:

Mark Osgatharp said...

While the New Covenant Baptists are condemning the government for not throwing enough money at AIDs, schools for not teaching people how to fornicate without contracting a disease, and people who are afraid of getting a disease that could kill them........


.........wouldn't one think that there would be at least a bare little mention that the Word of God repeatedly and in the strongest terms possible condemns the sexual immorality which perpetuates this awful plague? Such as,

"Marriage is honourable in all, and the bed undefiled: but whoremongers and adulterers God will judge."

Or,

"This is the will of God, even your sanctification, that ye should abstain from fornication: that every one of you should know how to possess his vessel in sanctification and honour; not in the lust of concupiscence, even as the Gentiles which know not God: That no man go beyond and defraud his brother in any matter: because that the Lord is the avenger of all such, as we also have forewarned you and testified."

Or,

"But I say unto you, That whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery with her already in his heart. And if thy right eye offend thee, pluck it out, and cast it from thee: for it is profitable for thee that one of thy members should perish, and not that thy whole body should be cast into hell."

Mark Osgatharp
Wynne, Arkansas

starduster said...

I'd like to stress here that this is the reason we all need the saving power of Jesus, because as we see, we only need to think the sin to commit it. Doing it is not necessary to be condemned. Just thinking it.

Now we see why Jesus is so important to have in our lives, since no one can claim a sinless life.

star

Mike said...

Mark, truly you are a man of great biblical knowledge- a Pharisee. You certainly are keeping a tradition alive.

Mark Osgatharp said...

Mike,

You said,

"Mark, truly you are a man of great biblical knowledge- a Pharisee. You certainly are keeping a tradition alive."

Well, I hope I am keeping the tradition of real Christianity alive. But I don't see how you can judge me a Pharisee for simply pointing out that the Scriptures - the authority of which the New Covenant Baptist claim to honor - repeatedly state that God will avenge sexual immorality.

Now Starduster is right in pointing out that our sinfulness - whether in thought or deed - shows all our need of Christ as Savior. But none of that changes the fact that God judges sin.

David, who is one of the greatest figures in the Bible and whose life is held up as typical of the grace of God at work (called by Isaiah the "sure mercies of David"), committed one act of adultery and God judged him severely for it, though He forgave Him of it.

Again I say, throughout the Scriptures the prophets of God condemned sexual immorality in the strongest language possible. Cannot the New Covenant Baptists, who aspire to be a prophetic voice to the AIDs plague, not muster up one word of criticism towards those who are spreading it through adultery, sodomy and drug abuse? Surely those who are spreading this disease deserve at least as much criticism as those who are afraid of getting it!

And don't give me any hypocritical lies about being non-judgmental, for it is common knowledge that liberals are shrill and profuse in their heaping of judgment on those who actually believe in the Bible.


Mark Osgatharp
Wynne, Arkansas