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"A New Thing" (Black History)

Topic: #3 of 303 for Sermons on Holy Spirit: Baptism
Scripture: Isaiah 43:18-43:19
Denomination: Baptist
Date Added: February 2006
Audience: Seeker Adults (31 - 49)
Keywords: none (Suggest a Keyword)
Biblical Text: Isaiah 43: 18-19
“Remember ye not the former things, neither consider the things of old. Behold, I will do a new thing; now it shall spring forth; shall ye not know it? I will even make a way in the wilderness, and rivers in the desert.”
History is the study of the human past. The past has left many traditions, folk tales, and works of art, archaeological objects, and books and written records of our accomplishments. Historians have been recording the events of history since the Phoenicians in Africa invented the first alphabet.

Sometimes we study the past to gain a better understanding of other people and places. But the purpose of most recorded history is to draw valuable lessons from which we can improve our own lifestyles. What we learn is largely determined by the accuracy and the availability of the raw data to which we are exposed.

For instance, until the advent of Black History Month, our school children learned all of their black history when they studied the plight of slavery in the south prior to the Civil War. Very little truth was, and still is contained in our children’s textbooks about the depth of slavery’s pain in America. So it was not a bad idea to set aside one month out of the year to concentrate on setting the record straight. Until the advent of Black History Month, the only information received about men and women of color by most white children living in the sheltered communities of the Midwest, were the snippets of truth about slavery and the Civil Rights Movement. Now, no matter where you live in America, in the month of February, the airwaves and satellite dishes are flooded with commercials about Black History that goes far beyond slavery and Civil Rights.

It is about time we taught our own Black children that there is more to our history than our ancestral enslavement.
1 Black children today are shocked to hear that Henry Ford bought the concept plans for the first automobile from a Black man.
2 They’re just as shocked to hear that Blacks are credited with inventing the mousetrap, the umbrella, and the ironing board.
3 They swell with pride when they hear that a Black man performed the first open heart surgery.
4 And, I love to watch their amazement when they find out that highly developed Black empires existed in many parts of Africa, hundreds and even thousands of years ago, way before the onslaught of slavery exploitation in the late 1500’s.

True, it’s important to know something about our history. Your history helps to define who you are as a people. Did you know that our black ancestor, Imhotep, was the first physician in recorded history? He opened the first hospital in 2700 B.C. and carved the familiar caduceus that is still recognized as the symbol of medicine. The Greeks even referred to Imhotep as their god of healing. And this same physician was also a great architect and engineer!

History has its purpose, but it also has its place. Our forward momentum as a people can become slowed and even stagnant if we dwell too much on past accomplishments. It’s good to reflect on the accomplishments of Dr. Martin Luther King and Rev. Jesse Jackson, but only if they motivate and inspire us to press on. Dwelling too much in the past can create deference to the present. It would seem today that we are so busy rejoicing over our past gains in Civil Rights that we have forgotten
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Comments

February 16, 2012

6. David Parks says...

Thanks for the reminder about Black History Month. A number of good points. But two verses and no Jesus? Is it really a sermon if it mentions Jesse Jackson, but not Jesus Christ?

February 14, 2011

5. Clarence Fairley says...

Why is it so hard for church-goers to get past the color line?

February 14, 2011

4. Dave Leo says...

Skip the first two pages. I have NEVER heard Jackson mention the name of Jesus. There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ. Gal. 3:28

February 20, 2009

3. Prentiss Allison says...

Thank you for a GREAT sermon.I am proud to say that I am an African American Christian. I thank God for Truth and I pray my White brothers and sisters read this sermon with a tender and compassionate heart. I look forword to reading some WHITE comments on this sermon. I will check back often.

January 23, 2009

2. Liz Canneady says...

Thank you for being real as to our status as a Black race. We must continue to assess our needs and meet them with not only in words but in actions.

February 25, 2007

1. Daymond Geary says...

Thank you, for reminding everyone that Black history began before slavery. God bless you as you help to set the record straight.

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