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hidefhippie · 2 years
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(RNS) — There are two moments in recent history to which I’d like to call Black Christians’ attention.
In Beyoncé’s July 2020 movie “Black Is King,” she continued a theme she began with her 2016 landmark visual album “Lemonade”: her association with, and possible initiation into, the West African religion of Ifa. Some Christians responded by calling “Black Is King” “blasphemy, satanic, unbiblical” because of the supposed representations of “false gods” and “pagan religions.”
RELATED: 5 faith moments to watch for in Beyoncé’s ‘Black Is King’
Beyoncé’s supposedly “satanic” images actually honor African deities such as Het Heru, a Khemetic goddess associated with the moon, women’s menstrual cycles and, by extension, fertility, but the references to African deities have particularly riled Black Christians, who take them as confirmation that the star, popular among their youth, is practicing witchcraft.
A few months later, as Americans waited for the results of the 2020 election, noted televangelist and presidential adviser Paula White, in a spirit-filled preaching style appropriated from Black church traditions, called upon “angels from Africa and South America” to help her claim victory for President Donald Trump. All out in front of Jesus and everybody, she preached down heaven, speaking in tongues and extending her hand to Ethiopia for salvation.
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BeyoncĂ© depicted as Oshun in her visual album “Black is King.” Image via Disney Plus
In the first case, Black Christians, is it not curious that when met with Beyoncé’s imagery and spiritual narratives of your own African traditions, your response is that it must be evil? Does it not seem troubling that the cultures from which you come are portrayed as demonic while the history and culture of Western civilization are exalted over us all?
In the second: What manner of mental slavery and colonization does a Eurocentric form of Christianity have over Black evangelicals today that they would credit white ministers who would tell you that African spirituality is ungodly and even demonic — and then look there for urgent help when the rubber meets the road?
RELATED: African spirituality offers Black believers ‘decolonized’ Christianity
African people in the United States have long been brainwashed to believe that Africa held nothing of value. Our long-established societies, cultures, religions and customs were presented as savage, heathen. We were told to be grateful for our enslavement. We were told that enslaved Christianity was better than living as free African people. We were terrorized into giving up our names and much of our spirituality.
Even in this trauma, African people in the Americas reshaped the predominant Christianity. We mixed and remixed a slave religion with our African spiritualities and those we encountered in the New World into a faith that emphasized freedom.
Despite the mass conversions of the Second Great Awakening, and the persistent missionary work of Catholic and Protestant clergy, African Americans retained their gods, cleverly and defiantly fusing them with Catholic saints and a Christian Holy Spirit.
These cultural retentions are still in evidence in Black Christian denominations as well as white ones — that Black preaching style that White so brazenly appropriates is based on the African call and response tradition. Being overtaken with the Holy Spirit connects Pentecostals of all races back to Africa.
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Pastor Paula White preaches at New Destiny Christian Center in Apopka, Florida. Video screenshot from NDCC.tv
And there is the music. What would the Black church experience be without that organ and tambourine, that rhythmic hand-clapping and stomping feet? These African elements give life to your Christian doctrine and accentuate your love for Jesus. Yet outside of a Christian context, they are taken as pagan and harmful.
In a world that has been gaslighted into believing that civilization has always been centered in Europe, most of us can’t conceive of what pre-colonial Africa looked like. The telling of world history, ancient civilizations and world cultures is maliciously narrow and almost always excludes the contributions of Nile Valley civilizations, never mind the rest of the vast, wealthy and diverse continent.
These lies are the reason some Black Christian pastors call African spirituality demonic.
Black Christians, your Bible tells you how important it is to honor the God of your fathers Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. Your Bible emphasizes that Jesus is of the house of King David. You are Christians because the Apostle Paul connected you to that ancestral line, though you were a gentile, and thus would otherwise have no seat at their Jewish family table.
Those connections are there because ancestral lineage matters. You have been told to respect other people’s ancestral stories, but to dismiss and even demonize your own. You are discouraged from even knowing about your African history. This is the insidious result of a white supremacist Christianity that permeates American soil.
In America, we have been led to believe that Euro-American history is better than ours, purer, more godly — that “the white man’s ice is colder,” as the Black vernacular has it.
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Black Christians, many of you are so afraid to even learn about African spiritualities lest they keep you out of the kingdom of God. You won’t even glimpse the rich spiritual traditions of Benin, Congo, Angola, Nigeria, Sudan, Ethiopia.
Christian pastors such as the Rev. Jamal Bryant teach that you can’t even burn sage. You cannot honor your ancestors, wear eleke beads, do yoga, get a spiritual reading from a mambo or Babalawo. You can’t buy your feminine hygiene products from a Black-owned business because the owner mentions crystals, herbs and sage. Your miseducation makes you believe that practitioners of African spiritualities worship these objects. Do you worship the cross or your Bible?
Oh, and you can’t listen to BeyoncĂ© anymore. Bummer, that one.
BeyoncĂ© carries a child in the beginning of her visual album “Black is King.” Image via Disney Plus
Black Christians, this religious zealotry demands an unsustainable double consciousness. W.E.B. DuBois described this schizophrenic condition that Black people have had to contend with as a byproduct of being a “problem people.” He described it as a two-ness, of constantly looking at oneself from within and from without. It is disorienting, and dear Black Christians, it is time to give up that ghost.
Black Christians can reclaim the African-ness inherent in Christianity, but you must first come out of that wilderness that deprives you of your culture. You can acknowledge that Christianity borrows heavily from the Nile Valley cultures and religions from which it was born, appreciate and value the Egyptian and Ethiopian presence in your Bible. You can learn about Ifa, Vodun and Khemetic spirituality without the fear instilled by colonizers who tried to buy your soul with your bodies.
This is where the idea that African spiritualities are demonic came from. Let it go, and get free! Acknowledging that our faith is a blend of our African-ness and Christianity is not blasphemy, it is an acknowledgment of your ancestors who survived the Middle Passage and slavery.
Those ancestors retained remnants of African spirituality outside of the master’s understanding for you. These were spiritual tools our ancestors bequeathed to us to survive the terror of slavery, revolt and resist ongoing oppression. Our oppressors would have us be docile with their white supremacist-infused Christianity. Instead, we remember these spiritual tools. We celebrate them. We call upon them.
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hidefhippie · 2 years
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ORISHA INTERNAL
Internalization is a process by which a devotee goes through stages of inner growth and development.
Through numerous studies involving chakras it has been proven that the physical body contains energetic vortices that rule devine energies internally.
Here is a helpful resource for those who work with Orisha on Orisha and the corresponding energetic vortices within the body.
1. SHANGO (Root Chakra)
Color: Red
Energetic goals:
1. Relax tensions; reduce worldly entanglements.
2. Safeguarding sensory organs from overindulgence
3. Acting with wisdom and moderation.
4. Motivation toward self development.
2. YEMOJA (Sacral Chakra)
Color: Blue
Energetic goals:
1. Observation of the moon phases on emotions
2. Monetary wealth over sensual desires and sexuality.
3. Release from anger, envy and greed.
4. Regulation of primal needs.
3. OSHUN (Solar Plexis/Navel Chakra)
Color: yellow/orange
Energetic goals:
1. Reflecting on the consequences of actions.
2. Safeguarding against vanity and false pride.
3. Development of positive ego and self-identity.
4. Inner love and compassion
4. OGUN (Heart Chakra)
Color: Green/Black
Energetic goals:
1. Developing higher awareness and sensitivity.
2. Emphasize purity, innocence, and magnetism.
3. Becoming independent and self-emanating
4. Seeking wisdom and inner strength.
5. Purity of relationships through balancing female and male energies.
5. OBATALA (Throat Chakra)
Color: White
Energetic goals:
1. Purifying your sound to effect listeners in a positive way.
2. Supreme reason overcoming the heart.
3. Safeguarding against negative thoughts and using knowledge with wisdom.
4. Becoming the master of the entire self.
6. ORUNMILA (The Third-eye)
Color: purple/red/green
Energetic goals:
1. Revealing the Devine within, reflecting the Devine in others.
2. Developing cosmic oneness.
3. Interpretation of cosmic laws
4. Psychic ability
7. ORI (Crown Chakra)
Energetic goals:
1. Reaching the guru within.
2. Deconstructing the illusion of individual self, realizing cosmic/universal principles within.
3. Feeling the Devine and realizing the Devine within.
Exert from: The Handbook of Yoruba Religious Concepts by. Baba Ifa Karade
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hidefhippie · 2 years
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                  Clarification on Marie Laveau
Was she a Vodoo or Vodun queen? No! Voodoo wasn’t practiced in New Orleans when she was alive.  Marie was never initiated and therefore was never a voodoo queen. It was a part of the culture, even today, where competing fortune tellers and rootworkers claimed to be voodoo queens, when they never actually practiced voodoo. Marie’s mentor was a hoodoo rootworker that went by the title of Doctor. Real voodoo priests aren’t called Doctors. Rootworkers call themselves doctors.
Marie did Root work or will even give her the title of a Caplata. People are confusing Root workers, Vodun or Vodoo, Ifa practitioner, and Hoodoo.
Bokors or Caplata are like in a sense independent contractors for prayers.
Hey, I need help getting a job could you pray(chore or work) for me.
Hey, 4 racist European men jumped me yesterday, told me next time they see me they will kill me. Could you pray for their downfall or death.
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Africans never had a belief of Good or Evil like Abrahamic cultures. Right and Wrong depends on what place or situation your in. If someone is trying to harm you or kill you. If you fight back that is not violence.
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hidefhippie · 2 years
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My ancestor altar is complete
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hidefhippie · 2 years
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Shadow Work đŸ€Žâ€ïž
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hidefhippie · 3 years
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hidefhippie · 3 years
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Attract ❀
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hidefhippie · 3 years
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hidefhippie · 3 years
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hidefhippie · 3 years
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favorite season 🎃 🍁
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hidefhippie · 3 years
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Happy Pride! Enjoy this book rec list of fiction books with LGBTQ+ and Black representation, written by Black authors! Goodreads and Bookshop.org links and text version of the list below the cut.
Some of these books involve some pretty heavy content, be careful to check content warnings!
ETA: I’ve also compiled a list of ✹ sci-fi/fantasy ✹ books with black & lgbt+ rep by Black authors! You can find it here
Keep reading
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hidefhippie · 3 years
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hidefhippie · 3 years
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Mixing on flights so lit! đŸ’ŻâœˆïžđŸ’șđŸŽč (at Jet Blue Airplane) https://www.instagram.com/p/COxfddkDGbl/?igshid=pp43rasjiemd
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hidefhippie · 3 years
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4 studio in two days I've been giving my all. I really love this & really want this shit. Thank you to my Empress @backonmyb.s._est1986 for supporting me in every form possible. Asé! Thank you to everyone supporting me, buying merch, paying me for features or even adding me for features free. I'm forever humble & beyond grateful. #hipxgawd #hidefhippiestudios #hidefhippiepublishing #AlwaysCoolSociety #Amg #Brooklyn #WilliamsburgBrooklyn #newyork #hometown #world #studio #producer #audioengineer #music #passion #dedication #ambtion #love #art #explore #unitedstates #Africa #Asia #australia #india #russia #legend #rapper #artist (at Brooklyn, New York) https://www.instagram.com/p/COuMw-9DNIf/?igshid=1nwzrzsajzyvb
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hidefhippie · 3 years
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Video shoot for "You A King" Featuring @superlative.sain Produced by me. Filmed By @superlative.sain #HipxGawd #SuperlativeSain #HiDefHippieStudios #SupaGang #Brooklyn #NewYork #HipHop #Trap #Music #Art #explorepage #fire #rap #unitedstates #europe #Africa #Asia #Russia #India #Australia # https://www.instagram.com/p/COeMcBVDor2/?igshid=1kqt3wdum2jp
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hidefhippie · 3 years
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Shout to @roddy_rodd for having me as feature " Money Don't Make" What do ya think?! #Rap #bars #mc #hiphop #Artist #producer #audioengineer #talent #Unitedstates #africa #europe #india #australia #rissia #gifted #songwriter #Lit #hipxgawd #HiDefHippiehippiestudios #HiDefHippieStudiosPublishing (at Bayonne, New Jersey) https://www.instagram.com/p/COEdC9HDIi-/?igshid=13lkslxi4ngh6
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hidefhippie · 3 years
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The business cards I created came in shout out to @canva they came out perfect! (at Denver, Colorado) https://www.instagram.com/p/CN5nnvvDu6v/?igshid=1x2py3bxuqaqs
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