Al Sharpton and Thealogy: Difference between pages

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'''Thealogy''' is literally the study of the [[Goddess]] ([[Greek language|Greek]] θεά, ''thea'', "goddess" + λόγος, ''logos'', "study"). In [[1993]], [[Charlotte Caron]]'s definition of '''thealogy''' as "reflection on the divine in feminine and feminist terms" appeared, but the term actually originates in the writings of [[Isaac Bonewits]] in [[1974]].
[[Image:Sharpton.jpg|right|thumb|'''Reverend Al Sharpton''']]
The Reverend '''Alfred Charles Sharpton Jr.''' (born [[October 3]], [[1954]]) is an [[United States|American politician]], [[minister]], and [[American Civil Rights Movement|civil rights activist]]. A [[Pentecostal]], Sharpton was the first major black presidential candidate of the [[21st century]] to run for the [[U.S. Democratic Party presidential nomination, 2004|2004 Democratic Party nomination]] (although he is a member of the [[Green Party (United States)| Green Party]]).
 
==EarlyFirst yearsuses==
Al Sharpton was born in [[1954]] to a middle-class family in [[Brooklyn, New York|Brooklyn]], [[New York City|New York]]. His father was a [[Boxing|boxer]] and landlord, owning several buildings in Brooklyn. Until the age of ten, Al lived a comfortable life in a ten-room house in [[Queens, New York|Queens]]. He preached his first sermon at the age of four, and soon became famous in Brooklyn as the "wonderboy preacher," even touring with [[Gospel music|gospel]] singer [[Mahalia Jackson]]. By the age of nine, he was a fully ordained minister. [http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20010416&c=3&s=sherman]
[http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/1203/p01s04-uspo.html]
 
===First(?) usages===
In [[1963]], his parents separated. Sharpton recalls in a [[2002]] interview "My daddy walked out on us, and he married my half-sister, Tina. Tina was my mother's daughter from a previous marriage." Al's mother took a job as a maid, and went on welfare; the family moved from their middle-class home in Queens to the [[public housing|projects]] in [[Brownsville, Brooklyn|Brownsville]]. [http://newyorkmetro.com/nymetro/news/politics/national/2004race/5570/index.html]
 
In "The Druid Chronicles (Evolved)," privately published in [[1976]], Isaac Bonewits used "thealogian" to refer to a Wiccan author ([[Aidan Kelly]], aka "C. Taliesin Edwards," who may have given him the term or vice versa) and "theilogy" (defined as "the study of more than one God"). Bonewits also used "theilogy" (and possibly "thealogy," since he thinks he coined them at the same time) in the pages of the widely-distributed "Gnostica" magazine he edited in 1974 and [[1975]].
Sharpton's first attempts at protest were in high school, where the minister protested cafeteria food and the dress code. In [[1969]] he was appointed as youth director of [[Operation Breadbasket]] by [[Jesse Jackson]], a group that focused on the promotion of new and better jobs for black Americans through negotiations and community-wide boycotts.
 
"The Druid Chronicles (Evolved)" were a three-year project starting in 1974 and finished (published) in 1976. The article referred to within "The Druid Chronicles (Evolved)" is dated to the summer of 1976. Moreover, this is almost certainly not the first usage; the context of "thealogian" is in citing a work by C. Taliesin Edwards, "Essays towards a Meta''thealogy'' of the Goddess." [stress added] There is, however, a possibility that Bonewits altered the name of the work to fit with his terminology. He is attempting to track this down. Kelley himself has said to Bonewits that he can't remember which of the two of them said "thealogy" to the other first.
In the [[1970s]] after two years at [[Brooklyn College]], Sharpton dropped out to be a tour manager for [[James Brown (musician)|James Brown]], where he met his future wife, Kathy Jordan, a backup singer for James Brown, who he married in [[1983]]. In [[1971]] Sharpton founded the National Youth Movement to fight drugs and raise money for impoverished youth.
 
In [[1976]], [[Valerie Saiving]], ending her "[[Androcentrism]] in Religious Studies" made a much quoted invocation that yearns towards something as yet undefined-
==Later years==
 
:''it is just possible that the unheard testimony of that half of the human species which has for so long been rendered inarticulate may have something to tell us about the holy which we have not known - something which can finally make us whole.''
In June, 2005, Sharpton signed a contract with Matrix Media, Incorporated, to produce and host a live two-hour daily talk program for the EBN Radio Network. The program will debut in August, 2005.
::(Saiving 1976:197)
 
===Second(?) usage ===
==Candidacies==
 
In "The Changing of the Gods" 1979:96, [[Naomi Goldenberg]] selfconsciously introduces the term as a half whimsical possibility, an inspirational comment, not a prelude to exegesis. She does not go on to define what thealogy might be, other than the implicit femininity of the coinage. This lack was perhaps because at that time the very assertion of a serious feminist analysis of religion was virtually unheard of, and the introduction of the concept was an excitingly powerful, but vague, possibility.
Sharpton has run unsuccessfully for the [[United States Senate]] seat from [[New York]] in [[1988]], [[1992]], and [[1994]]. In [[1997]] he ran unsuccessfully for [[Mayor]] of [[New York City]]. Some have criticized Sharpton for only running races he knows he can't win while shunning those he could. He has never held elected office.
 
This is not to say that both Goldenberg and Saiving do not both offer extremely solid chunks of thealogy, but they do not give an overview of something to which they were midwives.
On [[January 5]], [[2003]] Sharpton announced his candidacy for the [[U.S. presidential election, 2004|2004 presidential election]] as a member of the [[United States Democratic Party|Democratic Party]]. Precisely one year later, days before the Iowa caucus, reports of connection between Sharpton's campaign management and entrenched [[United States Republican Party|Republican Party]] organizers surfaced.[http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0405/barrett.php][http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/07/politics/campaign/07SHAR.html]
 
===Bonewits again===
Sharpton has been critical of the news media, charging it with ignoring his campaign due to deep-seeded racial prejudice. [http://stacks.msnbc.com/news/949475.asp?cp1=1]
 
Also in [[1979]], in the first revised edition of "Real Magic," Bonewits defined "thealogy" in his Glossary this way: "Intellectual speculations concerning the nature of the Goddess and Her relations to the world in general and humans in particular; rational explanations of religious doctrines, practices and beliefs, which may or may not bear any connection to any religion as actually conceived and practiced by the majority of its members." While the last clause was his editorializing, the majority of the definition was adapted by removing sexist assumptions from a dictionary then in his library. Also in the same glossary, he defined "theology" and "theoilogy" (spelled correctly this time) with nearly identical words, changing the pronouns appropriately. He has since dropped the use of "theoilogy" in favor of "polytheology," also first published by him in the 1974 "Druid Chronicles."
Sharpton's platform includes 10 key issues:
 
In [[2003]] he pointed out that "thealogy" is an obvious coinage that may have been invented many times, and that feminist scholars are unlikely to have been familiar with his writings.
* Increase voter registration.
* Increase political consciousness and awareness.
* Stimulate more people to get involved in the political process.
* Raise issues that would otherwise be overlooked—for example, affirmative action and anti-death penalty policy.
* Strengthen our national security by fighting for human rights, the rule of law, and economic justice at home and abroad.
* Fight to ensure women's rights.
* Deliver Universal Health Care for the nation, not hidden benefits to the health care industry.
* Provide a solution to the current educational crisis in the nation caused by Bush.
* Help working people by giving them the biggest tax cuts - not the rich.
* Fulfill American democracy by supporting voting rights or statehood for the 600,000 disenfranchised citizens of the District of Columbia.
 
=== Growing usage by Carol Christ and Ursula King ===
To his supporters Sharpton is a loyal defender of the underrepresented poor and disenfranchised who has been supporting his community for 30 years. Critics of Sharpton accuse him of being a profiteering racial agitator, as evidenced by the [[Tawana Brawley]] hoax, inserting himself into instances of racial tension in order to increase his own popularity, often making situations more tense. Sharpton has been sharply criticized for making antisemitic remarks. [[antisemitism|anti-Semitic]].
 
[[Carol Christ]] used the term more substantially in "Laughter of Aphrodite" [[1987]].
On [[March 15]], [[2004]], Sharpton announced his endorsement of leading Democratic candidate [[John Kerry]]. However, Sharpton did not withdraw from the race, continuing instead to campaign and striving to win delegates for the [[2004 Democratic National Convention]].
 
In [[1989]] [[Ursula King]] notes its growing usage as a fundamental departure from traditional male-oriented theology, characterised by its privileging of symbols over rational explanation. She chronicles sympathetically that-
==Alleged Bigotry==
{{npov-section}}
 
:''most writing on the Goddess, when not historical, is either inspirational or devotional, and a systematically ordered body of thought, even with reference to symbols, is only slowly coming into existence.''
It is alleged that Sharpton throughout his political career has called whites "crackers" and [[Jew]]s "diamond merchants," "white interlopers," and "bloodsucking Jews." Sharpton's criticism of black [[Marxism|Marxists]] extended to them carrying "that German cracker’s book under their arms."
::(1989:126-127)
 
== Further expansion of thealogy by Starr* Saffa ==
It is also alleged that after calling a Jewish shopkeeper a "white interloper," he looked on while an associate of his suggested the Jew's shop should be burned down. When a black member of the crowd did so, killing several including himself, Sharpton initially denied having been present. When confronted with a video tape showing his presence, he said: "What's wrong with denouncing white interlopers?" Other such controversies center on purported offenses by Jews against black Americans, although in one case it is alleged he verbally attacked Korean shopkeepers.
(Sources: [http://www.nationalreview.com/20Mar00/nordlinger032000.html] [http://www.digitas.harvard.edu/~salient/issues/990415/upfront.htm] [http://www.salon.com/col/guest/1998/01/05guest.html] [http://www.nationalreview.com/york/york200401120838.asp] [http://www.mises.org/story/1560].)
 
Tahirih Thealogy
==Celebrity status==
 
The basic Definition of TheAlogy as opposed to Theology means viewing the world incorporating the Female lens which to a great extent in the past has been omitted in Theology.
Because of his demeanor and personality, Sharpton has become something of a minor celebrity and has been featured in many [[film|movie]]s and [[television]] shows. He had [[cameo appearance]]s in the movies ''[[Cold Feet]]'', ''[[Bamboozled]]'' and ''[[Mr. Deeds]]'' and in episodes of the television shows ''[[New York Undercover]]'', ''[[Law & Order: Special Victims Unit]]'', ''[[Girlfriends]]'', ''[[My Wife and Kids]]'', and ''[[Boston Legal]]''. He also hosted the original [[Spike TV]] [[reality television]] show, ''[[I Hate My Job]]''. He also played a small role in the Spike Lee movie, ''[[Malcolm X]]''
 
Tahirih TheAlogy is religion beyond religion, politics beyond politics, and spiritual feminism beyond feminism in that it recognizes the Cosmic Christ Spirit in every individual and sets out the pattern of balance for the Sixth Cycle of humanity based on magnetic attraction vs. force and patriarchal constructs.
==Quotes==
[[Image:Sharpton speech.jpg|right|thumb|Al Sharpton giving a speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention in Boston]]
<blockquote>
"I believe something happened to Tawana Brawley.... I think it is absurd that someone would say that a 15-year-old girl could have made all that up, including fooling a hospital."
<br>
''&mdash; regarding the [[1987]] [[Tawana Brawley]] scandal, later shown to be a [[hoax]]
<blockquote>
</blockquote>
"I mean, Dwight Eisenhower was never elected to anything before he was elected president.... In a time that we no longer have a Cold War, there is no real threat to American security."
<br>
''&mdash; on [[Fox News]] August 2001 (a month prior to the [[9/11]] terrorist attacks)''
<blockquote>
</blockquote>
"Now that they have achieved the capture of Hussein, they should appeal to the UN to come in with a multilateral redevelopment plan. This is all the more reason this war should come to an immediate end."
</blockquote>
<blockquote>
"Who defines terrorists? Today's terrorist is tomorrow's friend. We were the ones that worked with Saddam Hussein. The United States worked with bin Laden."
</blockquote>
<blockquote>
"That's where the argument, to this day, of reparations starts. We never got the 40 acres. We went all the way to Herbert Hoover, and we never got the 40 acres.
 
During the later part of 2004 Starr* Saffa introduced Tahirih Thealogy and the Tahirih Path in her book entitled “Tahirih Thealogy: Female Christ Spirit of the Age” based on the figure of the 19th Century Iranian born Prophet-Poetess Tahirih who was also known as Qurratu’l-ayn, and the return of Fatima.
We didn't get the mule. So we decided we'd ride this donkey as far as it would take us."
<br>''&mdash; Address to the [[Democratic National Convention]] [[2004]] talking about [[Abraham Lincoln]]'s promise of forty acres and a mule to each freed slave''
</blockquote>
<blockquote>
"But we believed if we kept on working, if we kept on marching, if we kept on voting, if we kept on believing, we would make America beautiful for everybody."
<br>''&mdash; Address to the [[Democratic National Convention]] [[2004]]''
</blockquote>
<blockquote>"I suggest to you tonight that if George Bush had selected the [Supreme] court in '54, Clarence Thomas would have never got to law school."
<br>''&mdash;Address to the Democratic National Convention 2004''
</blockquote>
<blockquote>
"Don't piss on my leg and tell me it's raining."
<br>''&mdash;To [[Vicente Fox]], President of [[Mexico]], after remarks Fox made that seemed to disparage [[African Americans]]
</blockquote>
 
Tahirih taught that inner knowledge is trumps and Starr* Saffa says Tahirih TheAlogy has the potential to unite East and West where everyone can be living Tahirih’s in this day through the continuous flow of Spirit.
==External links==
{{wikiquote}}
*[http://www.salon.com/weekly/sharpton2.html Salon Interview with Al Sharpton]
*[http://www.80s.com/Icons/Bios/al_sharpton.html 80s Icon Al Sharpton]
*[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A21903-2004Jul28.html Text of Democratic National Convention 2004 Speech]
*[http://www.courttv.com/archive/legaldocs/newsmakers/tawana/part1.html#events The grand jury report on the Brawley case]
*[http://www.cnn.com/US/9807/13/brawley.verdict.02/ A CNN story on the Pagones suit]
*[http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/45a/487.html A pro-Brawley article on her first public appearance in years]
 
== Definition by Charlotte Caron ==
 
In [[1993]] Charlotte Caron's definition of thealogy as "reflection on the divine in feminine and feminist terms" appeared in "To Make and Make Again" (quoted from Russell & Clarkson 1996). By this time the concept had gained considerable (though conventionally marginal) status, broadly analogous to Ruether's view of radical feminist theology as opposed to reformist [[feminist theology]].
 
=== Melissa Raphael's view ===
[[Category:1954 births|Sharpton, Al]]
 
[[Category:African American politicians|Sharpton, Al]]
In [[1997]] [[Melissa Raphael]] wrote "Thealogy & Embodiment" which put the usage firmly on the map, and which she sustained in her subsequent "Thealogy: Discourse on the Goddess" ([[1999]]?). Together with Carol Christ's "Rebirth of the Goddess" 1997 Raphael's work provides a start for the "systematically ordered body of thought" King found lacking in 1989.
[[Category:African Americans|Sharpton, Al]]
 
[[Category:Christian ministers|Sharpton, Al]]
== Three interpretations of thealogy ==
[[Category:Civil rights activists|Sharpton, Al]]
 
[[Category:Film actors|Sharpton, Al]]
There are perhaps three distinct interpretations of thealogy, and they are evident in the briefing above.
[[Category:New York politicians|Sharpton, Al]]
*Christ, King and Raphael focus thealogy specifically on [[Goddess]] spirituality.
[[Category:Pacifists|Sharpton, Al]]
*Caron defines a broader field of a female worldview of the [[sacred]].
[[Category:People from New York|Sharpton, Al]]
*Goldenberg's neologism as a political stance that marks the [[androcentrism]] of historical [[theology]] permeates the other two and raises its own issues.
[[Category:Social justice|Sharpton, Al]]
 
[[Category:Saturday Night Live Hosts|Sharpton, Al]]
=== Thealogy as Goddess spirituality ===
[[Category:Pentecostals|Sharpton, Al]]
 
Taking the Goddess variant first, and it seems the commonest to the point where thealogy is typically assumed to be purely Goddess based, a linguistic derivation from the Greek "thea"
(goddess). Goddess systematics inevitably face the question of "god in a skirt" or not, a subtly [[sexism|sexist]] tag that nonetheless carries a genuine issue. This can be viewed as sexist because "in a skirt" defines a subject norm as altered, trivialised, and definitely derivative, much as some have considered the female to have been historically defined in relation to the male. Thealogy specifically aims to counter what its proponents perceive as the massive [[dualism|dualistic]] sexism in the field of religion, by asserting a female [[worldview]] that is not merely reformist or derivative, so its proponents would see this quip as especially destructive.
 
=== Broad interpretation of thealogy (Caron) ===
 
Caron's definition "Reflection on the divine in feminine and feminist terms" holds a caution for feminist theologians and thealogians alike that the female sacred extends beyond the feminist agenda. Often theology or feminist thealogy writes as if the Goddess is a feminist discovery. The "womenspirit" Goddess is a highly selected deity who for thealogians such as Christ has nothing to do with goddess practices such as violent sacrifice, or validating a male conqueror. However, this can be seen to be as inauthentic as the habit of some Christians of disowning the [[Inquisition]] as "not done by real Christians" (see the "[[no true Scotsman]]" [[logical fallacy]]).
 
Nor is it a matter only of past history: many members of a huge international organisation like the [[Fellowship of Isis]] would not identify as feminist, nor would a great many [[Pagan]]s. Outside the goddessing of western [[New religious movement|NRMs]] thealogy can recognise and give due respect to the world millions in village and tribal religions who look to goddesses in ways that may or may
not be feminist, and Caron's definition allows thealogy to be this widely inclusive.
 
This broader view accords well with the kind of fluid systematics profiled by [[Cynthia Eller]] when she reports her respondent [[Margaret Keane]] as saying:
 
:''I don't make those kind of distinctions that you hear about, they don't make any sense to me. You can say it's the Great Goddess, and that's the one Goddess, but she's also all of the many goddesses, and that's true. And she's everywhere. She's immanent in everything, in the sparkle of the sun on the sea, and even in an animistic concept. I think certain objects can embody that force and power. So I worship the Great Goddess, and I'm polytheistic and pantheistic and monotheistic too. And I also have a feeling for nature spirits...''
::(1993 :132-133)
 
This broader view has most recently been labelled by [[Michael York]] as "polymorphic thealogy." He also raises the issue of whether thealogy venerates one Goddess or many, which some thealogicians consider a non-question since it arises from a monotheist worldview that they do not hold.
 
However Caron's definition falls short of explicitly allowing for male positions in thealogy.
 
=== A challenge to androcentrism ===
 
The third interpretation of thealogy as an assertion of female sacred worldviews is clearly political. The notes above touch on how this usage aims to counter the deeply established dualistic relegation of female as derivative, making the male the norm: as [[Mary Daly]] put it "If God is male, then the male is God."
 
Thealogy has been criticised as [[essentialism|essentialist]] by [[queer theory|queer theorists]] and others.
 
To a thealogian it is important to explore the female worldview (not only but notably of the sacred) and not be compelled to take off female spectacles when looking at themes beyond female [[psychobiology]]. A speaker may choose to adopt a kind of gender neutral stance insofar as she can, or she may try to empathise with a male worldview, and a male speaker vice versa.
 
== Linguistic twiddling ==
 
Many scholars find the term "thealogy" exasperating, a linguistic twiddling, including some feminist theologians. But the position of women operating within the male worldview of theology, as in most of [[feminist theology]], is more marginal than in the general run of professional occupations these days. The rigidly entrenched sexism in the contemporary academy perceived by some thealogs recalls situations of general Women's Liberation in 1972, rather than society 30 years later (see recent research studies Ofsted UK).
 
==See also==
*[[God and gender]]
*[[feminist theology]]
*[[goddess]]
*[[goddess worship]]
 
==References==
* Isaac Bonewits "The Second Epistle of Isaac" in "the Druid Chronicles (Evolved)" Berkeley Drunemeton Press, 1974.
*Isaac Bonewits "Real Magic" Creative Arts Book Co., 1979
*Charlotte Caron "To Make and Make Again: Feminist Ritual Thealogy" NY Crossroad 1993
*Carol Christ "Rebirth of the Goddess:Finding meaning in feminist spirituality" Routledge 1997
*Cynthia Eller "Living in the Lap of the Goddess: The Feminist Spirituality Movement in America" Crossroad 1993
*Naomi Goldenberg "The Changing of the Gods" 1979
*Ursula King "Women and Spirituality" Macmillan 1989
*Melissa Raphael "Thealogy & Embodiment" 1997 Sheffield Academic Press
*Melissa Raphael "Introducing Thealogy: Discourse on the Goddess" 1999 Sheffield Academic Press
*Letty M. Russell & J Shannon Clarkson "Dictionary of Feminist Theologies" Mowbray 1996.
*Starr* Saffa "Tahirih Thealogy: Female Christ Spirit of the Age" OzForUs Publishing 2004; Zeus-publications 2005.
*Valerie Saiving "Androcentrism in Religious Studies" in Journal of Religion 56:1976:177-97
 
[[Category:Theology]]