TODAY IN MISSION YEARBOOK
Minute for Mission: Juneteenth
June 19, 2019
However, was it really a cause for celebration? It is important to understand that to emancipate means to free from bondage, control and/or restraint. And even though black people were technically free from the bondage of chattel slavery, the restraint of second-class citizenship, racism, economic inequity, unjust laws, mistreatment and bigotry were and still are inescapable residuals that have never ceased. Juneteenth meant that under the law, no one individual in the southern states (as the Emancipation Proclamation only mentioned the southern states) could pose another human being as their property. This meant that, on paper, everyone was now free to pursue the idea of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Unfortunately, this was merely a pipe dream for the almost 4 million individuals who now found themselves without money, housing, food, support or governmental assurance for their existence and advancement. Moreover, according to the law, it was in fact the slaveholders who were compensated monetarily for the loss of labor once these black Americans were freed. Newly freed black people were left to figure out how to move forward in a system that had perpetually robbed them of their humanity, dignity, rights, familial ties, culture and freedom. This is why many black Americans found themselves in unfair agreements of sharecropping the same plantations and farms that had just freed them, because it was all they knew and the only home many had as a resource to gain capital and upward movement.
Rev. Shanea D. Leonard, Associate for Gender and Racial Justice, Presbyterian Mission Agency
Today's Focus: Juneteenth
PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff
Ashley Winn, ILP
Jung Ju Winner, PW
Let us pray:
Dear God, in your divine wisdom, give us the strength to accept the things we cannot change and courage to face the things that need to be transformed. Amen.