Deep Breaths Beloved. This week, I’m letting the words of the late bell hooks lead us. She reminds us that love is not weakness—it is a liberating force. A framework for freedom. “In this society, there is no powerful discourse on love emerging either from politically progressive radicals or from the Left. The absence of a sustained focus on love in progressive circles arises from a collective failure to acknowledge the needs of the spirit and an overdetermined emphasis on material concerns. Without love, our efforts to liberate ourselves and our world community from oppression and exploitation are doomed. As long as we refuse to address fully the place of love in struggles for liberation, we will not be able to create a culture of conversion where there is a mass turning away from an ethic of domination.” — bell hooks We are living in dangerous times. This current administration is moving with a spirit of domination—not love. That’s not to say prior administrations were perfect, but this one feels especially calculated in its cruelty. Power and profit continue to uphold systems in which the have-nots are sacrificed daily. In a world like this, love may seem soft—even foolish. But hooks knew otherwise. She called us to center love in our organizing, our preaching, our daily witness. Not just as a feeling—but as a strategy. As resistance. As liberation. Because we cannot use the enemy’s tools to build new worlds. Fresh paint on blood-stained walls will not do. True change demands a new foundation—one built on fierce love. In my spirit, I imagine love that breaks our hearts the way God’s heart breaks—when the poor are punished, when the vulnerable are left to suffer. And just like that divine ache, real love begins to crack the walls of domination. First invisible, then undeniable. Now is the time to tear down what harms—and build up what heals. To make space for joy. For justice. For beauty. To build, by any means necessary, a world where love leads. Reflection Prompt: In your quiet moments with the Divine this week, ask: How am I embodying love—in my work, my witness, and my community? — Rev. Moya Harris, Director of Racial Justice, Sojourners |
No comments:
Post a Comment