Abstract
Reflecting amid a global pandemic, severe economic downturn, and a racial justice reckoning, Stephanie Spellers’
But as much as
As an Episcopal priest, community and labor organizer, and a theologian, I find Spellers’ work to be a wonderful and essential combination of the prophetic and the pastoral—a beautiful example of the kind of authentic, soul-searching, and justice-seeking practical theology and ministry work that our church needs. In this reflection, I will focus on two of the core spiritual and ethical practices that Spellers proposes in the culmination of her book—kenosis and solidarity—asking questions and offering examples of how these practices might show up in our church polity, our places of worship, and in the broader communities in which we minister.
Kenosis is tough in real life
Kenosis is serious business. Jesus modeled a life of kenosis, of self-emptying love for the sake of others and died in an ultimate act of kenosis. This is not cakewalk Christianity that Spellers is calling us to traverse. If this is the model, where does this leave us today? If we are serious about practicing kenosis as a way of being and doing church, then it must be practiced at all levels—personal and interpersonal, individual and collective, and at all levels of the institutional church. As Spellers notes, kenosis means different things for different sectors of our community and church. The recent work of reparations that affluent Episcopal institutions that benefited from the practice of slavery are engaging in is an important step toward practicing kenosis in concrete, material ways. But for black, Latinx, Indigenous, Asian (and in particular women, queer, immigrant, and working-class members from communities of color) within the Episcopal Church that have long suffered under oppressive systems that privilege wealthy white, male, and heterosexual members of our community over everyone else, kenosis will play out differently. Attending to the diverse realities of our faith communities will be a key component of concretizing the work of kenosis in our church. For this reason, we need to speak not only of white supremacy but of what writer and activist bell hooks has called “imperialist white supremacist capitalist patriarchy.” 1 Those are a lot of words put together, but it points to the need for kenotic theology and spirituality to be attuned to the interlocking systems of oppression in lived experience across race, class, gender, sexuality, and other markers of identity in our U.S. context.
So what does kenosis look like for those of us who are minoritized members of the Episcopal Church; how do we engage in this self-emptying way of Jesus? I cannot offer a blanket prescription for everyone, but I can share what this has meant for me as a Chicano-Latinx Episcopal priest with Mexican immigrant roots. My work of kenosis has been greatly informed by the philosophy and practice of nonviolent direct action and organizing embodied by the Black and Latinx freedom struggles as modeled by the Rev. James Lawson, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Ella Baker, Dolores Huerta, and César Chávez, and the countless unsung heroes who comprised the grassroots movements that they cultivated. From the six principles of nonviolence as taught by Dr. King, I learned to explore the challenging notion (informed by kenosis) that “voluntary suffering can educate and transform.” 2
As part of a community of interfaith leaders, labor, and immigrant rights organizers, we engaged in nonviolent civil disobedience by blocking immigration detention centers that were deporting migrants or transporting them to long-term detention prisons. In community, I experienced the collective power of putting my body on the line for the sake of others by risking arrest and spending time in jail; it was a temporary suffering that paled in comparison to what people faced in the height of the civil rights and liberation struggles of the 1960s, but hopefully it pointed to the need for deeper systems change in our immigration system to alleviate the suffering of immigrant families.
While this kind of action is likely not to appeal to everyone and not possible for everyone, I would argue that our church needs to invest more time, talent, and treasure in training people in community organizing and the philosophy, theology, and practice of nonviolence. What if larger numbers of our denomination, from lay leaders to Bishops, were engaged in spiritually grounded and disciplined nonviolent direct action and civil disobedience at strategic moments and in escalating fashion, as part of a long-haul organizing effort with ecumenical, interfaith, and community partners to challenge the most oppressive forces of our day and create tangible alternatives? This is a growing edge for the Episcopal Church and the kind of kenosis that can lead to real solidarity.
Solidarity: there’s no them, only us
Spellers describes solidarity as “love crossing the borders drawn by self-centrism, in order to enter into the situation of the other, for the purpose of mutual relationship and struggle that heals us all and enacts God’s beloved community.”
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As she notes with several powerful examples from Vida Scudder to Paul Washington, solidarity in a faith context flows from the initial belief in and practice of kenosis. The notion that kenosis and solidarity are deeply interconnected is a powerful one, and one that I share. Most of my experiences of solidarity have occurred outside of formal church contexts: as a college activist participating in a multiracial movement where white students joined students of color in marches and sit-ins to fight for educational access and equity for underrepresented students of color; as a young labor organizer participating in my first prolonged strike, where I witnessed registered nurses and doctors walk the picket line in support of striking nursing assistants, janitors, and other health care workers; as a lay leader participating in an informal ecumenical faith committee supporting an immigrant family taking sanctuary in a church. The tenet that I learned early on from these examples was the labor movement adage “an injury to one is an injury to all.” This means that if something happens to you, then it also happens to
In my view, practicing solidarity requires that we go beyond the idea that kenosis means giving our privilege and power away. It means that we do our own discernment, reflection, and analysis work (as individuals, ministries, parishes, Dioceses, etc.) to understand the places where we have privilege and power, and then leveraging that power and privilege to challenge, disrupt, dismantle, and transform unjust situations and oppressive systems. This is not merely because it is morally the right thing to do but because solidarity also implies that
Solidarity teaches us that despite whatever advanced education and professional titles we may have, we have more in common with the Amazon warehouse worker than with Jeff Bezos or other billionaire CEOs. Theologian Edward Schillebeeckx interpreted God’s very name (
Stephanie Spellers’
