Recognizing the Sacred
By Ray Buckley*
The delegation from the Oklahoma Indian
Missionary Conference does not occupy a great deal of space. There
are two chairs reserved for them. But behind them is a great deal of
hope, and centuries of waiting.
The petition, Regarding Native American
Culture and Traditions as Sacred, requires no financial
commitment from General Conference, and it is easy to overlook in
the weighty legislation facing delegates. It has, however, a lot of
importance to Native people. It asks simply that Native cultures,
traditions, and languages no longer be viewed as sinful.
“We realized that the teachings against
Native culture and traditions have been so strong that there has
been almost a ripple effect into the theology of Native peoples
today”, said the Rev. Glenn “Chebon” Kernell, Interpretation and
Program Specialist for the Oklahoma Indian Missionary Conference.
“That is one reason why we sponsored a petition to the GC of 2004. A
message that we would like to send from a Christian point of view,
to all Native people, not only in Oklahoma, but across the country
and wherever they may be. The UM church affirms the sacredness of
those practices. ”
The role of Christianity and historical
Methodism has played a significant part in the loss of Native
cultures. “This is something that could not even have been
conceived 50 years ago because of the certain stigma that was put on
Native traditions, and culture, and language. They were really
condemned by government boarding schools, and church run boarding
schools where young people were taken from their homes and their
communities, but yet they were told that their Native way was wrong
and evil,” Kernell stressed, looking into the distance. “They were
put into closets, because they wouldn’t speak English. Their mouths
were washed out with soap because they were talking in their
language. They were punished time and time again.”
Native people began to believe that their
languages, cultural practices and even art forms were incompatible
with Christianity. Many would not teach their languages to their
children, until some languages are extinct. In some Native United
Methodist congregations, hymns are sung, but no one knows the
meaning of the words. The theologies of Native Christians were
impacted to such a degree, that many still consider their tribal
identities as sinful. Kernell said, that within the Oklahoma Indian
Missionary Conference and other Native communities, “…one side still
really preaches that today, ‘You cannot do that. It is unholy. It
is not sacred. It is evil.’”
The petition is not just a statement for
Native United Methodist, but for Native traditionalists who have
believed that being a disciple of Jesus Christ meant giving up your
racial and tribal identity. For Native Christians, who believe that
the Holy Spirit guides them in their life and cultural choices,
their cultures are gifts to the Church and to the world. That is
the hope of Native United Methodists.
The petiton concludes:
“…being justified by faith, we will honor
as sacred those practices which: call us back to the sacredness of
Native people; affirm as beautiful their identity among the world’s
peoples; lead un into right relationship with our Creator, creation,
and those around us; and call us into holy living. We call upon the
world, the Church, The United Methodist Church, and the people of
The United Methodist Church to receive the gifts of Native people as
People of God.”
Kernell scans a busy room in Pittsburgh,
and reflects, “…it’s something that can benefit us all. It can
affirm who we are, and who God created us, with the songs and ways
of our people, that have been with us through centuries, since we
were in existence.”
*Buckley is the director of the Native
People Communications Office/UMCom