Friday, January 19, 2024

Serving Those Who Can't (Yet) Dream

“They don’t have the bandwidth to dream because their reality is a nightmare.”

Dr. Jamal Harrison Bryant made this remark to a room of 600 as the keynote speaker for this week’s Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr Community Commemorative Breakfast. The room was a “who’s who” of Black leaders, including elected officials, business leaders, and elders. The room was a celebration of Black Excellence in a way that I rarely see in my life, on my campus, and in this country.

But Dr. Bryant was not there to congratulate those in the room.

In essence, he was asking how those present were going to step up and make a difference for those whose reality was far different.

“So you’ve come up. Now what? Who are you bringing up with you?” he asked. (my paraphrase)

It is a critical question for all of us.

For instance, how we can do more to support our elders. Being a pastor, Dr. Bryant asked the question of church leaders why there were not elder/senior ministries akin to youth ministries, pointing out that senior citizens outnumber all other demographic groups in our country. He urged churches to talk about dementia and the complexities that face elders, not to shy away from them.

“If Dr. King were alive today, he would be 95 years old. Would he feel left out and forgotten, an elder ignored and discarded?” asked Bryant (again, my paraphrase)

For myself, and for all of us, let us spend some time with the question:

How can we take our talents, experience, energy and resources to support those whose reality is a nightmare? How can we take our success and translate and transfer it to those who need it most?

Let us create space to meditate on this question today.

In closing, I will share a parallel quote that has been a foundation for my life from Dr. King:

“Everybody can be great...because anybody can serve. You don't have to have a college degree to serve. You don't have to make your subject and verb agree to serve. You only need a heart full of grace. A soul generated by love.”


As Dr. Bryant spoke, our youngest daughter, Sihasin, drew this gem.

1 comment:

  1. A nod to Tupac Shakur's "the rose that grew from concrete" and the incredible rose I met yesterday who's dream was to leave the nightmare

    Yesterday I met that special rose,
    You know the one that grew from concrete?
    She who defied nature’s laws
    and learned to walk without feet
    And what dreams did she keep
    The dream of leaving, of getting out
    Of escaping that mud so deep

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