Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bearing burdens of 2020

Black pastors deal with hunger, racism, vital vote

- DESIREE STENNETT

As the Rev. Terence Gray stepped onto the stage to give a guest sermon at The Experience Christian Center in Orlando, about one-third of the 250 chairs in front of him were covered in black cloth so that attendees would sit socially distanced from one another.

About 60 masked people watched him. Three women in white lab coats — church members who are also medical profession­als — were tasked with checking the temperatur­e of every person who walked inside, asking a series of questions to make sure no one had a cough, a fever or a sore throat.

Gray opened with the forthcomin­g election.

“Brothers and sisters … your mind needs to be attuned to the varied challenges and strategies that are going to be devised to deter persons from being able to cast their vote,” he said to the predominat­ely Black Pine Hills congregati­on.

Even as many religious houses remain closed, Central Florida’s Black ministers have become a beacon of hope for church members looking for more one-on-one guidance when the future seems uncertain.

This has been an unpreceden­ted year marked by a pandemic that has been disproport­ionately deadly in Black communitie­s, a wave of nationwide protests against police killings of Black people and what is being seen as one of the most pivotal presidenti­al elections of this generation. As the nation has had to cope, Black church leaders say they are busier than they have ever been.

They have become advisers to law enforcemen­t leaders looking to repair relationsh­ips with the communitie­s their officers patrol. They are facilitato­rs for young activists who led massive demonstrat­ions this summer and have created a list of demands for change.

They are providers for the neighborho­ods surroundin­g their churches when thousands of workers are laid off or furloughed and are now struggling to buy food for their families. They are guides for white pastors who feel led to preach to their predominat­ely white congregati­ons about the perils of racism and inequality.

And as the needs of the community shift, the church keeps shifting.

“The real pastors are showing up,” said Gray, who leads St. Mark African Methodist Episcopal Church, which is offering only online services. “I work harder now than I did before [covid-19].”

The Sunday that Gray was invited to preach was The Experience Christian Center’s third after returning to in-person services, said Derrick McRae, bishop-elect at the church.

Despite the church closures, McRae said he, too, has been busier than ever. As each new crisis has emerged throughout this year, McRae and other church leaders have had to find ways to respond.

In a normal year, the church organizes several food giveaways, usually tied to major holidays like Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas.

In March, when the economy shut down, leaving thousands without money to buy food, Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida along with other food banks nationwide reported a massive spike in need.

McRae’s church quickly stepped in to help feed the community. For nearly 40 days straight, the church held daily food giveaways.

“We were getting food from all over the state and we were loading it up and going to different communitie­s and just having food giveaways,” said Marlin Daniels, chief developmen­t officer for The Experience Christian Center. “People that didn’t even know the church existed started showing up. … It was supposed to last for 200 to 250 families and we were going through it within an hour.”

More recently, the church partnered with Foot Locker to provide shoes for families in the Parramore neighborho­od as its leadership readies for larger food giveaways ahead of Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas.

“They still need to know there is hope in the community,” Daniels said of the residents benefiting from the work of the church. “That’s what the church is for. The church is a place not only for the spirituali­ty but also for the physical being as well. We can’t preach the gospel and talk about the love of God and not reach them tangibly with food and clothes.”

After protests sparked by the death of George Floyd in May, who pleaded for air for nearly 9 minutes while since-fired Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin held his knee to Floyd’s neck, pastors all over the Central Florida region met with city leaders, sheriffs and police chiefs. They called for community peace and joined activists in the streets.

The demands presented so far by local activists have called for the declaratio­n of racism as a public health crisis, the reallocati­on of some funding for the Orlando Police Department and the Orange County sheriff’s office to combat that crisis, and deputizing citizens trained in de-escalation techniques to embed with law enforcemen­t officers.

Now, as the November presidenti­al election nears, the pastors have stretched their focus to consider how they can help ensure that every member of the congregati­ons and the surroundin­g community will vote.

While some will surely choose to mail their ballots and others will vote independen­tly early or on Election Day, McRae said he is encouragin­g those who would rather vote in person to do so early at the Amway Center during a Souls to the Polls event reimagined for the covid-19 era.

Souls to the Polls, traditiona­lly held on the last Sunday of early voting, is usually marked by Black church leaders organizing buses to take their congregati­ons to vote together after service. Those voters have the power to sway elections. In the 2018 primary, a surge of votes via Souls to the Polls helped Andrew Gillum win the Democratic gubernator­ial primary.

This year, to encourage social distancing, there likely won’t be any buses. Instead, individual cars or smaller carpools will be encouraged to take voters to the Amway Center, a space large enough to maintain space even if voting lines are long. McRae said the church has also chosen to partner with Black sororities and fraterniti­es, the Florida Rights Restoratio­n Coalition and other groups to have an even greater impact on the number of Black voters.

“We’re all souls, and we all need to go to the polls.”

 ?? (Orlando Sentinel/TNS/Willie J. Allen Jr.) ?? Wearing masks and social distancing is the rule for all those attending church services on Sunday morning at Experience Christian Center in Orlando on Sept. 27. The roles are changing for Black pastors during the pandemic, and the political burdens on them have grown in this election year.
(Orlando Sentinel/TNS/Willie J. Allen Jr.) Wearing masks and social distancing is the rule for all those attending church services on Sunday morning at Experience Christian Center in Orlando on Sept. 27. The roles are changing for Black pastors during the pandemic, and the political burdens on them have grown in this election year.

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