From the mud-filled cistern of injustice to the collaborative ropes of deliverance, this message from Reverend Doctor Lee H. Butler Junior, President of Iliff School of Theology, reveals how African-Americans have always been active agents in God’s salvation plan rather than sacrificial victims. Like Ebed-Melek the Ethiopian who rescued Jeremiah with both courage and care, we are called to pull together in faith to overcome today’s broken systems.
The rescue of Jeremiah required community effort and thoughtful care—Ebed-Melek wrapped rags around ropes to protect Jeremiah as he was pulled from the mud. This collaborative approach mirrors how African-Americans have survived centuries of injustice through faith and solidarity. The speaker challenged the harmful narrative that Black suffering exists to save America’s soul, instead emphasizing how African-Americans have always been believers with spiritual agency throughout salvation history.
“African-American history is replete with stories of survival and deliverance that were only made possible by faith and pledging to work together. By faith we survived the forced march from interior to the Continental Coast. By faith we survived the Middle Passage. By faith we maintained our family values despite auction block.”
This powerful testament reminds us that if we are to overcome today’s challenges—from book banning to racial injustice—we must recognize we’re stuck in the mud of a broken cistern and pull together as a community of faith.