By Rev. Dorothy S. Boulware
Overview:
Black parishioners’ emotional investment in the 2024 presidential election left some in mourning over its outcome. Pastors believe the right message of resilience and hope can offer strength and inspiration to carry on.
Most pastors agree that certain funerals can test them most in preaching. It isnโt easy to provide a message of comfort, wisdom and hope when the deceased is a child, or a victim of police brutality or a domestic-violence murder victim, or a young person in so much pain they took their own lives.
But what does one say after a devastating presidential election?

For months, Black America had cautiously hoped that Vice President Kamala Harris would make history as the first Black woman president of this country. Former President Donald Trump destroyed that hope, leaving many in the community in mourning, perhaps wondering why God allowed it to happen.
โWe are holding weighty matters today,โ Rev. Dr. Roderick D. Belin, publisher of the AME Church, said as he convened a gathering of AME bishops and clergy to consider which anecdotes, parables or scripture to deliver from the pulpit this Sunday.
โEach of us brings our own emotions, and concerns,โ he says. โI invite you to center and take a deep breath. Hold it for just a moment and let it go.โ
Each of the speakers first revealed the angst theyโd endured overnight as reality set in and the victory was handed to President-elect Donald Trump. Many of the themes on which they landed involved Biblical themes of faith in times of uncertainty and anxiety.
Bishop Francine Brookins, presiding prelate of the 5th Episcopal District of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, said parishioners are facing multiple anxieties: โYoung people receiving threatening texts. Seniors fearing loss of social security. People who voted for Donald Trump, [and] people who will be most heavily victimized by those choices.โ
Yet the church was made for this particular season, she says, referencing Jesusโ proclamation in Luke 4, where he listed the people and the conditions for which heโd been called and anointed. Itโs โthe real Jesusโ she will preach about this Sunday, โnot the one theyโve chosen to elect.โ
Brookins suggested pastors should first take careful account of the people to whom theyโll be preaching, their immediate and local context. Itโs also worth reminding them that courts provided protection during the Civil Rights Movement and also blocked right-wing attempts to ban abortion in every state and halted the immediate deportation of undocumented immigrants.
โItโs important to be consciously aware that our neighbors have chosen a convicted rapist to lead this country, a known thief, liar, and murderer, considering the millions who died during COVID,โ she said. โAs we preach the real gospel, the reaction of the darkness to the light is to always hurl it off of a mountain.โ
Retired Bishop Adam Jefferson Richardson Jr. noted that an election surfaced in Luke 23:13-19, when the people chose Barabbas when given the option of freeing Jesus instead. That lesson could be the foundation of an effective message to congregants.
โThe title of choice would be, โAll for Barabbas, Stand up and Holler,โโ he said. โWith multiple chances given to change their minds, they stuck with Barabbas.โ
Bishop Silvester Beaman, president of the A.M.E. Council of Bishops and presiding prelate of the 12th Episcopal district, landed on the topic of โThe Other Side of Jericho,โ embracing the tradition of answering the childrenโs questions about the faith.
โEvery time we show up in the sanctuary it is a time of remembering, a time to reflect on who God is and how God has been in our lives,โ he said. โEven when we see through the glass dimly, because we canโt fully comprehend what God is doing presently; itโs the time to remember what God has already done.โ
Retired Bishop Vashti Murphy McKenzie, president of the National Council of Churches, said itโs jarring to see the majority celebrate a moment when so many feel despair. But the journey, she said, โis not defined by a single moment or a single outcome.โ
She says sheโs drawn to Jeremiah 29:3-12, where people reckon with a future theyโd not anticipated.
โThey hadnโt expected to be in exile for an extended time,โ McKenzie says. โBut Jeremiah doesnโt end in despair, but with a future and a hope. Hope is our faithful anchor. A future filled with possibilities. Though the Israelites enduredโฆthey were assured their activity would not conclude Godโs plan for them.โ
She encouraged radical acceptance of present realities.
โAcknowledge, โI am afraid. Iโm not sure,โโ McKenzie says. โAcknowledge anger, but sin not. God is saying this is not the time to slink quietly into the night. God says you need to be active in your faith and active in life. God says I want you to build. I want you to settle down. I want you to eat what you produce.โ
She went on: โSeek the peace of the place where you live. Pray for your country. This is not a moment. Itโs a season. I will preach [that] God still has a plan for you, not to harm, but to prosper you and give you a future and a hope.โ
This article was originally published by WordinBlack.com.

