With โSacred Slam,โ Rev. Dr. Wanda Bynum Duckett uses poetry and hip-hop to revive Black church traditions and connect with Gen Z and millennials.
By Rev. Dorothy S. Boulware
Word In Black
Overview:
As younger generations seek meaning beyond traditional pews, the Black church is experimenting with new forms of worship. One pastorโs spoken word approach reflects a larger shift toward culturally rooted, inclusive faith spaces.
With graduate degrees from St. Maryโs Seminary in Baltimore and Wesley Theological Seminary in Washington, D.C., the Rev. Dr. Wanda Bynum Duckett has traditional faith leadership credentials. Her career path affirmed it: she rose from itinerant ministry to serve as superintendent of the United Methodist Churchโs former Baltimore Metropolitan District for eight years.
Then, she retired and rewired.
After years of preaching in a more traditional mode, Duckett now spits the gospel with the power and energy of a hip-hop artist or slam poet. Thatโs with good reason: Bynam Duckett, 64, is melding art forms found in nightclubs and coffee houses with scripture โ a unique spiritual blend she calls โSacred Slamโ:
We are the onesโฆwhat are we waiting for?
We are the onesโฆopen wide every door!
We are the ones
We canโt hear them from our shrines
Canโt see them through closed blinds
Canโt love them with closed minds.
Eternal life? Letโs get this right.
The world is waiting and
We are the ones.
The combination is drawing them into the pews whenever Duckett preaches, and not just young people craving a spiritual message in a language they can relate to. Sacred Slam, she says, attracts the young and the young at heart. Her style has been so successful that she facilitates workshops and coaches others to find themselves in the art of poetry under the banner of Spoken by Duckett.
โI celebrate that God is the first spoken word artist,โ Duckett told Word In Black in a recent interview. โIn the beginning was the word. Thatโs a spoken word poem. And if you go back and listen to Rev. Jesse Jackson and some of the popular preachers we have, itโs poetry; the way they use imagery and repetition and alliteration.โ
Extending her soul art, she says, has been a real blessing as well as a model for others to be authentically themselves. People began to ask her to perform in unusual places, including a wedding: โOne bride walked down the aisle to a poem,โ she says.
Duckett wants to introduce younger poets to the faith community, thereby encouraging them to embrace all the arts for worship. Her next plan also includes community gatherings, even in homes, much like the poetry salons of the Harlem Renaissance.
Word In Black interviewed Bynum Duckett to talk about โSacred Slam.โ This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Word in Black: When did you first fall in love with hip-hop and poetry?
Wanda Bynum Duckett: I grew up the youngest of five. I had a brother who was a rock and roll, Led Zeppelin, Rare Earth guy. He was a hippie. I had another brother who was Temptations, Four Tops. And my sister, sheโs Pointer Sisters, and sheโs listening to Malcolm X on wax, on album. โฆ
It was in the late โ70s, and I heard the Sugarhill Gang. I was kind of in love then, but then when I heard, โDonโt Push Me, Iโm Close to the Edge,โ I was like, โOK โ Iโm in.โ
My motherโs James Cleveland, Mahalia Jackson, so I think in song and rhyme anyway.
Of course, weโve got poetic preachers and in the tradition of even someone reading the scripture and the preacher preaching a while and then heโs rhyming and heโs riffing and heโs unpacking it. Itโs poetry to me. Itโs, like, the way the images and the words and the attitude of it all come together. All this stuff is in my head.
โWeโve got poetic preachers and in the tradition of even someone reading the scripture and the preacher preaching a while and then heโs rhyming, and heโs riffing, and heโs unpacking it. Itโs poetry to me.โ โ Rev. Wanda Bynum Duckett
WIB: When did you first experience rhythm in scripture and prayer responses?
Bynum Duckett: I really donโt know if I was aware until other people noticed it in my preaching. I think it was so much a part of the way I think, hear, and speak that I didnโt realize. I would preach at Mount Calvary AME Church, and when the young adult choir was singing, they would snap their fingers when I made a point. I said, โWhat are they doing?โ I said to myself, โIโm not doing poetry,โ but thatโs the way they heard it.
WIB: Did you need to summon courage to be non-traditional?
Bynum Duckett: One of the first times I performed, I stood in the background with my hair tied up, like I was Maya Angelou or somebody. I thought I had to be Afrocentric. While I read from the background, out of sight, Rev. Stephanie Graham Atkins, one of my colleagues, did liturgical dance to the rhythm of my words and I got to hide.
It was another kind of gradual coming out.
WIB: Did you experience pushback? Did anyone say, โThatโs not preaching. Whatโs she doing up there?โ
Bynum Duckett: It was actually the opposite. I found my tribe in the young adults. And people love when young people show up, right?
I give credit to a young lady named LaShonda. When I was in southwest Baltimore, my first church, I was doing a lot of real, gritty urban ministry. And then when I moved uptown to Ashburton, I sat in the office and saw people and visited. She came into the office one day and said the young people had Googled me. They said, โWhere is she? We havenโt seen her show up here.โ She called me out. She said they were excited for me to bring my โbopโ as she called it.
Out of that conversation came the poem, โI Decided to Be Myself.โ
WIB: What did โbeing yourselfโ look like, initially?
Bynum Duckett: We started the โSeven Last Words of Poetryโ nights on Good Friday. We didnโt start until 10 oโclock. People had been in church all day. We set the place up like a cafe. We had live music one year. We had a DJ the next year. And the seven last words were all offered poetically.
People came from all over: D.C., Silver Spring, you know, elsewhere in Baltimore. It was beautiful. They were able to get a taste of what it was before they could argue against it.
So then, when I did dissertation work, I really pushed the envelope and took the United Methodist hymnal and wrote a poetic reaffirmation of baptism, a poetic communion service.
WIB: Can you say more about the baptism poem?
Bynum Duckett: It is dedicated to Trayvon Martin. He had a right to live. Remember that mantra? And itโs talking about how Jesus had the right to live, but he gave himself up for us. Itโs a communion service.
In the dissertation, it was the first time I had a chance to experiment with that to see what people said. And then I took a survey as part of the dissertation work. And the survey was, like, itโs cool. They said they liked it but werenโt sure about it being part of worship.
Some said they certainly didnโt know how they felt about it being used in the sacraments. And some people said stuff like, โWell, itโs kind of like hip hop. I donโt understand it because they talk too fast.โ So writing it down is helpful so people can read it at their own pace in their own way.
But this one woman, who had been kind of on the edge, cried as I did a reaffirmation of baptism. She said it took her back to when she was confirmed, and she wasnโt one of those weepy people.
This article was originally published by Word In Black.

