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Best Of Portland: 2000

Cheap Eats 2000

photo by basil childers

In a recent survey conducted by the Hartford Institute for Religion Research, more than 80 percent of the female clergy and more than 60 percent of the male clergy polled said women usually have a harder time than men in becoming senior ministers.





"Evangelism is a way for women to exercise their gifts in a way they can't in most churches," says Virginia Phillips, founder of the nondenominational women's support group Women of Purpose Int., headquartered in Newberg, Ore.





Bynum's visit was sponsored by Pastor Lonnie Hosley's HeavenBound Deliverance Center. Hosley can be heard Sundays at 9 pm on KKSL radio, 1290 and 1640 AM.

 



NEWS STORY--RELIGION
BLESSED EMPOWERMENT
Part Oprah and part Benny Hinn, traveling evangelist Juanita Bynum tells throngs of Portland women they can serve the Lord by taking control of their lives.

by RACHEL GRAHAM
rgraham@wweek.com

Marie Miller has been in a three-year rut. Her six kids are great, and she "love, love, loves" her job as a physician's assistant in the Kaiser ER. But despite regular attendance at New Beginnings Christian Center, what was, she says, a close and challenging relationship with God got lost somewhere. "I kept going in case anybody said anything that would help me," she says. "I sat in the back just listening, listening, but I never heard anything."

Two weeks ago, the 39-year-old heard something. And so did hundreds of others. Over three nights, from Nov. 28-30, an estimated 2,000 people, most of them African-American women, packed Maranatha Church in Northeast Portland to hear something they don't usually get from the pulpit--a woman's perspective. Prophetess Juanita Bynum, a leading female evangelist and top-selling Christian self-help author, was the keynote speaker for the Voice of Deliverance Conference 2000. Miller prayed Bynum could give her what her regular pastor hadn't: a spiritual kick in the pants.

"I come to fix situations you can't deal with, that your momma can't deal with, that your best friend can't deal with," Bynum told her audience inside the airy, modern sanctuary. "And your deliverance is as close as the next hallelujah out of your mouth."

It's often noted that 10 am on Sunday is the most segregated hour in America. It also may be the most sexist. Although the majority of churchgoers are women, only half of all American denominations ordain women clergy. You're more likely to find women employed as butchers, electrical technicians or metal workers than as ministers. According to the federal Department of Labor, more than 85 percent of the ordained ministers in the nation are men. And even ordained women don't always reach the pulpit.

Although women are senior ministers at a couple of prominent downtown Protestant churches (First Unitarian and First Congregational), none have the post in large evangelical Portland churches. Rather, women serve on the pastoral staff--primarily in children's ministry, women's ministry and education. Even Bynum remains inside the traditional boundaries of church roles--a traveling evangelist, rather than pastor of a congregation.

Whether Bynum would want to work from the pulpit rather than the floor is unclear. She is critical of the institutional church's inability to meet women's spiritual needs. "You often go to church and feel empty," she told her Portland listeners. "I'm trying to give you an experience. You've been in church all your life, but I want to take you way out in the spirit." And for three nights in Portland, she did just that, pacing Maranatha's floor in a dark conservative suit, using anecdotes and old-fashioned preaching to hammer home her message of deliverance.

Marla Frederick, a post-doctoral fellow at Princeton University studying contemporary African-American women's religious experiences, says the current emphasis among women evangelists is "away from religiosity, the routineness of going to church" and "on spirituality and relationship with God." In that respect, Bynum fills a gap between the self-help and Christian markets.

Bynum's frank talk about her past--a nervous breakdown, anorexia, bad relationships, some serious lust--sets her apart from the mostly male crew of prominent evangelists like Benny Hinn, while her biblically based message of deliverance distinguishes her from secular and generically spiritual self-help authors such as Iyanla Vanzant or Oprah. And it's found
a huge audience.

Bynum was the first African-American evangelist to have her own show on Black Entertainment Television network. Her most recent book, No More Sheets,
a Rules for evangelical Christians, is the fifth most requested title from Central South Christian Distribution, the nation's largest distributor of Christian books, music and videos.

Deliverance, Bynum says, depends upon obedience to God's will, not your own. "You have to ask God, 'What do you need?' And say, 'I don't care if my house is upside down, marriage a mess, kids on drugs--I'm gonna bless your name.'"

In a post-feminist age, Bynum's insistence on conformity may sound like a negative throwback, but within this language of obedience is a message of empowerment. "People always want to give an excuse why they are not following God," she told her audience. "'Can I still watch a few more pornos? Curse just a few more times? Gossip just a little bit more?' You cannot go with God until you can look your past in the face and say, 'Uh-uh.' Until you're ready to face your baby's daddy and say only, 'Send my child support.'"

For Renee Ward, associate pastor at Allen Temple CME, Bynum's writings "encapsulate in blunt honesty a lot of experiences the average woman, and especially African-American women, deal with." Ward, founder of Chrysalis Ministry for victimized women and communications manager for Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon, says Bynum "calls attention to where we thought we have no power to control or change a situation, and, in fact, we do through God."

Christine Baker, 26-year-old pastor of a single mothers' group at New Beginnings, says Bynum "was really good at emphasizing you've got to get on the ball
discovering and developing your God-given opportunities." It is,
in other words, What Color Is Your Parachute? set to the rhythm of the Bible.

Listening to Bynum, Miller said, didn't end her rut but it did put her at greater ease. "She gave me
a purpose for my turmoil," she said. "Now it's OK because there's a light at the end of the tunnel and because my struggle can help somebody else down the line. The church and the secular world often try to knock people off track. People like Juanita Bynum are there to put you back on track."