For a long time nothing much has changed for the poor black
congregation of the Sweet Pilgrim Baptist Church of Clearwater,
Mississippi. Eastertime has dutifully rolled around again. The
azaleas are in bloom.
And then off in the distance comes a wondrous music-a music that
thunders throughout the sky with sweet majesty. It brings in its
trail a celestial cloud and signals a heavenly visit: Jesus and
Simon Peter have come to town. But they are women. Jewish
women-well dressed and built like runway models, to be exact. "At
times I've come to earth in the form of a man. But this time I've
come as a woman. Is something wrong with me appearing as a woman?"
Ms. Jesus asks the surprised churchgoers.
In short order, this unexpected turn of events becomes the norm.
Jesus and Simon Peter drink chablis with the locals; arrange for
oil drilling on black families' tiny lots; make some folks rich and
a few bitterly envious; get caught up in civil rights matters; and
figure in a suspense-filled series of events that bring joy and
prosperity, hatred and murder, and, as a final surprise,
redemption.
When Clayton Sullivan first published "Jesus and the Sweet
Pilgrim Baptist Church" with Doubleday in 1993, many sang his
little fable's praises. Morgan Freeman called the book "A
delightful, if reverent, romp up and down the aisles of a
Mississippi Baptist congregation. Fun "
Eugenia Price said, "That Jesus the Carpenter of Nazareth was
the Son of God occurred to almost no one until coarse and uncouth
people as well as legalistic, brainy, religious types began to see
Him live, act and speak in a way unlike anyone else. Whether they
spoke in vulgarities or in pious-sounding platitudes, people were
taken off guard by the fact that He was a common workman, homeless,
lived simply-even crudely-did and said startling, unorthodox things
that shook people to their roots, as in Clayton Sullivan's
remarkable fable, "Jesus and the Sweet Pilgrim Baptist Church."
This is a fable. No one is claiming that Jesus might come again as
a well-dressed Jewish woman. So, put aside your prejudices and read
it. The Gospel is here in all its simple, shining power."
Clayton Sullivan is a retired Baptist minister living in
Hattiesburg, Mississippi. He is a professor of philosophy and
religion at the University of Southern Mississippi.
A Muscadine Book
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