AMERICA'S 
GODLY HERITAGE
		
		Follow 
the Lord Jesus Black History Month
		
		By 
Charles Colson  Breakpoint Online  
		
		 
		 
CBN.com 
   Its 
  Black History Monthand in classrooms around the country, children have been 
  learning about famous African Americans and their contributions to our culture. 
  Thats a good thing. But there's one thing most kids have not been learning about 
  many of these famous men and women: that is, their Christian faith and how it 
  motivated their lives and their work.               
For 
  instance, Sojourner Truth is often identified as a womens rights advocate and 
  abolitionist. Overlooked is the source of Sojourners fiery devotion to 
  human rights: That was her commitment to Jesus Christ. "The Lord gave me 
  the name Sojourner," she declared, "because I was to travel up 
  and down the land, showing people their sins, and being a sign unto them." 
  At age 88, her dying words were, "Follow the Lord Jesus." 
And 
  then there's Rosa Parks. Many people know the story of the seamstress who helped 
  ignite the modern civil rights movement. But far fewer people know that Parks 
  is a devout Christian and that it was her faith that gave her the strength to 
  do what she did that day in 1955. "Since I have always been a strong believer 
  in God," she says, "I knew that He was with me, and only He could get 
  me through that next step"that is, refusing to give up her seat on 
  a bus to a white man. 
Our 
  kids have also been hearing a lot about Jackie Robinsons quiet dignity in the 
  face of racial bigotry on the ball field. But many dont realize the source of 
  Robinsons ability to turn the other cheek: It was his faith in Jesus Christ. 
  During his ten years with the Dodgers, he endured racist remarks, death threats, 
  and unfair calls by umpires. But Robinsons faith helped him keep his anger in 
  check. Every night, he got on his knees and prayed for self-control. 
Most 
  people know that George Washington Carver was a chemist and agronomist. Born a 
  slave in 1860, Carver rose to become director of agricultural research at Tuskegee 
  University in Alabama. He is remembered for developing 118 derivative products 
  from sweet potatoes and 300 from peanutsincluding my favorite food, peanut 
  butter. Thanks to his efforts, by 1940, peanuts were the second largest cash crop 
  in the South.  
But go to his name in the encyclopedia, and youll find no reference 
  to the most important aspect of his life: how his faith in God inspired his creativity. 
"I 
  didnt make these discoveries," Carver once said. "God has only worked 
  through me to reveal to His children some of His wonderful providence." 
Stories 
  like these are a reminder of what a central role the Christian faith has played 
  in the lives of many great Americans. We Christians need to reclaim our cultural 
  heritage from those who seem intent on deleting it from history booksand 
  from Black History Month celebrations. So I urge you: Before the month ends, make 
  sure your own kids learn about the abiding faith of Sojourner Truth, Rosa Parks, 
  Jackie Robinson, George Washington Carver, and, of course, the Rev. Martin Luther 
  King, Jr. And consider donating some of the good biographies written about these 
  people to local schools and librariesbiographies that tell the whole story.  
Our 
  kids deserve to know, not only of African-American contributions to science, politics, 
  and culture, but also of those individuals commitments to Christ.  
                 
                -  Mary G. Butler, 
"Sojourner 
Truth: A Life and Legacy of Faith," Sojourner Truth Institute of Battle 
Creek.
 
                - Mary 
G. Butler, "The 
Words of Truth," Heritage Battle Creek: A Journal of Local History 
8 (Fall 1997).
 
                - W. 
Terry Whalin, Sojourner 
Truth: American Abolitionist, from the Heroes of the Faith series (Barbour, 
1997).
 
                - BreakPoint 
Commentary No. 990625, "The 
Woman on the Bus: The Faith of Rosa Parks."
 
                - Rosa 
Parks and Gregory J. Reed, Quiet 
Strength: The Faith, the Hope, and the Heart of a Woman Who Changed a Nation 
(Zondervan, 2000).
 
                - BreakPoint 
Commentary No. 980217, "Baseballs 
Great Experiment: The Jackie Robinson Story."
 
                - Sally 
M. Walker, Jackie 
Robinson (Carolrhoda Books, 2002).
 
                - McNabb, 
"George 
Washington Carver: A legacy of salvation for the lowlands of sorrow!," 
from "Four Iowans Who Fed the World," a symposium held at the Herbert 
Hoover Presidential Library-Museum, 26 October 2002.
 
                - Sam 
Wellman, George 
Washington Carver: Inventor and Naturalist, from the Heroes of the Faith 
series (Barbour, 1998).
 
                - BreakPoint 
Commentary No. 030117, "Fighting 
Unjust Laws: Remembering Martin Luther King, Jr."
 
                - Mervyn 
A. Warren, King 
Came Preaching: The Pulpit Power of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (InterVarsity, 
2001).
 
                - Kevin 
Belmonte, "A 
Faithful Steward," Focus on the Family magazine.
 
                - Kevin 
Belmonte, Hero 
for Humanity: A Biography of William Wilberforce (NavPress, 2002).
 
               
              More from Charles Colson on CBN.com
               
              From BreakPoint, Copyright  Prison Fellowship 
Ministries. "BreakPoint 
with Chuck Colson" is a radio ministry of Prison Fellowship 
Ministries. Reprinted with permission of Prison Fellowship, P.O. Box 17500, Washington, 
DC, 20041-0500." Heard on more than 1000 radio stations nationwide. 
For more information on the ministry of Chuck Colson and Prison Fellowship visit 
their web site at http://www.breakpoint.org.
		   
 
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