“A Progressive Before His Time”: David R. Dykes Speaks Of His Father, Dr. D.L. Dykes, Jr. Bookmark and Share

Posted on Feb 13, 2010 - 01:44 PM

I learned one thing above everything else from my father. He taught me that what and how we believe about God, the universe, each other and our world is crucial. It is crucial because every act we perform expresses that belief. And to the extent that this belief includes life-denying notions of any kind, our actions will manifest those notions in everything we do - sometimes only as a hint or the suggestion of a flavor; sometimes as an outright three-dimensional act. What we believe about God shapes how we live on the planet. 

Yes, we deal in the world of ideas and beliefs. But the world we mean to influence is the world of action and outcome. Theologians and ethicists have only recently begun to be aware that while we have been getting our beliefs right, our theologies and moral philosophies have ignored the reality that the majority of the human population on this planet is left to live without the means to live and ultimately without the hope to make life possible.

So whatever education we do from this time forward must forever after include and underscore the unrelenting questions that question our assumptions about life, what is good for others, what life is like for others and that demand to know how we will resist the powers that be that tell us that only the powerful, the resource-rich and the fortunate-born matter. Our education must always include an indictment of the system in which we live and in which we serve.

This is what D. L. Dykes, Jr. knew and taught. It is what he taught me. The peace and prosperity for which we all long will never be possible without reconstructing a world in which every human being has enough and no one is lorded over by anyone else.

Faith is not about thinking and believing right things; it is about righting wrong things. It’s not about our being kinder, gentler people. It’s about how we will not rest until God’s world is made right. This is what D. L. Dykes intended; this is what we will do.

your colleague and friend,
David Dykes, CEO of The D. L. Dykes, Jr. Foundation


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Joerg Rieger 'PCCS Scholar'

Dr. Joerg Rieger is the Wendland-Cook Endowed Professor of Constructive Theology at Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, TX. His website is devoted to theological projects that take seriously the radical and hopeful alternatives that emerge in conjunction with the underside of history.

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Here's what real people have to say about what 'Progressive Christianity' means to them:

  • Progressive Christianity encourages a spirituality that offers maturity, depth, and wisdom. It invites compassion.

  • One who does not quote Biblical chapters and verses, but who tries to live Christ’s message of compassion and justice.

  • Progressive Christians are liberated Christians who can think for themselves & not
    have the church think for them.

  • Progressives refuse to participate in a theology of patriarchy that hold women in spiritual vassalage.

  • A profound faith focused more on justice than judgment; where all are allowed to participate as is their birthright as children of God.





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