When We Stand with Terence Lester / Transcript

Note: Can I Say This at Church is produced for audio listening. If able, I strongly encourage you to listen to the audio, which has inflection, emotion, sarcasm where applicable, and emphasis for points that may not come across well in written word. This transcript is generated using a combination of my ears and software, and may contain errors. Please check the episode for clarity before quoting in print.

Back to the Audio Episode


Terence Lester 0:09

Man, I wish people in church or people in the congregation's, would talk more about how churches sometimes use poor people to feel good about themselves. And the reason I say that is because obviously, with the work that I do for my organization we always have a lot of faith based communities get involved and they come in, they swoop in, and they throw a bunch of money and stuff. And, you know, everybody's happy, and they take pictures and then they go back, and nobody ever sees them again. And I'll never forget having a conversation with a kid who received a bike for Christmas because his church wanted to donate bikes, because that was cute, and the young man didn't even know how to ride a bike because nobody ever taught him.

Seth Price 1:22

Hey, there, how is everyone? So I'm embarrassed. See, I was on vacation with my family last week. And the time of the vacation is irrelevant. So I wanted to apologize to everyone. I had intended to be much better planned for last Monday's release of that what…minute and a half, three minute episode there that I put out. But you know, mistakes happen. Sometimes people leave a power cable and that's okay it actually forced me to do no work and to stay on vacation. But um, anyway, that out of the way. I’m excited to be back. I am recharged, and vacation was good. And I hope that your summer is going well. For me, kids go back to school here in a few weeks. And that's insane. So yeah, a couple quick announcements. So the store is backup merchandise is their patron supporters, you do get a discount. So before you buy anything, reach out to me, make sure you've got that code. If not, there's at least two new designs in there. I've commissioned a few more because I'm not the best artist. And in church today, I had another idea for something else that I'd like to have done, I'll have to see if I can draw it up and then find someone that is more talented than me to make it a reality. But that is there.

Before we get going, the normal podcast thing, you know, rate and review the show, it helps tremendously. And I also really wanted to say thank you to jack, welcome to the community here on Patreon. I'm excited to have you if you haven't joined him and the other people like him. They're brilliant people. They wouldn't make a mistake. Right? And you should join in with them. That is out of the way.

So Terence Lester and I had a conversation one day before work, and I loved it. Now full disclosure, I brought him on to talk about his book and we skirted the edges. I've since then read the book. And it is amazing. It is very good. But we skirted the edges of it because I was not able to read his full book before we chatted. And I'm embarrassed to say so, because that's one of my goals, but it just didn't happen because life got in the way. But the conversation was great. I got a lot out of it. I hope that you do. And here we go. Terence Lester.

Seth Price 4:01

Here we go. Correct me if I’m wrong, Terence, you’ve got like 5 degrees right? Or 17 degrees? Something like that? (Terence laughs)

Terence Lester 4:08

Seth, man, I have four degrees. And I'm currently in a Ph. D. program. So I'm halfway through that. Studying public policy and social change.

Seth Price 4:19

I just wanted to make sure that I introduced you correctly. You know if you're a doctor, I want to lean into that, so I guess you're a master then but I don't know what the right maybe maybe I don't know, you're a lot of things. So what would you say to people that are you know, by the way, let me back up. Welcome to the show. I don't know what happened. I think our easy chat at the beginning kind of got me out of my normal rhythm there. But welcome to the show. And what would you say to people when they're like I don't know who? Like I saw the name in the little iTunes show notes. So this dude's name is Terence but who is that like what are you and maybe more importantly, why are you that?

Terence Lester 4:57

Yeah. Wow, that's a loaded question. (Seth laughs) I think we have built the rapport before we actually started. But, man, I don't normally like to describe myself in terms of things that I've accomplished, or my education. If I was to describe myself, I would like to describe myself based upon the things that are passions for me. I am passionate about my wife, who have been married, going on 15 years in August we’ll celebrate 15 years, we married really young. I'm passionate about my children, my children are my legacy. I oftentimes tell people that I'm hustling for my last name and not my first. And I mean that through and through. I want my kids to be able to look at the life that I am living, the life that my wife is living, and feel a sense of empowerment from our family structure, and our core values, and what we stand for.

I am passionate about service specifically to those who are living on the margins of society or those persons who have been made invisible through laws, and ordinances, and political and social rhetoric. And I am also passionate about, man, just being a good neighbor to all people. And when I say “good neighbor”, I'm talking about being a neighbor to all persons in a community and extending tables as instead of building walls. So that's what I'm passionate about.

Seth Price 6:51

Yeah. So my wife and I just celebrated our 15th I have no idea when this will air but we're in the middle part of June here. So we had our 15th the first week of June there. It was great. Grandma watched all the kids at my house. I didn't have to pay for childcare or dog care. Well, I always got to pay for childcare. You lose your spot, you know, because I got to be at work normally. But yeah, so I don't know how old you are. Your skin looks younger than mine. Maybe you've been out in the sun less I don't, I don't think so. So I don't think that you could have gotten married too young because I feel like just looking at you we've got to be close. And I don't want to call myself old yet. I'm not willing to do that. How old are you Terence?

Terence Lester 7:30

I am 38 years old.

Seth Price 7:33

Yeah, definitely. I just turned 39 in May. So yeah, I didn't get married young and nor am I old so happy 15th early man 15 is a good year. 15 is a good year.

Terence Lester 7:42

For sure.

Seth Price 7:43

So the publisher of your book, you know, they send me this book jacket like as a PDF right? And in that you're like all cleaned up and I gotta say like, I prefer this haircut and that beard I'm a beard dude and people that aren't you know, on Patreon can't see the video but are you gonna keep this like when when you when you back out and about like, is this a thing? I like this. This is much nicer than that that like that was a PhD headshot for like a faculty listing is what that was.

Terence Lester 8:14 (laughs)

Right. Yeah, I mean, I am settling into the hair growth. I love the beard now.

Seth Price 8:25

Saves a lot of time.

Terence Lester 8:26

Yeah, I’m growing my hair out. So I'm thinking I'm going to sit with this a while.

Seth Price 8:35

(Chuckles) I like it. So there is a method to that madness. So one of the things of my stalking and sleuthing on the internet is you wrote a blog post recently, and you referenced your current hairstyle. And I have quite a few friends that happen to not be white. And they've also told me about things like that and like educating their kids and you do a lot of things. You were underselling yourself and your little who am I and what am I. Like you work at an intersection of like pastoral care, social work, justice, advocacy, I would argue maybe a prophetic voice. Like you've done a lot of things. And maybe, you can correct me if I'm wrong, if you feel like any of those are incorrect. But can you give some context and I'll link, I do a transcript for the show as well, I'll link for people that can't listen, that want to read it. I'll link to it right here, right there. That nice word here will be linked. But for those listening I'd like to kind of start there because I think it would give a good perspective to dive off into some of the things I want to talk about as we launch into you got a book that just released and some of the work that you do and kind of why you do some of the work that you do.

Terence Lester 9:41

Yeah, yeah, for sure.

Man, I am always a person that likes to talk about the intersection of my racial identity and culture with being synonymous with my faith. Because I am a black man in America. And I have never had the privilege of separating who I am, my racial identity, from my faith. I can’t separate those two things. I follow Jesus and I still can be mistreated. I follow Jesus but I still can walk into a restaurant, to stand in line to purchase healthy food, and then have the manager, like I was talking about in this blog, come over to me and suddenly harassed me. Looking at my hair, asking me what am I doing here? Why have I chosen to sit in a public setting? When I look around I see people, who are white, sitting at other tables or not being asked these types of questions. The security guard comes over, as if I am causing some type of trouble.

Seth Price 11:03

Sitting there.

Terence Lester 11:05

Yeah! I was sitting there. I was even asked if I had paid for my food and I had to reach in my pocket and produce the receipt. But it started to make me realize that in certain settings, that even as a person who is pursuing a PhD, has multiple degrees, literally I give my life sacrificially to be proximate and present with community of persons who are without homes. None of that matters because all persons see is my skin color or how I wear my hair. And it's always interesting being in those circumstances because when you're going through it, it feels very traumatizing and shocking. But, later, you get a chance to process what happened to pull out or mine out some type of lesson to communicate to a much larger audience.

And that's what I try to do with how I live my life or the personal experiences that I go through. I'm always looking for ways to take moments and turn them into teaching moments for other people. And so if you have been discriminatory towards a person of color who has had longer hair, or natural hair, I would definitely encourage you to be very conscious, and be aware of your mannerisms and your behaviors and things that could be damaging to persons who should also be included.

Seth Price 12:40

Yeah. Can I ask hopefully inappropriate but definitely in an ignorant question. Because my kids have asked me this before because we'll talk about implicit and unconscious biases. We've talked about this for their daycare, for their school, for our neighbors. Like we live right next door to a gentleman his name, I'm not gonna say his name because he didn't give me permission. That happens to be black. The guy before him was not black and we have just a good relationship. It doesn't really matter who because, you know, he's good people. I like him. He's very kind he is he loves on my kids sometimes when they're out there playing so I’ve got no issues with him. But as a person that I've never had to deal with that Terrance like, I was born with the right amount of pigmentation that for the most part people leave me alone. What is the role of someone else sitting in the setting that you're in, or really in any setting, that hopefully claims to be a Christian so we're supposed to love everyone and do what we're supposed to be doing. And even if they don't, I think that uh, you know, the morality of the world would say, that's not how we treat people. What should someone like me do? Like if I'm observing that happen like, what is the right response?

Terence Lester 13:55

Mmm

Yeah. You know, you brought up those two forms of biases. I'll just start with the unconscious bias. There was it was years ago when ml King was talking about the differences between de jure discrimination and de facto discrimination. De jure discrimination had to do with laws that were actually put in place that discriminated against black people in this country. You can't drink at this water fountain. You can't vote. You have to have a certain amount of education to fill out a voter registration card. I mean, Black Codes, all of the laws that emerged from Jim Crowism. And so that was being discriminated against by law.

Well, when some of those laws begin to be wiped away and abolished that didn't mean that the behaviors or the posture of heart changed, right? That's when it became de facto. De facto describes the behaviors and the practices, or the disposition, that still embodies the laws that weren't in existence anymore. And I think, unconsciously, a lot of the behaviors and practices have been passed down; and subconsciously it is still a form of discrimination that persons of color have to go through whether you know it or not it's just been embedded within the context of culture. As a black man, I would like to see my white counterparts or my white persons that stand in solidarity with the struggle, speak up.

Seth Price 15:53

Like in the moment? Like right there in the moment?

Terence Lester 15:55

In the moment! Right there! Think about it, I was sitting at this table and I went from being a patron, or somebody who is patronizing this business, to being a person who is on display. And nobody said nothing! I became this weird character in a, you know, metaphorical stage play, if you will. And I was becoming entertainment to people as opposed to people leaning in and speaking up.

I think, after speaking up, this whole notion of creating these type of rhythmic practices in your life where you are doing things that are outside of your normal routine is appropriate. For instance, I was giving a talk the other day and one of the questions came up and they were like, Well, how do I escape my bubble? And I'm like, Well, the only reason you're in the bubble is because you're doing things that are routine for your bubble. Go outside of your comfort zone. If you shop at a white coffee shop go to another part of town where you can purchase coffee in the community that is not your own. What I'm basically talking about is, you know, starting to develop this idea of what proximity and presence really means. But you have to start with speaking up.

Seth Price 17:30

See, it's like you're a professional speaker, because where I wanted to lean was your new book, which again, I told you, I think before we recorded that I haven't had the ability to read more than the first chapter. And I don't ever ask first chapter questions, Terence. Because I feel like that's where people that did not read the book, like they just put in the minimal amount of effort. (Terence laughs) And then also full disclosure, I usually read every single word of whatever we're going to talk about before I do because your time is valuable, you know. So that's why I want to be so upfront with that.

But your new book, from what I can tell, and from videos that I've watched, and other people writing about what you know, writing about the book, and the endorsement successfully from Father Boyle, like, you're you're making the case that like proximity is, is the way of life that we need to get to like community is the way of life. But I'd like to start maybe, and let me back up. So the book is When We Stand: The Power of Seeking Justice Together. That way, you don't have to say it. And you know, because you know, why not? But I don't think that most people have a good concept for what community is. I think most people say community is the people that I see day in and day out which is slightly different from what you're saying, for someone trying to actually help bring a little bit more shalom into the world, to use a fancy word. But since you've got 17 degrees, we’re there. I do not, but I've read a lot of books, (Terence laughs) like how would you define community in the sense that you want people to kind of understand that for the work that you do?

Terence Lester 18:57

Yeah, I think community is something that has been abused, well the term itself, because we have to ask, you know, whose community? Are we talking about the community within the context of a dense neighborhood that has redeveloped homes, that has gates around their subdivision? Are we talking about that community? Or are we talking about the community that has a private school, also in the same dense neighborhood, that looks like a college campus but it's for K - 12 students, but you know, block over is a food desert for those other “residents” in the community? So we always have to start with who's community.

And I start there because when I talk about community, I am talking about the whole community. I'm talking about when persons within the context of that community have been made aware that they are not the only ones in the community. I've been asked several times about people without an address and how do you build relationships and be proximate to people who may be impoverished. And I normally respond with a conversation that I had with a well known friend of mine. He was talking about how he had the privilege of uprooting out of a suburbian neighborhood and moving into a really dense area. He's been there for 40 years. And before he moved into this community he always saw persons who struggle with poverty and, you know, lack of access as being persons who were lazy. And, you know, not wanting to put in hard work.

But then he said he moved closer in proximity, and slowly, the struggles of the community became his own struggles. That when he was in church with his neighbors who probably didn't bring in the same amount of income that he brought in but he started to hear the concerns of rents, mortgages, and rent payments being raised, because the area was being gentrified. That they were literally in church praying to God that they would make it through and have enough to cover the inflation. But still knowing that they probably wouldn't and they would be displaced because of the gentrification. He said their concerns became his concerns.

And when I see community I'm talking about is this shared sense of humanity and this shared sense of togetherness within the context of community, and it includes everyone in it, not just those who have been isolated.

Seth Price 22:11

Yeah. Are you a fan of rap music, Terence?

Terence Lester 22:16

I am brother.

Seth Price 22:18

So my favorite, amongst my favorite, artists is Propaganda. And honestly, this is like, I think the third episode in a row. Now I'm not gonna release these in a row. So listeners won't probably catch up on that. And I might even edit this out, because that way it feels right, so all I've been doing is listening to his new album Terraform. I don't know if you've listened to that album or not. If you haven't, I think it's gonna…have you heard it?

Terence Lester 22:36

Not yet.

Seth Price 22:37

Dude, do it today. It's just six songs. I don't even know if that's technically an album. But it goes with the book that he just released, which I also haven't read. But his very first song reminds me a lot of what you just said. So I just read you the intro real quick. So he says,

Let me tell you about this shorthand mean, you use, it's how we decide if somebody is safe. There's talking points. That's how you know if they are in the fence or outside of the fence, whether you're safe or not. But I suggest a redo. Because like it or not, we are all that we've got.

Which that last line, like it or not, like, this is the community like, like it or not, we are all that we've got. My problems are your problems. My faith is maybe your faith, your faith is my faith. Your kids need to succeed, because I live here, like I live here, and your kids will one day help take care of me. And I'll help take care of them. You know what I mean, because I live here, regardless of their politics or whatever.

So your book, What are you getting at in that book? Again, I'm sure there's 250 pages there. So there's a lot there. What is the overarching narrative and the goal of the book as you're seeking to talk about community and justice?

Terence Lester 23:45

Yeah, that true justice happens when persons decide to come together. I take a lot of ML Kings writings, when he uses languages, like world house or global village, or interconnectedness. There's a sermon that he gave in 1967 is a Christmas sermon, where he's talking about when you wake up in the morning, you can't start your day without having a global encounter. You know, he's talking about where you got your cup of coffee from, where did you get your shirt from? Who made that, you know, the decor in your house. He's helping us to see the entire world as an address, as opposed to only your physical address, helping us to understand that we are all in this life together.

And I take that framework and I'm trying to push people to see themselves as being contributors to the collective fabric of social change by connecting with their neighbors. Like I often ask what are you doing in your context, right around you, and many times people think that they don't have anything to offer, or that what they may offer is too small. What I'm suggesting is that if you give of your gifts or talents, or whatever it is that you bring to the table connected with other people's offerings, then that's how we truly start to see change happening within our local context.

And I think true change happens locally and it spreads across the country and across the globe. And most persons are overwhelmed if they try to tackle an entire issue by themselves, as opposed to locking arms with people right around them to make a difference right in their own communities.

Seth Price 25:51

Here's the thing. It's that time, you can hit the button if you want, right, you know, skip 30 seconds or skip a minute, but I will be right back.

Seth Price 26:27

My lights just flickered. I think the lights going bad. So it's probably going to happen again, we'll have a little strobe effect happening here. So I want to ask a question about self worth. And I keep being reminded of a conversation I had with Dr. Richard Beck, who's a psychologist out of Abilene Christian University, talked about how most people are averse to things that are not in their bubble. Like there's a spit test, like you take spit in your mouth right now and swallow it, you're fine. You spit in a Dixie cup and try to swallow it immediately. It's not even contaminated. It's still your spit, and you can't drink it. You can't do it, because it's left you. And so there's like a concept of self.

And so as you are witnessing with people, and you've got your organization Love Beyond Walls, right, that's the name of the organization that you helped start, I think you'll helped to start, and then hopefully partnering with churches and cities and mayors and city councils and maybe school boards. What has changed for your version of the concept of self, and in relation to other people's concept of self, to help repair that? Because I think most people ignore the people in our community, the homeless, the people disenfranchised, the people that were in the same place that you were, you know, while you're getting abused because you got the wrong haircut while you're trying to eat. You know, better than that. You got to clean up. How has your concept of self changed me over the last decades as you as you work through this work? And then how are you helping to communicate that to organizations and people that can then take that and maybe further that ministry?

Terence Lester 27:54

Yeah.

Man, I'll never forget having a conversation with, I was on staff at a church, and one of my best friends I was, I think I was like, 27 and one of my best friends was 68. His name was Mr. Gene. And Mr. Gene and I would sit around and like have coffee and and talk. And I’ll never forget him telling me that there were two types of people in life. He says there are accumulators. And then there are distributors. And he was talking about himself because he was in a phase of life where he was downsizing. And he was starting to distribute a bunch of stuff. And he says, “Man, I missed a bunch of years, collecting a bunch of stuff. And I could have been living my life, distributing, and living with open hands.” as Henri Nouwen talks about. And I'll never forget taking that and like just really sitting with that. And wanting that to shape, how I live my life, how I raise my family. To know that we aren't just being accumulators, right? We're not just focused on, you know, amassing a bunch of stuff or amassing a bunch of titles and just like being about ourselves, but we are seeking to understand how can we take those things that we have been graced to possess and steward and be distributors of goodness and justice, and all of those things in the world around us. And so that is at the core of who I am.

So when I walk into spaces I'm communicating messages that call people to think outside of themselves, to think about what's around them, to push back against this psychology bias that you're talking about, to push back against this notion of just being about self. Because I think we have all of those messages around us all the time. To be about yourself to amass bunch of stuff. I mean, we're marketed to daily. And it creates a type of selfish and then different and apathetic culture. And normally when I go in, I am working with organizations and given talks and stuff, I'm trying to help people to see how they can be a good representation of what home is; and I define home, even in my last book, is a place where you feel seen accepted, and you feel like you belong.

How are you creating the space, or spaces, within the context of your life where people feel seen, accepted, and feel like they belong? And no matter if you have an address or not you're still a neighbor. As a matter of fact, you don't need an address to be considered a neighbor. In the words of Jesus, that all are worthy and that's what I love doing. That's my passion. And I said, that's the lens, bro.

Seth Price 31:10

How do I…how do…

I don't know how to ask this question in the best way. So I feel like I totter-teeter between intentionally doing it well, and then, unintentionally, not caring if I'm doing it well. And then realizing that and then trying to do it well. And I think a lot of that is because of the inputs coming in, you know, between Facebook, Twitter algorithms, the news, only telling me the things that are going to sell ads, so it's always the the most hyperbolic stuff and the most vitriolic stuff. So how does someone kind of sit and cut through all of that crap, for lack of a better word, and then like, focus on what matters? Like how do you practice things to kind of, “Okay, here's the line, the rest doesn't matter. Here's what does matter”?

Terence Lester 31:58

Yeah, man, I think, I don't know, I think I've just fashioned my mind to see diet, as being more than just food. Diet is essentially more than just food, it's what you watch, is what you consume. It's who you listen to, it's who you allow to influence you. It's the type of, you know, messages that you hold dear to your heart, it is the confirmation bias, sometimes, that's your only searching for things that, you know, affirm your core beliefs, it is not putting yourself in a place where you are challenged. And I've just always been a person to be very intentional about allowing the consumption of things to not just be about what I'm eating on a plate. There's some times where I'm really intentional about not being on social media a lot, although my accounts are set up where there's a rhythmic posting, I write a lot. There are times when I'm being intentional in the conversations that I'm having.

I love to have conversations with people who don't even think like me, which has been one of the hugest blessings in my life, because it gives me an opportunity not only to grow, but the challenge the ways that I think and open my heart up and posture myself to really wrestle with if something that I've been holding in my heart is true or false. And if it's false, and about come to that conclusion, being courageous enough to let it go, right. Which has been a really powerful thing of growth.

And then, for me, man, I'm constantly asking what will come of my life? It reminds me of that passage, that Jesus when he was talking about, I think he said, some words like, you know what profits a man to gain the whole world and then lose his soul? Well, I interpret that as, what are you going after? You know, what are your priorities. And for me, I've just always been a person that prioritized my life around things that I'm really passionate about. And created the margin in my life to literally give of myself to those passions. Most people have a lot of passions, and they are willing, they just don't have availability. It's not a matter of willingness it's a matter of availability. And I think that is a priority question that you're asking.

Seth Price 34:48

So I'm running up against you in a minute I actually have to go to work and I want to end with a couple longer form deep questions that you can answer in a sentence or you can answer in a book, it doesn't matter to me. One of them is I finally decided to just play on the sarcastic name of the title of the podcast. Because I figured why not? It's been there for long enough and I intentionally left it alone. And now I will.

So you have a lot of experiences that I think many people just don't experience. I mean, you spent, we skipped a lot of your story, like you spend time intentionally being homeless, so that you can get like that perspective. I mean, you've done things that most people don't do. I was watching one of the documentaries I think's on some website, like, literally, you're like now I'm just gonna go down here with a sandwich board and we're going to get this dude a job. Like you do things that don't…like they don't…that most people don't do. So what do you as a congregant of a faith community feel like we should be allowed to talk about at church, but we don't? And people are like, yeah, you can't say that at church. Like, we don't talk about that here. That's the wrong boat to be rocking. And then what if we did? Like, what would change?

Terence Lester 36:04

Yeah, gosh Seth! (Seth laughs). That is…that is the question of the hour. Man, you know, I think I would want to see churches talk more about…

Seth Price 36:19

…and I don't necessarily mean from the pulpit either. Like, I just mean anyone in that faith body.

Terence Lester 36:24

Anyone in the faith body?

Seth Price 36:27

Yeah. Like, I don't necessarily mean like the preacher telling people what to talk about…

Terence Lester 36:31

Yeah, that’s good.

Man, I wish people in church or people in the congregations would talk more about how churches sometimes use poor people to feel good about themselves. And the reason I say that is because obviously, with the work that I do for my organization, we always have a lot of faith based communities get involved. And they come in, they swoop in, and they throw a bunch of money at stuff. And, you know, everybody's happy, and they take pictures. And then they go back and nobody ever sees them again.

And I'll never forget having a conversation with a kid who received a bike for Christmas, because this church wanted to donate bikes, because that was cute. And the young man didn't even know how to ride a bike because nobody ever taught him. And that is the reason I'm talking about proximity and presence so much. You know, every now and then we'll have, you know, some congregants who will come and they'll be for the event, but the event grips their heart and it changes them. And they want to move from an event mindset to a lifestyle mindset. And they dwell, right.

And I think we need to have a real, intentional, conversation about how can we be more present and proximate and, you know, long lasting in communities as opposed to, specifically poor communities, as opposed to just pick and choosing, and then celebrating from (a) stage, we're patting ourselves on the back and said, we did the Jesus thing, but forgetting that Jesus dwelt among people.

Seth Price 38:20

Yeah, that is, that bike story, that is a powerful image, I think, for the for the posture of most people, especially people with some wealth and some power. And the reason, like when you said that, like, I got some goose bumps, you can't see the goose bumps because I got dressed up for this combo. Nobody told you there was a dress code, but there definitely is. So, my youngest daughter has a bike and she can't go on bike rides with us. And it's, it's, it's awful. And she'll tell you, I don't know how to ride the bike. And we try to show her, but there's a point where, you know, she's gotta want to, you know, we're trying to do it. But I can't imagine that the point of view of the child and especially the thing about that, like faith, like, like, we're out here trying to get people saved, and no one's out here trying to help people live in a community like that is so powerful. There's a lot there that that story is doing a lot more work, I'm gonna wrestle with that today. I like that a lot. Yeah, I like that a lot.

So I got one, maybe two more questions. And then I'll give you back your day. So when you try to describe like, what God is like, someone comes up and correctly asks, “Hey, I just, I don't want that junk. I just want to know when you try to say what God is like, what are you actually saying?” What are what are the words that you're wrapping around whatever that is?

Terence Lester 39:50

Mmmm!

That is a very, very deep question. It reminds me of the story of when I first started Love Beyond Walls my wife and kids were dropping me off underneath the bridge for me to actually live as one experiencing homelessness. I had a house at this point. And my family allowed me to live on the streets for over a month. Eating out of trash cans, sleeping on the bridges, being put out of shelters. I mean, struggling in the cold, having to stay up 24 to 48 hours to keep warm. I mean, going through having beer cans thrown at me all these different things. I'll never forget one night specifically it started raining had a windchill of like seven degrees. I'll walk over to my friends tent, his name was Tony. Tony had a terminal illness. And I asked him, I said, “Tony, man, how do you survive out here? It’s cold my toes feel like popsicles?” He goes into his tent. He gives me his last donated pair of socks. And he says, “Man, we just got to share it to make it.”

Man! I think that is what God is like!

God is love in the midst of struggle. God is sacrifice in the midst of crisis. God is one that brings people together. And God is one that when all of life has been stripped down to rubble love is the very thing that keeps you warm. You know, a lot of my friends underneath that bridge that same night stood around a campfire and we didn't have firewood and so we had to burn donated clothes, in this campfire, just to keep warm. And many of them talked about how churches would come and pass out flyers and everybody would leave. And when we started to talk about the reasons why I stayed they started to talk about Jesus in this way that was very different from the way that we hear Jesus in the church. And I'm not Jesus, I'm just a follower of Jesus. And he says, “Man, many of us would see more of God, if people dwelt with us, instead of left us”.

So when I talked about God and how to communicate God to people, specifically those without an address, I talk about God being God who dwells in the power of relationships. Yeah, and that's the most powerful expression that I can communicate to a person. Because what I'm saying is, you are so worth it that you are deserving of a community of people to see you and wrap their arms around you!

Seth Price 43:36

So I want to ask a question that you don't have to answer. And if you don't want to answer it all edited out, except for in this video, because, again, we've referenced I don't know how to do that. And I'm not going to learn. So I was stalking your Twitter timeline, and you put on there, that you're going to talk to NBC about Juneteenth this week. And that may have already happened. However, a lot of people that look like me learned about what Juneteenth was last year, because a lot of businesses finally put their “we will forfeit profitability”, you know, because this matters and Black Lives Matter, you know what I mean? So I'm curious if you would say, and again, this won't release in time for Juneteenth; because that's just not gonna happen. But I think it would still be relevant. Like, what is the impact of Juneteenth? Because I saw yesterday at least and I don't think it's signed into law yet. But it looks like like Congress has overwhelmingly said this is now a federal holiday. And maybe I'm wrong in that. Like, what is the impact of that? Just for someone and it doesn't even have to be related to the church or theology but since you're already preparing to talk to NBC, unless you already have I’m just curious what you would say to that. And the reason I say you don't have to answer that, as I know, that puts you on the spot and I don't want to make you speak like monolithically for all, everyone listening.

Terence Lester 44:54

Yes, yeah, well. So yeah, I got a chance to record some thoughts about Juneteenth and share that in a compilation that will come out later this week. You know, when I reflect on Juneteenth and what it means, I mean, personally, I mean, gosh, man…these enslaved Africans in Galveston, Texas, hear for the first time General Order Number Three, that declares their freedom, right?

Seth Price 45:32

A year ago.

Terence Lester 45:33

Yeah, and here's the thing, the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation happened three years before they heard this news. And so this whole idea of what freedom really meant for enslaved Africans is that it was a delayed freedom. And it needs to be recognized in my understanding of it, because it acknowledges the long road to struggle to freedom for black people in this country. But it also educates people about a freedom that was delayed. And I support it, because, you know, it gives me an opportunity to celebrate the collective history of heritage that speaks to the freedom of black people. It validates my existence, but it also pays homage to people, and my ancestors - or our ancestors - that who are bought in and enslaved and sold for profit. But it also commemorates this this moment, that their sacrifice was not in vain. And it also reminds us to think about how much more work we have to do in terms of providing what racial equity and racial justice in this country. And yeah, so that's my reflection on Juneteenth.

Seth Price 46:57

Yeah, “delayed” is the word there. Right? That was delayed recognition to this day was delayed and…

Terence Lester 47:03

Mmm! Delay freedom! Could you imagine being free and not even knowing it?

Seth Price 47:11

Again, no. No, no. But it does make me question that's where we're at. Like, that's where we've made it. And on the delayed timeline that's where we've made it. Like that took years to get delivered. And then that took what 200 to be recognized….

Terence Lester 47:31

That took two hundred years to recognize!

Seth Price 47":35

That time operates at a different level, which is really infuriating when you're wondering…alright, so what what gets delayed(ly) addressed maybe when my kids are my age? Like what are we finally going to address then? You know what I mean? I don't know. And that's not my voice to say, but it does make me wonder like, and I like your word delayed there. I hadn't really considered it that way at all. Where do you plug plug the places that people need to do the things that they should be doing or that they already should have been doing?

Terence Lester 48:09

Yeah. (laughs) Man, if people want to look up the work that we do with our organization, they can check out lovebeyondwalls.org. or follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, @lovebeyondwalls. If they want to look me up, if they care to @imTerenceLester. And if you want to check out When We Stand, and you've been, you know, just overwhelmed with all of the injustices of the world and you're looking for a practical way to get involved in community checkout, When We Stand: The Power of Seeking Justice Together, wherever you buy books.

Seth Price 48:50

Thank you very much for your morning and for your time. And also for your still delayed breakfast. I’m just gonna lean on that there.

Terence Lester 48:57

No! That was intentional! It is intentional! (laughs)

Seth Price 49:13

That metaphor that Terence had about the way that many church bodies come into an area and basically giveaway bikes, like we throw money at problems, instead of throwing our hearts on the problems. And we'll say that our heart is in the right place. But honestly, we go back home, and we do what we want to do. We watch our movies, talk about on Netflix, pop back on the Facebook and totally forget about the people that we metaphorically and sometimes literally have given “bikes” to and we haven't done anything to help them use them. We're not equipping people, we're not equipping ourselves. And yeah, I've continued to wrestle with that but it was a joy to have Terrence on; I do want to say again, thank you so much to the producers of the show the patrons join in over there. And Remedy Drive as well, as always, thank you for your music in this show and thank you for your music in this episode.

With all that said, I hope that you are so well. That you're finding joy in new and unexpected places.

Be blessed.

Terraform with Propaganda / Transcript

Note: Can I Say This at Church is produced for audio listening. If able, I strongly encourage you to listen to the audio, which has inflection, emotion, sarcasm where applicable, and emphasis for points that may not come across well in written word. This transcript is generated using a combination of my ears and software, and may contain errors. Please check the episode for clarity before quoting in print.

Back to the Audio Episode


Propaganda 0:00

The point I try to make in the book is like, culture is as healthy as we are if culture is unhealthy, it's because we're unhealthy because we are it. I can't be at war with something I am. You know what I mean? Like it's not separate from me, I am the culture, right. And so are you because it doesn't exist if there are no us, right?

Seth Price 1:03

Back in April, maybe March, I went on to the Twitterverse, right, and I said, you know, if I can get Propaganda on the show, that…that's it, I'm gonna hang it up. That's the show! And you'll hear Prop and I joke about that here in a minute. But I just want to tell you, that was a lie. Because I have other shows I've already recorded and out of respect, out of respect, for those people's time, I can't end the show, that's just that. Now I need you to do something for me. I'm going to need you to just before you start listening, hit pause, and rate and review the show. And consider becoming a supporter on Patreon because it's extremely helpful if I'm just honest, it's very helpful. And with that out of the way, let's rock and roll.

Propaganda 2:24

Are you recording?

Seth Price 2:26

Shoot! No! I meant to hit record. See, I shouldn't be drinking!

Propaganda 2:28

I got you! Yeah. (Laughs)

Recording in progress. (Zoom voice)

Propaganda 2:33

I am and I was able to catch that. So we good.

Seth Price 2:38

(Seth laughs)

Yeah, I had some alcohol for Father's Day. And I'm just trying to get it out. You know, so I can get back on that diet.

Propaganda 2:43

Let's go. (Laughs)

Seth Price 2:45

Why not? I don't have enough. I got that. And these goofy. Look, see?

Propaganda 2:52

I like that.

Seth Price 2:55

I tell dad jokes periodically (Dad Joke shirt gift).

Propaganda 2:57

I love it! I think that works, bro. I love that shirt.

Seth Price 3:00

Wife hates it. And I'm like, I'm gonna wear it. I'd wear it to work if they’d let me.

Propaganda 3:05

Here's the thing babe. I’m gonna wear the shirt.

Seth Price 3:08

I mean the kids bought it with our money shows you bought it.

Propaganda 3:15

of course. That dad life. “Hey here’s this gift for you that you paid for…that I didn’t ask for…thank you.”

Seth Price 3:22

You’ll like it though.

Propaganda 3:23

I’ll love it. You know what? I love it. Thank you so much.

Seth Price 3:29

(Laughing) Alright, here we go. Prop, welcome to the show. You don't know this, because you have too many Twitter followers, but at the beginning of the year, I actually said if I can get the Pope or propaganda on the show, it's just gonna be the last show. Because I'll count that as a success. And that's a legitimate tweet. You go back in and you can find it.

Propaganda 3:47

This better not be the last show! You gotta get the pope also right?

Seth Price 3:50

It won't be the last show.

Propaganda 3:51

Okay, good.

Seth Price 3:52

I have emailed the Pope. They keep saying no. And that also is a true thing. I don't even know if he speaks English. It doesn't matter. We'll figure it out.

But Welcome to the show, man. I'm glad you're here.

Propaganda 4:03

Thank you, bro. Glad to be here, you’re hilarious.

Seth Price 4:07

Yeah, maybe he'll say yes. And then maybe I will do it

Propaganda 4:09

You never know dude, then you're like dammit, I shouldn't have said maybe its the last show!

Seth Price 4:14

Maybe I ended it with ellipses. And so it wasn't the end of the sentence. I don't think that happened because I'm not that clever. Anyway. (both chuckling) So for those that don't know you

Propaganda 4:23

I’m gonna love this show.

Seth Price 4:24

For those that don't know you…who and what is propaganda? Like, why is that?

Propaganda 4:30

Well, the word…what is the word propaganda?

Seth Price 4:34

No! You!

Propaganda 4:35

Oh, okay. Yeah (laughs), I am a rapper and poet. I do podcasts. I’m husband, I'm a father. I wrote a book, which is super rad. I am a West coaster, Californian through and through, I bleed Los Angeles. And I taught high school for six years, son of a Black Panther. I'm the son of a praying mother. I gotta prayin’ Mama! I'm the youngest of my siblings. I am the second favorite parent (laughs from Seth) which has been made abundantly clear when my daughter goes, “you're not my favorite mom is”. I mean you didn’t have to say it out loud. Like we know, but you ain’t have to say it”. But here it is.

Seth Price 5:30

I read that part of your book. And then I read it to my wife out loud. Especially that part about Stranger Things like your internal monologue there where you’re like…”really, why are you? Why are you crying? Get up.”

Propaganda 5:43

It's not real. Go to bed!

Seth Price 5:46

We'll get there but I have a six year old that legit hates me. She will tell you to your face.

Propaganda 5:51

Yes!

Seth Price 5:52

I don't like him.

Propaganda 5:52

That's my six year old! She's like, and sometimes she'll “daddy!” and run and give me a hug. But most of the time she's like, “Can mommy do it? Can I sit by mommy? I don't want to...I don't sit by you. I don't want to ride in your car”.

Seth Price 6:03

Correct.

Propaganda 6:04

“You're not my favorite!”

Seth Price 6:05

Don't tell me Good night. And I'll tell her, “Hey, baby, I love you. Can I give you a hug tonight?”

(daughter) “No, no.”

“Why I love you.”

Propaganda 6:12

Don't say that! You're just like, Oh…

Seth Price 6:14

This is it. Just silence. Nothing. Just stare me down while I walk out of the room slowly backwards.

Propaganda 6:20

What did we do to our children? Like, where did I go wrong?

Seth Price 6:25

One day, she'll realize I'm gonna pay for the wedding. And she'll love me again!

Propaganda 6:29

One day she’ll realize you paid for everything! You know what I’m sayin?

Like, yo, true story. My oldest, this a true story, my oldest, uh, we were…she was…she's 15 about turned 16 now, but she was a single digit age. I don't remember exactly what it was. bBut she was like deathbed sick all through the night. Coughing, barfing, just gross. My wife sleeps through everything. So I'm up holding her hair, getting her water, checking her temperature to the point to where I'm like, I'm getting up so many times. I just go sleep on the couch. Because I'm like, this is just, I keep having to climb over it. So I'm like, I'm just gonna sleep on the couch. Finally, she finally falls asleep like three in the morning. So I was like, Okay, cool. I go. Finally, she's actually sleep. I go back to the bed—in the morning my precious daughter gets up, walks over to her mom's side of the bed, gives you the longest hug and kiss and goes “I love you, mom.” (Seth laughs)

And I popped up and I was like, “are you‽… I was up all night with you”. She goes, “Oh, yeah. Thanks, Dad.”

Yeah. And then my wife looks over at me. And she goes, “Oh, that was sweet. What did”..

Seth Price 7:52

“Is she okay?”

Propaganda 7:53

And I was like, “I can’t believe both of y’all; I can't stand both of y’all.” That was like, I was like, is this dad life? Is this what dad is? Is this what it is? Is this what I signed up for? I guess I'm here.

Seth Price 8:05

I only have one child that likes me. It's my middle child, who is my middle girl. My son, I think hates me. But we're the same person. So we don't like each other. And then I don't know why my youngest daughter doesn't like me.

Propaganda 8:17

I think me and my oldest sort of same person. Yeah, I think that might be why we don’t like each other.

Seth Price 8:20

We've been to counseling Prop and they told us,

Propaganda 8:23

Damn!

Seth Price 8:24

You’re the same person.

Propaganda 8:27

Dang! Okay, you win.

Seth Price 8:30

So yeah, you wrote a book. But you do a lot of things like so. I didn't know what to expect when I read the book. Matter of fact, little before before we got going. So my friend Josh was the one he's like, here you go read this. I was like, I didn't know he wrote a book. So I was behind. I didn't realize it.

Propaganda 8:44

All good.

Seth Pride 8:45

But I read it. I didn't know what to expect to read it. And I'm curious as I read through it about 60%. And I was like, I'm not sure exactly who this audience is? So who is the book written to? Because we'll talk about what the book “is” a little bit of that. I got some questions I’d like to rip apart. I also got a question about listened to you freestyle on that Rapzilla podcast because yeah, it said freestyle. I was like, I actually don't get to hear that all that often. Let me hear it. And you said some mess on Whataburger that we're going to talk about in a minute because I'm a little upset. But that's okay. But yeah, who is the book aimed that?

Propaganda 9:22

Uh, you know, it's like, I always like that question always, like stumps me. Because I think in a lot of ways, I don't know who I'm talking to.

Seth Price 9:34

Editors love that.

Propaganda 9:35

I know, right? I know, the point I'm trying to make. It's like you find it later. who you're talking to? So I think a lot of times maybe I'm talking to myself. Maybe it's a diary. But I know I'm not the only one that thought this. You know, I'm saying I think it's that's more the thing to me. It's like, I know I'm not the only one thought that like, hey, why is everything like this and why is it still staying like this, we could probably do something else. Right? You know? So I'm like, I can't be the only one that thought this.

So it's one of those like, yeah, I think I finally know how to answer that question. It's the part where I feel like my writing is, imagine you're in a room and I'm addressing the like, the, like 400 pound gorilla, maybe not the 800 pound gorilla that everybody sees. But the 400 where it's like, “Hey, I know everybody saw that one. But I can't be the only one that saw this one too”. You know, so I'm gonna say it. And then so I'm hoping that the rest of the room goes, Yeah, actually…! So I don't know who that person is. I'm just thinking. I can't be the only one that thought this.

Seth Price 10:53

Yeah. So a narrative throughout your book, as well as your most recent album, because it appears as though many of the lyrics are in this book, if not all of the lyrics. Maybe I'm wrong.

Propaganda 11:03

Yeah, the albums go with the books. Yeah, yeah. Not all of them but a lot of them.

Seth Price 11:06

Wait. You said books. How many books have you written?

Propaganda 11:08

I mean, I meant albums. The album's go with the book. There are four albums. There's three more albums to go with the single book.

Seth Price 11:16

Wait after Terraform? Where are they? When are they?

Propaganda 11:19

Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. So the book is broken up into four sections, the Sky, The Soil, The People, The Possibility. The People's already out. The Sky is coming out within the next couple of weeks. And then there's The Soil and The Possibility. They're all coming.

Seth Price 11:34

I missed that. See, I'm just not, I'm just not with it.

Propaganda 11:37

It's all good, bro. Don't worry about it.

Seth Price 11:38

Yeah, well.

Propaganda 11:40

You sent your one tweet in the beginning of the year…

Seth Price 11:44

Expecting nothing to happen.

Propaganda 11:45

And then yes, here you are.

Seth Price 11:46

And again, this is the I'm gonna finish this beer, we'll finish this conversation, I might not even edit it, because that's the end. (Laughs) So you are talking about culture in a way that I like. But I feel like you're using the word culture in a way that most people do not normally use culture. Like, we use culture as a weapon, as ammunition, as an arrow, as whatever aggressive way we need to get my point across because those people are wrong. But you seem to be using culture throughout the book in a different way. So what is culture? And like, why are you approaching it from that way?

Propaganda 12:20

I love it, man. I think, because of like the advent of like the culture wars, you know, especially like in that like, sort of like, right wing evangelical space who treats the culture as something separate from them. You know, it's just academically and, by definition, a misnomer. It's just false. That's just not how culture works.

Culture is two humans, trying to figure out how to survive, it's the things that they come up with that you make up out of the clear blue sky between you and the other people that is necessary for survival. Language is culture. You know, I'm saying?

It's, this is…humans made it, you know, I mean. So, all of our institutions, it’s us. So the point I try to make in the book is like, culture is as healthy as we are, if culture is unhealthy, it's because we're unhealthy. Because we are it. I can't be at war with something I am! You know what I mean? Like, it's not separate from me, I am the culture, right, and so are you. Because it doesn't exist if there are no us.

So I was approaching it from that sort of, like, academic perspective of like, how you define culture, you know and then from like, a more like, for lack of a better term pop culture sense, then that means that the power is in our hands balls in our court, you know, and then we get to define what it is, you know, then I try to give examples of like, what I mean by like, we make culture and then eventually culture turns around and makes us. Which is a motif I got from this guy named Peter Barger, he's a sociologist.

Seth Price 14:19

Yeah, I like that take. And I think I like it. And I actually don't think I put it together until you just said that out loud. Because you said it slightly different than some of the words in the book. But to be clear, again, I may or may not have been drinking when I was reading the book.

Propaganda 14:34

It’s all good.

Seth Price 14:35

Um, I think that when you and I choose to miss the mark, we create hell, or bad culture, or we can choose to create a kingdom.

Propaganda 14:46

Good culture.

Seth Price 14:47

One or the other and that's literally sin and the Kingdom of Heaven like you and I making it or we're also still making it we get to, we get to actively participate in the creation of this. So I use the word kingdom. You I se the word culture and I kind of like it. I do want a definition, though what is the age range for an OS1 Millennial?

Propaganda 15:08

Man, from what I understand,

Seth Price 15:10

Cause that's not a term that I know.

Propaganda 15:11

No, no, it's it's like we're the first wave of them. So from what I understand you was born between ‘79-‘83

Seth Price 15:19

That's me. Yeah. Because as you describe it, I'm like, I feel like that's me. I can remember when I got caller ID. I can remember doing work on a Basic computer with a Mac floppy disk the size of this mac book that I'm talking to you on.

Propaganda 15:34

Yes.

Seth Price 15:35

And then I graduated with T1 internet. Which isn’t even a thing people know what T1 is!

Propaganda 15:39

Yeah, I'm saying. But like, it's like, you're, it's like this weird moment to where like, your maybe if you were like younger than your siblings, like for years, they were printing out directions. Like they're still using MapQuest. And it's like, this is my sibling. This is my older sibling. And I don't understand why you're asking me directions. Here's the address. You know, I'm saying? But you remember printing out at some point using MapQuest looked like you were young enough to be like us great to use MapQuest anymore!

Seth Price 16:17

Yeah, you know, though there's something to be said for, I guess, that we’re similar in age because I fall right in right into the middle of that.

Propaganda 16:25

Yeah that in between. I’m not Generation X, like, I'm not an X’er.

Seth Price 16:31

I do find it easy, though, especially for what I do for a living. I can relate well, to people that know how the internet worked. But also then, like, I can empathize with an older generation. That's like, I just don't quite understand this.

Propaganda 16:42

Totally.

Seth Price 16:43

Please help me. I'll make sure. Let me let me explain it to you in a different way. Yeah, yeah. And like, I also still find it innately easier than some of my siblings or younger friends to just navigate around the city because I'm like, yeah, that's…”avenues run this way (and) streets run this way. Circles run this way.

Propaganda 16:58

I don’t have to use my maps.

Seth Price 17:00

If it's an even number Interstate, that's an east and west one. You know, there's an odd number, it goes up and down. And it starts at 1 in California. And we got the 90s on the East Coast over here where I'm at. So yes, whereas I81 is mine and 70 is to the west of me.

Propaganda 17:12

Yes, it's over there. Yes, that's the perfect example. I don't ever use my maps. Unless I don't know the place. But most of the time, I'm like, Oh, yeah, it's off. What city is it? Okay, it's off. Its off the 10. It’s North of the 10. Because Larchmont is north of the 10 yeah. Oh, yeah, you just go. I'm pretty sure I can get off on Western Crenshaw or Labrea it's gonna be up there.

Seth Price 17:35

I’ll figure it out.

Propaganda 17:36

Yeah it is fine!

Seth Price 17:37

I'll figure it out. Yeah, we'll be over there. That's when my wife and I were out in Phoenix not long ago and we're trying to find a place to get ice cream. And we didn't intend to be in Phoenix we left from vacation where we were at we on to the Grand Canyon. And she's like, well, we're gonna get lost and I’m like it's gonna be fine. Like the roads out here work the same way as the roads in Texas. She’s like we're not gonna find it. (and I say) Yes, we will. It's gonna be…see there it is. Found it. Let's get some ice cream.

Propaganda 18:02

Yes! 10 West-California, 10 East back home, simple.

Seth Price 18:08

Well, back home to Virginia is a long way. So yeah, um, so I mentioned Texas and then in this Rapzilla interview, which I'll link in the transcript I'm not going into it in the show notes but I will put the transcript. You threw out some issues with Whataburger

Propaganda 18:22

I did!

Seth Price 18:23

You're basically saying like they don't know how to make french fries. And so I am from Midland, Texas, born in Odessa. I don't play games.

Propaganda 18:28

Here we go!

Seth Price 18:29

And I shouldn't have listened and I should have stopped listening. Why like that hurt‽

Propaganda 18:33

I have attacked your soul because your identity is tied into I find this with every Texan. I can't talk about Dr. Pepper. And I can't talk about Whataburger.

Seth Price 18:45

You can talk about Dr. Pepper. You can't talk about Plano (he meant Waco :) ) but you can talk about because there’s the Dr. Pepper in the store that named Dr. Pepper. But then there's the Dr. Pepper in the glass bottle that you can only buy in Plano (again meant Waco) don't talk about that. Dr. Pepper.

Propaganda 19:00

So here's the thing. I am saying like as a reflection of yourself, there are things about California that I understand. I will agree. Roscoe’s Chicken and Waffles is not the greatest chicken and waffles.

Seth Price 19:15

But it's your chicken and waffles.

Propaganda 19:17

But it's mine. And I will defend it to the death. (Seth laughs) Because it's California. Because it's open because it's Pico and Labrea. But what I'm saying is I have this self awareness about that. And I just feel like you're Texas don't have that self awareness about Whataburger. It's not that good!You know what I'm saying? I'm like, but I understand your emotional tie to it. I understand. I understand that spicy Sriracha ketchup. I understand that. I understand that. But that's a condiment. That's not the burger. (Seth laughs again) That's the condiment and what I'm saying is I understand that it was open at 2am after Friday night football and the whole school went to it. I get it.

Seth Price 20:01

It was that or IHOP and IHOP sucks

Propaganda 20:03

And IHOP sucks!

Because you could say that's verifiably bad food. But, but you could have mediocre food tied to your high school 2am experience…

Seth Price 20:13

And call it In and Out Burger (Prop looses his mind here you really should watch this exchange)

Propaganda 20:14

I get …. OOOHHHHH! (Prop backs away from the screen in shock)

Seth Price 20:16

Oh, I’m kidding, I’m kidding.

Propaganda 20:19

That was good! That was good! That was good! But I could say that Fat Burger, Roscoes, it's mediocre food (but) In N Out is a different story.

Seth Price 20:35

I’m teasing, yeah, and then one last question just because I don't ever speak with a coffee aficionado and that's why I stalk you on Instagram, not for anything else other than coffee. Um, so I just I'm, I'm a cheap guy, so I just drink the Folgers black but I just want to know…

Propaganda 20:51

I’m sorry.

Seth Price 20:52

Man, I know. That's what I can afford. Right, Man to man? How should I be drinking my coffee? Like if I could choose what should I be doing? Because I'd like to be better.

Propaganda 21:01

Um, I am over the bell curve of like, snobbyity for coffee.

Seth Price 21:11

So just Folgers then?

Propaganda 21:13

No! But I will say this, if you're gonna do Folgers. If you're gonna like, “I just need it done. And good”. If you're not going to take the time there are now there are plenty of places that have figured out how to freeze dry espresso, and you can like steep it in like little tea bags. It is pretty amazing. There's a spot called Honest Roasters that did this. But I will say this, to this day at my wife's grandma's house. My mother, you know, my grandma in law, I don't know what you call her. You know, Acapulco, she's in Mexico. She will boil her water with cinnamon sticks in it and then pour that into some Nescafe instant coffee. And it's delicious. And it's instant coffee with cinnamon water! And it's amazing. So if you just want it done, get it done. And not as burnt and paper taste as just some Folgers from your drip machine. Which again, I would never judge you if that's what you’re gonna do, that’s what you're gonna do.

Seth Price 22:29

Six year old, that's all I got time for.

Propaganda 22:30

Exactly. I would say get some Nescafe, boil some water with some cinnamon sticks, use that as your instant coffee water. And it'll already be better than that Folgers!

Seth Price 22:40

With cinnamon sticks. Okay, yes, I can do that. So getting back to why I actually have you on because I got those out of the way they've been itching in my head, you know, probably since January when I sent that out. So there's a part in your book where you you do a lot of “Let me tell you what I'm not gonna do”. Yeah, back to back. So there's a part in here where you say,

I'm not going to tell you your pain is a usable commodity for the rest of society. It's up to you what you do with your healing. But I will say this, you should choose to tell your better story, it will transform you into a terraformer of the worlds of your listeners.

It's that last part that I want to drill on, like what are you getting into? They're like terraforming the worlds of your listeners; specifically, because a lot of people I don't think, realize that they have a platform and like that people are paying attention.

Propaganda 23:26

Yeah, you'd be surprised how many people are actually listening to you, whether you have a podcast or not, you know, or a platform or not, you have a platform in somebody else's life. They're watching you. They're understanding, they're learning the world from you. Whether directly or indirectly, it's happening.

So I think there's an importance of understanding that how you choose to navigate the world, for better or for worse, is shaping somebodies worldview, you know. And it's just a reality because again, full circle, that's just how culture works; we're influenced by each other, you know. And how you navigate pain is up to you, you know, but I think there's like a reality of like, if your pain was on display with the people around you…there is a great amount of like power and influence in your healing also being on display to those same people, you know. But I think it's…I don't like hearing people saying, “hey, you need to share your healing because you're going to heal somebody else”. Because I feel like well…they didn’t go through it, you know, what I'm saying? Like that was something you went through. And I think that like I don't want to ever add any extra pressure or guilt to a person who maybe that thing is deeply personal, maybe there are no like, words, you wouldn't even know how to share it. Maybe sharing would open the wound. I don't know.

But I didn't want to make it seem as though like your whole life is transactional. And sometimes I feel like we we treat each other as, like, all your experiences are transactions and they are for me, you know? I mean, “what do you mean for you, no, there for you if I want them to be”, you know. But I just wanted to make sure I wasn't robbing people of agency. But at the same time, the reality of like, whatever you choose, it's informing the people around you.

Seth Price 25:44

I want to talk a bit about beauty and truth. So there's a part in your book that honestly this sentence still doesn't make any sense to me.

Propaganda 25:52

Uh oh…

Seth Price 25:53

And that's okay. It's probably me. So you say

self awareness makes graciousness?

For some reason. Those words just don't…I don't maybe…I don't know. I don't know.

But towards the tail end of that paragraph, you say, you know, so I wonder which modern debates will sound silly in 1000 years, as you're talking about, like, you know, like Ancient Greece and ancient, like, they all thought that this was the thing and the sun was chasing, it's like, and we think that's silly. And I do think that's right. Neil Tyson Degrasse has the thing about, like, the way the space time bends space, and like, the stuff that we don't even see, and how like, 1000 years from now, we're not even gonna be looking at the same stars. And like, we don't even realize all the context that we lost. And I think that's a beautiful way to look at a divine being or just life in general.

Propaganda 26:41

Absolutely!

Seth Price 26:42

But yeah, I don't understand “self awareness makes graciousness.”

Propaganda 26:44

I love it. I love that you asked that. That's one of the questions that I was like…I was hoping someone would ask me. What I mean by it is this. The more you understand yourself, the more you see, truly your strengths, self awareness is both, it's your strengths and your weaknesses. It's your beauty and your flaws. And then the flaws that are beautiful. It's the whole gambit, I know what I'm good at; I don't have any pretense about some sort of false humility, or some sort of puffed up, you know, prideful thing about myself, but I know what I'm good at. I also know what I'm not good at. I also know what I need help in where I'm struggling, where I'm inconsistent and I'm still working it out. You know, I'm saying? And I know that there's a lot that I don't know, you know. So I think that the more you see it in yourself, and all the work you did for so many years to hide it then you now see it in other people. And you can go, “Oh! This fool is hiding. He's hiding an insecurity—hiding in insecurity”.

So I'm like, I can be more gracious with this person, I don't have to respond to their defense mechanism with my own defense mechanism. I can be more gracious and be more patient with this person because I understand. Oh, it's me. I've been doing this for years. I'm like, Oh, you have a weakness. Oh, you have a wound. You're functioning from that wound. Okay.

Seth Price 28:30

Yeah, that makes sense to me. How do I do that in a social media environment that is as politicized as the world that you and I live in today?

Propaganda 28:40

Oh, you block them! (laughs from both) I’m just kidding!

Seth Price 28:45

I can't block Mitch McConnell.

Propaganda 28:45

Yeah, I know. Right? You just, with Mitch McConnell, that's great. That's a good example with him. It's like, I don't have to engage with this dude. Because it's one of those things where I'm like, you and I both know what you're doing. You know, and you're not going to stop and me calling you on is not gonna make you stop doing this because it's working too well for you. So I'm not gonna stop you from doing this. I don't even have to respond. Because like I said, is that going to change anything? So I think for me, in a social media space, is that calculus of like, is this person first of all, is this person an actual person? Like, or is this a (some kinda troll)

Seth Price 29:24

Yeah, I don't necessarily mean on social media. I just mean, that is the mentality that we bring into our real life relationships. Totally. Yeah,

Propaganda 29:32

Totally. Yeah. But I think that, yeah, given that context, I think we're all putting our best self, you know, or we are at least curating what the world sees about ourselves on the internet. And the same way we did in real life. We still curated what people saw about us, you know, I'm saying? And then something kind of like get over the fence and you see the real you which, you know, is hard for anyone. But I think that when you remember that about a person throughout the internet is like they're choosing which part of them they're showing. And I can choose to engage in that or I can choose not to engage in that. Because the truth is I probably don't really know this person. And I don't have to care. I could turn off my phone.

Seth Price 30:24

Fair enough.

Propaganda 30:25

I think that that was the freest thing to me where I was like, Oh, wait, I don't have to care.

Seth Price 30:30

You wrote a song about that. “I'm just here for the comments.”

Propaganda 30:35

I'm just here for the comments bro. I’m completely not worried about this. Yeah, and even when I do get into it, like with somebody like, part of me is like this grant I have on my face now is great, because I'm like, you don't understand how uninvolved I am in this convo, it makes me no difference.

Seth Price 30:57

I just came in here to like everybody's post, and then I left.

Propaganda 31:01

And I'm gone! Sometimes, and especially when I know that I know what I'm talking about. And I'm like, I don't have to convince you because I know I know what I'm talking about. You know what I’m saying? And then when I don't know what I'm talking about, then oftentimes I'm like, “Okay, well, let me listen to what thi… actually let me do listen”. But I am in control of my engagement to this not them.

Seth Price 31:24

Yeah. I will be right back. It is time to do the things you know what I mean. (music and ad break)

Seth Price 32:21

You have terraforming exercises or practices at the end of each episode, I forget which one was my it's the one where you like list out like all the people. But besides the one where you've smartly listened to your wife about grounding, and it appears as though you're still not taking off your shoes. But besides that one, which one is the hardest for you personally, on a consistent basis to ensure that you're doing to stay healthy?

Propaganda 32:53

Man, that's good, man. Wow, let me go through them. I gotta go through them in my head. Wow. I think probably there was a part about the self reflection, I think in The Truth is Yelling at You chapter that was about what is this mundane, obvious, thing that's happening that's hitten at you in a certain way that is clearly trying to communicate something to you about you. Because I think oftentimes, like I get in the moment, like anyone like I tell you what, like just now my printer (when was the last time we ever actually had to use the printer).

Seth Price 33:51

You still have a printer? That's amazing. Because you are an OS1 Millennial

Propaganda 33:56

Yes! And because like, I get furious anytime I have to print something, because I'm like, this is stupid. Why do I have to do this? But my kid is going to a Pride March tomorrow and they needed a permission slip. So I emailed it. And they were like, can you print it? And I'm like…

Seth Price 34:21

We're gonna need a wet signature.

Propaganda 34:23

Yeah. Word, okay. And then for the love of me, it just kept jamming! And I was like, this is the dumbest…it doesn't have like, I'm so pissed as to like. And while I'm trying to figure it out, my wife goes, What do you have planned tomorrow? And I wanted to like turn and become a dragon and be like, are you serious right now‽ You want me to okay, this is what I'm gonna do! I'm gonna stop and check my calendar right now! While I'm trying to print this thing for our daughter, you don't see that I'm trying to…! You know, I'm saying so like, but I think what was happening was, I felt out of control. And I think that now I didn't (lose control), I was able to catch it because I practiced this terraforming thing, able to be like, you just, you're just irritated that this isn't working. Your wife's question is valid. And just explained to her, “Can I tell you later, I'm really frustrated about this…”

Seth Price 35:37

I’m gonna yell at something, I don't want it to be you.

Propaganda 35:39

I'm gonna yell, I'd rather yell at this inanimate object. You know? So I think that like one of the most difficult things is to continue to have that wherewithal, like, the truth is yelling at you. You're mad, because you're out of control. And that, like, ability to reflect is something that like, I try to like struggle day to day to make sure that that's what's happening.

Seth Price 36:05

Yeah. I have a really simple question, but it's because I honestly have no idea. Why do ziggurats get a shout out and an explainer in a book about terraforming? Why ziggurats? Like, why does that need a parenthesis says, “by the way, here's what ziggurats is” Like, why?

Propaganda 36:19

Because, there's a number of reasons (chuckling). One because I get teased about, they say that…like one of my homies is like “Cali dudes-dudes that are raised in LA just randomly use big words. And oftentimes, they don't know what they mean”.

Which is, is a pretty good…that's pretty true. (laughs) But I think that also as an educator, so, like, I taught high school for six years. Whether it was my music, whether it was high school, or my music, or preaching, or whatever the case may be, there's some moment that I never stopped for understanding. And, it was like, it's a critique, it's feedback, that I get often is that you throw out these things, but you don't go back to it; like what are you talking about here? So I was trying to be aware of the fact that like, okay, this is what I'm talking about. And I thought ziggurat was just such a time to do this.

Seth Price 37:19

I mean I highlighted it I was like, “What?” I mean, I know what a ziggurat is. Why is this…

Propaganda 37:24

It is such a deep cut that I felt like, and part of me was like, for those that know, they will get a kick out of the fact that like, this fool just shouted out. ziggurats! Why did you do that? You know? Like, it is a little easter egg for somebody like you.

Seth Price 37:40

Okay well, so you referenced the enneagram once in here, like something with a three wing or whatever. I'm a five. So like, I need all the books. And I want all the knowledge. And I like to hoard it when I'm not healthy. Which is probably why I do this, whatever. So I do want to ask you about this chapter and I don't know where it'll go. So you say

I'm a full blown libertarian, total free market economy guy, if it wasn't for racism.

and then you go on to go on and on about that. But I don't feel like that's a sentence that most libertarians say. Are you actually a libertarian? Like, what is that? And like, why does racism have anything to do with libertarianism for those people that have not read the book?

(here the internet takes a lunch break)

You know, I broke up? I'll say it again.

I said so you say I'd be a full blown libertarian total free market economy guy if it wasn't for racism? But most libertarians don't say that. And I don't know that many libertarian friends of mine would say that those two have anything to do with one another?

Propaganda 38:40

Yeah.

Yeah, so the biggest issue is, if I were to say this, (you're not frozen, are you? I’m not)

Okay, cool. Just your thumb was moving? I was just making sure. (laughs from both) There it is.

It's because when I think of what finally freed us from slavery (it) was a war. And then an amendment. And then military enforcement. What push the civil rights movement? Well, that was just government intervention. Because when we left white Americans alone they're not going to choose us. You know? My own dad, like after his freakin GI Bill after the Vietnam War. still couldn't get a loan. You know, and it, it took laws. It took government intervention for me to finally like why being able to swim in pools. It took laws, you know what I'm saying? So I'm like, I can't trust you know, White supremacist America, I can't trust you. Because if I leave you alone, you're going to oppress me.

So I'm like, I can't trust you. If I could trust you to understand that, like, this is detrimental to both of us-that's different. So that's why I'm saying like, you know, I would totally be like, dude, just, bro. Like, I'm fine. Leave me alone. I don't want no handouts. I want nothing from none of y'all. I'll figure it out. And if I fail it's because I wasn't good at it. You know, I'm saying, but if I'm doing that playing in a playing field, that's clearly uneven, and you stack the laws against me. Then at some point, I got to look at the ref and be like, “yo, ref I'm not…dog like y'all seeing this! Can you do something about this”? You know what I’m sayin’?

Seth Price 40:53

Okay, yeah. Now that makes sense. Maybe it was you. Maybe it was a good friend of mine. I don't know who it was. But I remember one time somebody saying all of the rights that I have been privileged too just from being born with this color skin (not white skin) were given forcefully and belligerently by legislation to him. I don't remember who said it actually.

Propaganda 41:14

Yeah, but that's the thing. All the rights that I have was like we had to, every step of my life everything I enjoy, I had to fight separately for and my culture had to fight separately for each one. Yeah. For each one of them.

Seth Price 41:28

Yeah. So I read your book on a Kindle. And so I'm not sure that the haikus come through here. But you talked about handouts a minute ago. And it reminds me of a part of your book, it's literally one of the few that I bookmark where you say

the Rona just yelled, haikus. Here's what I heard. You live together, you don't really know your kids make conversation,

which that's really true. And last year taught me that. Yes, sadly,

money is not real.

I'm a banker. So I agree.

1.5 trillion from the Feds. Where's your health care, son?

How do we…I agree, Terraform, your book is not about health care, but I can't not address that Haiku. So I don't even know if that's a haiku, because I don't really know how to do it like 7/5/7.

Propaganda 42:11

5-7-5. Yes you got it. 5-7-5

Seth Price 42:14

I don't know. So why is that here? Like, why is it in the book?

Propaganda 42:17

I think because at the time, again, we're talking about a virus covering the planet and you worried about the stock market? Like I just was just like, this is the…I don't understand where…why is…you got 1.5 trillion, but you're saying it's not enough money to cover health costs due to a (global pandemic)? It just was just such a picture of like, “Oh, so you have the money. You just won't”? And I'm like, but don't you…you know, is not real? Right? Like you can you could pay for health care. You could pay for this! I don't understand. Like, you know, you could and it's so it was just such a bizarre like, whether I have an opinion about it or not. It was just like, just like, you know, I'm gonna give a silly example. I am lactose intolerant, right. So this just ruins Italian food for me.

Seth Price 43:38

Really? you can’t have pasta if you're lactose intolerant?

Propaganda 43:41

No, I can't have none of the cheese. So like the gluten is an issue too, but I'm just like, what, what is Italian food without the cheese man, who know what I’m saying? So anyway, I'm like, if you, for example, like so I'm like, I don't have a horse in the race per se, but if I see you're making, I don't know, some Fettuccine Alfredo, or whatever the case may be and you put in Velveeta cheese on top of that. I could be like, yo, you finna put that on...

Seth Price 44:18

It's not even cheese. (laughs)

Propaganda 44:19

That's not cheese! Like, why are you doing that? And you're like, we don't have money for actual Alfredo. And I'm like, but Alfredo (is) cheaper. I'm like, I'm not gonna eat it! I don't have an opinion! I'm just saying that don’t make no sense. Why would you say that? It is nasty! I'm like, Velveeta, does not…it don't taste good. I've been poor before. I wasn't always lactose intolerant. But when I was and when we were poor and that’s all we had, I was like, this is not good.

The Alfredo tastes better. What is you doing? You know? So in my mind, that's the way I saw this, I was like, well, this don't make no sense. What the hell! What the hell…you saving the stock market? What the hell is the stock market? If everybody deadt? I don't understand what you worried about an economy if economy is humans‽ But if we die, then what is you savin? I'm just like, I don't understand what you're talking about.

Seth Price 45:18

Yeah. Also money isn't…like I think it was Ben Bernanke, like in an interview like MSNBC or CNN he’s like, yeah, we just call up the Fed and tell them to add a zero and the banks have it, so we fixed it. That was like in the that was right when Obama became president. Yeah, like, it's literally like, you hear him saying, like, he…

Propaganda 45:43

Oh, I said he it out loud.

Seth Price 45:45

And it's true. It's just, we just fixed it. We just added a zero because, you know, we didn't need to print it. We just said that it was there.

Propaganda 45:52

It's not real!

Seth Price 45:54

And now it is, now it's there! So we fixed it there. Yeah, we don't know why there was no inflation that time. But it's there. But it's there. Yeah. So one last question. And it's about there's a line in here that says,

Just breathe even if the bag isn't inflating oxygen just flows.

I love that line quite a bit. What do you want people to get out of that? Like, where should that be? Like, for me, that's become almost like, I have it written on my desk, because I get pretty stressed at work. Like I just like that line. So what do you want people? When when would you like that to be instituted?

Propaganda 46:33

I love it. Because it's, you know, I'm taking it from airplanes. You know, when you're doing the little safety debriefing, they'll say like, if the cabin gets depressurized oxygen mask will drop, put it on your face, and just breathe. It's not going to inflate, but the oxygen is flowing. So they're trying to warn you that like, it's not gonna look like…

Seth Price 46:59

Don't freak out.

Propaganda 47:01

Don't freak out. It's not gonna look like what you think is supposed to look like, but you're fine. So I think that like, what I was trying to address with this is like, okay, if the oxygen masks like dropped down on a plane it's a pretty legitimate reason to panic. You know, so you're in crisis. So what I was trying to address is like, this is a legit, I'm not saying your crisis isn't legitimate, it's probably absolutely legitimate. Because the oxygen mask wouldn't fall if it wasn't a legitimate crisis, you know?

But what I'm saying is like, your job is to breathe; because breathe is the reminder that you're going to be okay. And even though it doesn't look like it's working, I swear to you, it's working. You know, I'm saying? So I think that that's like, that's what I was trying to communicate is like, I promise you, I know it don't look like it. Because, duh, if I blow into something it's supposed to expand, it's physics. But what I'm trying to say is like, I know, but still do it. You know, but still breathe. I promise you it's working. So it, obviously, it's like a lofty way to say that, like, hey, if you just continue to take care of yourself, these things, it will work out. And even if it doesn't, you will be fine. You have to keep breathing. Because, again, the reminder that like you have a fortitude and ability to continue. And, also like the understanding that like your breath is like it's crazy how it really is the best indicator of where your anxiety is-is your breath. The deeper and slower you breathe, it's just truthful, that it's the more relaxed you are, you know and when you are nervous, your breath is shallow.

So when you take a second to like, think about your breath for a second and just say, let me remember to you know (takes breath), and you continue to do that. Not only is it an indicator, it's actually causing you to calm down, you know? I mean, it was my hope for those that are ever in an anxious moment or find themselves constantly in moments of anxiety that like, don't just breathe. I know it doesn't seem like it's working. I swear to you it is.

Seth Price 49:47

Yeah, no, I like that. I also kind of like thinking about that in a community. Like me seeing you you seeing me reminding each other looking at the dude across the aisle; we're not crashing today and even if we do It's probably gonna be alright, cuz you won't feel it. We're going to fast.

Propaganda 50:04

You not feel anyway, we’ll be fine.

Seth Price 50:06

I want to ask you two more questions, and then I'll let you point people where they need to be and get back to yelling at a printer; unless that's been…

Propaganda 50:13

Oh that’s been fixed I’ve got a yell at a child after this.

Seth Price 50:18

Just breathe, man. So hopefully not the six year old because she already don't like you.

Propaganda 50:25

She already don’t like me. And it don’t work for the old one, it don’t work, I’m just wasting my breath.

Seth Price 50:32

But it feels good.

Propaganda 50:34

It feel(s) great.

Seth Price 50:35

So I can't not talk about the church. Because…

Propaganda 50:38

Yes!

Seth Price 50:39

…that’s the itch…I just love it. Like, some people watch fantasy football, I come home and just read books on theology. So or you can't watch fantasy football. But you know what I'm saying?

Propaganda 50:49

I feel you, I follow.

Seth Price 50:50

What congregationally, like, as a body do you feel like if we do not directly be empowered to talk about is just going to explode the church as we see it in the years to come?

Propaganda 51:03

Oh, easy, race and sexuality!

And it’s like, you know, and you obviously tie that into politics, you know, which is like the third thing, But I feel like the politics part is not new, you know? And that is more indicative of the nation as a whole. Right? If we don't really reckon with like how bad we've become partisaned and separated. Just anybody that loves history, you're just like, a nation can’t sustain this, it's going to blow up. You know? So that's easy. But I think within the church if we don't talk about race and sexuality, yeah, you were dead in the water.

Seth Price 51:47

Yeah, no, I agree. Very much so, matter of fact, I have a good friend that works for the Evangelical Covenant Church is having their meeting right now. Yeah. And, and he's like, “yeah, that's up to talk about tomorrow”. I was like, “how's it gonna go”? He's like, “I have no idea". But everybody's stressed about it”.

Although today they they publicly condemned, as a congregation, the Doctrine of Discovery, which is cool that they even talked about it.

Propaganda 52:09

Let’s go! Yes!

Seth Price 52:11

He's like, yeah, “I'll send you the video like we have, because he's the dude that runs like the IT. So he's got the actual thing. He's like, I'll send it to him like, yeah, yeah. Which is cool. Because most, you know, we got the SBC doing their thing. And then we got them going. Yeah, this is a thing, which is great.

Propaganda 52:23

(SBC) Doing the polar opposite.

Seth Price 52:28

So when you try to wrap words around, like the divine, or God, what is that for you?

Propaganda 52:31

Man, I love that question, bro.

I think that after like touching soil in the Sinai Peninsula, like after you meet an Arab in an Arab community, you're it just like throws your categories out the window, I think in a lot of ways—in the best way possible. I think what it did was, in a lot of ways, it's sorted out the parts that were the bits that were American, the bits that were regional, and then the bits that are really transcendent. And then it blurred all those lines, like it was just the weirdest. I spent time in Morocco, I spent time in, you know, the West Bank, I spent time in Jerusalem, Palestine, you know, parts of Syria and you're like, Okay, so clearly, this is like, you know, fertile crescent, this is where my faith comes from. And then there's like, my time in Ethiopia and understanding like the African traditions about my faith, and just how much longer the church was in Africa before it was in Europe, just seeing all that you put it all together. And I think I finally understand the, like, Jewish tradition of not having vows and the word YHWH, of where it's like, this is just above us. You know, it is, and you become, I now am so much more fascinated and interested in, not in the bits of like, well, this is where your theology is off. This is where we're different. It's those parts that, the cream that, floated to the top that we all across generations, and across locations, all pointed at in awe and was like, but damn, there's that, you know. So that's the part that is now, that divine that transcendence is so much more intriguing. I'm so much more in love with that, that like, it makes me so much more careful to give it a name and to like, wrap a language around it because again, language is cultural. So I know once I wrap a language around it, I've already diminished it.

Seth Price 55:19

You’ve bound it?

Propaganda 55:20

Yes, I’ve bound it. So that's why I'm like, I understand now why the ancient Hebrews were like, we can't even under this name dawg. Like, it's so above us. You know, I'm saying that this is our best guess. You know? So I think for me, it's like the divine is that. It is those bits that are so transcendent that is so far above us, that are so full of beauty, that like, I don't have words for you know, yeah, I got hints of it. I got visions of it. We got pieces of it. You know, CS Lewis with the good dreams like God gave humanity good dreams. You know what I'm saying so I'm like, that's what I got. I got good dreams of this thing. That is like, above us all, you know.

Seth Price 56:11

Speaking of Syriac, like Ethiopian church, are you familiar with Dr. Vince Bantu?

Propaganda 56:19

Yes!

Seth Price 56:21

I assume you have his stuff.

Propaganda 56:24

Yes. He saved me! He pulled me off the cliff. He was one of the handful of people that like pulled me off the cliff because I was deuces. Yeah, I'm out.

Seth Price 56:36

I talked to him last year. And at the end, I was like, I don't I thought I knew some things. I didn't know. I didn't know anything. But yeah, where do people go? So you got 97 albums, apparently. (Prop laughs) Multiple books, like where do you want people to go to do the things?

Propaganda 56:54

Prophiphop.com has all my socials, has the book, has the links to the albums, has everything. And all my socials are @prophiphop.

Seth Price 57:06

I really thought you were gonna also say Hood Politics there. I'll say it for you. You do a side thing, Hood Politics. You should listen to it if you want to hear you laugh considerably more than you've done tonight.

Propaganda 57:19

I do laugh a lot on that show.

Seth Price 57:23

So see that's not a bad thing. Yeah, Prop. I really appreciate your time tonight. So very much.

Propaganda 57:27

Dude I’m honored man. Thank you for having me.

Seth Price 57:29

Yeah, my pleasure, man. It was a joy to have Prop on the show. And I look forward to doing it again. I got a lot out of that though. And I will also say his book and at least as of recording this right now. The one EP that is out The People is fantastic. They mesh so well together. It's almost like he wrote them (together) But you should really get a hold of it. I believe that I'm going to make it this month's…I'm gonna make it this month's patrons book that goes out. Because it genuinely is very, very, very good. I want to thank Clay for becoming a supporter of the show. People if you're listening, you should join Clay because he's really smart, and he wouldn't make a bad decision. And I also want to thank Forrest Clay for his music in the show today. You can hear the music from forest clay in the playlist for the show as well as links to that down in the show notes. Check him out. It is very good.

Seth Price 58:56

With that, I'm out i'll talk to you with a brand new episode in a few weeks and then next week obviously we'll have one of the replays as we're deep into summer. I hope that your summer is fantastic and is going well.

He Saw That It Was Good with Sho Baraka / Transcript

Note: Can I Say This at Church is produced for audio listening. If able, I strongly encourage you to listen to the audio, which has inflection, emotion, sarcasm where applicable, and emphasis for points that may not come across well in written word. This transcript is generated using a combination of my ears and software, and may contain errors. Please check the episode for clarity before quoting in print.

Back to the Audio Episode


Sho Baraka 0:08

I am just trying to create this challenge to folks that God doesn't place us anywhere just by happenstance - it is strategic. You are in the palace to be a blessing like Joseph, like Moses, like Esther, like Daniel, and ultimately like Jesus. You condescend and you give your life as a ransom for other folks.

Seth Price 0:46

Am I able to be really honest with you right now? I mean, of course, I can like right, I have the microphone, I’m the one that does the editing. But this right here is like the 17th take of the intro for the show, because I record these after I edit the show; the same thing with the outro. (And) I haven't even started the first take of that one. This one's been hard though.

So the guest is Sho Baraka today. And I had a ball. I (had) a legitimate fun time spending a bit of the day with him over the internet on Zoom. Now, I hope that that's a name that you know, if it's not, you need to hit pause right now, actually don't hit pause, finish listening to the episode then go down to the show notes and check out some of his work. So he does a lot of things, and his music, I remember when I heard it…I don't know, six or seven years ago, for the first time like his music man, it touched a chord with me. And I've listened ever since. I just love it.

But he has a voice that I love. And I really like the way that he tackles many, many topics. And so today, kind of, what you can look forward to-Sho has written a book of, I guess, theology, and prophecy, and narrative and a little bit of storytelling. And it is “good”. And that's a play on words, because the name of the book is He Saw That it Was Good, but it really is good. I mean, in his book show wrestles with questions, honestly. And does I think what I try to do with this show, give people permission to do hard questions and deal and wrestle with hard answers. Knowing that when we learn from that, it gives us more paths to go down and none of those are necessarily the right path; they are all good. Ahh! I’m not saying as well. So I'm going to stop here on whatever number this take is, we're just gonna roll the tape.

Seth Price 3:20

Sho Baraka, you don't know this, (but) I’ve been listening to your music…there was something about pianos..

Sho Baraka 3:26

“Pianos and Politics”?

Seth Price 3:38

Yeah, since then, Spotify said you might like this. And then since then I have. (Sho laughs ‘thank you spotify’) Yeah, you don't know that. Thank you. Oh, absolutely hit that follow button and make you some what half of a cent per stream, something like that. That's more than half a cent. But welcome to the show man. I'm glad you're here. And thanks for your patience and on the fly, I think on your book birthday, having to cancel on you. So I apologize for that. But thanks for being here this morning.

Sho Baraka 3:55

Oh, man, it's a pleasure. Thank you. I'm excited about the conversation.

Seth Price 4:00

Not everybody is watching the video. And not everybody will be familiar with you because Spotify has not yet recommended your music to them. (Sho laughs) And I have a couple of tracks that people if you want to email me I'll say listen to the schedule laugh and then you'll also be really angry and that's a good place I think for art to leave people.

Sho Baraka 4:16

I want to ask you what those songs are?

Seth Price 4:18

I'll have to pull them up. I don't have them memorized. But I do have them favorited like in a playlist gotcha. Yeah. You got me off track. (we both laugh) So when people know you're good with so who like what are you? Who are you? Why are you like what are the things that you think matter?

Sho Baraka 4:36

Yeah, I am. I just make things easy. I just call myself a polymath or renaissance man because I do a lot of things from music to writing to..I hate to call…I don't like the term “activist”, but you know, I guess you can say an activist. I studied film and television so I do a lot of work either behind the camera or in front of the camera. (I’m a) husband, father, autism dad. And why I am those things is I had parents who found that art was important. So they put, you know, certain poets and literature in front of me at a young age, kind of shaped who I was, but then I had older brothers who were huge into hip hop. And so that kind of cultivated this love and affection for, you know, making rhymes through music, not just through the written, through poetry. But hey, I can put these two words together and make this sound real cool.

And you know, my parents also were part of the Black Panther Party, well, my mother was. And so that's kind of cultivated in me this desire for justice and to be concerned with people around me. So that's where the activism comes from, if you will. But I grew up outside Los Angeles. So Hollywood, my aunt worked in Hollywood worked on a set of shows that some of these folks may not know, but like 227 and Gimme a Break!, Nell Carter and some other ones. So yeah and so being around sets and seeing shows being mad this created this indelible, like this, molding of wanting to tell stories to visual mediums. So that's kind of like who I am now, where I am. I also taught at a couple of universities. Hip Hop through our religion-politics through hip hop, I've, yeah, I can do this for all days, and I'll bore people to tears. I'm just pretty, I guess you could say I'm pretty dope.

Seth Price 6:53

(Laughs) Well, so that confidence there. So I have a question. So I, you know, cuz you got to prepare for these things. I went onto your Instagram. And I found some of your #Thursdaythoughts. And being that you are pretty dope. I found one from a few months ago, because it doesn't look, you've done these in a while. But then again, you've been launching a book and I'm sure you've done 9 billion podcasts because that's a book tours happen now anymore. And thanks for, again, for being here for that. But there's a #Thursdaythought one of your last ones that I watched, and there's a couple you know, someone watches someone this and I will say you've got quite the watch game. I just changed my watch face on my Apple Watch, because it's cheaper. It's free. But that's fine. You can keep on but you have on there that you understand that the plight of women, because you were hit on by a 6 and you're a 9. And since you're dope, I just kind of wanted to know, like, how do you arrange that scale? between 6 to 9? (Sho starts laughing)

Sho Baraka 7:47

Yeah, umm. A lot of different elements. There's a lot of variables you got to consider. So my wife, you know, on her off days, she's an eight.

And I'm not just saying that because she's my wife, you know, if she was here, I would you know, she's, she's definitely a nine but on a bad day. She's an eight. (Seth laughs)

But I tell her, I say “Ma'am, I just want to let you know, you go to you go to Walmart, and you're upset that men are hitting on you”. And I was like, “you know, you got to understand, 8’s, don't go shopping in Walmart. And so sometimes you got to stay in like, it's not just how you look is how you carry yourself as well”. (Breaks down laughing).

Eights go to, they go to they go to Whole Foods, they go to Targets. So it's also like, the type of way you care? You know…I’m just playing…I don't know. I mean, I just have a little fun. I say some things that I think have some truth in it. Some things that I would love to put out there and just create discussion as you kind of communicated earlier.

I think the way that art/comedy, it disarms people, it gives the opportunity to say some things and to present some, you know, some ideas that may not be easy to transmit in a lecture; or if it is easy to transmit a lecture, it's not as palatable for people to consume because it doesn't have a nice melody behind it or it's not metaphorical or allegorical. And so therefore, people are able to wrestle with these concepts in different ways.

I was recently talking about Nathan and David, how Nathan totally sets David up for this conversation. Nathan knew where he's going. Nathan knew he was going to rebuke David for his actions with Bathsheba and the killing of Uriah. But Nathan said, You know what, instead of me just coming out calling him a disgusting bastard. You know what I'm saying, what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna share this story with him. And he's going to connect to this story, and he's gonna be the man that's…that's ridiculous. That person should be punished. He's like, Well, you know, that's you, David.

And in a lot of ways that's what you do at our you know, whether you're making you know, you're talking about beauty, you know, me being a nine and getting hit on ;). Or if you're talking about war if you're talking about violence and justice, you're saying like how can I put the listener in this position so that they see themselves very similar to what Jesus did with the Pharisees as they were going to stone other religious leaders that they were going to stone the prostitute. It's like, look, y'all out here doing the same stuff she's doing, but you've created law so that you can avoid the punishment. And so if you are better than this young lady, then go ahead and stone her. And they realize like now we're in the same predicament. And so art does that, storytelling does that.

Seth Price 10:37

What would your wife say that you are on your bad day?

Sho Baraka 10:43

(laughs!) I would like to think that she would say that I'm an 8, but I'm gonna have to go down to a I'm gonna have to go to a….

…six or seven. I would like to just, I would pray and hope to God, that she wouldn't say a six but I can deal with a seven.

Seth Price 11:00

He came on here, Sho came on here, to talk about a book.

Sho Baraka 11:04

The crazy thing is she's not going to give me a 9, I think she's gonna give me a nine. I think she's gonna say I'm an eight. If you pinned her down and you said…

You know, I think she'll give me a nine. I think she'll give me a nine. The only reason why I'm not getting a 10 is because I don't have the body of like a Michael B. Jordan. And so if I had that now, it'd be a 10. Easy!

Seth Price 11:26

If you got that contract though to be Apollo Creed. I'll bet you would when you put in the work.

Sho Baraka 11:31

Oh! That's a 10. She'll probably give me an 11 after that. She wishes it looks like that.

Seth Price 11:38

Grade on the curve.

Sho Baraka 11:40

Right.

Seth Price 11:41

So you wrote a book, the name actually He Saw That it Was Good. That's right, right?

Sho Baraka 11:46

Yep.

Seth Price 11:47

I want to walk through some of that. And then I always like to end with a few existential questions, which I feel like based on what you said you do that that will be fun. You start the book, I think the first word you say maybe it's not the first words is, “hello average, let me introduce you to awesome”. (Sho laughs) What is average for a normal American or for normal Christian, especially maybe in a different context? Because that that sentence struck me, I literally highlighted it. And I read it again, I’ve started saying it at work, which makes me come off as arrogant. And I don't, and I don't care. But I just want to begin by ripping that apart a bit. And then maybe we can get into some of the practices and some of the theology of the book and some other questions that I had from the book as well.

Sho Baraka 12:35

Yeah, okay. Um, I think that's a great, I think, honestly, if I'm not, I'm not stretching, I think the book in a lot of ways is addressing that posture. We’ll get probably into the weeds of this statement. But I think there's a lot of…there's a lot of…Christians out there who go to work on a nine to five, and they don't see themselves as God kind of instructed us to wake up and look at the day as a void, and to speak life over that void. And therefore we create life. We cultivate, we bring goodness into the world. And at the end of the day, God said it is blessed. He said, It is good. So he blesses it. And I think oftentimes, we go to work with this apathy with this, with this sense that my work doesn't really matter. I'm not really contributing to any real substantive change.

And so for me, what I want to do is to remove that sense of apathy from people, because that produces average, that produces mediocrity. Not in the sense of just how you approach work and the effort you give, but your theology. And if your theology is very average, in the sense that God doesn't really care over “this”, then you don't see your work as worship, you don't wake up and go to an everyday thinking like I…even if my work doesn't directly tie to some social good, like working at a hospital or feeding, you know, the homeless. The reality is the fact that you work in itself is worship. And you should approach it like that, because you're creating something that is a reflection of what you believe about your Creator. And so hopefully, you're saying, “Hello average. Let me introduce you to greatness”, it's not only a proclamation to your own self, but it's a proclamation to the world.

Seth Price 14:35

Do you think that everyone is an artist and what they do as a vocation or as artists set aside as a different vocation?

Sho Baraka 14:42

Yeah, I would agree with the latter. I would say the artist is a vocation. However, I think everybody creates everybody is they cultivate they're part of this idea. So I when I think about creating I think about Genesis 1:26-28 where God says, you know, “subdue the land, multiply. etc, etc”. And so therefore what I see one of the main directives from God's humanity is to be a part of creating, producing our cultivating the raw materials that God has given us. And everybody does that. There's not one person who doesn't participate in the cultivating of something, which means we build systems, we build societies, we build culture. And so if sin corrupts that then ultimately what we're saying is Jesus is calling us to redeem those things. And so yes, I would say, however, no artist is a vocation. But I would say every vocation creates.

Seth Price 15:41

Point of clarification, because I can't remember from the book. So you talk about Where's it at? I got my notes here, digital, here we go. So there's a part we talked about, you look good in red. And I'm sure because a couple things, that's like the first chapter. And so most people I think that read books or book interviews, don't read the full book. And so I'm sure you've been asked this question a lot. (Sho laughs)

I have questions from the end of the book, too. Because I refuse to talk to someone if I haven't read the full book about a book.

Sho Baraka 16:07

Thank you I appreciate that.

Seth Price 16:08

But I want to approach a question a different way. So in Look Good in Red, I know you're your dad. Because Because Google says things was like a football player in New Orleans, right? For the Saints, or maybe for somewhere else. Yeah. So wearing red in certain neighborhoods or communities, especially a community I grew up in Texas will cause some issues and I think you alluded to that in the book. But where are you at in your life? Like, how old were you?

Sho Baraka 16:31

Right now?

Seth Price 16:32

No, no, no. When you're learning to embrace the color?

Sho Baraka 16:39

I was, um, I think I'd say I think I was seven, eight years old around that time.

Seth Price 16:44

So that's still in LA or that's in Louisiana?

Sho Barka 16:46

That still is Southern Southern California.

Seth Price 16:48

Yeah, because the level of “don't wear red” escalates, I think from from LA, maybe to Louisiana.

Sho Baraka 16:54

Yeah! No…so I grew up, like around, you know, the Snoop Dogg era, his early years, you know, before Tupac got shot. And, you know, NWA was kind of falling apart, but they were still height. So gang violence was was everywhere. And it was popular colors, Boyz n the Hood movies like that. So yeah. Even if you didn't live necessarily in Los Angeles. There were particular neighborhoods you lived in and ou knew what colors you could and cannot wear?

Seth Price 17:25

Yeah, definitely. Yeah. And I had different colors being out in West Texas, with different environment. But, same thing.

Sho Baraka 17:34

Oh yeah.

Seth Price 17:35

So no, you talk about the impact of what we leave as inheritances and like inheriting the impact of embracing different things. I'm curious, though, what do you think you, and or we, as a nation, or as a country, as a church are, take that wherever you want, are leaving for the next generations? And probably not even really your kids? Like, I mean, like your grandkids? Like, what are we currently participating in and what do you think we're leaving for the next ones?

Sho Baraka 18:05

Mmmmm, I think we are leaving, you know, I think this this is a very successful and rich nation. So I do think we're leaving people financially; we're leaving people in, in some sort of economic wealth. But however, I do think we're leaving people socially bankrupt, spiritually bankrupt.

So there's a lot of resources that we know we have as a nation, there's opportunity like never before for all people. Some opportunities are easier than others, are easier for others, than they are for certain people. But there's, there's no reason why a particular person in this country can succeed, especially in comparison to other countries. That's because this country has you know, has great wealth, for all of its problems. There are great opportunities and in roads to get to these places. It's easier for people if you have connections and who you know, kind of families you grew up, where you live, what type of neighborhood you come from.

However, no matter where you are, no matter if you're of the, you know, your rich, middle class, lower class, I think we're handing down a spiritual deficiency that I think not only is caused by our political conversations, but I think social media has created a society that really wants things “now”. So we want to give people a lot of information without giving people a lot of wisdom. And I think until there's some sort of social media revolution, political, like not revolution in the sense that it needs to be violent, but a revival of sorts, that will cause people to remove themselves from the from the extremes of our political discourse to a more rooted place…I'm not sure my our grandkids will be in a place where they can sift through nuance. That they'll be courageous enough to speak against things that their best friends may hold to that may be wrong, if that makes sense? I think that right now, we measure ourselves, we categorize or label ourselves against our opposition for the most part. And I don't think that's a place or a posture that we should ever be. We shouldn't know just what we're against and just have anti-vision, we should have vision and we should know what we're for. And we should hold to ideas not based on who else holds them. But off the merit of its principles.

Seth Price 20:54

I don't know how to do that. I don't know. I know how to do that in person. Because it's almost required to be in community. I don't know how to do that with social media. And it's not Clubhouse. That's the latest revolution. But it's definitely not Clubhouse. I haven't even tried it. But I'm sure that it's not Clubhouse. You know, I don't…I don't know how to do that.

Sho Baraka 21:18

So in my book I talk about, you know, heroes and villains and how there's no such thing as that. How oftentimes we think of as individuals as fixed heroes and villains, like if a person is a hero, they're always hero, if the person is a villain. And the reality is, is that's not the case. People put themselves in situations to be heroes or villains. And oftentimes we can fluctuate or vacillate from a hero to a villain. The one thing I say is that, and I truly believe this, is I think people wake up with the audacity to say, “:you know what, today I want to make decisions that's going to put me in a position to help other people”. And David is very similar to David and woke up at times where he was like, I am going to put myself in this position to have courage and fight for people who are on the margins. But then there were times when David was like, I'm going to wake up this morning, and I am going to have sex with this beautiful woman.

Seth Price 22:08

I want that because because I'm a nine and she's a ten.

Sho Baraka 22:13

Exactly! David was, I'm pretty sure David was a ten.

Seth Price 22:16

When you're the king you are a 10 because you're the king.

Sho Baraka 22:20

Bathsheba would have to be a 10. Because if you saw it from the distance, you saw that…oh…that's a 10. (Seth laughs)

I mean if you have the courage to bathe outside knowing that people will see you…that’s gotta be 9-10 stuff. That's 9-10 stuff. Because if you ugly, just concealing yourself?

Seth Price 22:40

You know, yeah. So, you didn't necessarily talk about this specifically in the Bible, but I'd like to rip it apart. And you use the word vacillate? Because no, not the Bible. No, in your book, sorry. And you see, I got all excited about using a big word, because I'm gonna steal it from you. So you don't know this show. But I transcribe these episodes. And so when people use words, like vacillate, I already am wondering how it's spelled. But I know what it means. And so I'm gonna do it. Yeah. But so there's like, throughout the book, you weave a narrative of, you know, we are good, especially how you close it, like, there will be a day that redemption doesn't even need a name anymore, because we're all good. But at the beginning, I think it's in good call chapter two. Like, I'm curious, your thoughts, I see you weaving a narrative of goodness, and then intentionally choosing a brokenness, you and I, and choosing that and helping to create like a hell here on Earth, which the inverse is also true, which is what you just alluded to, and we can make decisions that create the kingdom in partnership as creators, not necessarily artists. But I'm curious, where do you stand on like, Original Sin type doctrine, which isn't really spelled out in the book? Because I see you writing from both sides of that without really choosing a stance, if that makes any sense at all.

Sho Baraka 24:02

I, you know, I try to be careful because I'm not a theologian. I've spent enough time in seminary to to, to be dangerous. I just read books. Yeah. Both and yeah, I've been reading a lot of books. And I'm that kind of person who reads enough books that I can say something that is totally dangerous, because I kind of get the concept but I don't know it. I don't comprehend it all the way. So I tried to stay away from like, with being authoritative around particular tenets of faith. Now, however, my personal belief is that I do believe in original sin in a sense that, you know, man, we're creating humanity was created good. And we've, we've fallen, and we're trying to figure out how to get back to a place of, of goodness, but we'll never be wholly good as you will. As we were better yet. In the garden, but I am of the philosophy, the human philosophy that humans are terrible people. And I'm not shocked. I tell people this all the time, like if, for instance, if my neighbor next door, murders his wife, and then all of a sudden, the news comes to me and they say, Can you believe that? You're

Seth Price 25:21

like, Yes, I can't, I can't believe it I met.

Sho Baraka 25:24

I'm not shocked. I've met him. And he seemed like a great guy. But you know what, I know what people do when they get upset, and they get angry. And so I'm more shocked that he hasn't killed her yet. If anything, you know, it's, it's more of that, like I look at the world, I look at the depravity I'm never shocked by the propensity of human depravity that ranges across our nation, across the globe. I go to India, and we talked about India, off camera, you see caste systems, you go to South Africa, it's not just the effects of apartheid. But before that, you see the violence between Kosovo and Zulu you in Rwanda to see a Tutsi in my own neighborhood, you have gang violence, but then you have this national, cat, you know, systems of oppressions that have been rapid through our society. And so I mean, you go to Ireland, you see Protestant, Catholic, I mean, it's, my thing is you don't need race, you don't need religion, you don't need social status to hate somebody, all you need is another human being in close proximity, and you will find a reason to dislike them. And so that's kind of like my view of, of humanity. But I guess the opposite of that, the, the, the, the the opposition or not the opposition, but the resolution is somewhat of a Christian humanism that I'm trying to give is like, how do we learn to treat each other better? How do we learn and the tension of knowing that I am going to move next door to somebody who probably looks different than me, grew up differently, has a different religion for me? How do I still find a way to love them, even if I never proselytize them to the faith to the social sensibilities that I have? I got to figure out how to live in peace with this person. And this is a lot of what I'm trying to communicate in this in this book.

Seth Price 27:21

We've reached that random point in the episode that I've got to do this because capitalism is the beast that requires feeding and you amazing people continue to help the show grow, and I got to help pay for that. Hang tight. And let's do this.

Unknown Speaker 27:37

Hello everyone. I'm a meow like Gotham sofa since about nine this morning. I know the Lord sees my greed is so appalling. That's been my phone buddy your clothes so I miss McCollum. But my extended adolescence so Salus, I wanna play doh. I'm so childish.

Seth Price 27:55

Can you walk me through what the concept of chocolate Hill song is? What is that? That's when you know, I actually read all of the book that is yes, he Look, you've earned some points right there. So I,

Sho Baraka 28:10

I talked about going to a church that was a minority led church with the intention of trying to be multicultural, multiracial and multicultural. And in some senses, multi economic, multi, diverse in its economic status as well, because it was in the middle of the city. So you had like, you know, communities that were considered projects or lower income, but then you also had like, literally million dollar homes, right next door to projects. And so this is in Atlanta, but by the way, and so in the city, you have these people, white, Asian and Latino coming to this predominantly black church. And the philosophy of the church was how do we create music that can bring everybody together. And so one of the philosophies was, well, let's just take songs from like, Hillsong. Let's take songs from like Bethel, different people like that, but jazz it up a little bit, give it a little bit of fun, give it a little so. And so insert some horns. It's more it's facts look baseline, rather than just an electric or acoustic, let's get a little baseline. Let's put that thing on a two and four rather.

Seth Price 29:27

You know that we can't clap to that.

Unknown Speaker 29:30

Hey, well, you

Unknown Speaker 29:30

gotta you won't learn you're gonna learn today.

Sho Baraka 29:33

And so, basically, I learned I just I start calling it chocolate Hill song. These black folks tried to give a go song a little low.

Seth Price 29:46

Is there an album I got? I'll buy that.

Sho Baraka 29:49

No, but there's some so you know, when I was we tried, right? But I would say there's two you know, why is it there's two there's a pull up contagious worship. It's a it's a it's a it's some of those folks made a news. But then it's also ducks, ducks allergy, I think it's called. It's a band out of Philadelphia church out of Philadelphia. And they, I would say they did the same thing. Those two albums are the attempts of trying to take this highly theological, thoughtful music

Seth Price 30:20

and put it on the two and four, and put it on until four. All right, so you write a couple stories in here, honestly, you should just make a book out of this. Actually, at the end of all this, I'm going to recommend a book that comes out in September because from what you wrote about prudence, which is what I want to ask you about, um, I think the majority go any further. Yeah,

Sho Baraka 30:40

I will say this, you are the I've literally I've done maybe 30. I don't know, maybe 30 interviews, it's probably not that pretty, but it feels like 30 interviews, and I'm not trying to like overtake you. Or maybe the second person who's asked me, maybe third person at the moment who's asked me about the fiction. Is that good or bad? That's amazing. We want to talk about that.

Seth Price 31:04

Yeah, I mean, there are books with theology, but books with arguably parables mixed in the middle. So when I read that it forced me to reconcile what I read before, and then made me pay attention to what I was reading further, because I'm assuming, since you know, you said, You're an adjunct professor, I think it's probably the word that you don't put a story in the middle of a of a classroom lecture. If the story doesn't matter. It's not just you being like, you know what, I need to flex a bit. I know that I'm a recording artist, and I could say what I want and just put it on Spotify. But No, I'd rather write it down. Because that's easier. For some reason, I'm sure that that's not the intention. So I'm gonna read this go with me, I'm probably going to read it wrong. So there is a story about prudence. And I'll let you rip apart whatever you want about prudence. I want to talk about what the rodent says. And then I want to relate that later on to what because you use the word prudence again. And I again, have to assume that's not intentional or that's intentional. But you say the Rhoden spoke rapidly acknowledgments were revered judges, we are in the process of a great renewal. So excuse what might be unpleasant to your eyes, we are growing, we are moving, we are building a future. If I had known our prudent friend was unwelcome or in danger, I would have assisted or myself. And then he talks about all these other things, you know, look at my reputation, I got money, I give away money, yada, yada, yada. But then at the end, you say you can't build dignity. And that's the part that I really want to rip apart kind of whatever that metaphor and narrative is. And then if you could, the other place that you use the word prudence is in I don't know what the chapter is. But there's a part where you're talking about a song called chapter nine, Jim Crow, which is actually one of the songs that makes me upset. The Kanye rent is another one that kind of makes me happy. And I don't know why. I don't know why I think it's the cadence of the flow. It's slightly different than, than the normal cadence. But you write in there, after you quote some of your own lyrics, you say, you know, these words were used with prudence. And so are those ideas connected at all? Take that wherever you want to take it.

Sho Baraka 33:08

So I would love to act like they were But no, no, those, those two. Give me about 30 seconds, I can figure out how to make them connect. Yeah, I will say no, um, but I will say no, I will say no. They're not connected. But I forgot the other part of the question.

Seth Price 33:33

Yeah. So the, these these, the, the rat part, the rodent basically saying, You can't build dignity, okay. And the reason I asked that is my pastor did I think two years ago before COVID. So maybe three years ago, I don't know. times lost, its its its measure. He did a sermon series on the Minor Prophets, it was 13 weeks summer was 13 weeks long. So this is great. It's already pre planned, mostly two chapters, three chapters long, let's do this thing. And at the end, I can remember someone in our church being like, you can't talk about our government that way. And he's like, I didn't say the word United States in any of this. And for some reason, in the words of the road, and what I hear is, but look at me doing all these cool things. I did it kind of reminds me of Amos 523 like just so anyway, wherever you want to go, yeah. So,

Sho Baraka 34:21

absolutely, exactly. Um, you know, without over, over analyzing and over explaining the art. Each road is a representation of a particular type of person, you can even say vocation, if you will skillset a particular class of people and I mean class by, like, you got the artists in class, you have, you know, business class, you have the academic. And so the Rodin is a representation of a particular type of person, and oftentimes we look at the veneer of what they do as dignified or redemptive, but It can often be very selfish, it can be self serving, and destructive. And so the council will lay down some judgment in that. Oftentimes the the construction of edifices that look like they're bringing dignity actually do the opposite, because of the effects of that type of work and vocation. And so that story, and to your point, that story is placed in that in that particular part of the book for a reason, because I just, I think I just came out of talking about good call, and then I'm going into justice, if I'm not mistaken. And so, which is good plays bad pronunciation. Want to make sure that I'm not making this up? Yep. So I is in between a chapter that's talking about work. And the chapter that's talking about justice. So I think it was very pertinent that I put it there, and that people can see themselves as they just read about, what do you do? How do you work? How do you contribute? And how is this tethered to making other people's lives better?

Seth Price 36:11

Hmm, there's a part in there again, I don't know what chapter it is, because I'm screenshotting these things on the Kindle app on my phone. So he talked about that many black evangelicals. And you also end up saying that most people that are black evangelicals, unless I'm misremembering, really aren't black evangelists. That's just a label foisted onto them, because there needs to be a label somewhere, see themselves as modern day recipients of Jeff Jeremiah's prophetic instructions to seek welfare of the city as exiles. And then you say that that term needs to be ripped a bit apart. Now, most people only are familiar with Jeremiah 2911, maybe 12, if you did the extra credit homework. So what are you getting at with that? And like, what would you mean when you define the word exile specifically for people living, you know, here in the US, which you'd asked at the beginning, the people listening to the podcast for the demographics. So the the number one listener is actually your neighbor. So that's going to be awkward. When he finds out that he's, you assume he's got his wife, and in the United States is the primary demographic as well. But yeah, can you rip a bit apart that little sentimentality there about Jeremiah? And the term of exhale?

Sho Baraka 37:17

So just a little correction? I do believe that black I so there are a lot of people who don't like the as the labeled black evangelicals, there are a lot of black Christians who don't like that. But my argument in a lot of ways is like I'm, I understand that. The underbelly of my argument is like I get it, and yes, to some degree, there's a legitimate argument there. However, if we're looking at evangelical in the sense, and just the Bebbington definition of it, which I talked about there, and I can't remember off the top of my head, but it's, you know, Christ centeredness. The Gospel changes people, people change the world type of thing. black churches, traditional black churches, churches throughout history are evangelical, and that white evangelicals can't just own that term, by themselves. And but today, evangelicalism has a different type of association to it. So therefore, there are a lot of people who are like, Nah, don't call me an evangelical, but the reality is, is just like people call themselves Christians and do ridiculous things, you can't throw away the identity of what it means to be a Christ follower, just because somebody else has said and done something that you don't like and don't associate with. So that's that. So black folks should be should not be ashamed to call themselves evangelical, because it's an inherently it's not a bad label. exiles, in the context of this particular chapter, Jeremiah is talking to people who were removed from their home, and placed in captivity in Babylon. And he's telling these individuals look, we know this is not the perfect situation for you, you know, we know you'd rather be in your homeland. But the reality is, is God has allowed this, and God wants you to be here, not only for your own personal flourishing, but this is what this is, what's crazy, but for the flourishing of the city, you're Europe, oppressors, if you will. And that is a very difficult and hard truth, and tells them to marry off their children, to build gardens to buy homes, it's, you know, to live and to flourish off the land, because in your flourishing, the city will flourish as well. And if you for those people who are Bible scholars are just familiar with the story, you understand that David, David Daniel and, and the Hebrew boys shadrach, meshach, and abednego exist during this time. So they take this prophecy or this prophetic posture to heart by saying, you know what, I'm going to thrive in the culture I'm going to learn and Daniel talks about this in chapter one. I'm going to learn the culture and I'm going to excel and therefore you get high positions and therefore because of those high positions, you become a blessing not only to the city, but to your People, and so as a as a clarion call to black evangelicals who feel like this is not my home, I'm in a palace, and I don't belong here. What I'm saying is whether you decide to leave the palace or whether you remain in the palace, understand that you still have a responsibility to seek the flourishing not only of your own well being and maybe those people who are, you know, directly connected to you culturally, socially, racially, if that's your thing, then also, you have a responsibility for the flourishing of the city and your Ascension in the palace may be a blessing to other people. So I am just trying to create this dis challenge to folks, that God doesn't place us anywhere, just by happenstance is strategic, you are in the palace to be a blessing like Joseph like Moses, like Esther, like Daniel, and ultimately, like Jesus, us, you condescend, and you give your life as a ransom for other folks.

Seth Price 41:04

So I have three questions left. None of them are actually about your book. Because really, we only get five or six questions in a podcast episode, which really is frustrating, because I've probably got 15 other questions I want to ask. That's okay. So you have referenced David and Nathan. I don't mean Remember, if I was recording when you referenced it earlier, maybe it was maybe it wasn't. Who are the Nathan's today, like? Some of those people that we should be list like, pay attention to when they when they point at something?

Sho Baraka 41:33

The my favorite person in all of the world right now is Dave Chappelle. I love Dave Chappelle. I think he is brilliant. I think he is I think there's something about comedians that have the one the audacity to be able to speak to culture in a way that doesn't, they don't care about being silenced. Because one, they operate in the ridiculous. So it's like, people in a lot of ways they like, yeah, of course, they're going to say that. But what would I think separates the good comedians from exceptional comedians are is their ability to operate in the ridiculous but to communicate a philosophy and a truth that really gets to that puts a pause in the people. And it says, Wait, hold up. There's some, there's some depth to what they just said. And so Dave Chappelle is honestly he's a philosopher who just happens to be funny to me. He just a dude who you think you're having a conversation about? I don't know. Like, one of my favorite jokes in his day, is him talking about when he left Comedy Central, and he's trying to No, no, no, he didn't leave at this point. He just said, I was just going on a vacation to just, you know, to Disneyland with my with my family or Disney World, my family, and I'm just trying to take a break. And you think this is a joke about people invading his privacy. But at the end, he talks about how he got so frustrated with Mickey Mouse and people like trying to make fun of them and use his own jokes against him that he punches Mickey Mouse. And you're like, What in the world? Why would you punch Mickey Mouse. And then he talks about how everybody around him is up in arms. And it's like, I rate because he pushed Mickey Mouse. But not all. These are how everybody's irate not because he punches Mickey Mouse but because Mickey Mouse is actually a Mexican underneath the costume. And it's like, that's the social commentary that he gives. It's like, we're more upset that the fact that

Seth Price 43:35

Mickey Mouse is being portrayed by this Hispanic character in the fact that I punched him,

Sho Baraka 43:42

punched him and I and I abused Mickey Mouse this this icon right here said, so it's just funny. It's like, it's stuff like that the layers of you know. And anyway, so. But these vary both vulgar. But as Richard Pryor said, and as I quote Richard Pryor, it may be profane, but it's also profile. So I think folks like him, and I'll just I know you want to ask more questions, so I'll just leave it with a shirt. Yeah, no, that's fine.

Seth Price 44:07

His um, his thing in some cornfield, I guess in Ohio or whatever last like. Yeah, I don't know. I, I like I like that. Dave Chappelle is not where I thought you were going. Also, I'm glad that you went with that punched story, because there are other comedy specials with Dave Chappelle where he punches other things and it's not as clean as his Mickey Mouse. So I appreciate you going with that one. My kids sometimes listen to this and and yeah, you're right. You're right. I know exactly which way it is funny. Brilliant, set up to his level people where we're gonna go in an hour and a half this we're gonna be and then when you get there, you're like I told you, I told you. Oh, my gosh, the genius But anyway, yeah, he's great. Alright, so I decided Finally, after years of doing the show that I should play on the name of the show and it's become I think you're maybe the third or fourth person I've ever So what do you personally feel like are the things that we should be allowed to talk about at church, and that if we don't, we'll possibly be the demise of a portion of the life giving part of the church.

Sho Baraka 45:12

I think it's a little too late right now. But I think sex sexuality is one of the things that we have failed in. So therefore, we have a generation of people who don't trust the church anymore. Now, they have to say, about sex or sexuality. And I'm not even talking about sexuality in the sense of, you know, LGBTQ, etc. I'm saying, It's, I'm talking about even healthy sex within marriage, healthy sex. Like, it just seems like we can't, the only time we can talk about that is in counseling spaces are in marriage counseling, or marriage retreats. And I think this is politics. I don't know, marriage now. Maybe even politics, sex, and race are one of the most divisive. Some of the most divisive things to talk about. But it's the things that people love the most. And I don't understand why we were so afraid to talk about these things. Many people upsets people who are not even married or loving, love sex, and they love engaging in sex. And we're acting like we can't talk about it, teenagers are engaging in it. And oftentimes, we just try to distract teenagers with, you know, their favorite Christian rock band, or Christian hip hop group and act like, as soon as they're done, they're not going to go out and hang out with their friends, and there's going to be an attractive individual that they want to have sex with. And to deal with that compulsion, just listen to your favorite rap group is like, and then you know, politics again, you know, we all have strong beliefs about what makes the world better for us. Why are we able to talk about that, frankly, and do it in a way that's charitable and learn from one another? Why are you anti abortion? Why are you for abortion? And let's have a discussion about it. You know, I mean, and then we all love ourselves. And so that's the race discussion, even though it's a construct for stable like, we built this construct in the sense that we build our identities, according to the social groups. And I grew up loving this, you grew up living that well, that pushes up against my sensibility? Well, let's talk about it. How can we make this world a better place so that you and I can both love the things we love. You can love your Southern culture, but not necessarily throw your, your confederacy in my face. And I can love my blackness and not feel like just because you are white that you're evil, you know, I'm saying and so, like, let's figure out how to have these since a bit like these conversations and be sensible about it. But the church wants to act like they're not real things. And the more we talk about it, the more honest I think the conversations will be. And the less taboo, it will end up in them, the less offended we'll be by these types of things when they come up.

Seth Price 48:01

When you try to wrap words around what God the divine, whatever that is, is, what do you say to that if someone asks you, hey, what is that? What is God? What is that? All right, this? I told you, I end with the existential.

Sho Baraka 48:19

Yeah, I am very traditional in the sense that I just answered this question. I don't know if I can be very artistic. I've heard you know, Octavia Butler, talk about Goddess is power, basically. Right. And so that doesn't mean it's that he or she is a beam, it's the very essence of controlling something. And knowing you have that power and that control to change people's lives, that's a god. I like to think of it been more embodied in an actual energy and actual spirit that facilitates controls, determines but also allows things to happen, people to do. And that that person, that being that energy, that spirit actually cares. And it's not just hovering with without any kind of empathy. Because I think everything that nature cares, nature grows and gives nature punishes, when things go wrong, you feel that there was there's storms, there's viruses there the like nature interacts and it has a it's an organism that lives and it moves and it has it's been it thinks and to believe that those things didn't have some sort of intimate intelligent interaction with something to me feels like. Like there's there's there's nothing that watches over over us. I think that is to me, very naive, and I feel like that thing is God. I don't know what gender is, I don't know what it or he or she looks like, I just know that this is too beautiful of a design for it not to have been intentional. And we the way we operate, and we think we operate like gods. And so it just only makes sense that that complex didn't just come from the fact that we figured you know what somebody needs to control some stuff. I think that came from this idea that we are made from the very thing we want to emulate.

Seth Price 50:33

So I want to answer the question you asked earlier. So the Kanye 2009. That's the name of the song. I've been playing in the back of my mind, which makes it really hard to have a conversation. But all I keeps hearing is going to say it then, you know, which is not the way that it's saying in the song, the lyric in there, though, that I relate the most to where I like dialed in, and listened because I hate people named Sally. And I hate people named me. And I also hate that I hate people named Sally Mae. But there's a part in there that you say something like, like something about, you don't have enough money to solve problems and influence doesn't stop Sallie Mae from calling. And it's enough to drive somebody I don't remember all the lyrics, someone into depression or something like that. But I literally stopped rolling. And I'm like, that's absolute. That's why I got into what I do for a living because I didn't go to school to do what I do now. But Sallie Mae is like, hey, this six month deferral, hey, we will need that. Listen to this. I gave you some money. in quite a payday loan. I'm aware that you were 19 when we gave you like all this money, and you didn't know any better. You didn't do any better than probably should have done anyway. But still, that's how the system worked. They allow me to do it. And guess what that would appear? And maybe I did. I didn't buy like a Plymouth neon. Not even that Dodge Neon with money. That's not my fault. I needed a car. So yeah, I don't think it's your song with the song that spoken to me the most recently is we know Indian day. I think it's propaganda and I don't know who the other guy is. It might be swell. I'm not sure. So he's the lyric is Jesus died in the blackest way possible with his hands held high or his hands held up in his mama, they're watching them or something like that. And it's just Oh, it's not your song. Sorry. I didn't mean to digress. I know both of those loops. And I love both of those days. That's fine. Yeah, yeah. Where do you want people to go because they should buy the book. It's at books, a million here in in Stuarts draft Waynesboro, Charlottesville area that I live in, and I have moved it. There's an incap section there with a few other books, most of them are also blue. I do the same thing for every author that's on here. Like I did this for Elizabeth Johnson. I've done it for Diana bass. Like, if I'm in the store, and it's there. I'm moving to the front. So hey, it's time cost anything I know, in a few hours, some poor kid making $8 an hour is gonna have to fix it. But that's all right. But

Sho Baraka 52:55

hopefully those hours somebody has walked past and they saw this beautiful face. And they were like, Oh, yeah, that is strikingly gorgeous. I mean,

Seth Price 53:04

you see, that's when you like Chappelle, cuz that's the callback. I mean, there's no neon lights wrapped around you like you did the other day. But Gosh, people, there's people who have some interesting commentary on those pitches. Where do you want people to go their show? Where do they do the things that they need to do to support what you're doing

Sho Baraka 53:28

on all my platforms. My full name is ameesha. So it's ami sh o Baraka Ba, Ra K. So you'll find me on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, at that particular handle. Baraka, ology is my website, and I have an event that's going to be coming up called one Good night, and it's going to be a variety show. It's going to happen on June 26. And I think it was coming. Yes, Chappelle is gonna be there. He's gonna be on screen, but he'll be in the building. But it'll be virtual and also in person. So you know, just stay up on media or social media and you'll be able to enjoy some of the skits and short films and music that I'm you know, presenting with friends, so

Seth Price 54:14

it's gonna be fun. That's fun. Hey, man, I appreciate you being here. And yeah, I really enjoyed it. It was a it was a fun time. You were very fun interview and I don't say that to everybody. I appreciate it. And I'm on my way. I said, that's the end. Thank you so much for listening. The music in today's episode was used with permission from show Baraka, you'll find links to that on the playlist for the show on Spotify and anywhere else that you can find music. I want to give a huge and very special thank to Kathy Bruce, the newest member over at Patreon. People like Kathy and I would love to count you among them. Help the show can send you to be a show. If you've ever felt like hey, I'd like to support this throw a buck or two this way. Next week will be a replay again, of one of my favorites from the past archives. And then we will end the month with Jeremy and Jennifer diver. And that was also very fun conversation. I hope and I pray that the beginnings of this summer or late spring I don't actually know what season we're in have been truly amazing that you found new rhythms and new patterns of grace and rest. You're having fun, be blessed and I'll talk with you soon. And I'm on my way

Unknown Speaker 56:00

unlike hold up Can I dream? Everybody's dreaming, but not me. Manuel de his masterpiece is so vivid we know the architect homeboy we in the building no silly prayers tear the roof off tougher God via text we got a new car fans will exhaust you, hey, this was stolen your mail will always fail you keep on Jehovah. I'm saying great. I'm trying to push my brother's talented service.