214-351-1901
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“It is obvious today that America has defaulted on this promissory note [for life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness] insofar as her citizens of color are concerned. Instead of honoring this sacred obligation, America has given the Negro people a bad check, a check which has come back marked insufficient funds.” Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, March on Washington, 1963
“The strength of unequal pay rests on the notion of unequal value. It is an issue of equity.” Margaret “Midge” Purce
WORDS OF HOPE
It was on August 28, 1963 during the delivery of his iconic “I Have a Dream Speech” that Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King told the crowd of 250, 000 people gathered at the Lincoln Memorial that America had a debt to pay people of color.
Sixty years later that declaration is still true. One shameful manifestation is the pay inequality for African American women. They receive only 67 cents for every dollar non-Hispanic white men make. According to the National Women’s Law Center: “The wage gap costs Black women $1,891 per month, $22, 682 per year, and a staggering loss of $907, 680 over a 40 year career.” Trumpeting the effects of such disparity today are those observing Black Women’s Equal Pay Day, a time to raise awareness that Black women must work 7 months more than white males to earn their equivalent year’s salary.
A group of organizations collaborating to address these inequities proposes the following actions:
First, that we urge federal lawmakers for “swift passage of the Paycheck Fairness Act, which would strengthen the Equal Pay Act of 1963 to better combat pay discrimination and close the wage gap, including by protecting workers from retaliation for discussing pay, banning the use of prior salary history, and codifying pay data collection.”
Second, that we “contact governors and other state officials to ensure that the historic infrastructure investments recently enacted into law lead to better and higher-paid jobs for Black women. Without intentional interventions to address the underrepresentation of Black women in quality jobs supported by these unprecedented federal investments, we risk replicating current inequities and exclusions.” http://www.equalpaytoday.org/black-womens-equal-pay-day/
Among many other things, the Bible is an economic document. In both testaments, people of faith are called to care for the poor, the orphan, the widow, the stranger. Moreover, in Sabbatical years (Shemitah, in Hebrew) debts were forgiven. And when Jesus overturned the tables of the money changers at the temple, he asserted: My house will be called a house of prayer, but you are making it a den of robbers.” (Matthew 21: 12-13)
May we not be complicit in letting the legalized “den of robbers” in our own society to continue to devalue the gifts of Black women by wage inequity. Let us advocate for economic justice, so that our country’s debt to people of color is finally paid.
PRAYER
Oh God, Kindle within us the fire of justice on behalf of our Sisters. Amen.
DEVOTION AUTHOR
Dr. Pat Saxon
Cathedral of Hope
Proclaiming Christ Through Faith, Hope and Love
5910 Cedar Springs Road | Dallas, TX | 75235
214-351-1901
info@cathedralofhope.com