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Metropolitan AME pastor’s new book offers ancestral veneration as guide to civic engagement

(RNS) — Though often linked to Black diasporas and Indigenous culture, the practice is deeply rooted in American culture, said the Rev. William Lamar IV.
Metropolitan AME pastor’s new book offers ancestral veneration as guide to civic engagement
“Ancestors: Those Who Bless Us, Curse Us, and Hold Us” and author William H. Lamar IV. (Photo courtesy of Metropolitan AME)

(RNS) — When visiting his maternal grandmother’s house in Florida, the Rev. William Lamar IV remembered feeling “frightened” when he stared at the picture of a great-aunt hung up prominently on the wall.

It wasn’t until his grandmother explained what the portrait represented that he began appreciating it.

“This picture of Aunt Viney is the first ancestor that reached out for me beyond time and space, to teach me something about who I was, biologically and genetically,” Lamar said in a recent interview with Religion News Service. “But also to teach me about what kind of human being I was supposed to be.”


Today, Lamar is the pastor of Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church in Washington, D.C., a historic Black church that was vandalized by Proud Boys members in 2020 and, after a lawsuit, was awarded the trademark rights to the alt-right group’s logo. In his book, “Ancestors: Those Who Bless Us, Curse Us, and Hold Us,” releasing Tuesday (March 3), Lamar hopes to share what ancestral veneration has taught him about civic engagement and navigating the current political moment.

“This idea of lifting up ancestors, designing space ancestrally, is to always remind us of humanity,” he said. “My grandparents, great-grandparents, people, my parents’ generation … they taught us to be human.”


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