Ein Weiter Ort (A Broad Place)
Ein Weiter Ort (A Broad Place)
I wrote this poetic homily for a spoken word workshop for Swiss Reformed pastors. The workshop ended with an event called “Preacherslam” where it was performed before a congregation.
Bible Text
You have set my feet in a broad place.
Du stellst meine Füsse auf weiten Raum. – Psalm 31:9
Homily
You have set my feet in a broad place;
A place I never knew.
A place so big it holds the world, and all the planets too.
A place my grandma talked about, where all of life’s distress
Evaporates, like morning dew, and every soul is blessed.
Blessed to dance without a song,
And blessed to sing without a tune.
Blessed to ring without a bell, and rise above this earthly hell.
A hell so small, it crushes you, and squeezes out your tears,
And a hell so dark, it crushes me, and brings to light my fears.
And yet, You have put me in a good place.
A place so rich, the poor can spend their wealth without a dime,
And a place my mother talks about, where late is always time.
A place where “friends to enemies” is not enough to mend,
But wounds are healed by enemies, who join the fam as kin.
O yes, You have put us in a good place;
A Table filled with bread.
Where wine is poured with hands of hope, and hopelessness is dead.
So now I come to prop my feet, and watch it all so broad.
While planets pass, and earth is still.
The Gift, the Grace
The Gift, this Place
The Gift, the Grace of God.
Peace.
This poem is © Scotty J. Williams
Dear Proverbs 31 Woman
Dear Proverbs 31 Woman
While in seminary I heard a number of my female classmates speak out against the Proverbs 31 model of womanhood. I, for a number of reasons, agreed with them and wrote this spoken word piece to show solidarity. My classmates enjoyed it with much laughter when I performed it live at a seminary talent show.
Dear Proverbs 31 Woman, KEEP AWAY FROM ME.
Keep your rhetoric of hypocrisy, guised as virtuous femininity.
Keep your church hats, and church shoes, and church smiles that make me sing the church blues
As I drink booze, so confused at how I once again missed the clues.
Clues that always come together, the moment my heart is bound with fetters
And once again I write this letter, hoping that next time I’ll do better,
In choosing what will catch my eye, while I just let you “walk on by”,
As I sigh and no longer cry, and thank God while looking up to the sky.
HALLELUJAH! HALLELUJAH! THANK YOU JESUS! SHE PASSED ME BY!
NO MORE Unbiblical domination, and Biblical emasculation
As angels wait in hesitation, to offer their illumination
To this poor angel, whose wings you’ve clipped
To this poor actor, whose script you’ve flipped
To this poor minstrel, whose song you’ve skipped to play your song
Over and over again.
NO MORE Woman Thou art loosed, as bishops place the hangman’s noose
Around my broken neck, unfree, to live and father progeny
And there my soul swings up above as haters teach me how to love.
And below me stands you virtuous woman….
Writing in the diary of a mad Black woman.
So read my diary when you can
To: A MAD Black woman; From: A TIRED Black–Creole man.
–Tired of doing all the work.
–Tired of being called a sorry jerk.
–Tired of trying to do all the “right” stuff.
–Tired of not being spiritual enough.
–Tired of changing because you say change.
–Tired of rearranging because you say rearrange.
–Tired of wool and flax unspun; Verses 13 and 19
–Tired of no cooking at dawn; Verse 15
–Tired of a vineyard unplanted; Verse 16
Tired…..Tired……TIRED
But not too tired to drink to Thee and bid Thee Farewell,
And turn to heaven, away from this hell,
Where a down to earth woman will come to my cell;
And with an open heart finally break your spell.
And so Proverbs 31 woman,
Church hat, church shoes, church smile woman.
Unbiblical Domination, Biblical Emasculation woman.
Wing clipping, script flipping, song skipping woman.
Woman Thou art loosed, hangman’s noose, Teach me how to love woman.
Diary of a Mad Black, White, Asian, Hispanic, and everything else Woman woman.
Fire Baptized, Tongue Talkin, Holiness, Saved, Sanctified, Filled with Casper the Friendly….
Excuse me…..Please Disregard that…What I meant to say was….
Filled with the “Holy Ghost”, Trinity Broadcasting Network woman.
KEEP AWAY FROM ME.….YA HEARD ME?
Sincerely not yours,
Psalm 102 Man
This poem is © Scotty J. Williams
The Greatest Story Never Told
The Greatest Story Never Told
This poem is about two indentured servants, on White and one Black, in early America. They are like brothers until a series of negative forces split them apart.
A Tale of Two Brothers
Many stories I have, many folks call them fables.
But hear this story of a man at a table,
As another man looks out from a doorway
In a cold, dead silence with nothing to say.
Are they strangers that despise each other?
No I say, they happen to brothers,
Brothers who rarely cross each others way,
Brothers as different as night and day.
Hear this story that many don’t want to hear,
Of a beginning of bliss, not one of tears.
In a garden like heaven vast and broad,
Where Brother Night and Brother Day communed with God.
They grew in diverse knowledge and wisdom,
Keeping alive the ancient Solomonic tradition.
And after a youth of divine things,
Brother Night and Brother Day left the garden to be kings.
Meditate on this story of power on high,
As Brother Night and Brother Day built towers to the sky.
Basking each morning in radiance so true,
Till new lands they discovered and their kingdoms they outgrew.
Casting down their golden crowns like holy elders of the light,
Brother Night and Brother Day went off to seek a different life.
So I tell on this story with glee,
Of kings now servants fervently searching for opportunity.
They traveled together across the new land,
Until they found opportunity in the hands of the Man.
The Man was cruel, the Man was cold,
Men came to him free and slaves they were sold.
In the midst of all this the brothers stayed together and toiled the Man’s land,
Reaping crops watered with their sweat and blood.
Only to see the fruits of their labors snatched by this minister of the gospel of greed.
Hear oh people of days gone by,
Like a tempest in the sea under a stormy sky.
In these days cold became their hearts,
And Brother Night and Brother Day were soon apart.
No more was the alliance of the images of God,
For now upon the predestined union did The Man trod;
For he had gotten his victory
And poisoned the mind of a man once free,
Giving brother day the aristocracy.
High in mansions in this new land
Brother Day ate the fruits sown by Brother Night’s hand.
He forgot the days in the garden of his past,
He forgot the God who had held him steadfast.
He forgot Brother Night who loved him most,
He forgot their wives mutilated at the whipping post.
And there he sat in luxuries of this world,
Subject to the will of the diabolical god who usurps the hearts of men.
Listen to this story of two brothers in a nation
Caught within a sacrilegious transubstantiation,
Where men become cattle and cattle become men
To justify an unjust pagan theology.
And Brother Night fights for his humanity
While Brother Day seeks economic efficiency.
Sitting in the abode of shadows enlightened truth comes to an oppressed prophet singing Louis Armstrong:
(Sing this part )
I see skies of blue
And clouds of white,
The bright blessed day,
The dark sacred night,
And I think to myself……
O sacred night, and blessed day co–exist…co–mingle in your Makers delight.
Overcome the abomination birthed from the lies of false prophets and the fathers of a nation.
Overcome together and swim through infested waters.
Overcome and restore what was torn asunder.
Overcome and sing with the voice of thunder.
Overcome and be free of the conditioning of a pagan deity,
Who under a cloak of conformity feeds you destructive, stereotypical, fallacies.
And so Brother Night sings “We shall overcome”,
But he shall not overcome, until Brother Day comes on over.
And they remember those days……
Those ancient days……
When……they….. were……
Brothers
This poem is © Scotty J. Williams
In God We Trust: American Evangelicalism Explained
In God We Trust: American Evangelicalism Explained
October 2021
This paper presented during a lecture at the University of Zürich’s Faculty of Theology. The subject was American Evangelicalism and what led members of this movement to join the Religious Right and MAGA Movement.
To read this paper, click on the button below.
True Reconciliation - Fighting Racism in the Church
True Reconciliation: How to Deal With Racism in the Church
September 2021
This is paper was presented at Mission 21’s 2021 Summer School. The theme was Between Racism and Respect: Christian Missions and Churches.
To read this paper, click on the button below.
The New Reformed Pastor: Zwinglian Wisdom for Modern Ministers
The New Reformed Pastor: Zwinglian Wisdom for Modern Ministers
May 2015
This is my doctoral dissertation. It focuses on improving Reformed pastoral practice through Ulrich Zwingli’s Eucharistic theology.
To read this dissertation, click on the button below.
Fatherly Advice: The Patristic Improvement of Black Liberation Theology
Fatherly Advice: The Patristic Improvement of Black Liberation Theology
April 2009
This thesis was a response to critiques of James Cone’s Black Liberation theology. Various scholars have noted that Cone’s Black Christ has became ineffective in addressing the needs of Black people . To address this issue I present an alternative norm from Patristic theology. This new norm was the Cosmic Christ of St. Maximus the Confessor.
To read this thesis, click on the button below.
Celebration, Not Toleration: MLK Day Reflections
Celebration, Not Toleration
MLK Day Reflections
Affirmation
Every morning I give my son a special affirmation, and for this MLK Day I gave him one from my mother. As a boy I would hear her say whenever I faced mistreatment:
“Go to where you are celebrated, and not just tolerated.”
This phrase was more than words to soothe my wounded feelings. It was a proverb that my mother lived, and continues to live, as Black people have done for centuries. Though we have needed to make good impressions for survival, we have never been a people to settle for tables of tolerence. We have walked away to build tables of our own, and this is the heart and main point of Dr. King’s dream.
Tables
As I prepared to give my son the words that I once heard from his grandmother, I began to think of the tables that existed in our family. Some of them are moments past preserved in photo albums, while others are places and heirlooms handed down from loving Elders. In my closet is a dress shirt and a handkerchief from my grandfather, which he wore on days without a feast or special celebration. He would tell me, “Though life will go bad, you should never look like a vagabond. Good things will eventually come to you, so dress well to receive them”. This is the reason I rarely dress casual in public. My formal flare is an act of joy and hopeful celebration.
Another table in my family is the story of my great-grandfather, Nonc George Mathis Williams, from whom my son gets his middle name. At the height of Jim Crow in southern Louisiana, he purchased land and built a house for his wife and children in Pointe-Coupée. These things remain in our family to this very day, and are testaments to the truth of Black life which is more than pain and struggle. They show that to be what we are is a mix of beauty and brokenness, and even in the darkest times we are free to choose the former.

Looking back to Dr. King one will not just see a prophet, but a person who chose beauty and boldly enjoyed his blessings. In addition to pictures of him on a stage or at a pulpit, one can see him off of the mountaintop and in the valley like the rest of us. There is a smiling boy and a student at Morehouse College, or a husband on his wedding day and a father with his children. Each picture shows Dr. King at a table of celebration, and enjoying the freedom he mentioned as he closed his speech in Washington.
What I Have Built
On this year’s MLK Day my son and I gazed at the tables that I have built. They are a children’s book with a story from our ancestors, and pictures hanging in his room that I painted to bring the tale to life. But along with this story is my story as a father, and before that as a husband, brother, son, and other roles that I am blessed to have. I pray that this will help my son choose beauty over brokenness, and to never settle for toleration in spaces that reject his heart and mind.
Our people are often wanted for their talents but not their hearts and minds, and the dream of Dr. King was a day when this would not be so. He imagined a world where we could sit at tables beyond our own, and find our thoughts and feelings embraced and celebrated with respect and love.
The Elephant and the Whale Audiobook released
The Elephant and the Whale Audiobook released
End of December 2021
To celebrate the end of 2021 and the beginning of 2022, I have decided to release the audio version of my children’s book on New Year’s Eve. Because it is also Kwanzaa, those who buy it on that day will get a rebate. The audiobook can be purchased in the store here on my website.
Introduction video
Product and pricing

The Elephant and the Whale
€ 18.00 – € 30.00Price range: € 18.00 through € 30.00John Bunyan (Final Entry)
Dancing with Divines
December 23, 2021 (Thursday)
Twenty-Sixth Day of Advent
Final Entry
Divine

Today’s Divine is John Bunyan. He is best known for his book, “The Pilgrim’s Progress”, which has been translated into more than 200 languages and has never been out of print.
Entry
Prayer
O Giver of all good things, help me to have true charity, and to give with joyful selflessness as Elizabeth gave to Mary. Give me a heart of help that goes beyond this season, and calls me to a way of life with selfless care for others. Through Jesus Christ I pray. Amen.










