On the first Sunday after he became a Georgia senator, Rev Raphael Warnock described his election and the changing scene at the US Capitol – from insurrection to inauguration – as forms of divine messaging.
“Can I just close this sermon by telling you that this very week, in the very place where we saw the ugliness and the nastiness, I believe I heard just some subtle echoes of the spirit, which suggest to me that the wind of the spirit is moving across the land?” said Warnock, preaching in a prerecorded message on 24th January from the sanctuary of Atlanta’s historic Ebenezer Baptist Church to a virtual congregation.
Rev Raphael Warnock preaches at Ebenezer Baptist Church, on Sunday, 24th January, in Atlanta. PICTURE: Video screengrab
The sermon came four days after he was sworn in holding a Bible he had received in 2005 when he became senior pastor of the church where Rev Martin Luther King, Jr, was once co-pastor.
Through most of his half-hour sermon, the camera focused on Warnock in his pulpit but, near the end, as he spoke of the events in Washington in recent days, news footage appeared of the mob storming the US Capitol, the swearing-in of Vice President Kamala Harris and the inaugural speech of President Joe Biden.
“I hear the sound of the first woman vice president, who is also the first African American vice president, who’s also the first Asian American vice president, speak her version of our grand American story,” he said, before speaking of himself in the third person, along with fellow new senators Jon Ossoff of Georgia and Alex Padilla of California.
“Then I heard her swear in Georgia’s first Jewish senator and Georgia’s first Black senator and California’s first Latino senator. I heard a mighty, multi-racial coalition rise up and say this is what the kingdom of God is all about. This is what God has been trying to tell you all the time.”
Warnock, one of a number of members of Congress who have simultaneously led congregations and served at the Capitol, titled the sermon for his church’s 9am and 11am services “On Making Your Next Move.”
Early in the service, without specifically stating the words “senator” or “election,” he expressed his appreciation to those watching for their recent encouragement.
“I want to thank you for all of your support, for all of your love, for all the ways in which I have felt the power and encouragement of the saints over the last several months for me and my family,” he said. “We are the family of God. We are the Ebenezer Baptist Church. Now let’s worship God from whom all blessings flow.”