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Homecoming 2025

Dr. Michael Eric Dyson Kicks off Howard University’s ‘One of One’ Homecoming Week at Andrew Rankin Memorial Chapel

Michael Eric Dyson - Call to Chapel Oct 25 -1

Renowned author, lecturer, preacher, media personality, and distinguished professor at Vanderbilt University, Dr. Michael Eric Dyson, kicked of Howard University’s 2025 Homecoming week with a timely message focused on “healing the land.” 

Michael Eric Dyson - Call to Chapel Oct 25

Dyson spoke to those gathered at Andrew Rankin Memorial Chapel with his signature blend of intellectualism and humor, mixed in with a good dose of the word — which on Sunday, Oct. 19, came from 2 Chronicles 7:14. 

The verse reads: “If my people who are called by my name humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and heal their land.”

The professor began by discussing Black language and the shifts in culture it’s brought about. 

“David Skinner’s marvelous book, ‘The Story of Ain’t,’ talks about the shifts in the culture in the aftermath of this the Second World War, when America emerged as a political superpower and a cultural broker, and moved from intellectual elites to the middle class, as the nation embrace more democratic norms,” said Dyson. “Black language has always been received as vulgar and detestable until it sneaks its way into the heart of American culture. I mean, what would American language be without Black language?”

This discussion of language was but one example used by Dyson to illustrate the diversity that’s become a part of America and of its land, and the contributions that people of all backgrounds and identities have made to it. Therefore, no one group can claim authority over it — or Christianity. 

While some may believe Christianity to be exclusive to a specific identity, Dyson emphasized to those in attendance that God’s love is for all and noted the dangers that can come from a belief that racial identity outweighs all.

“We must be reminded whose people we are. We must be reminded of our connection to God when our connection to our native land or our national identity gets the greatest priority,” explained Dyson. “We don’t owe primary allegiance to a piece of land, a specific geography, a stretch of terrain, but to God who demands loyalty above all.” 

He continued, “the tragedy of our times is that too many of us who call ourselves Christians, pay primary allegiance to our national identity.” 

In a system where some are “putting the flag above the cross and placing their ethnicity above their religious beliefs,” people of color or those who identify as LGBTQ or Muslim for example are made to be subordinate or inferior, Dyson shared. 

“They are assumed to need God’s redemption from their sin of otherness. Their sin is their skin. Their sin is their orientation. Their sin is their ethnicity. Their sin is their very existence,” said Dyson. But this is not true. 

“All human beings that reflect God are in the image of God, no matter their faith, their face, or their place in the world,” said Dyson, again stressing that we all “belong to God” and must therefore love and act accordingly in order to bring about a healing over the land. 

“The word this morning reminds us that we are to be called by God’s name. If we are bold enough to make the claim that we are called by God’s name, we must accept the responsibility that goes with acting in God’s name. If we’re going to be called by God’s name, we must represent the name with love, compassion, and care — not hate, disrespect, and bigotry.” 

 

View the Entire Service 

During the service, members of the Andrew Rankin Memorial Beacon Liturgical Dance Ministry performed to “Bless Your Name” by Miranda Curtis. During the performance, the music track began to cut out, but the students, who were performing for the very first time, kept on dancing. Dyson said that the resilience and push-through demonstrated by the dancers in that moment exemplifies the hope he has, even in this particular moment in history. 

Andrew Rankin Memorial Beacon Liturgical Dance Ministry
Members of the Andrew Rankin Memorial Beacon Liturgical Dance Ministry perform to “Bless Your Name.” 

“What gives me hope is to see young people who haven’t given up. When those dancers today, despite the distortion, despite the technical difficulties, continued to perform — where the technology failed, but the technique rose and the technique prevailed,” he said.  “And then for them to look past the distortion and past the noise, so to speak, and still keep up and keep pace with an internal metronome — an internal sense of time and pace — that to me, is a metaphor for what Black people have done from time immemorial, and we transmit this to our kids.” 

He continued. “I was so happy to see them perform with such dignity, grace, and vitality at the same time. That’s a metaphor for what we have to do in the midst of this autocratic, dictatorial demagogic culture, in which we live today.” 

 

Howard’s “One of One” Homecoming 

Dyson is a national figure who in many ways embodies what it means to be “One of One” in several areas and disciplines. In fact, on the very same weekend, Dyson was presented with the Hip-Hop Scholar Award by the Hip Hop Museum — the first scholar to receive the honor. That said, when asked how today’s students can contribute to the legacy of Howard University and show up in this moment demonstrating their own “One of One” spirit, Dyson suggested that the answer lies in realizing one’s ambitions and living up to their “great potential.” 

“I see in these students a future that looks so much like the greats of the past. These young people with intelligence, with poise — I was so struck by the level of self-possession and control of their own bodies and spirits and minds in the midst of a culture that has been chaotic and that has tried to traumatize them,” he said. “So, the best way to do it is to be true to yourself, to maximize your potential, to live out your own ambition, and to live up to the ideals that this institution plants in them that are high to begin with.” 

He continued, “Black excellence is a norm here, and that’s a beautiful thing.”

All photos by Cedric Mobley.