Where the Chains Couldn’t Reach
shaped from the spirit, struggle, and truth


Where was God?
The question rose like smoke
from the belly of ships
where breathing was borrowed
and names were unspoken.
It rose from cane fields
where hands calloused into prayer,
from whispered hymns
braided into night air
so softly the overseer
could not hear hope being born.

Across four hundred years
the world built engines of profit—
iron, sugar, cotton, law.
Men mapped the oceans
but not their own conscience,
measured bodies in coin
but not the cost to their souls.

Chaplains blessed the voyage,
sermons sanctified the whip,
and scripture was bent
until mercy could not recognize its own face.
Yet the story never ended there.
For the same book that empire twisted
trembled with thunder
when the enslaved opened it:

Exodus breaking like dawn,
prophets shouting from dusty margins,
a Messiah who walked with the bruised
and called the captives free.
Once these words entered wounded hearts,
they refused to stay silent.

In brush arbors where moonlight
slipped through the cracks,
a second church rose—
a sanctuary stitched
from courage and code.
Spirituals carried double freight:
worship in the open,
liberation in the undertow.

“Go Down Moses” was a roadmap,
“Wade in the Water” a warning,
“Steal Away” a promise
that freedom had ears.
Leaders rose like lanterns:
Tubman following visions into the night,
Douglass sharpening truth
until it cut chains clean.

Every slowdown, every lesson shared,
every family held together
against the auction block’s hunger—
these were sermons too,
spoken not by preachers
but by the unbroken.

And when the chains finally fell,
the church became a house rebuilt:
a school, a ballot box,
a shelter for dreams,
a revolution humming in four-part harmony.
Faith, once conscripted to conquer,
became the drumbeat of dignity—
the spine of movements
that refused to bow again.

So where was God?
Perhaps in every act of resistance,
every whispered psalm,
every step northward in the dark.
But the harder question,
the one history cannot hide,
is where humanity was—
and why so few stood
when so many fell.

Yet even that failure
cannot quiet the testimony:
that conscience lived
in the very people the world tried to break,
and sang through them like fire.

About the Creator
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