
by James A. Bacon
In the 14th century, a popular movement known to historians as “flagellants” spread across Europe. Followers practiced “mortification of the flesh” by publicly pummeling themselves with knotted whips. By practicing self-denial and imitating the scourging of Jesus, they hoped to hasten the second coming and end of times.
A similar movement has taken root in the United States today, although adherents don’t inflict physical pain upon themselves. Rather, they flagellate themselves with shame for their sins — or, actually, the sins of their ancestors, such as racism, misogyny, slavery, and the dispossession of native lands.
John McWhorter, the center-left African-American author of Woke Racism: How a New Religion Has Betrayed Black America, makes the case, as his book title suggests, that wokeism bears all the hallmarks of a religion. Wokeism comprises a closed system of unfalsifiable beliefs and exhibits no tolerance of dissent. Transgressors risk condemnation and ostracism. Practitioners engage in performative rituals such as public acts of contrition and apology.
As a living, breathing confirmation of McWhorter’s argument that wokeism is a religion, I present to readers a “Prayer for Truth, Reparation, and Healing” composed by the Truth and Reparations Task Force of the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia.








