Cheryl Jeanne Sanders grew up in Washington, D.C. The title of her doctoral thesis was "Slavery and Conversion: An Analysis of Ex-slave Testimony." She noted in an interview at Harvard that she was 'fascinated by oral histories, fascinated by people giving religious testimonies." Sanders is the author of several books and articles related to Christian ethics, African-American religious history, Pentecostalism, and
womanist theology. In 2018, two of her books,
Empowerment Ethics for a Liberated People and Ministry at the Margins: The Prophetic Mission for Women, Youth, and the Poor, were included in a list of recommended reading for Black History Month by CBE International. Sanders is also an ordained minister in the Church of God. She is the senior pastor of the Third Street Church of God in
Washington, D.C., where she has been in ministry since 1995; she has been the senior pastor there since 1997. Third Street is also the same church where she was raised as a child. In an interview in T
he Washington Post, about abortion rights, Sanders held that the bible may be "pro-life" but expressed an unwillingness to be associated with the political movement. Sanders has cautioned against over simplifying "terrorists" as evil, noting that the "war" against anti-Black terrorism in during the
civil rights movement was "won" by righteousness and not weapons. At a speech given in 2014 at the Martin Luther King Jr., Lecture Series at
Fuller Theological Seminary, Sanders highlighted seven leadership roles that King demonstrated, which she felt should be emulated by clergy and religious leaders. They were "orator; organizer; opportunist; optimist; operative; organic intellectual; and oracle." == Works ==