The State of Georgia is home to some of Black America's best and brightest, and nowhere is this more evident than the City of Atlanta. Dr. Jones happens to be one of its most famous and powerful people. The man has a net worth of thirty million dollars and rubs elbows with the Hollywood elite, Georgia's top politicians, businesspeople and the like. The good doctor and pastor looks like he has it all. Dr. Jones and his wife Rosa Browne have two adult daughters, Josephine and Sylvie, both of which attend Auburn University. Today, the good doctor is trying to wow the people of Atlanta even before. Is there anything he cannot do?
"Mentoring is very important in the African American community," said Dr. Luther Jones. The six-foot-tall, dark-skinned and well-built preacher and Morehouse College alumnus looked sharp in a dark gray suit. In the assembly sat Black men and Black women from the various colleges and universities in the City of Atlanta, Georgia. Morehouse College men sat next to Spelman College women, Georgia State University folks and Clark Atlanta University people. The future of the Black American community was right there, and Dr. Jones had the privilege to speak to them.
In the front row sat Dr. Jones's wife Rosa Browne, a tall, curvy and brown-skinned woman originally from Suffolk County, Massachusetts. The First Lady of White Cloud Church was positively glowing. Next to Rosa Browne sat a very handsome and athletic young Black man. Trevor Jackson, a second-year student at Morehouse College, is both a member of the White Cloud Church and the good doctor and preacher's mentee. Rosa Browne and Trevor Jackson exchanged a smile as both watched Dr. Jones as he delivered a speech.
"The pastor looks good enough to eat," Trevor said with a grin, and Rosa nodded in agreement. Dr. Jones paused for applause after delivering his speech. The audience cheered him on, of course. Dr. Jones has a lot of followers all over the City of Atlanta, and some consider his megachurch more akin to a cult than anything else. The four-thousand-member church has two locations in Atlanta, and they opened a third in Macon, with another planned for Marietta. Black megachurches are big business in the American south. Let no one tell you anything different.
"Our boo looks tense, we must suck his dick properly," Rosa whispered, and Trevor nodded sagely. For over a year now, the two of them had been close friends. Dr. Jones is bisexual, a fact which must be kept secret because Black church folks are the most homophobic and biphobic denizens of the Planet Earth. The same Black women who collect effeminate gay Black male besties are also virulently biphobic, expressing disgust and rejection when a Black man is revealed to be bisexual. The good doctor has a good thing going on with his wife Rosa and his mentee Trevor. Nothing wrong with that.
After the speech, Dr. Jones stopped to speak to the media. Reporters from the SNN or Southern News Network covered the event. The Lieutenant Governor of the State of Georgia, Maximilian Tyrone Bland III was also in attendance. Governor George Wellington couldn't be in attendance because he was attending a political conference in Florida. Dr. Luther Jones is kind of a big deal in business and political circles. The man did just donate a million dollars to the Black Youth Mentorship Fund or BYMF. Some Black men truly give back to the community and Dr. Jones is one of them.
"The future of America belongs to men like you," said Lieutenant Governor Maximilian Tyrone Bland III as he shook hands with Dr. Jones. The media snapped up numerous pictures of the handsome, well-dressed Black men together. Some people in the State of Georgia believe that Bland intends to run for his boss position when the latter leaves office. As for Dr. Jones, he has his hands in many pies. Education, religion and politics, those are the things that make the State of Georgia go around. It's just the way of things down there...
Rosa got up and joined her husband, and Dr. Jones smiled at her and then took her hand into his mouth. As for Trevor Jackson, he stood in the background. As a tall, well-dressed and athletic young Black man, Trevor did not look out of place among such an audience. A sizeable number of America's best and brightest Black men and Black women were in attendance. The future doctors, lawyers, engineers, professors, journalists, police officers, businesspeople and other professionals of Black America attend Georgia's top schools and Dr. Jones is one of their idols. Of course, behind every great man is a great woman...
"I couldn't do it without you, honey," Dr. Jones said as he looked adoringly at his wife Rosa. Smiling, Rosa waved at the media while holding hands with her husband. When the two of them got married twenty three years ago, they were the talk of the town. Dr. Jones was thirty, and just beginning his ministry after completing his theology studies at Morehouse College and Georgia State University. Rosa had just moved to Atlanta after graduating from Boston College in Boston, Massachusetts. The two came from different worlds but fell in love. It can be said that a generous fate simply brought the two of them together.
"Team effort all the way," Rosa said, and as the media watched, she kissed her husband passionately. There were cheers all around. People hailed the minister and his wife. No one paid attention to the tall, handsome young Black man standing in the background. He appeared to be checking out both the handsome minister and his gorgeous wife, but no one noticed. The minister and his wife left in a nice limo, and were joined by their mysterious friend. The couple and their friend headed to their stately mansion, located in the Golden Aces neighborhood of Buckhead. All is right with their world...