top of page
Search


Reap What You Sow Mondays with Tony™: Seeds Sown in Chains Still Grow —What Frederick Douglass Teaches Us about Faith, Literacy, and Harvest Beyond Oppression
Born enslaved around 1818, Frederick Douglass was denied what slaveholders feared most: knowledge.
He later wrote that slaveholders understood something dangerous:
"Knowledge unfits a man to be a slave."
So Douglass sowed anyway.
He taught himself to read—illegally, quietly, persistently. Every letter learned was seed. Every word understood was resistance. Every sentence absorbed was preparation.

Tyrone Tony Reed Jr.
Feb 93 min read
bottom of page