Surprisingly (to me at least), a high-up in the Southern Baptist Convention has gone off on racism, Sarah Posner reports.
After the failure yesterday of a grand jury to indict the New York police officer who was videotaped choking Eric Garner to death, Russell Moore, president of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, launched into a denunciation of racism in the church on the ERLC’s program “Questions and Ethics.”
Saying he was “shocked and grieved” by the news, Moore added:
Romans 13 says that the sword of justice is to be wielded against evildoers.
Now, what we too often see still is a situation where our African-American brothers and sisters, especially brothers, are more likely to be arrested, more likely to be executed, more likely to be killed. And this is a situation in which we have to say, I wonder what the defenders of this would possibly say. I just don’t know. But I think we have to acknowledge that something is wrong with the system at this point and that something has to be done.
Moore added that in the wake of Ferguson, he has called for “churches that come together and know one another and are knitted together across these racial lines.” In response, though, he said, “I have gotten responses and seen responses that are right out of the White Citizen’s Council material from 1964. In my home state of Mississippi, seeing people saying there is no gospel issue involved in racial reconciliation.”
“Are you kidding me?” Moore exclaimed incredulously.
If even the Southern Baptist Convention can see it…
Blanche Quizno says
Except that they can’t. In “Divided by Faith: Evangelical Religion and the Problem of Race in America” (Michael O. Emerson/Christian Smith, 2000, Oxford University Press), the authors make the following observations:
The text cites two letters, one from The Black Person to Dear White Person, and a response, published in Christianity Today magazine in 1971 (see page scan at http://tinyurl.com/kcn9wt9).
The Evangelical Christian solution identifies racism as a “sin” problem, which can only be resolved by changing people’s hearts through the grace of Jesus Christ or some such.
What is clear is that those who are profiting from this status quo have found a means of feeling they are not contributing to the problem – “Not me! I have black friends!”
This is a critical distinction, because societal problems require societal solutions, whereas individual problems can only be resolved on an individual basis by those individuals themselves.
This goes a long way toward helping explain the conservative Evangelical hostility toward feminism as well, I think. But let’s proceed:
And so you see how neatly racism fits within the conservative, anti-government, anti-“entitlement”-programs attitudes so prominently displayed within the Tea Party, for example. This is why so many Evangelical Christians feel right at home within the Tea Party.
And the Southern Baptist Convention is the largest Protestant denomination, with more than TWICE as many members as the next largest. And as for that comment that “there’s not that much division in the Christian community”:
“We must face the sad fact that at eleven o’clock on Sunday morning when we stand to sing ‘In Christ there is no East or West,’ we stand in the most segregated hour of America.” – Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., March 13, 1968
What’s changed? Church congregations remain overwhelmingly mono-ethnic.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s response to “YOU CAN’T LEGISLATE MORALITY; YOU HAVE TO CHANGE HEARTS FIRST”:
What may come as a surprise, though, is that clergy tend to be far more progressive than their congregations. A number of white clergymen actively supported the Civil Rights Movement, marching with protesters etc. The great majority found themselves fired from their churches within a year.
Sorry this ended up so long – difficult problems do not readily lend themselves to 25-words-or-less summaries.
Crimson Clupeidae says
To Russell Moore, I say this: “Who are you and what did you do with the real Southern Baptists?!?”
Sorry, I got nothing meaningful here, and post one was a great, factual, informative post!