Baptists seeking ways to bridge racial divide - Word&Way

Baptists seeking ways to bridge racial divide

(Shuttersock)

The death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and the killing of others elsewhere at the hands of white police officers and the recent massacre of nine African-American churchgoers by a white supremacist have grabbed public attention to issues of racism, violence and injustice.

racial divide story 193278458Many Baptists have joined the discussion and seek ways to help heal racial divides.

“The racial divide, not just in St. Louis but across the nation,…is a real issue that needs to be faced head-on,” Jim Breeden, executive director of St. Louis Metro Baptist Association, said. He hopes churches will not try “ignoring it or acting like it does not exist.”

Breeden rejects the idea that events in Ferguson and the similar killing in Baltimore set back race relations.

“I believe they just simply revealed where we really were, that many of us were living with a false perception,” he explained. “I am encouraged that we are almost forced to deal with the divide.”

Local churches, his association, the Missouri Baptist Convention and the Southern Baptist Convention have held prayer meetings, special services and community cleanups in the aftermath of events in Ferguson, Breeden noted.

“We must be intentional and go to areas we’ve not gone before,” he added. “In this day and age, it’s a sin if white pastors and church leaders do not have African-American friends and are not breaking bread together and our families getting together. We need to build intentional relationships in our personal lives, our families and our churches.”

Working together for Jesus

Harry Riggs, pastor of First Baptist Church in Lincoln, Neb., thinks churches must have conversations about race, but warns, “It will be hard!”

Harry RiggsHarry RiggsWhen the predominately white American Baptist congregation called him as pastor 10 years ago, he wondered if they were really ready for an African-American pastor. Over the years, as the church transitioned to a more multicultural congregation, both he and the church changed, he said.

Riggs noted that they have worked “not to just sweep [racial differences] under the rug but actually lean into them.” He added that “you can’t skip over the pain” in the search for unity.

“Racial reconciliation is not the right term for America because there has never been a time in America where race was not an issue of above and below or power and injustice,” he said. “We’ve never been ‘conciled,’ we’ve never had a conciliatory relationship to begin with.

“So I think the right term is to have a racial redemption conversation. We have to, as a church, let God redeem us.”

Baptists must consider carefully how their understanding of Jesus’ return impacts their thinking and actions on difficult issues like racial redemption.

“Our eschatology makes a difference,” he said. “If our eschatology simply is ‘come, Lord Jesus, come’ and the world is going to get worse and worse and worse…then we’re not going to do anything.”

Riggs hopes Baptists instead hold an eschatology where “God wants to partner with us to be his redemptive agents in the world and, therefore, I need to do my little part.

“What does my view of end times say about how I’m living right now?” he added. “Jesus is going to pull us out of this mess versus Jesus is coming back, but he’s looking for laborers who’ve been faithful in the work.”

Hope in conversation

On the one-year anniversary of the Michael Brown shooting, Central Baptist Theological Seminary will host worship and dialogue in St. Louis. “A Day of Hope: One Year Later” will take place Aug. 8 at Third Baptist Church.

The event will include a screening of the EthicsDaily.com film “Beneath the Skin: Baptists and Racism.” Terrell Carter, a former police officer who now serves in various ministry and community roles; Lornetta Chaney-Jones, who teaches English in at a St. Louis public school; and Molly Fleming, who leads a national faith-based effort to end predatory lending.

Carter sees the event as a way to increase dialogue among Baptists on issues of racism, policing and justice.

“Within a safe and supportive environment, the event will offer people the opportunity to engage in conversation centered around the events that helped to spark national debate over police-citizen relations,” he said.

Attendees will connect “with a diverse group of Baptists” and “learn about community-based resources and strategies that can help with future conversations and ongoing concerns related to race and ethnicity,” he said.

Carter hopes “Baptists of all kinds” will “be honest with each other and take tangible steps to work together.”

“With all of the challenges that the church is facing, we can’t afford to act like we exist in a vacuum or are singlehandedly fighting these battles alone,” he added.

Carter said he remains “discouraged by the overwhelming silence of many of our congregations.

“I understand that some of these hot-button issues are not a daily concern for certain congregations. But it has been disappointing to know that many of our affluent brothers and sisters, whether black or white, have essentially said, ‘That’s their problem, not ours.’

“We seem disconnected from each other and forget that what affects one part of the body will have an influence on the health of the body overall,” he said.

Brian Kaylor is a freelance writer and author based in Jefferson City, Mo.