Wednesday, June 10, 2020

Racial Justice In the White Church -- Dr. Wells Rings a Bell for Equality



I have to tell you, at my church it is easy to not talk about racism. At my church, it is easy to dismiss as politics the economics of hundreds of years of systemic racism. But not talking and not acting is the path to destruction. We can could watch that on the news every night and ask if that is the future we want for ourselves.”

Steve Wells, Pastor of Houston South Main Baptist

Dr. Steve Wells, a Texas pastor, called on white churches to address racial injustice during George Floyd's funeral Tuesday afternoon, saying, “We are better than we used to be, but we are not as good as we ought to be.”

Wells began his message thanking the organizers for letting him speak because “everyone would have understood if said we don’t need to hear from any white people today.”

Wells continued …

If I could just have the privilege, I would like to say a word to white churches. We are better than we used to be, but we are not as good as we ought to be. That is not good enough, which means you have to take up the work of racial justice. Racism did not start in our lifetimes but racism can end in our lifetime.”

Before speaking at the funeral, Rev. Wells told his friend News10NBC’s Deanna Dewberry …

"You and I grew up in West Texas where people are kind of plain-spoken. And I remember someone saying, ‘Sometimes silence is golden, and sometimes it's just plain yellow.' This is the season to recognize racism is real, and it's a problem. Even if I don't know how to fix it, I have to recognize that it's real.”

While he applauds peaceful protests demanding change, Wells said protesters, policy change, and pastors all have a role to play. He explained …

"It's not enough to walk in the streets. We have to walk in the halls of power, and somebody's got to legislate. But why pastors? It’s because legislation isn't going to change a heart. We can write it down in a book, but until our hearts are changed, the world is not going to change."

God bless, Rev. Dr. Steve Wells. I don't know much about him, but his words rang so true. A short biography tells us …

Steve Wells has been pastor of South Main since March of 2003. He grew up in Lubbock, Texas. He attended Baylor University, where he earned a B.A. in Philosophy (1990). Steve was a member of the first graduating class of Baylor’s George W. Truett Theological Seminary, earning a Master of Divinity summa cum laude (1997) and a Doctor of Ministry (2003), concentrating in Preaching and Worship.

Before coming to South Main, Wells served as pastor of churches in Texas and Mississippi. Steve met his wife, Missy Yeary Wells, at Baylor. Steve and Missy were married in August 1990 and have three grown children: Rachel, Ben, and Joshua.

Well's message about “not being easy to talk about racism in his church” resonates throughout the country. Lip service is commonplace; however, honest dialogue about systemic racism is lacking. Ignoring the issue or simply praying about it does not evoke needed change. Churches must accept the challenge of being a force for needed change. Predominantly white churches must champion justice and spearhead the movement for minority justice.


In his new (2019) book, The Color of Compromise, Jemar Tisby (BA, University of Notre Dame, MDiv Reformed Theological Seminary) surveys the history of the Christian Church with an eye toward the innumerable moments when white American Christians could have interceded on behalf of racial justice, but did not.

Taken together, Tisby argues, from the founding of the United States to the present, these moments constitute an ignominious timeline spanning four centuries of suffering, so that today’s headlines are connected to seemingly ancient atrocities. By the end, it is clear that past and current events retain a striking similarity regarding the church and race.

Tisby explains …

Every time that the white community – especially Christians – failed to confront racism in its everyday, mundane forms, they created a context of compromise that allowed for an extreme act of racial terror like planting dynamite at a church ( a reference to 16th Street Baptist Church bombed in Birmingham, Alabama.) That’s the idea of complicity. It’s not that every Christian was a foaming-at-the-mouth racist hurling racial slurs and burning crosses on peoples’ lawns. It’s that when they had the opportunity to intervene in everyday ways, they chose complicity over confrontation, and this enabled a larger atmosphere of racial compromise.”

(Eric C. Miller. “The American Church’s Complicity in Racism: A Conversation
with Jemar Tisby.” Religion & Politics. April 2, 2019.)

Tisby explains that any talk of social justice in the church distracts from what “Christians should be “focused on – the Gospel.” He uses his book as an example. Tisby says …

Throughout history, Christian activists have always asserted that this is an artificial separation—that the two go together. So if you read the comments on some reviews of the book, or on social media posts promoting it, you see some of the same criticisms now that were made in response to activists throughout American history.

The main objection to The Color of Compromise has to do with whether Christians should be involved in these topics at all. It reflects, in my view, an over-spiritualizing of the Christian faith that ignores physical, material concerns like poverty, mass incarceration, voting rights, and other important issues.”

Many white churches uphold oppression through silence on racial injustice. When discussion of racialized violence stops at the church door, the result is an unbearable discordance for many observant Christians, particularly young black and brown Christians. Reverend Margaret Sawyer, an organizer at the Pioneer Valley Workers Center, says …

Even if it says on the (church) door that Black Lives Matter, culturally, a congregation has come together in a certain way over a certain period of time. Certain things are done, certain things are not done, and that makes (the church) less open.”

Now, Rev. Dr. Steve Wells has opened a new dialogue at a very crucial time. I am in hopes that not only will Christian white people praise his efforts, but also they will heed his words and initiate much-needed change for equity. These white Christians know racism is a sin. The question remains about how they will band together to defeat the old structure of systemic racism in America. Prayers are needed, yes … but actions are needed more now during the swell of consciousness about racial injustice.

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