As we approach the coming General Assembly
to be held in Mobile many of our presbyteries have been discussing the idea of
an Assembly Confession and Repentance concerning racism, especially during the
Civil Rights period of our nation. I have
been involved in several discussions concerning this idea, and seen a few
different proposed overtures. I want to
make some observations about what I have heard in discussion.
One of the popular overtures has come out of
Missouri, and it stakes out a covenantal type claim to the sins of our past and
to our overall church. In seeming
opposition an overture has arisen out of South Carolina which declines to make
such a connection and rather simply condemns racism and calls for it to be
repented of by those who persist in it.
If there were no Missouri overture the South Carolina one might seem
something easy on which to join and sign.
As it is, it is a diversion and rejection of the ownership of our sins,
and thus not simply inadequate but, in my opinion, a representation of a state
of denial.
For some the SC overture might be an escape
either into self-righteousness, or an angry rejection of blame for what is
hardly deniable. I grant that others might honestly be confused but I am afraid
the drift toward this alternative has pernicious consequences. There should be
no confusion since the historical facts of some our founders taking Scripture
out of context to defend segregation, ban inter-racial marriage, and thus aid
and abet the demeaning, image of God denying and often violent racism of De Jure
segregation has been clearly documented.
I have heard some say that even though
these things might be true those who held racist views “lived in another era.” The question isn’t what historical period
they lived in, and some of course are still living who held and stated those
views, but were their views wrong, were they in fact sinful? If the answer is, “yes, those views and the
actions they supported were wrong, and yes they were sinful” then have they
repented or at least renounced them? If
they have not repented or renounced them, has the church which gave them
shelter and even prominence repented and renounced those sinful statements and
actions?
As far as I am aware no one has asked for a “witch
hunt” to drum out anyone who published error or evil, or whose congregation
obstinately refused inclusion of various races and ethnicities. We have not sought to lynch those who refused
to love their own brothers and sisters of the Spirit and thus put the lie to
the image that they truly loved God. No,
only that folks own up to what happened, and what should have happened, and
help bring healing and unity in the church.
The fact is that the Matthew 18 process has been gently attempted, and
not only rejected but condemned as an attack on persons of prominence.
Thank God our testimony as a continuing
church is not simply that of those who wished to continue segregation. Jesus has always had heroes, in the south and
in the Presbyterian Church, who stood up for truth, and loved everyone, and called
for justice. The refusal to distance
ourselves from the words and actions of those who advocated injustice keeps us from
properly celebrating those who were champions of it
As long as there is an obstinate and
stubborn refusal to humbly admit the truth, and accept the reality that this
has brought shame to the message of Christ, it will cause African Americans who
are drawn to the Reformed faith and wish to join our fellowship to stumble over
what it is we actually represent. It
will put them in a place of severe cultural and ethnic challenge within their
own cultural groups, and cause pain in their own conscience.
I have heard some Elders say they disagreed
with some things that happened during that Civil Rights period, and claim that
the Civil Rights acts of 1964 and 1965 were wrong and made mistakes. This of course has nothing to do with the
issue at hand, it is an irrelevant comment.
The overture from Missouri and such as those that agree with its spirit
are not a defense of any particular legislation. This is not an entrance into the affairs of
the magistrate or the State. This has to
do with the sins of the church, the “continuing church”, and the portion of
that continuing church that wanted to continue segregation and thus racism. This is squarely in the context of the church
being spiritual and how it’s members advocated or violated the ethical and moral
demands of the Gospel.
Others have made comments that they fear this is all "political correctness" and motivated by what is happening in the streets and from groups like Black Lives Matter. This too is irrelevant. Events in politics, the media, and the street may have all kinds of motivations. Will we not do right because others have the wrong motivation? Our motivation has to be the glory of God, the witness of and for Christ, the defense of the Truth and what is true, and the peace and unity of the Church.
The issue will be joined in Mobile. We all ought to be praying for a godly,
honest, humble, and open conversation.
We all ought to be aware that the wrong decision can actually hold our
denomination back, and roll back many of the gains we have made in these issues
thus far.
Well said Randy.
ReplyDeleteThank you Randy.
ReplyDeleteRandy, I don't disagree with many of the points you share! You not only talk the talk BUT you have walked the walk - and - done so in an exemplary way. WHAT IF the proposals, resolutions and overtures are all passed by a majority, how long will it be before the PCA Churches - many of which (in the rural South) are in a rapidly changing demographic both economically as well as community composition? As a denomination, we may "vote" to talk the talk - but - why aren't we currently walking the walk totally apart from proposals, resolutions and overtures? Some of us have been doing it on a personal level for more than 50 years, but the Churches are reluctant to comply with the obvious. As a result, several of our rural south Churches are withering and in the process of dying (closing). I've shared this with you and others with the various posts on the subject - so - my comments may be redundant at this point - or worse yet - falling on deaf ears with the recalcitrant!
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