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Saturday, August 19, 2017

Presbyterians and the history of race in the United States





The following is an article from the Presbyterian Outlook, that has to be passed on.  It is, in my opinion, one of the most well thought out articles dealing with the Presbyterian church and our response to race issues historically.  As we reflect on the events in the past week, we should be prayerful asking the questions, "what should we say" and "what should we do?"  


Silence is not an option, but what should we say?


Guest commentary by William Yoo
In the painful aftermath of the hateful activity and horrible tragedy in Charlottesville, Virginia, many Presbyterians condemned white supremacy as evil and committed to speak out against racism. Pastors revised or rewrote their sermons. Congregations offered prayers for the grieving and the afflicted. We participated in community rallies and vigils to stand in solidarity with the brave students from the University of Virginia who defied a band of torch-wielding white supremacists at nightfall and the courageous pastors and faith leaders who sought to drown out the racist rants and Nazi chants with Christian songs and hymns the following morning.
As a church historian, I find it heartening that more and more Presbyterians are convicted to end white silence and combat racial oppression. This wasn’t always the case. In 1831, three Presbyterian missionaries working in Cherokee land within the state of Georgia were arrested for their activism against unjust policies to forcibly relocate American Indians under President Andrew Jackson’s administration. Several presbyteries and synods in Alabama, North Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia protested the imprisonment of the white missionaries. But there was less support among Presbyterians for the graver injustice toward the Cherokees. By and large, Presbyterians in the 19th century remained silent as the U.S. government coerced most American Indian tribes east of the Mississippi River to sign unequal treaties and surrender their ancestral lands.
During the civil rights movement and the push for racial integration in the 20th century, the majority of white Presbyterians also remained silent. Reports from the General Assemblies of the northern and southern denominations denounced racism and promoted racial justice. In 1958, the uniting General Assembly of the United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. called upon every congregation to welcome all “without regard to their racial, economic, or cultural background and condition.” But many congregations in the very neighborhoods that were becoming more racially and ethnically diverse opted to flee to the white suburbs. In Atlanta, several white churches stayed, but a high number of white persons, including some white church members, moved out of the city. Between 1960 and 1980, the white population in the city decreased by more than half – from 300,000 to 127,000. Some white Presbyterians were not silent, but they spoke out to preserve white domination. One congregation in Kirkwood, a neighborhood in southeast Atlanta, partnered with five other local white churches in 1961 to prevent realtors from selling homes to black residents and to discourage bankers from providing loans to black buyers.
As we look back at our troubled history and ask why far too many white Presbyterians chose to be silent about racism and complicit in racial discrimination, I don’t believe it was because they stopped attending their churches. Columbia Seminary’s library keeps the congregational histories of many white southern Presbyterian congregations in the archives. The Committee of Women’s Work in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.) initiated this project in the early 20th century to encourage local female church members to record the rich stories of each congregation for future generations to remember. When studying these documents, my students and I marvel at the ways in which these female historians wrote with meticulous precision and copious detail, which illustrates their profound sense of belonging to their congregations. But we lament how little they wrote about racial justice. We turn to the pages of congregational histories in Selma and Birmingham during the civil rights movement and all we find is silence.
In Romans 12:1, the apostle Paul instructs Christians, as recipients of divine mercy, to offer our bodies as “living sacrifices” as a form of “spiritual worship” to God. Because the Greek word for “spiritual” is logike(from which the English word “logical” is derived), some English versions of the Bible translate the phrase as “reasonable worship” or “logical worship.” As we seek to respond faithfully and effectively to the rise of the “alt-right,” a relatively new term to identify the enduring and evil program of white supremacy within the mainstreams of our nation’s history, we must discern reasonable actions and logical outcomes. Denouncing white supremacy is the first sermon. What shall we say in the second and third sermons?
We can begin by asking God to give us eyes that see the painful realities of racial discrimination and white privilege embedded deep in our country’s moral, political and religious life. In 1787, the U.S. Constitution defined enslaved African-Americans as “three-fifths” of a person when determining the number of seats a state was allotted in the House of Representatives. Three years later the U.S. government determined that only “free white persons” could become citizens. Persons of African descent became eligible for citizenship in 1870, but the changing legislation exacerbated anti-black racism with the escalation of public lynchings, discriminatory housing laws and lending practices, and unjust voting restrictions. Over 3,400 African-Americans were lynched between 1882 and 1968, which amounts to nearly one black lynching every nine days. Unfair immigration laws favored applicants from northern and western Europe until 1965. In 1893, a prominent white Protestant pastor named Josiah Strong contended that “to be a Christian and an Anglo-Saxon and an American in this generation is to stand on the very mountain-top of privilege.” Despite his sincere commitments to social justice, Strong’s idea of ministry centered on the racist notion that God created white Christians to rescue persons of color from their debased conditions and degraded communities.
Presbyterians today do not talk about white people and communities of color like Josiah Strong. But an honest appraisal of our history reveals that while Presbyterians have been skillful academic interpreters of the Bible, they have been less effective at enacting scriptural teaching to form racially just and culturally diverse relationships in our everyday lives and local congregations. Whites comprise over 90 percent of our denomination’s membership and 98 percent of all white members belong to mostly white (over 80 percent) congregations. White privilege can manifest for Presbyterians when the message of racial reconciliation is undercut by the expectation of white assimilation. The signs outside the church doors welcome all, but the accompanying assumptions are that newcomers will adapt to white-dominant ways once they come inside.
We can no longer be silent. Yet we also must speak with honesty and integrity. If you are a white Presbyterian in a predominantly white context, a reasonable action and a logical outcome of your ministry is to call out the sinfulness of white supremacy as contrary to the love of God and challenge other white people to do likewise. But we should carefully consider what we say next about confronting racism and practicing racial reconciliation. The two are related but distinct ministries. White Presbyterians can do the former in predominantly white contexts, but the latter can only truly occur in authentic communities in which a diverse group of different church leaders and members representing a multiplicity of racial, ethnic and cultural backgrounds learn each other’s testimonies, share each other’s sorrows and build powerful circles of trust and accountability over a long duration of time. Some Presbyterians are doing this very work in diverse neighborhoods. Others will need to step out in faith and leave everything that is familiar to follow God’s call. As the redeemed people of God, we simultaneously hold on to the promise that all things are possible for those who believe and heed Christ’s admonition to count the cost of discipleship.
WILLIAM YOO is assistant professor of American religious and cultural history at Columbia Theological Seminary in Decatur, Georgia. He is the author of “American Missionaries, Korean Protestants, and the Changing Shape of World Christianity, 1884-1965” and the editor of “The Presbyterian Experience in the United States: A Sourcebook.”
IF you are not a subscriber to Presbyterian Outlook, I strongly recommend becoming one today.  Presbyterian outlook provide congregational resources and tools as well as article relating to the church. 

Friday, August 18, 2017

From the Presbyterian Outlook: An Invitation by Jill Duffield


Jill Duffield with Faith Leaders at Westminster Presbyterian Church prior to the rally
Dear President Trump,

You saw the videos. I was there. I was there with other ministers, rabbis and pastors: faith leaders standing for peace and for our faith. If you need clarity about what happened here, I invite you to come to Charlottesville.

I invite you to come and talk to the families of those injured and with the family of Heather Heyer, killed when a white nationalist deliberately drove his car into the crowd.

I invite you to come and meet with my colleagues in ministry who put their bodies on the line to avert violence.

I invite you to come and meet with our rabbis who worshipped on Saturday under the threat of a self-proclaimed militia armed with machine guns standing just outside the synagogue doors.

I invite you to talk to the University of Virginia students who faced a torch-wielding, racial-epithet-chanting crowd on their campus.

I invite you to talk to the UVA student who sat with one of those injured from that speeding car until medical help arrived.

I invite you to talk with the African-American man beaten in the Market Street parking garage.

I invite you to come to worship at any number of our faith communities to hear the experiences of those in the pews and, from those standing in the pulpits, the articulation of what faith calls us to do and be.

Mr. President, if you will not come to Charlottesville, then read the accounts of those who witnessed the events of Friday and Saturday. Or enter the vile world of the Neo-Nazis and white supremacists who invaded our town and get a painful glimpse into their agenda and beliefs. I did, and I can’t forget.

Mr. President, the Unite the Right Rally in Charlottesville was not about Robert E. Lee or any statues. It was not, and is not, about history or heritage. It is about hate and there is nothing good or peaceful or ambiguous about that.

Mr. President, you are not only our Commander in Chief, you are our called to be conscience in chief and you are failing us.

While it is late, Mr. President, very late, I believe it is never too late. In the words of Martin Luther King Jr., “The time is always right to do what it right.” Do what is right, Mr. President, take a stand against evil and speak up now for those being targeted in the alt-right’s “summer of hate.”

Mr. President, if you sincerely do not know the difference, come to Charlottesville and we will teach you.

Grace and peace,

Jill Duffield

Presbyterian Outlook Magazine

Thursday, August 17, 2017

On the Tragedy in Charlottesville and Racism in the United States



This video is a first hand account by Rev.Traci Blackmon, of a peaceful multi-faith worship service that was interrupted and surrounded by white supremacists.  The worshippers were prevented from leaving the church by the mob with torches and chanting "blood and soil" for thirty minutes.  They were carrying torches and baseball bats. The white supremacists had no legal right to be there or detain those individuals, but the silence about events like this one is what is troubling.  When the President mentioned Friday night he said "There were people in that rally, and I looked the night before" he said.."If you look, they were people protesting very quietly the taking down of the statue..."


On the Tragedy in Charlottesville

In the light of the tragic events in Charlottesville Va, the topic of racism and racial hatred has once again become an important headline.  This has brought back questions about the KKK, free-speech, and statues to the confederacy.  Firstly, the gospel of Jesus Christ runs counter to the beliefs of the white supremacists.  The gospel expresses that God has reconciled humanity to God-self and to one another in Jesus Christ.  When Paul stated that There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus (Gal 3:28) he was stating a new reality and consequence of Jesus' resurrection for the world.  No longer would we have to allow our differences to stand in the way of fellowship and community.  All who have been baptized have now been made part of a new family with a new identity, and a new Lord through the outpouring of God's Spirit at Pentecost.   There is no question, the ideologies of the white supremacists cannot in anyway be compatible with Christian belief.  It must be condemned and rejected outright.  

I have included several posts stating the views of several Christian churches that addresses issues of race, ethnicity and hate.  It is time for the church to drop any silence on these issues and with one voice stand as a witness to the love that God asks us to have for one another.  I agree with the editorial by Jill Duffield of Presbyterian Outlook, that the most significant issue at stake is that the church denounce racism and the evil represented by the white supremacists groups.

One incident, that many people I have spoken to this week were unaware of, was what unfolded at a prayer service in a church in Charlottesville, where hundreds (estimates were as high as six hundred) of white supremacists surrounded the church while worshippers were inside and held them hostage for thirty minutes chanting slogans.  While white supremacists have had marches in the past, the large gathering, the carrying of the tiki torches, and the targeting of a church (without a legal permit to protest) all show an escalation in the actions of these white supremacist groups.  At least in my lifetime, I do not recall an instance like this.  Inside a number of clergy, parishioners, worshippers and visitors endured without police protection not only the chants but the uncertainty of might happen to them.  These are the kinds of stories that we need to tell about Charlottesville.  On Saturday, the unnecessary and tragic death of a protester, Heather Heyer, is heart breaking along with two officer's that died while performing their duties.  These tragedies are a painful reminder that hate and hate groups will often lead to violent terrorist actions that kill and destroy lives.  My prayers are with the family and friends of those affected by this tragedy.

Secondly, there is the issue is issue of the Confederate Statues.  This was the event that brought about the protests of the white supremacists in the first place, so it is closely related to the events in Charlottesville.  Scripture tells us that we should be aware of issues that cause our brothers and sisters offense (1 Cor 8:13, Matt 27:17).  Out of love, we should be sensitive to the fact that certain images and representation such as flags, monuments, or statues may be painful reminders of a history that we would rather forget.  A history of slavery, oppression, segregation, hate and lynching is part of the African American community's history.  It is part of the history of the entire United States.  Christians that do not share this same history and experience should be willing to listen, learn, and thoughtfully respond to the story, experience, and pain of the African American community.   We should remember that this really is a shared history.  What primarily unites us as Christians is not our national or social identities but our baptismal identity in Jesus Christ.  That is our first and foremost relationship with each other.  It transcends all other relationships.  Therefore, the church should never allow these kinds of symbols in spaces of worship. 

Now as citizens of the United States, we share our country with people from many diverse backgrounds and experiences.  As such, the national and local debates about particular racial issues will be debated and discussed.  Eventually for better or for worse, we will make legal decisions about policy, either on a local, state or national level such as the statue removal.  Creative solutions may be a key here.  Is it possible to have memorials that honor the dead who fought for the South in the civil war and are still sensitive to the legacy of slavery and the African American experience and removing symbols deemed as racist?  While we share one American experience, clearly the stories and feelings about, for example, the civil war, will diverge greatly depending on the point of view.  We however cannot dismiss the painful legacy of those symbols that included slavery and oppression.  

At the end of the day, I am in favor of removing certain confederate monuments for reasons given here.  However, for those communities that refuse to remove such offensive statues and memorials, protests for those who disagree should always be peaceful, as our constitution guarantees the right to address grievances to the government.  In the national conversation about the confederate statues, a video speech by Mayor Mitch Landrieu of New Orleans lays out a very well thought out rational for the removal of these monuments as well as the unique history of many of these monuments.   I believe that everyone should listen to this speech.   I have included it at the bottom of this page and it is really well worth the time and attention.

Lastly, I have also included a video of a first hand account of what happened at the church in Charlottesville at the top of this page.  White supremacy has been on the rise and we have been seeing a radicalization of people across the world and across the spectrum.  This is an example of this escalation.  For the church therefore, this is a time to engage with each other and our world and to be a witness of God's love and grace.  May God grant us wisdom in these times to faithfully witness to God's truth, Christ's love and the Spirit's calling.




Mayor of New Orleans speech on the topic of monuments to the confederacy 


The following are links to statements from other Christian denominations speaking to or condemning the racist marchers that showed up at Charlottesville to promote white supremacists and alt-right ideals.  








Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Catholic Conference of Bishops


Brothers And Sisters To Us

 
U.S. Catholic Bishops
Pastoral Letter on Racism
1979
Racism is an evil which endures in our society and in our Church. Despite apparent advances and even significant changes in the last two decades, the reality of racism remains. In large part it is only external appearances which have changed. In 1958 we spoke out against the blatant forms of racism that divided people through discriminatory laws and enforced segregation. We pointed out the moral evil that denied human persons their dignity as children of God and their God-given rights. (1) A decade later in a second pastoral letter we again underscored the continuing scandal of racism called for decisive action to eradicate it from our society.(2) We recognize and applaud the readiness of many Americans to make new strides forward in reducing and eliminating prejudice against minorities. We are convinced that the majority of Americans realize that racial discrimination is both unjust and unworthy of this nation.

We do not deny that changes have been made, that laws have been passed, that policies have been implemented. We do not deny that the ugly external features of racism which marred our society have in part been eliminated. But neither can it be denied that too often what has happened has only been a covering over, not a fundamental change. Today the sense of urgency has yielded to an apparent acceptance of the status quo. The climate of crisis engendered by demonstrations, protest, and confrontation has given way to a mood of indifference; and other issues occupy our attention.

In response to this mood, we wish to call attention to the persistent presence of racism and in particular to the relationship between racial and economic justice. Racism and economic oppression are distinct but interrelated forces which dehumanize our society. Movement toward authentic justice demands a simultaneous attack on both evils. Our economic structures are undergoing fundamental changes which threaten to intensify social inequalities in our nation. We are entering an era characterized by limited resources, restricted job markets and dwindling revenues. In this atmosphere, the poor and racial minorities are being asked to bear the heaviest burden of the new economic pressures.

This new economic crisis reveals an unresolved racism that permeates our society's structures and resides in the hearts of many among the majority. Because it is less blatant, this subtle form of racism is in some respects even more dangerous -- harder to combat and easier to ignore. Major segments of the population are being pushed to the margins of society in our nation. As economic pressures tighten, those people who are often black, Hispanic, Native American and Asian -- and always poor -- slip further into the unending cycle of poverty, deprivation, ignorance, disease, and crime. Racial identity is for them an iron curtain barring the way to a decent life and livelihood. The economic pressures exacerbate racism, particularly where poor white people are competing with minorities for limited job opportunities. The Church must not be unmindful of these economic pressures. We must be sensitive to the unfortunate and unnecessary racial tension that results from this kind of economic need.

Mindful of its duty to be the advocate for whose who hunger and thirst for justice's sake, the Church cannot remain silent about the racial injustices in society and its own structures. Our concern over racism follows, as well, from our strong commitment to evangelization. Pope John Paul II has defined evangelization as bringing consciences, both individual and social, into conformity with the Gospel.(3) We would betray our commitment to evangelize ourselves and our society were we not to strongly voice our condemnation of attitudes and practices so contrary to the Gospel. Therefore, as the bishops of the United States, we once again address our pastoral reflections on racism to our brothers and sisters of all races.

We do this, conscious of the fact that racism is only one form of discrimination that infects our society. Such discrimination belies both our civil and religious traditions. The United States of America rests on a constitutional heritage that recognizes the equality, dignity, and inalienable rights of all its citizens. Further, we are heirs of a religious teaching which proclaims that all men and women, as children of God, are brothers and sisters. Every form of discrimination against individuals and groups--whether because of race, ethnicity, religion, gender, economic status, or national or cultural origin--is a serious injustice which has severely weakened our social fabric and deprived our country of the unique contributions of many of our citizens. While cognizant of these broader concerns, we wish to draw attention here to the particular form of discrimination that is based on race.

The Sin of Racism

Racism is a sin: a sin that divides the human family, blots out the image of God among specific members of that family, and violates the fundamental human dignity of those called to be children of the same Father. Racism is the sin that says some human beings are inherently superior and others essentially inferior because of races. It is the sin that makes racial characteristics the determining factor for the exercise of human rights. It mocks the words of Jesus: "Treat others the way you would have them treat you." (4) Indeed, racism is more than a disregard for the words of Jesus; it is a denial of the truth of the dignity of each human being revealed by the mystery of the Incarnation.

In order to find the strength to overcome the evil of racism, we must look to Christ. In Christ Jesus "there does not exist among you Jew or Greek, slave or freedom, male or female. All are one in Christ Jesus." (5) As Pope John Paul II has said so clearly, "Our spirit is set in one direction, the only direction for our intellect, will and heart is -- toward Christ our Redeemer, toward Christ the Redeemer of [humanity.]"(6) It is in Christ, then, that the Church finds the central cause for its commitment to justice, and to the struggle for the human rights and dignity of all persons.

When we give in to our fears of the other because he or she is of a race different from ourselves, when we prejudge the motives of others precisely because they are of a different color, when we stereotype or ridicule the other because of racial characteristics and heritage, we fail to heed the command of the Prophet Amos: "Seek good and not evil, that you may live; then truly will the Lord... be with you as you claim!... Then let justice surge like water, and goodness like an unfailing stream." (7)

Today in our country men, women, and children are being denied opportunities for full participation and advancement in our society because of their race. The educational, legal, and financial systems, along with other structures and sectors of our society, impede people's progress and narrow their access because they are black, Hispanic, Native American or Asian.
The structures of our society are subtly racist, for these structures reflect the values which society upholds. They are geared to the success of the majority and the failure of the minority. Members of both groups give unwitting approval by accepting things as they are. Perhaps no single individual is to blame. The sinfulness is often anonymous but nonetheless real. The sin is social in nature in that each of us, in varying degrees, is responsible. All of us in some measure are accomplices. As our recent pastoral letter on moral values states: "The absence of personal fault for an evil does not absolve one of all responsibility. We must seek to resist and undo injustices we have not ceased, least we become bystanders who tacitly endorse evil and so share in guilt in it."(8)

Racism is a Fact

Because the Courts have eliminated statutory racial discrimination and Congress has enacted civil rights legislation, and because some minority people have achieved some measure of success, many people believe that racism is no longer a problem in American life. The continuing existence of racism becomes apparent, however, when we look beneath the surface of our national life: as, for example, in the case of unemployment figures. In the second quarter of 1979, 4.9% of white Americans were unemployed; but for blacks the figure was 11.6%; for Hispanics, 8.3%; and for Native Americans on reservations, as high as 40%. The situation is even more disturbing when one realizes that 35% of black youth, 19.1% of Hispanic youth, and an estimated 60% of Native American youth are unemployed.(9) Quite simply, this means that an alarming proportion of tomorrow's adults are cut off from gainful employment-an essential prerequisite of responsible adulthood. These same youths presently suffer the crippling effects of a segregated educational system which in many cases fails to enlighten the mind and free the spirit, which too often inculcates a conviction of inferiority and which frequently graduates persons who are ill prepared and inadequately trained. In addition, racism raises its ugly head in the violence that frequently surrounds attempts to achieve racial balance in education and housing.

With respect to family life, we recognize that decades of denied access to opportunities have been for minority families a crushing burden. Racial discrimination has only exacerbated the harmful relationship between poverty and family instability.

Racism is only too apparent in housing patterns in our major cities and suburbs. Witness the deterioration of inner cities and the segregation of many suburban areas by means of unjust practices of social steering and blockbusting. Witness also the high proportion of Hispanics, blacks, and Indians on welfare and the fact that the median income of nonwhite families is only 63% of the average white family income. Moreover, the gap between the rich and the poor is widening, not decreasing.(10)

Racism is apparent when we note that the population is our prisons consists disproportionately of minorities; that violent crime is the daily companion of a life of poverty and deprivation; and that the victims of such crimes are also disproportionately nonwhite and poor. Racism is also apparent in the attitudes and behavior of some law enforcement officials and in the unequal availability of legal assistance.

Finally, racism is sometimes apparent in the growing sentiment that too much is being given to racial minorities by way of affirmative action programs or allocations to redress long-standing imbalances in minority representation and government-funded programs for the disadvantaged. At times, protestations claiming that all persons should be treated equally reflect the desire to maintain a status quo that favors one race and social group at the expense of the poor and the nonwhite.

Racism obscures the evils of the past and denies the burdens that history has placed upon the shoulders of our black, Hispanic, Native American, and Asian brothers and sisters. An honest look at the past makes plain the need for restitution wherever possible - makes evident the justice of restoration and redistribution.

A Look at the Past

Racism has been part of the social fabric of America since its European colonization. Whether it be the tragic past of the Native Americans, the Mexicans, the Puerto Ricans, or the blacks, the story is one of slavery, peonage, economic exploration, brutal repression, and cultural neglect. All have suffered indignity; most have been uprooted, defrauded or dispossessed of their lands; and none have escaped one or another form of collective degradation by a powerful majority. Our history is littered with the debris of broken promises and treaties, as well as lynchings and massacres that almost destroyed the Indians, humiliated the Hispanics, and crushed the blacks.

But despite this tragic history, the racial minorities of our country have survived and increased. Each racial group has sunk its roots deep in the soil of our culture, thus helping to give to the United States its unique character and its diverse coloration. The contribution of each racial minority is distinctive and rich; each is a source of internal strength for our nation. The history of all gives a witness to a truth absorbed by now into the collective consciousness of Americans: their struggle has been a pledge of liberty and a challenge to future greatness.

Racism Today

Crude and blatant expression of racist sentiment, though they occasionally exist, are today considered bad form. Yet racism itself persists in convert ways. Under the guise of other motives, it is manifest in the tendency to stereotype and marginalize whole segments of the population whose presence perceived as a threat. It is manifest also in the indifference that replaces open hatred. The minority poor are seen as the dross of a post-industrial society -- without skills, without motivation, without incentive. They are expendable. Many times the new face of racism is the computer print-out, the graph of profits and losses, the pink slip, the nameless statistic. Today's racism flourishes in the triumph of private concern over public responsibility, individual success over social commitment, and personal fulfillment over authentic compassion. Then too, we recognize that racism also exists in the attitude and behavior of some who are themselves members of minority groups. Christian ideals of justice must be brought to bear in both the private and the public sector in order that covert racism be eliminated wherever it exists.

The new forms of racism must be brought face-to-face with the figure of Christ. It is Christ's word that is the judgment on this world; it is Christ's cross that is the measure of our response; and it is Christ's face that is the composite of all persons but in a most significant way of today's poor, today's marginal people, today's minorities.

God's Judgment and Promise

The Voice of Scripture

The Christian response to the challenges of our times is to be found in the Good News of Jesus. The words that signaled the start of His public ministry must be the watchword for every Christian response to injustice, "He unrolled the scroll and found the passage where it was written: The spirit of the Lord is upon me; therefore, he has anointed me. He has sent me to bring glad tidings to the poor, to proclaim liberty to captives, recovery of sight to the blind and release to prisoners, to announce a year of favor from the Lord. Rolling up the scroll he gave it back ...and sat down...'Today this Scripture passage is fulfilling in your hearing'." (11)

God's word proclaims the oneness of the human family -- from the first words of Genesis, to the "Come, Lord Jesus" of the Book of Revelation. God's word in Genesis announces that all men and women are created in God's image; not just some races and racial types, but all bear the imprint of the Creator and are enlivened by the breath of His one Spirit.

In proclaiming the liberation of Israel, God's word proclaims the liberation of all people from slavery. God's word further proclaims that all people are accountable to and for each other. This is the message of that great parable of the Final Judgment: "When the Son of Man comes in his glory, escorted by all the angels of heaven. . . all the nations will be assembled before him. Then he will separate them into two groups. . . The king will say to those on his right: 'Come. You have my Father's blessing! . . . For I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink. I was a stranger and you welcomed me. . . . I assure you, as often as you did it for one of my least brothers, you did it for me.(12)

God's word proclaims that the person "who listens to God's word but does not put it into practice is like a man who looks into a mirror at the face he was born with . . . then goes off and promptly forgets what he looked like."(13) We have forgotten that we "are strangers and aliens no longer . . . . [We] are fellow citizens of the saints and members of the household of God. [We] form a building which rises on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus himself as the capstone."(14)

The Voice of the Church

This is the mystery of our Church, that all men and women are brothers and sisters, all one in Christ, all bear the image of the Eternal God. The Church is truly universal, embracing all races, for it is "the visible sacrament of this saving unity.(15) The Church, moreover, follows the example of its founder and, "through its children, is one with [people] of every condition, but especially with the poor and the afflicted."(16)

This Church has a duty to proclaim the truth about the human being as disclosed in the truth about Jesus Christ. As our Holy Father Pope John Paul II has written: "On account of the mystery of the Redemption [every human being] is entrusted to the solicitude of the Church." The human being is "the primary and fundamental way for the Church."(17)

It is important to realize in the case racism that deal we are dealing with a distortion at the very heart of human nature. The ultimate remedy against evils such as this will not come solely from human effort. What is needed is the recreation of the human being according to the image revealed in Jesus Christ. For He reveals in himself what each human being can and must become.

How great, therefore, is that sin of racism which weakens the Church's witness as the universal sign of unity among all peoples! How great the scandal given by racist Catholics who make the Body of Christ, the Church, a sign of racial oppression! Yet all too often the Church in our country has been for many a "white Church," a racist institution.

Each of us as Catholics must acknowledge a share in the mistakes and sins of the past. Many of us have been prisoners of fear and prejudice. We have preached the Gospel while closing our eyes to the racism it condemns. We have allowed conformity to social pressures to replace compliance with social justice.

But past mistakes must not hinder the Church's response to the challenges of the present. Worldwide, the Church today is not just European and American; it is also African, Asian, Indian, and Oceanic. It is western, eastern, northern, and southern, black and also brown, white and also red and yellow. In our country, one quarter of the Catholics are Spanish speaking. A million blacks make Catholicism one of the largest denominations among black Americans today. Among our nation's original inhabitants, the Native Americans, the Church's presence is increasingly becoming developed and expressed within the cultures of the various Native American tribes.

It is a fact that Catholic dioceses and religious communities across the country for years have committed selected personnel and substantial funds to relieve oppression and to correct injustices and have striven to bring the Gospel to the diverse racial groups in our land. The Church has sought to aid the poor and downtrodden, who for the most part are also the victims of racial oppression. But this relationship has been and remains two-sided and reciprocal; for the initiative of racial minorities, clinging to their Catholic faith, has helped the Church to grow, adapt, and become truly Catholic and remarkably diverse. Today in our own land the face of Catholicism is the face of all humanity--a face of many colors, a countenance of many cultural forms.

Yet more is needed. The prophetic voice of the Church, which is to be heard in every generation and even to the ends of the earth, must not be muted -- especially not by the counter witness of some of its own people. Let the Church speak out, not only in the assemblies of the bishops, but in every diocese and parish in the land, in every chapel and religious house, in every school, in every social service agency, and in every institution that bears the name Catholic. As Pope John Paul II has proclaimed, the Church must be aware of the threats to humanity and of all that opposes the endeavor to make life itself more human. The Church must strive to make every element of human life correspond to the true dignity of the human person.(18) And during his recent visit to this country, Pope John Paul II discussed the direct implications of this for the Church in the United States:

"It will always remain one of the glorious achievements of this nation that, when people looked toward America, they received together with freedom also a chance for their own advancement. This tradition must be honored also today. The freedom that was gained must be ratified each day by the firm rejection of whatever wounds, weakens or dishonors human life. And so I appeal to all who love freedom and justice to give a chance to all in need, to the poor and the powerless. Break open the hopeless cycles poverty and ignorance that are still the lot of too many of our brothers and sisters; the hopeless cycles of prejudices that linger on despite enormous progress toward effective equality in education and employment; the cycles of despair in which are imprisoned all those that lack decent food, shelter or employment. . . ." (19)

Therefore, let the Church proclaim to all that the sin of racism defiles the image of God and degrades the sacred dignity of humankind which has been revealed by the mystery of the Incarnation. Let all know that it is a terrible sin that mocks the cross of Christ and ridicules the Incarnation. For the brother and sister of our Brother Jesus Christ are brother and sister to us.

The Voice of the World

We find God's will for us not only in the word of Scripture and in the teaching of his Church but also in the issues and events of secular society. "The Church...recognizes that worthy elements are found in today's social movements, especially an evolution toward unity, a process of wholesome socialization and of association in civic and economic realms." (20) Thus spoke the Church in the Second Vatican Council. That same Council urged the Church, especially the laity, to work in the temporal sphere on behalf of justice and the unity of human kind.(21)

With this in mind, we pay special tribute to those who have struggled and struggle today for civil rights and economic justice in our own country. Nor do we overlook the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights which still speaks to the conscience of the entire world and the several international covenants which demand the elimination of discrimination based on race. None of these, unfortunately, have been ratified by our country, whereas we in America should have been the first to do so. All have a duty to heed the voice of God speaking in these documents.

Our Response

Racism is not merely one sin among many; it is a radical evil that divides the human family and denies the new creation of a redeemed world. To struggle against it demands an equally radical transformation, in our own minds and hearts as well as in the structure of our society.

Conversion is the ever present task of each Christian. In offering certain guidelines for this change of heart as it pertains to racism, we note that these are only first steps in what ought to be a continuing dialogue throughout the Catholic community and the nation at large. In this context we would urge that existing programs and plans, such as those dealing with family ministry, parish renewal, and evangelization, be used as vehicles for implementing the measures addressed here.

Our Personal Lives

To the extent that racial bias affects our personal attitudes and judgments, to the extent that we allow another's race to influence our relationship and limit our openness, to the extent that we see yet close our hearts to our brothers and sisters in need, (22) - to that extent we are called to conversion and renewal in love and justice.

As individuals we should try to influence the attitudes of others by expressly rejecting racial stereotypes, racial slurs and racial jokes. We should influence the members of our families, especially our children, to be sensitive to the authentic human values and cultural contributions of each racial grouping in our country.

We should become more sensitive ourselves and thereby sensitize our acquaintances by learning more about how social structures inhibit the economic, educational, and social advancement of the poor. We should make a personal commitment to join with others in political efforts to bring about justice for the victims of such deprivation.

Our Community Church

The church must be constantly attentive to the Lord's voice as He calls on His people daily not to harden their hearts.(23) We urge that on all levels the Catholic Church in the United States examine it's conscience regarding attitudes and behavior towards blacks, Hispanics, Native Americans, and Asians. We urge consideration of the evil of racism as it exists in the local Church and reflection upon the means of combating it. We urge scrupulous attention at every level to insure that minority representation goes beyond mere tokenism and involves authentic sharing in responsibility and decision making.

We encourage Catholics to join hands with members of other religious groups in the spirit of ecumenism to achieve the common objectives of justice and peace. During the struggle for legal recognition of racial justice, an important chapter in American history was written as religious groups, Jewish, Protestants, and Catholic, joined in support of civil rights movement which found much of it's initiative and inspiration within the black Protestant Churches. This cooperation should continue to serve as a model for our times.

All too often in the very places where blacks, Hispanics, Native Americans, and Asians are numerous, the Church's officials and representatives, both clerical and lay, are predominantly white. Efforts to achieve racial balance in government, the media, the armed services, and other crucial areas of secular life should not only be supported but surpassed in the institutions and the programs of the Catholic Church.

Particular care should be taken to foster vocations among minority groups.(24) Training for the priesthood, the permanent diaconate, and religious life should not entail an abandonment of culture and traditions or a loss of racial identity but should seek ways in which such culture and traditions might contribute to that training. Special attention is required whenever it is necessary to correct racist attitudes or behaviors among seminary staff and seminarians. Seminary education ought to include an awareness of the history and the contributions of minorities as well as an appreciation of the enrichment of the liturgical expression, especially at the local parish level, which can be found in their respective cultures.

We affirm the teachings of Vatican II on the liturgy by noting that "the liturgy is the summit toward which the activity of the Church is directed." (25) The Church must "respect and foster the spiritual . . . gifts of the various races and peoples" (26) and encourage the incorporation of these gifts into the liturgy.

We see the value of fostering greater diversity of racial and minority group representation in the hierarchy. Furthermore, we call for the adoption of an effective affirmative action program in every diocese and religious institution.

We strongly urge that special attention be directed to the plight of undocumented workers and that every effort be made to remove the fear and prejudice of which they are victims.

We ask in particular that Catholic institutions such as schools, universities, social service agencies, and hospitals, where members of racial minorities are often employed in large numbers, review their policies to see that they faithfully conform to the Church's teaching on justice for workers and respect for their rights. We recommend that investment portfolios be examined in order to determine whether racist institutions and policies are inadvertently being supported; and that, wherever possible, the capital of religious groups be made available for new forms of alternative investment, such as cooperatives, land trusts, and housing for the poor. We further recommend that Catholic institutions avoid the services of agencies and industries which refuse to take affirmative action to achieve equal opportunity and that the Church itself always be a model as an equal opportunity employer.

We recommend that leadership training programs be established on the local level in order to encourage effective leadership among racial minorities on all levels of the Church, local as well as national.

In particular, we recommend the active spiritual and financial support of associations and institutions organized by Catholic blacks, Hispanics, Native Americans, and Asians within the Church for the promotion of ministry to and by their respective communities. There is also a need for more attention to finding ways in which minorities can work together across racial and cultural lines to avoid duplication and competition among themselves. There is also a need for cooperative efforts between racial minorities and other social action groups, such as labor and the women's movement.

Finally, we urgently recommend the continuation and expansion of Catholic schools in the inner cities and other disadvantaged areas. No other form of Christian ministry has been more widely acclaimed or desperately sought by leaders of various racial communities. For a century and a half the Church in the United States has been distinguished by its efforts to educate the poor and disadvantaged, many of whom are not of the Catholic faith. That tradition continues today in - among other places - Catholic schools, where so many blacks, Hispanics, Native Americans, and Asians receive a form of education and formation which constitutes a key to greater freedom and dignity. It would be tragic if today, in the face of acute need and even near despair, the Church, for centuries the teacher and the guardian of civilization, should withdraw from this work in our own society. No sacrifice can be so great, no price can be so high, no short-range goals can be so important as to warrant the lessening of our commitment to Catholic education in minority neighborhoods. More affluent parishes should be made aware of this need and of their opportunity to share resources with the poor and needy in a way that recognizes the dignity of both giver and receiver.

Society at Large

Individuals move on many levels in our complex society: each of us is called to speak and act in many different settings. In each case may we speak and act according to our competence and as the Gospel bids us. With this as our prayer, we refrain from giving detailed answers to complex questions on which we ourselves have no special competence. Instead, we propose several guidelines of a general nature.

The difficulties of these new times demand a new vision and a renewed courage to transform our society and achieve justice for all. We must fight for the dual goals of racial and economic justice with determination and creativity. Domestically, justice demands that we strive for authentic full employment, recognizing the special need for employment of those who, whether men or women, carry the principal responsibility for support of a family. Justice also demands that we strive for decent working conditions, adequate income, housing, education, and health care for all. Government at the national and local levels must be held accountable by all citizens for the essential services which all are entitled to receive. The private sector should work with various racial communities to insure that they receive a just share of the profits they have helped to create.

Globally, we live in an interdependent community of nations, some rich, some poor. Some are high consumers of the world's resources; some eke out an existence on a near starvation level. As it happens, most of the rich, consuming nations are white and Christian; most of the world's poor are of other races and religions.

Concerning our relationship to other nations, our Christian faith suggests several principles. First, racial difference should not interfere with our dealing justly and peacefully with all other nations. Secondly, those nations which possess more of the world's riches must, in justice, share with those who are in serious need. Finally, the private sector should be aware of its responsibility to promote racial justice, not subordination or exploitation, to promote genuine development in poor societies, not mere consumerism and materialism.

Conclusion

Our words here are an initial response to one of the major concerns which emerged during the consultation on social justice entitled "a Call to Action," which was part of the US Catholic participation in the national bicentennial. The dialogue must continue among the Catholics of our country. We have proposed guidelines and principles and as the bishops of the Catholic Conference in the United States, we must give the leadership to this effort by a commitment of our time, of personnel and of significant financial resources. Others must develop the programs and plan operations. There must be no turning back along the road of justice, no sighing for bygone times of privilege, no nostalgia for simple solutions from another age. For we are children of the age to come, when the first shall be last and the last shall be first, when blessed are they who serve Christ the Lord in all His brothers and sisters, especially those who are poor and suffer injustice.

Endnotes

      1. Discrimination and Christian Conscience. National Catholic Welfare Conference. 1958.
      2. National Race Crisis. National Conference of Catholic Bishops. 1968.
      3. Pope John Paul II Address at the Third General Assembly of The Latin American Bishops, Puebla, Mexico, January 28, 1979. p. 1.2
      4. Matthew, 7:12.
      5. Galatians, 3:28.
      6. Redemptor Hominis, 7. Pope John Paul II. 1979.
      7. Amos, 5:14, 24.
      8. Live in Christ Jesus, p. 25. National Conference of Catholic Bishops. 1976.
      9. Employment and Earnings, Vol. 26, No. 10, Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, October, 1979. Precise data on youth unemployment among Native Americans are not available. The 60% unemployment figure is an estimate by the U.S. Dept. of Labor.
      10. Widening Economic Gap, National Urban League, Research Dept., 1979. See also "Consumer Income," Current Population Report, Series P60 #118,1979.
      11. Luke, 4:17-21.
      12. Matthew, 25:31-40
      13. James, 1:23-24
      14. Ephesians, 2;19-20.
      15. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, 9.
      16. Decree on the Church's Missionary Activity, 12.
      17. Redemptor Hominis, 13, 14.
      18. Redemptor Hominis, 14.
      19. Homily at Battery Park, New York. Pope John Paul II. October, 1979.
      20. Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World, 42.
      21. Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World, 43.
      22. I John, 3:17.
      23. Psalms, 94:8.
      24. Concern for vocations from minority groups and the preparation of priests to serve in a multi-cultural and multi-racial society has been previously expressed in The Program for Priestly Formation, which was developed and approved by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, 1976.
      25. Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, 10.
      26. Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, 37.

ELCA statement: Freed in Christ

FREED IN CHRIST:
RACE, ETHNICITY, AND CULTURE




Adopted by a more than two-thirds majority vote as a social statement of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America by the third Churchwide Assembly on August 31, 1993, at Kansas City, Missouri.

FACING GOD
1. A Time of Vision
For us as members of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America there is one God and one Lord, Jesus Christ, “ . . . through whom are all things and through whom we exist” (1 Corinthians 8:6).
Scripture speaks of one humanity, created by God. It recounts our rebellion and enslavement to sin. Scripture tells of a diverse people reconciled to God through the blood of the cross, a people set free for the work of reconciliation. It heralds a new freedom and future in one Lord, one faith, one baptism.
If the story of Babel is of a people scattered, the story of Pentecost is of a people called and gathered. Christ brings together the scattered children of God(John11:52). The Holy Spirit breathes the freedom of the Gospel into the Church, where every people under heaven is represented.
A humanity enslaved to sin has been set free; a Church has been gathered in freedom. Cultural differences still matter, but they can be seen for what God intends—blessings rather than means of enslavement.

2. A Time of Confession
The Church is built on the confession made by Peter (Matthew 16:13-20) and by Martha (John 11:1- 27),whentheydeclaredJesustobetheMessiah,the Son of God. From age to age the Church proclaims Christ, who was crucified for our trespasses and raised for our justification (Romans 4:25).
The Church confesses Christ, who has broken down the dividing wall (Ephesians 2:14). Christ, our peace, has put an end to the hostility of race, ethnicity, gender, and economic class. The Church proclaims Christ, confident this good news sets at liberty those captive behind walls of hostility (cf. Luke 4:18).
The Church looks toward the freedom of the reign of God, announced by and embodied in Jesus. But Christians live between the “now” of the reign of God and the “not yet” of its fulfillment. Trusting the promise of freedom, we can face the fact that each of us is captive, each of us is in bondage to sin (1 John 1:8).
Therefore, we confess our sinfulness. Because we are sinners as well as saints, we rebuild walls broken down by Christ. We fall back into enslaving patterns of injustice. We betray the truth that sets us free. Because we are saints as well as sinners, we reach for the freedom that is ours in Christ.

3. A Time of Commitment
We of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, with the whole Church, look forward to the time when people will come from east and west, north and south to eat in the reign of God (Luke 13:29). For the Church catholic, diversity of cultures is both a given and a glimpse of the future.
The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America has roots in church bodies with a strong immigrant history. These churches kept the faith once delivered to the saints (Jude 3) in ways appropriate to the cultural background of their membership. Besides preserving the faith, they furthered mission and ministry.
The Christ to whom the Church witnesses is the Christ who breaks down walls of cultural exclusivity (Mark 7:24-29; John 4). We of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America have recognized ourselves to be in mission and ministry in a multicultural society, and have committed ourselves to welcome cultural diversity. Given our history, the commitment was neither quick nor easy.
The commitment was made, though, in these and other ways:
  •  the goal that, within the first ten years of its existence, ten percent of this church’s membership would be African American, Asian, Hispanic, or Native American;
  •  the adoption of an organizational principle providing for the representation of cultural diversity on churchwide staff and on boards and other decision-making bodies;
  •  the creation of a Commission for Multicultural Ministries and adoption of a Multicultural Mission Strategy;
  •  the encouragement of African American, Asian, Hispanic, and Native American associations; the recognition of the Slovak Zion Synod and German, Hungarian, Finnish, and Danish special interest conferences; the regard for distinctive cultures, such as the Appalachian culture; the assertion that deafness leads to the creation of a unique language and culture, and a new context for ministry;
  •  the effort to start and to support ministry in African American, Asian, Hispanic, Native American, or multicultural settings; the effort to recognize and to empower pastoral leaders while honoring their cultures; the effort to provide resources in languages other than English;
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  •  the public policy advocacy at state, federal, and international levels that seeks to eliminate racial or ethnic discrimination; the private sector advocacy that encourages corporate social responsibility for community development;
  •  the attention to inclusivity by seminaries, colleges, and social ministry organizations of the church; and
  •  the respect for cultural diversity in the work of global mission. 4. A Time of Spiritual Crisis*
    We of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America rejoice in our freedom in Christ Jesus. But we know we must persevere in our commitment to follow Christ and to serve neighbor, and live up to our specific commitments. While we have taken many measures fitting to a church in mission and ministry in a multicultural society, we still falter.
    We falter in what we do, or in refusing to carry out what we have promised to do. We falter through ignorance of what we have done or left undone. We falter when we cling to old ideas that prevent us from becoming the people God calls us to be.
    With all Christians everywhere, members of this church live in a time of crisis (Romans 2:1 ff.). We are torn between the freedom offered in Christ, the new Adam, and the captivity known by the old Adam. We are torn between becoming the people God calls us to be and remaining the people we are, barricaded behind old walls of hostility.
    The social, economic, and political dimensions of the crisis are acute, and indications of it abound. A burning cross reminds us that blatant acts of intimidation, hatred, and violence continue. A critical look reminds us of barriers that are more insidious.
    The source of this many-faceted crisis, however, is profoundly spiritual. We will rise to the crisis, not by making a longer list of commitments, but by persisting with repentant hearts.

    FACING OBSTACLES

    1. A Time to Take Culture Seriously

    We of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America too often react fearfully or grudgingly to the diversityofcultures. Wearetodelightinthefactthatthepeoplecalled,gathered,andenlightenedhave such diversity. We are, as a multicultural church, to minister in a diverse but divided society.
    Culture includes music, art, and dance, but is more than that. Culture—the attitudes and patterns of life—plays a part in setting priorities, developing procedures, and choosing expressions of faith.
    This church has not moved much beyond an “assimilation” approach to culture, where the assimilated are those who adopt the values and behavior of the dominant culture. This keeps us from benefitting
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from the plurality of cultures already present in our church, and from appreciating the plurality of cultures in society.
This church clearly shares the brokenness of a society that has responded to cultural diversity through fear and efforts at assimilation. Our society has melded many European ethnic groups into mainstream America, but it has included people of other cultural identities only insofar as they have taken on the values and behavior of the dominant culture.
A wall of hostility stands intact. Captive on one side of the wall, people with access to opportunities and institutions are largely unaware either of their own cultural biases or the worth of other cultures. On the other side of the wall, people scarred by slavery and other forms of degradation and suffering have seen their cultures ridiculed and reviled, or destroyed.

2. A Time to Confront Racism
All of us sin and fall short of the glory of God (Romans 3:23).
Racism—a mix of power, privilege, and prejudice—is sin, a violation of God’s intention for humanity. The resulting racial, ethnic, or cultural barriers deny the truth that all people are God’s creatures and, therefore, persons of dignity. Racism fractures and fragments both church and society.
When we speak of racism as though it were a matter of personal attitudes only, we underestimate it. We have only begun to realize the complexity of the sin, which spreads like an infection through the entire social system. Racism infects and affects everyone, with an impact that varies according to race, ethnicity, or culture, and other factors such as gender or economic situation.
This church has often addressed words on racism to white members. We have done so because our mission and ministry are in a society where white people have been favored and hold unequal power to implement their prejudices—socially, politically, and economically. What has been the case is still the case: skin color makes a difference and white people benefit from a privileged position.
Racism, however, infects and affects everyone. It deforms relationships between and within racial, ethnic, or cultural groups. It undermines the promise of community and exacerbates prejudice and unhealthy competition among these groups. It robs white people of the possibility of authentic relationships with people of color, and people of color of the possibility of authentic relationships with white people.
Racism also can lead to the rejection of self, as when white people internalize guilt or people of color internalize values associated with white culture. It hinders us from becoming who God calls us to be.
When we rebuild walls of hostility and live behind them—blaming others for the problem and looking to them for solutions—we ignore the role we ourselves play in the problem and also in the solution. When we confront racism and move toward fairness and justice in society, all of us benefit.
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3. A Time to Be the Church
Vision breaks through brokenness. We are one in Christ. As the body of Christ, we are free to live out our connectedness with each other. Promises are kept when vision is communicated in word and deed, and members are captured by it. For this to happen, we need the leadership of all who have been given responsibility and authority: members of congregations and their pastors; boards and staff of institutions and agencies of the church; synodical bishops; and the bishop of this church.
We expect our leadership to name the sin of racism and lead us in our repentance of it. Although racism affects each one of us differently, we must take responsibility for our participation, acknowledge our complicity, repent of our sin, and pray God will bring us to reconciliation.
Racism, both blatant and subtle, continues to deny the reconciling work of the cross. God’s forgiveness frees us from the enslavement of racism. For some, this may mean giving up power or privilege; for others, it may mean giving up anger or prejudice. Let us know this reconciliation in our lives!
We expect our leadership to persevere in their challenge to us to be in mission and ministry in a multicultural society. The Church catholic already has diversity of cultures. For the Evangelical LutheranChurchinAmerica,catholicityisagiven. Memberswillquestion,however,whyintentional measures have been taken in order for us to be a multicultural church.
Because of sin and indifference, intentional measures are necessary for vision to become reality. We expect our leadership to clarify why measures were taken, and to help members deal with the implications of such measures.

DOING JUSTICE
1. A Time for Public Leadership
Our world is one where racial and ethnic lines are drawn and enforced. Our world is one where hostility festers along those dividing lines, often bursting out in violence. Our world is one where power and prejudice combine in bitter oppression.
But God has not gathered the Church as yet one more example of brokenness. The Church exists to proclaim Jesus the Christ, whose life, death, and resurrection mean freedom for the world. The Church also exists to teach the law of God, announcing that the God who justifies expects all people to do justice.
So, the Church must cry out for justice, and thereby resist the cynicism fueled by visions that failed and dreams that died. The Church must insist on justice, and thereby refuse to blame victimized people for their situations. The Church must insist on justice, and thereby assure participation of all people.
The Church that pursues justice will face and address difficult social, political, and economic problems such as:
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  •  how racism must be confronted in order to build a society where diversity is truly valued;
  •  how race and ethnicity figure in political decisions on immigration, crime, and environmental pollution; and
  •  how economic forces work against people of color in housing, medical care, education, and employment.
    In its pursuit of justice, this church must question responses that are quick, easy, and, therefore, probably inadequate.\

    2. A Time for Public Witness
    The Church that confesses Christ in public demonstrates its commitment through involvement in public life—globally and locally, nationally and in neighborhoods.
    Through public events such as elections or town meetings, through public bodies such as legislatures or volunteer groups, church members help to forge political will and consensus.

    Participation in public life is essential to doing justice and undoing injustice. Only when people affected by racial and ethnic division speak publicly of painful realities, does there emerge the possibility of justice for everyone.
    In places served by the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, however, public life is too often in sorry shape, shallow, and fragmented. Increasingly cynical or simply bored, many residents ignore public debate. Many find it difficult to participate fully because of racial or ethnic barriers, or economic hardship.
    This church, therefore, will actively promote a public life worthy of the name. We encourage public witness by members, and stand publicly as a church against injustice. We insist on a public forum accessible to everyone, since the interests of everyone are at stake.

    3. A Time for Public Deliberation
    One way that we, the members of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, will promote a better public life is through example. This church has already committed itself to a moral deliberation that deals openly with conflict and controversy. In fact, such deliberation has helped us to discover new dimensions of mission and new possibilities for ministry.
    This church will live up to its commitment to deliberation. Specifically, we will:
    model an honest engagement with issues of race, ethnicity and culture, by
  •  being a community of mutual conversation, mutual correction, and mutual
    consolation;
  •  model a healthy and healing response to the change that inevitably comes from cultural contact;
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  •  model exchanges in which people of different cultures can find points of agreement while sometimes “agreeing to disagree;”
  •  encourage and participate in the education of young people, in order that they might be better equipped to live in a multicultural society;
  •  bring together parties in conflict, creating space for deliberation; and
  •  participate in identifying the demands of justice, and work with others who
    would have justice for all.

    4. A Time for Advocacy

    The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America received from its predecessor church bodies a solid foundation upon which to build advocacy for justice and opposition to racial and ethnic discrimination. We will listen to our advocates as we examine our own institutional life, and will model that for which we call.
    Our advocacy will take place in partnership ecumenically, among corporations and local, state, and national governments. We look for positive incentives for change and fair distribution of the social costs of correcting past wrongs. We will work for respect of cultures, for example in mass media and public presentations, in art and advertising, and in other endeavors. We will speak against policy initiatives that discriminate on the basis of language.
    This church will support legislation, ordinances, and resolutions that guarantee to all persons equally:
  •  civil rights, including full protection of the law and redress under the law of discriminatory practices; and to all citizens, the right to vote;
  •  access to quality education, health care, and nutrition;
  •  opportunity for employment with fair compensation, and possibilities for job
    training and education, apprenticeship, promotion, and union membership;
  •  opportunity for business ownership;
  •  access to legal, banking, and insurance services;
  •  the right to rent, buy, and occupy housing in any place; and
  •  access to public transportation and accommodation.
    We of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America will advocate for just immigration policies, including fairness in visa regulations and in admitting and protecting refugees. We will work for policies that cause neither undue repercussions within immigrant communities nor bias against them.
    Our efforts on behalf of local and international community and in opposition to racism will recognize the multicultural nature of the world. We will promote international respect for human rights, and support the international movement to eliminate discrimination.
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