Chattanooga Times Free Press

Faith leaders helping address racism

Pledge challenges Christian church to be anti-racist

- BY WYATT MASSEY STAFF WRITER

Faith leaders in Chattanoog­a have released a framework for addressing racism in the church, part of an ongoing effort in the city to bridge the racial divide among houses of worship.

The L.E.A.D. pledge — standing for listen, embrace, advocate and dream — offers a framework for Christians who are not racist but may not be familiar with anti-racism work, said Nicole Parker, an adjunct professor at Southern Adventist University and author of the “Tales of the Exodus” series for children.

Parker wrote the pledge alongside her four teenage children and their friends based on her family’s experience of church attempts to embrace multicultu­ral approaches to faith.

“Many white people are paralyzed by not fully understand­ing how racism operates and their own fear about saying the wrong thing or doing the wrong thing,” Parker said.

Troy Brand, senior pastor of Orchard Park Seventh-day Adventist Church, took the pledge and started gathering support among local clergy. As of Wednesday, at least 150 clergy and at least 300 church members from Chattanoog­a and beyond have signed.

“We didn’t want it to be a ‘feel good about myself for a moment’ pledge,” Brand said. “We wanted to challenge people. … We want to end racism in the Christian church in America with this pledge. We know we are starting small here in Chattanoog­a.”

The pledge calls on people to reflect on ways in which they may be involved in racist systems and offer hospitalit­y toward people from different cultural background­s.

“We want to end racism in the Christian church in America with this pledge.” – TROY BRAND, SENIOR PASTOR OF ORCHARD PARK SEVENTHDAY ADVENTIST CHURCH

People taking the pledge can reflect on each step before moving to the next, Brand said.

“It’s good to listen and it’s good to embrace, but then we need to begin to advocate because there’s people in power and people who are not in power, and people need to speak up.”

Parker and Brand said the Christian framework offers a meaningful way of confrontin­g racism. Jesus confronted the oppression of marginaliz­ed people and showed how all people were equal in the eyes of God, Parker said.

“Only a gospel-driven mission will make people willing to keep fighting racism when they are tired or when they get attacked,” she said.

In June, a group of local pastors gathered in Miller Park for a service to call out the silence and complicity of white Christians in ongoing issues of racism in the church. The service, which Kingdom Partners hosted, came in response to weeks of unrest in Chattanoog­a and around the country after the killing of George Floyd by a Minnesota police officer.

This week, the county is again watching unrest in cities following the shooting of Jacob Blake, a 29-year-old Black man who was shot seven times in the back by a police officer in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Sunday.

Brand said the pledge is an extension of the gathering in June to continue conversati­ons among local faith communitie­s.

Like Christiani­ty throughout the country, the faith in Chattanoog­a is affected by centuries of racism. Symbols of the Confederac­y are still present in local houses of worship, along with troubled histories of prominent faith leaders owning slaves.

During local protests against police brutality, tensions arose between clergy and protesters after several leading demonstrat­ors called out the faith leaders for not doing more to address white supremacy in their congregati­ons and in the city.

Brand said the group is planning to release a 40-day devotional series on anti-racism work in the church sometime in September or October.

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