Criswell News

A Cultivator’s Take on Racial Reconciliation

Dr. Curtis A. Woods, February 24, 2025

A Cultivator’s Take on Racial Reconciliation

When regenerate followers of Christ discuss race relations in America, we should do so without being overly critical or biting toward one another. Ad hominem attacks only engender more heat than light. No one is edified. The apostle Paul chastised the church at Galatia to avoid “biting and devouring one another” lest those in the church destroy one another (Galatians 5:15).

I firmly believe the Gospel eradicates racist ideas and prevents all forms of avarice and victimization from poisoning our hearts. Christ gave His followers the missiological and eschatological vision of Kingdom diversity through His high priestly prayer and the prophecy of blood-bought worshipers “from every tribe, language, people and nation” bowing down before the slain lamb in adoration and praise (John 17:21; Revelation 5:9; 7:9). Simply put, biblical theology and historical truth-telling undergird distinctly Christian conversations about racialization in America.

A prophetic statement

Evangelical leaders of various hues and denominations grappled with the heretical anthropological orientation that gave birth to Jim Crow. African Americans had become increasingly frustrated with the de jure segregation of the Jim Crow North and South, which held on in many localities despite civil rights legislation and decisions handed down by the Supreme Court.

Voices from the religiously diverse black prophetic tradition demanded equal rights under the law. Some of these religious figures espoused liberation from the oppressive grip of American racism “by any means necessary,” which engendered fear in many hearts. Others took a different approach, believing radical love and nonviolence would expose the brutality of ethnic supremacy with hopes of minimizing mass concern for personal safety. Those who embraced nonviolence, “love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you,” rather than the lex talionis, “an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth,” were not immune to ridicule in the public square.

Lamentably, some American citizens incessantly castigate the demonic and dehumanizing anthropological views of our national forebears without celebrating what God has done and is doing to create denominational beauty in the 21st century.

The Latter-Day Civil Rights Movement

The Civil Rights Movement, which arguably began in the late 1700s, was in hot pursuit of equal opportunities for black citizens in the 1950s and’60s. Many historians, sociologists, political pundits, and some evangelical Christians have mixed feelings about the civil rights operation in America. The phrase “latter-day Civil Rights Movement” highlights the long history of the black freedom struggle. The Civil Rights Act of 1866, for example, granted equal protection under the law for every American citizen. This legislation became legal precedent for demanding a just society based on the U.S. Constitution, common good, and Christian virtue.

Some religionists think the Civil Rights Movement was devilish insofar as the leaders sought to transform society through perceived carnal weapons such as boycotts or sit-ins. These false notions overlook analogous illustrations in Scripture to the aforesaid forms of protest. The Hebrew midwives boycotted Pharaoh’s edict to kill male Hebrew children (Exodus 1:15-22). Daniel, in opposition to King Darius, got on his knees and prayed openly to God in civil disobedience (Daniel 6:10). He antedated the famed Greensboro, N.C., lunch counter sit-ins that courageously defied injustice by well over two millennia. People of faith have executed civil disobedience against injustice throughout human history.

Civil unrest, in many cases, gave some evangelical leaders impetus to rethink the convention’s historic relationship to people of color. When “interest convergence” motivates societal change rather than the Gospel, we simply change the furniture in the home without dealing with the cracked structural foundation. Which is to say, a majority group that tolerates minority advancement for self-interested reasons will always clash over the meaning of situational and systemic racism. Gospel-saturated racial reconciliation exposes cultural racism without fear of corporate reprisal.

At Criswell College, we remain confessionally committed to the “faith once for all delivered to the saints” (Jude 3) as cultivators who seek to understand diverse populations while developing purposeful relationships for the glory of God and the good of others.

 

Grace to you,
Curtis A. Woods, Ph.D.
Vice President for Academic Affairs
Professor of Theology and Christian Leadership

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