Pastors Rip Off Band-Aid, Expose 'Ugly' Racism as They Seek Healing in Divided US
Pastor Jentezen Franklin speaks at the Celebration of Unity Service at Free Chapel in Gainesville, Georgia, March 19, 2017.
GAINESVILLE, Georgia — It's time to rip
off the band-aid and expose the ugliness of racism so that God can bring
healing to America, an Atlanta megachurch pastor said Sunday as he was
joined by other Christian leaders hoping to tackle violence and the
racial divide.
Free Chapel Lead Pastor Jentezen
Franklin spoke before thousands of parishioners at the "Celebration of
Unity Service," lamenting that the divisions in his own churches which
manifested during the election year were very painful for him to see.
But he was also "tired of putting band-aids on it" and "tired of
ignoring it and pretending that it's not there."
"As long as we
stay polarized in our little camps, we only hang out with people who
think like us, look like us, act like us, share the same political views
as us.
Guess what? We're never going to find the real thing ... only
God can fix it, Church," he said.
"Maybe all of this is God saying
'I'm tired of you putting band-aids on it every four years. Maybe it
needs to be ripped off, as ugly as racism is, and say the only way it
can be healed is if you say 'Jesus, you are the healing balm of Gilead,
and we are the Body of Christ, that healing agent.'"
Franklin was speaking out in support of The Reconciled Church, a
movement co-founded by Bishop Harry Jackson and which held its first
conference in January 2015 after a series of killings of unarmed blacks
by police. This movement of racially diverse Christian leaders decided
to hold a "Unity" service at Free Chapel, outside Atlanta, in order to
address violence in America's cities as part of ongoing racial
reconciliation efforts in politically divided times.
The group of
acclaimed ministers did not hold back from dealing with tough, touchy
issues. Bishop Jackson, senior pastor of Hope Christian Fellowship in
Beltsville, Maryland, outside Washington, D.C., said he believes that if
the church does not respond to the racial crisis and injustices, more
chaos in cities is likely.
Bishop Harry Jackson, senior pastor of
Hope Christian Church in Beltsville, Md., and Hope Connexion Orlando in
Florida, is seen in this file photo.
"America
is at a boiling point and we are going to have to invoke the mercy of
God," Jackson said, noting he believes that American urban centers are
under a spiritual curse, brought about by widespread disobedience.
If
the Church repents and follows through with several steps toward
forgiveness and restitution, God's blessing will replace the curse and,
Jackson believes, America will be "on the verge of the greatest
Awakening our nation has ever seen."
The Christian Post asked
Franklin what he sees coming on the horizon for racial reconciliation
and city renewal after Sunday's service.
The Reconciled Church, he stressed, "is not just a night but a movement," he said in an interview following the service.
"What
we're going to do hard locally and in the city of Atlanta, hopefully it
will spread through the nation ... we're going to create prototypes and
models. We're going to build those bridges to law enforcement. We're
going to build those bridges into our communities that are in trouble
and are filled with broken, hurting homes, families and people and be
the church that God has called us to be and heal the racial divide," he
said.
Throughout the night, several of the leaders modeled and led
the attendees in acts of repentance for various racial sins that have
served to divide the church.
"I was so encouraged tonight because
we dealt with real stuff," Franklin commented. "We dealt with real
issues. We heard the very heart of our Father God crying out and saying
that the voices of anger and hatred and retaliation, they are not my
voice. My voice is crying out for healing and wholeness and
reconciliation and that we are called to be ministers of
reconciliation."
Jackson told CP that in the following months his team will be working to implement the Seven Bridges to Peace, their comprehensive strategy for renewal of broken cities.
A
vital part of this effort, he said, will be criminal justice reform
which entails "churches adopting returning criminals to folks who have
served their time, disciple them, reengage in the marketplace."
Other
notable figures present at the "Celebration of Unity Service" included
evangelist James Robison and Alveda King, niece of Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr. There was also a panel discussion about how to approach city
transformation featuring Bishop Angel Nunez of Bilingual Christian
Church in Baltimore; Toni Brinker Pickens, founder of Operation Blue
Shield; Chief Melvin Russell of the Baltimore Police Department; and
Kevin Williams, a former corrections officer and chaplain of the Billy
Graham Evangelistic Association's Rapid Response Team.
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