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Posts Tagged ‘racial reconciliation’

Understanding brings Healing… but not overnight!

It’s impossible to heal a disease you don’t understand. Take cancer for example. The history of cancer treatment has slowly advanced as thousands and thousands of hours of careful research have been poured into understanding the causes and possible cures. Racism is a stubborn cancer on the soul of our nation. Many feel it’s absolutely incurable. Many see some signs of hope, places where healing has happened. Still others pretend it doesn’t even exist. “I don’t feel the pain – so how can I be sick?”

Healing the racial divides that are still with us today will take an enduring effort on everyone’s part regardless our socio-economic status. We can’t simply preach a sermon on it and walk away. We can’t attend a class then feel like we’ve done our part. We can’t pretend it doesn’t exist. We can’t give up either – refusing any medical attention just because we have cancer. There is hope. There is progress as long as God’s people are willing to engage in the healing process. It takes a tenacious willingness to learn, repeated attempts at solutions, reinventing the strategies, realigning the priorities and always being willing to admit mistakes and try again.

Here are a few links to some important resources we’re talking about in the class Healing the Racial Divide:

  1. The Kingdom Color Map of places of historic interest in North Omaha. The map will show you locations of significant events and landmarks each with a pop-up description when you click on it. If you’re not familiar with North Omaha, poke around on the map a little, find a couple of places you’d like to see and drive there with a friend.
  2. The Kingdom Color Podcast is an audio interview of several community leaders describing Omaha’s cultural landscape in historic terms.
  3. The Kingdom Color Feature Video is a report from the Justice Journey several of us staff went on in the spring of 2009. A group of 25 white pastors and a group of 25 black pastors toured three cities in the south looking at significant civil rights locations, deepening our understanding and trust.

Keep building your understanding of what has happened. Keep building key relationships along the way. Keep engaging the context you live in – those of us here in Omaha have a rich field of possibilities on all these fronts.

This Is Difficult to Talk About!

 The above “Note of Encouragement” wound up in my mailbox on Monday morning in response to our Kingdom Color Series and my message in particular. They tell preachers to never gage how they feel about ministry on Monday mornings. I suppose this kind of note is why that’s the case. I’ll let you read it here. We’ll talk about it in my next post. I think the person responding like this has missed more than one critical point of my message. I’m curious if you have a reaction to it. Here’s what my nameless brother wrote me in case you can’t read the writing in the image:

Tim,
That was the most depressing liberal message, that I have ever heard at this church. Thank you for the condemning messages the last two weeks. MLK taught that we should judge each other by their conduct, not by the color of their skin. God doesn’t view us based on the color of our skin.”

Maybe we should change the header on our comment cards…

Kindgom Color


Yesterday we concluded a three week message series entitled Kingdom Color exploring the theme of racial reconciliation. I thought it would be good to post a few things I mentioned the message and flesh some ideas out a little more. I used a few Martin Luther King Jr quotes that I’ll list and give the references to. There are tons of resources we churned through in the last month of preparing these messages. I’ll get those posted as well. Stay tuned!

If you haven’t seriously thought about where our world is headed and how the church should be responding, I urge you to jump into the opportunities that are staring us in the face! Christians can get so concerned about having the right answers for tough questions like the problem of evil. But if we could show the world that our faith actually has the power to bring healing to our city’s biggest problems, we just might be more believable to a skeptical world.