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Home > 2007 > FebruaryChristianity Today, February, 2007  |   |  
Exit Interviews
Why blacks are leaving evangelical ministries.



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I used to take a certain amount of pride in being the first African American on staff at Christianity Today. But I was routinely humbled when I realized that being first isn't all it's cracked up to be. When you're the only one, there's always a sense that you're in an extremely unstable position, as if one healthy gust of wind could topple you—and with you, the hopes of other people with your skin color.


Reconciliation Blues: A Black Evangelical's Inside View of White Christianity
by Edward Gilbreath
IVP Books
207 pp.; $20

Sometimes, I had to remind myself to "be black," to make sure the rest of the editors weren't overlooking some important point or advancing something that might be insensitive to nonwhites. This became exhausting. On the one hand, I wanted to be a good race man and represent "my people" well. But on the other, I hated all that responsibility. I just wanted to be an excellent journalist.

Washington Post sports columnist Michael Wilbon echoed the opinion of many African Americans when, in a column about golfer Tiger Woods, he wrote, "There's a social responsibility that comes with being black in America, regardless of the profession, and that obligation increases exponentially with stature. There are rules adopted out of necessity, even desperation, by the subculture we as black folks inhabit. … One of the rules is you speak up, even if it means taking some lumps."

I did my best to speak up when it seemed necessary, and at times I caught grief for it. Other times, I decided it would be best to act like Jesus before Herod and simply say nothing. It gets old, you know—this taking-your-lumps business.

"People sometimes ignore you," says Bruce Fields, a professor of systematic theology at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School in Deerfield, Illinois. "Or, if there is attention directed toward you, it is subtly communicated that you are not to be taken as seriously as a white person of similar status, experience, and credentials."

Fields was the first full-time African American professor on Trinity's staff, and in July 2005, he became the first to be tenured. Yet being one of the few blacks at the institution, he continues to harbor doubts about his presence there. "I think about being a minority here all the time," he confesses. "There is rarely a time when I am not thinking about it. I am thankful for who God has made me, and I am grateful for his call on my life—but not all the time. I find myself being distant, untrusting, and often angry that I have internalized a certain sense that I am not good enough. I know this is wrong, and I've been working with a support network to overcome it. But it's difficult."

From a young age, many of us have been told that it isn't good enough just to be good. As a black person (and I've heard members of other ethnic groups make similar statements), you had to be better than whites in order to make it. I think this notion was probably even more true in past years, but there will always be some whites (and even blacks) whose opinion of African Americans is so low that they're just waiting for them to slip up. Oftentimes, whites don't even realize they think this way.

Over the years, I've noticed a pattern of African Americans joining evangelical organizations, often as the first black, only to leave two, three, or four years later—usually in frustration. In dozens of interviews with black evangelical leaders, I heard story after story of alienation, anger, and defeat.

When so many otherwise successful African American Christians still express disappointment over the state of race relations in the church, as my research indicates, something is not right. We need to listen and learn. As members of the body of Christ, we should be determined to hear and understand the concerns of our brothers and sisters. If one part of the body is hurting, we should respond. But first we need to understand the reasons. Why do so many successful black evangelicals feel marginalized in evangelical institutions? Worse, why are some giving up on the idea of racial unity in the church altogether?





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Owusu Asamoah   Posted: January 21, 2007 10:11 AM
Thank you brother for your article. The issues you raised are very true. As a black in Ghana it is very difficult to be accorded any opportunity in the work of Christ by Evangelicals. When I am in Europe and apply for any opportunity it looks promising. The very moment they see that I am from Ghana their attitude changes towards me. I ask myself if these people are really working towards the upliftment of the Kingdom of God. When you are in Africa you are not part of the Evangelicals.

Kevin   Posted: January 16, 2007 11:39 AM
I think that Christians today are focusing more on feelings than they are Jesus. If Christians were actually living according to the way that Jesus commanded we wouldn't even see skin color. I get that we as people all have different likes and dislikes but they are of no concern to a Christian who seeks truth and knowledge according to the Word of God. We as Christians are all to often brought down by what we don't know and I think that It's time that we get educated on not only the TRUE WORD OF GOD, but also the secular cultures around us. You can know where you are headed and why you are headed there until you understand where you've been and why you've been there. It's shouldn't be a matter of choosing a Church because you feel comfortable. We should be seeking truth anywhere and everywhere we go. There is more to be said, I'm sure, But I think I've gotten my point aCross. Jesus died for everyone, so let's act like. I don't call yourself a Christian unless you're going to act like 1

Peter   Posted: January 17, 2007 9:20 AM
Good job Ed! Its difficult to be the only, the first or even the next, but it must be done. Having grown up black in a white church that became black over the years but still has a white pastor I have seen many sides of this coin. The key is, as you said, going beyond the event to building a "house to house" relationship with individuals who are different in color, in denomination, in viewpoint, in method. Thanks

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