Leaders Reaffirm Commitment to Reconciliation, Announce June 19 March on Atlanta
ATLANTA, June 1, 2020 – Hundreds of faith leaders associated with the OneRace Movement, including GRAMMY award-winning hip-hop artist Lecrae, today gathered in downtown Atlanta to call the Christian community to engage in racial issues both spiritually and civically, and the legal community to act against racially-motivated crimes.
On the heels of a weekend of protests and violence as a result of recent racially motivated acts of violence, OneRace released “The OneRace Statement on Righteousness and Justice: A call to end Racial Violence” and announced a June 19 march on the Atlanta Capitol, inviting tens of thousands to join the effort to call for change.
“Today, we are not here to talk about the protests. We are not here to talk about the riots. We are not here to talk about the looting. What we are here to talk about today is the injustice in our land,” said OneRace Co-director Josh Clemons in speaking about the miscarriage of justice and the loss of lives of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor and George Floyd.
“We are called to love one another regardless of color, class or culture,” Clemons continued. “Now is the time for change and reform, and for the Church to lead the way.”
Local leaders who spoke or prayed at today’s event included:
Pastor Crawford Loritts of Fellowship Bible Church,
Pastor Jeff Norris of Perimeter Church,
Pastor Lee Jenkins of Eagle’s Nest Church,
Pastor Dennis Rouse of Victory Church,
Singer/songwriter Lecrae,
Pastors Scott and Tami Free,
Pastor Arthur Breland of Woodland Hills Church,
Latasha Morrison of Be the Bridge, and
OneRace co-founders Billy Humphrey of New Bridge Church and Atlanta House of Prayer and Garland Hunt of The Father’s House.
Clemons reminded participants of a quote by Martin Luther King, Jr., that states, “The Church must be reminded that it is not the master or the servant of the state, but rather the conscience of the state. It must be the guide and the critic of the state, and never its tool.
OneRace Co-director Hazen Stevens said that when the Church has been true to this calling, it has acted as the nation’s moral compass.
“Where the Church has practiced core Scriptural beliefs, we have succeeded in leading well,” Stevens said. “Where we have drifted from them, we have failed in our role as the conscience of our nation and drifted into silence and complicity with racism.”
He then went on to enumerate the specific beliefs of the Church reflected in today’s statement:
We believe all people are made in the image and likeness of God.
We also believe all humans (though created in God’s image) are broken because of sin, and that racism, hatred, bigotry, and violence are sins inherent to all fallen humanity.
We believe that our identity as brothers and sisters united together in Christ across cultures, genders, and denominations, as expressed in the Word of God, supersedes any public, private, or personal ideology, race, gender, religion, political affiliation, culture, or creed.
We believe where we as the Church have failed to uphold these truths, we have let down society, one another, and God Himself.
Clemons followed with a “Recounting of History of and Condemnation of Racial Violence against People of Color,” stating that the vast majority of our collective history in this nation is steeped in racial terror, division and pain, beginning with the slave trade through the Civil Rights era.
“We are here today to declare the church in Atlanta is mourning with those who mourn (Romans 12:15); our hearts go out to the families of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery, who each died prematurely and violently,” Clemons said. “To their families, we want you to know that the Church in Atlanta is praying for you, and we want to state plainly that in memory of your loved ones we can and must do better as a nation.”
Reinforcing “The OneRace Statement on Righteousness and Justice: A call to end Racial Violence,” organizers specifically called for the following actions:
For all individuals to work to end racially motivated acts of violence by voting in local elections for candidates that uphold the values of equity and dignity toward all races, to serve in our communities across racial lines, and to speak up and participate in nonviolent protest whenever we see injustice that demands our attention.
For the law creators, law interpreters and law enforcers in the state of Georgia to put fresh eyes on the current statutes, and to work to ensure that the laws are written and enforced in ways that are equitable towards all.
For elected representatives to make such changes, and for law enforcement at every level to act expeditiously against racially motivated crimes.
Pastor Tami Free further invited everyone to join in signing The Atlanta Covenant, a series of covenants developed by OneRace first announced at its 2017 event OneRace Stone Mountain and which thousands have already signed. Signatories of The Atlanta Covenant commit to “stand against racism in every form, never again allowing it to gain a foothold within our spheres of influence.”
Reflecting on his conversation with Civil Rights leader Dr. John Perkins at the Stone Mountain event, Pastor Billy Humphrey said “Dr. Perkins told me, ‘I am looking at the fulfillment of my life’s work. Now, you have to take this to the streets.’ So, on June 19, we are calling everyone to join us in taking this to the streets, together and united, saying that Jesus is the answer.”
This was also part of Pastor Tami Free’s challenge, that tens of thousands sign up to participate in a March on Atlanta on June 19, 2020, or Juneteenth, “to ask God, the Church, and our civic leaders to make a change, so there will be no more Ahmaud Arbery’s, Breonna Taylors, or George Floyds.” Participants are invited to gather at Turner Stadium at 9 a.m. to join the march to Liberty Plaza.
For more information and to register to join the March on Atlanta, visit the Facebook event page here: https://www.facebook.com/events/251745402592645.
About OneRace
OneRace is a primarily young adult movement of hundreds of churches and ministries throughout Atlanta and around the U.S. working through prayer and fasting, relationship and collaboration, to displace the spirit of racism and release a movement of racial reconciliation across Atlanta, the Southeast and the nation. Through persistent prayer, authentic relationship and redemptive justice, OneRace exists to raise up a movement of racial reconciliation and revival. For more information, please visit http://oneracemovement.com.
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Remarks by supporting pastors and leaders included:
Pastor Lee Jenkins: “It’s time for our white brothers and sisters to step up and do their part and to no longer be silent. I would ask that they do four things: listen to people of color, learn by educating yourselves about history, lament – what has broken God’s heart should break ours, and leverage – use your influence, whatever that may be, to make a difference.”
Pastor Dennis Rouse: “What’s going on is a power struggle. White people have been in power for centuries, and as our nation becomes more multi-cultural, this integration has been slow to happen in the halls of power. This is a divine moment for the Church; it has the opportunity to step into the fray and be the answer. If not, nothing will be solved. We must love each other as much as we love ourselves, and we much seek to understand rather than to be understood.”
Latasha Morrison: “The problem is systemic racism. I want to focus on the psychology behind the looting. Riots are intended to shock the white community. When a society honors property over people, the looting is intended to send a message by attacking that property. We need to let black people lead and let their voices be amplified.”
Lecrae: “I am all for the idea that the Gospel changes hearts. But that needs to be both implicit and explicit, both vertical and horizontal. There needs to be some horizontal action, not just OneRace words. It is one thing to have black friends, but do you have black leaders in your church? In hiring, are you considering qualified people who may not look like you? If we are truly living our faith, it will be uncomfortable and we should look strange to other people. We need to promote prayer, policy, protests and publicity. The system is set up for black people to fail, but black people alone can’t tear it down. I don’t just need my neighbor, I need the entire Christian body of believers.”
Bishop Garland Hunt: “The Lord judges the House of God first. The Church must be activist. The Church is to be the measuring rod, or the plumb line, who the world looks to in determining right and wrong. We are on the way, but we are not there yet.”
Pastor Scot Free: “This is a lifestyle, not a program. God, help us to be your advocates, your hands and feet.”
Pastor Arthur Breland: “We declare an end to racism – at work, at church and in the boardroom. We need to have honest conversations, even if that costs us members or donors. Racism is a discipleship issue.”
Media Contact:
Melany Ethridge
melany@alarryross.com
214-912-8934
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