By Staff ATLANTA (BP)--An "Atlanta Covenant" -- urging Baptists around the world to
devote the first 10 years of the new millennium to eradicating racism and ethnic
conflict -- was adopted by 200 delegates from 30 countries who participated in
the Baptist World Alliance's Baptists Against Racism Summit Jan. 8-11 in Atlanta.
A copy of the covenant's exact wording was not available from the BWA Jan.
14. The BWA issued a news release, however, summarizing the covenant. The BWA is a fellowship of 192 Baptist conventions and unions, including the
Southern Baptist Convention, ministering in 200 countries. According to the BWA news release, the covenant notes that while Baptists
have "a rich heritage of commitment to international mission" and have made
significant contributions in areas of health care, education and church planting,
"racism has tainted these efforts." Urging Baptists to be "agents of reconciliation," the news release reported,
the covenant specifically calls Baptists: -- to examine ways in which their "evangelism, Christian education and
economic structures perpetuate racism, and work aggressively for change." -- to "a renewal of worship and cleansing from racial sin" in Baptist
churches "and a commitment to wholistic and interracial mission and evangelism."
-- "to work for the elimination of unfair trade and [for] a just world
economy, the protection of the rights of aboriginal and tribal peoples and to
study the affirmation of the relationship between gospel and culture." -- to repent "in churches, especially in North America and Europe, where
worship is largely still segregated." -- to commit to "racial justice as an integral part of proclaiming Good News;
[to] promote economic development as a way forward to racial justice; use
multi-racial images and idioms in worship; and develop church educational
programs that promote a Christian lifestyle that demonstrates justice and racial
harmony." -- to move "towards a mission policy that empowers all Baptists to evangelize
and disciple all people groups around the world."
By Wendy Ryan
ATLANTA (BP)--Former President and Baptist layman Jimmy Carter
and Coretta Scott King, wife of slain civil rights leader Martin
Luther King Jr., were among Baptist leaders who called for an end
to racial discrimination during the Baptist World Alliance's
International Summit of Baptists Against Racism Jan. 8-11 in
Atlanta.
In a session at the Carter Center, Carter said the dreams of
ending racial discrimination "have not been materialized. There
have been legal changes, but too much separation of race and no
adequate compensation for years of slavery." Carter is the
honorary chairman of the BWA's Special Commission on Baptists
Against Racism.
Describing the Christian church as "the last rampart of racism,"
Carter blamed the continuing racial segregation at the 11 o'clock
hour in the United States on the tendency of people to build
small communities "and encapsulate ourselves with people like us,
and this puts no burden of Christian action on us." He called for
churches to "reach out to a neighboring church that has a
different racial and ethnic composition" as a beginning but
important step toward better race relations.
To the BWA, Carter said, "...I am pleased that the international
community of Baptists has taken such a strong stand against
racism. Our Savior Jesus Christ has called us as one people to be
equal before God with no room for racial discrimination or
prejudice."
In a session at the Morehouse College chapel named after her late
husband, Coretta Scott King cited the global effect of her
husband's legacy, noting 100 nations now observe the King
holiday. Churches are no longer as segregated as when her late
husband declared 11 o'clock, "the most segregated hour in
America,'" she said. King also noted the apology of the Southern
Baptist Convention for the ways Baptists had supported racial
discrimination, in a resolution of repentance adopted the
convention's 1995 sesquicentennial meeting in Atlanta.
Calling on Baptists to work for an end to violence between people
of different faiths, King said, "We have done much, and we have
much more to go, but I see the dim outlines of the beloved
community" which her husband envisioned.
Wallace Charles Smith, senior minister of Shiloh Baptist Church,
Washington, D.C., and chair of the BWA special commission,
described racism as "a human scourge and pervasive evil that
permeates every crack, corner and crevice of the known world."
While many governments and corporations get involved to fight
racism, "unless God's people get involved, the problem is not
going away."
"God can convert the chilliest, staunchest and deeply entrenched
racist in the world, if we preach the Word of God with power,"
Smith said.
BWA General Secretary Denton Lotz said in his address, "What God
wants is more visionaries, more prophets and more dreamers to
work for racial justice."
Lotz formed the BWA special commission on racism in 1992 out of
concern for the escalation of religious tensions in North America
and the tide of the racial and ethnic conflict sweeping many
parts of the world.
Supported by the weight of civil rights history as 200 delegates
from 30 countries met at Ebenezer and Wheat Street Baptist
churches and King's alma mater, Morehouse College, which all
played pivotal roles in the fight for civil rights in the United
States, Lotz said, "What God needs now is men and women who are
open to the movement of the Holy Spirit in their lives, ... ready
to go to the walls of injustice and say, 'Enough! Enough! God
says it is enough!'"
Lotz described Martin Luther King Jr. as a dreamer whose work has
changed people around the world. "We honor tonight especially the
dreams of one man who was cradled in this church," Lotz said from
the pulpit of Ebenezer Baptist Church, where much of the summit
was held, "and to a certain extent, this church can rightly be
called the birthplace of the civil rights movement, not only for
black Americans in the United States but for the poor and
marginalized worldwide."
Lotz said there is a Martin Luther King Haus in Germany, Italy,
Hungary and Russia, "because in their persecution they recognized
the prophetic ministry of God in Dr. King's life."
"It was Martin Luther King's dream that captured the world and
continued the prophetic ministry of Jesus. It was the Holy Spirit
working in his life that gave him a dream of equality and justice
for all," Lotz said.
"I still have a dream," the BWA leader continued, although he
warned the world has not dealt kindly with dreamers. Baptists who
fight for racial justice and an end to ethnic and tribal conflict
might also suffer, he said.
"We honor our martyrs but we kill our prophets, and this is true
in Anabaptist and Baptist history," Lotz said. He cited Balthasar
Hubmaier, a German reformer who was burned at the stake in
Vienna; Conrad Grebel, a Mennonite leader who was drowned in a
Zurich lake; Roger Williams, founder of the first Baptist church
in the United States who was banned from the Massachusetts
colony; John Bunyan, writer of Pilgrim Prayers who was
imprisoned; Sam Sharpe in Jamaica, who was hanged as he
prophetically said, "I would rather die on yonder gallows a free
man, than live in slavery;" Adoniram Judson, first American
missionary who was imprisoned in Burma; and Martin Luther King
Jr. who was assassinated in Memphis, Tenn.
"All of these men and women were dreamers of whom the world was
not worthy," Lotz said, "but all made profound changes in the way
we view the world. They understood that Jesus had come not to
talk about life but to change life."
Lotz also warned against false dreamers and dreams, like Hitler
who was a great racist and enraged a whole people to commit the
greatest racial and ethnic tragedy of history, the Holocaust, and
Hendrik F. Verwoerd of South Africa who instituted apartheid and
enslaved a people.
In this part of the world, Lotz said, the Christian church is
shamed by false dreamers in the Ku Klux Klan who spew racism with
Christian words. In the Balkans, there is ethnic conflict with
dictators encouraging their people toward genocide.
"Part of the prophetic responsibility of the church is to warn
people against these false dreams and against these false
shepherds," Lotz said.
"Jesus wants true dreamers," Lotz said, "and he promised he would
send the Holy Spirit in order to make new dreamers. ... Indeed,
Jesus Christ is God's dreamer become reality for all humanity. In
Jesus Christ we see and touch and feel the power and justice of
God."
Lotz urged, "Let us go from Atlanta and proclaim to our churches
and the world, 'I have a dream, that one day men and women in
Kosovo, Albania, will leave in peace, that the Armenians and
Azerbajainians will love and one another, that Hutus and Tutsis
will sit down at the same table and break bread together, that in
northeast India Kuki and Naga tribes will live in peace, that the
Aboriginal in Australia will be fully integrated into the life of
the community, and the inner cities in the U.S.A. will be
highways of peaceful integration and love."
C.T. Vivian, a civil rights veteran who chairs the Center for
Democratic Renewal in Atlanta, also voiced hope in God's power to
change people during his address, but said it will not be easy.
"Why are we still dealing with a 16th-century problem at the end
of the 20th century?" Vivian asked. "We have not gotten rid of
racism within the church and without the culture that surrounds
the church. Those who want to help find there is no place to go."
Chiding the Christian church and Baptists for the continuing
problem of racism, Vivian said, "Racism destroys more people in
more places of the world than any other single factor. ... No
person of color under racism will ever know what they might have
been, done or become for themselves, their family or their
people. We have no values that are not daily being compromised by
racism."
Vivian described racism as "the greatest barrier" to winning most
of the world to Christ. He called for black missionaries to come
to Euro-American countries "to save them from their most
atrocious sins" and praised Billy Graham for making this evident
in his worldwide evangelistic efforts.
"If you are black, you become a Christian in spite of the
Christian faith and culture because of the freedom Baptists gave
blacks," Vivian said. "The black church is now in control of
itself, and this was given because we are Baptists. Without this,
we never would have this great drive for peace and justice."
Vivian offered several practical ways Baptists can fight racism
and called for, among other things, "a racist-free Baptist
church." He called on theologians "to make powerful statements
around the world" against racism and for every Christian teacher
educated in a Baptist school to have a course in racism
education.
"Our work can save us all, if we choose to do it," Vivian said.
Robert E. "Bob" Reccord, president of the Southern Baptist North
American Mission Board, before leading in prayer for
reconciliation in the world, told the summit, "I'm sure glad the
Savior who died for me did not give a whit about the color of my
skin. It is an honor for me to stand here."
[Baptist Press 15 January 1999]
BWA summit adopts 'covenant' for array of steps against racism
Racial reconciliation still lagging, Baptist summit speakers
declare
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