Black Minister Leaves Southern Baptist Convention Over Its Support of Trump, Alt-Right – Atlanta Black Star

Minister Lawrence Ware has served the Southern Baptist Convention for nearly 10 years. (Image courtesy of Oklahoma State University).

In a scathing open letter published in The New York Times this week, an African-American minister announced his departure from the Southern Baptist Convention over the churchs reluctance to denounce white supremacy and its outward support of President Donald Trump.

Lawrence Ware, who serves asco-director of the Center for Africana Studies at Oklahoma State University and has been an ordained minister at the convention for nearly a decade, renounced his denomination Tuesday, July 17, noting that while it wasnt an easy decision, it was a necessary one.

As a Black scholar of race and a minister whos committed to social justice, I can no longer be a part of an organization that is complicit in the disturbing rise of the so-called alt-right, whose members support the abhorrent policies of Donald Trump and whose troubling racial history and current actions reveal a deep commitment to white supremacy, Ware wrote.

He explained that his decision was ultimately spurred by an event earlier this year when a prominent Black pastor from Arlington, Texas, introduced a resolution at the groups annual convention denouncing the white supremacist and alt-right movements. Conference leaders initially refused to hear the resolution but later approved a revised version that excluded a denunciation of the curse of Ham theory and added details of all the good Southern Baptists have done for Black people and nonwhites.

Ware argued that the resolution shouldve been immediately adopted, but it wasnt.

A contingent of predominately white, old-guard members refused to take the resolution seriously, even while many Black and progressive clergy members advocated its adoption, he wrote. It wasnt until chaos ensued that a reworded resolution vowing to decry every form of racism, including alt-right white supremacy, as antithetical to the Gospel of Jesus Christ was adopted.

Among other things, Ware highlighted the fact that over 70 percent of white evangelicals, many of whom are Southern Baptists, approve of President Trumps job performance. He also touched on the churchs history of pro-slavery attitudes and its outward support of segregation during the civil rights movement.

Though the church issued a formal apology for its support of slavery in 1995, Ware insisted that enough still hasnt been done to address the institution of white supremacy within the SBC. He then called out several churches for remaining silent about Trump and the rise of the alt-right while being hostile toward social justice movements like Black Lives Matter.

I love the church, but I love Black people more, Ware concluded. Black lives matter to me.I am not confident that they matter to the Southern Baptist Convention.

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Black Minister Leaves Southern Baptist Convention Over Its Support of Trump, Alt-Right - Atlanta Black Star

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