53.5 F
Spokane
Thursday, February 27, 2025
spot_img
HomeCommentaryDiversity in the Pews: Segregation common on Sunday mornings

Diversity in the Pews: Segregation common on Sunday mornings

Date:

Related stories

One God. Many world religions. Can that be?

Marking 1,700 years since Nicaea, the author shows how the Baha'i faith sees spiritual evolution with increasing knowledge, which results in uniting all world religions under one divine source.

Trump’s abuse of power puts U.S. democracy in peril

Trump’s actions challenge the Constitution, undermine justice and threaten democracy with abuse of power, attacks on the press and disregard for laws.

Embrace Lent without the guilt: Read a book or share a smile

Lent has shifted from guilt-driven rituals to spiritual renewal, with prayer, good works and reflection. Benedictines also encourage reading a new book!

Shed old skin: Learn the Year of the Snake’s power

In this Year of the Snake, what old skins might need shedding for your personal renewal? The author notes he needs to shed racial prejudice and hostility to snakes.

Could empathy stem from our shared atoms and humanity?

As she ages, the author values efficiency, embraces absurdity and deep questions and finds empathy in humanity's shared atoms.

Our Sponsors

spot_img

This is part one of a three-part series on segregation and church.

The time that Christians are coming together to praise God — 11 a.m. on Sundays — is also the most segregated hour of America, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. once pointed out. Two local religious leaders say decades later King’s words still ring true. They offered their insights on church segregation today, explaining what it looks like, why they believe people should care, and what can be done about it.

Rodney McAuley, director of community and church engagement for Spokane Youth for Christ, is an African American Baptist and served as pastor of a Foursquare church for eight years, which is a predominantly white Pentecostal denomination. He said his experience was one of walking in the middle of the divide of race and denomination. He said his passion is reconciliation, which has taken him into arenas where he worked to be a bridge and bridge builder, trying to bring the walls of separation down and bring groups together relationally.

Russ Davis is a current pastor of leadership development, teaching and administration at New Community Church. He was the keynote speaker in January at the Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration “Drum Majors for Justice — A Call to Action” at Spokane Community College.

Explaining Church Segregation

Nationally, church segregation is common. Sociologist Michael Emerson from Rice University collected data about racially mixed churches and found 93 percent of congregations in the U.S are uniracial, a term defined by sociologists as a membership with at least 80 percent of one racial group.
Even a church with a mixed race congregation could have an all white leadership team and worship style, which is not the truly reconciled or multi-ethnic church consistent with God’s desire, McAuley said.

Church segregation in Spokane is a bit different than church segregation in other cities because of Spokane’s demographics, said McAuley.

According to the U.S census, the percent of people who identify as Caucasian is 77.9 percent nationally and in 86.7 percent in Spokane.

Church segregation is the homogeneous principle, said Davis.

“People tend to relate to and interact with those that are most like themselves,” Davis said. “I don’t think it is an intentional segregation as much as it is a natural byproduct of you tend to worship with people who worship like you and act like you. I think segregation happens not just along racial lines but also socioeconomic lines.”

As McAuley said, there is still a problem within the church in regards to racial segregation.

Check back tomorrow to learn ways church segregation can be addressed.

Madison Garner
Madison Garnerhttp://bit.ly/18PNdYa
Madison Garner is a sophomore at Whitworth University majoring in journalism and mass communication and minoring in philosophy and English. She loves writing for her school's newspaper The Whitworthian in the philosophy and religion beat.

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
spot_img
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x