My Streaming Faith
Email:
Password:
Forgot password?



This is Pentecost Fellowship Ministries
Northview Christian Church - On Course
Fellowship Missionary Baptist Church
Cynthia James Evangelistic Ministries


Announcements

October 27, 2009  Hide Comments (2 comments)  Add Comment  Print Article  E-mail to a Friend
Black, White Methodists Heal 200-Year-Old Rift
from The Christian Post

Racial barriers were broken as blacks and whites came together for worship on Sunday at a Philadelphia church that once espoused segregation.

Members of Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, which was founded in the late 1700s by a group of blacks who walked out of St. George's Methodist Church because of segregated seating, were welcomed back for a "reunion" and integrated worship.

"You bless us in a way mere words fall short. The memory of what happened – hurt, hostility, disgrace, and disappointment – did not keep you from being here today. You grace us in coming," said the Rev. Fred Day, pastor of Historic St. George's Church, according to The Philadelphia Inquirer.

Centuries ago, St. George's was for some a symbol for racial segregation, Day said. But today, reconciliation is more on the minds of the community when they view the nation’s oldest Methodist congregation.

Hundreds of black worshippers from Mother Bethel joined dozens of St. George's white members for the historic service. The two Philadelphia churches have previously held ceremonial exchanges together, but this was the first time they worshipped together on a Sunday morning.

"It’s a reunion, but more than that ... It’s COMMunion, Holy Communion, people coming together, differences and all, together at the Lord’s Table, seeking peace and harmony with God and one another. You can’t have one without the other," Day said.

The idea for the joint service was born as the pastors of both churches were planning to commemorate separate historic occasions. St. George had its 240th anniversary to celebrate while Mother Bethel was marking the 250th birthday of Bishop Richard Allen.

Allen was among those who left the segregated worship at St. George's more than 200 years ago and founded Mother Bethel, which established independence from white Methodists. The former Delaware slave also formed the AME Church, a Wesleyan denomination.

In a symbolic gesture on Sunday, the Rev. Day presented Mother Bethel pastor the Rev. Mark Kelly Tyler with a cross that was made with the nails from St. George's balcony – which was built to segregate blacks and whites.

The two churches have planned for more joint worship services in the future. But Tyler noted that racial divisions are still "alive and well" across the country.

He hopes that one day a service like the one they just held "will not even be newsworthy because we have overcome issues of racism, sexism, classism, and all other -isms that separate us from one another and God."

The integrated worship comes after The United Methodist Church adopted a constitutional amendment that recognizes "the sin of racism that has been destructive to its unity throughout its history" and calls the denomination to "confront and seek to eliminate racism."

© The Christian Post all rights reserved.

 
Back to Announcements Home
 

 Hide Comments (2 comments)    Add Comment





Comments:

Glory be to God. I am a white male from Tennessee and have seen not racism in the church, but rather a separation that I think is unintentional. I know god knows no color and we are called to be One in the Body of Christ. If this was not so, then why did he send his only son to preach not only to the Jews, but rather more so to the Gentiles. He came to seek out all that they may have ever lasting life. I believe that this is not the only problem we face, by that I mean a racial issue. We have excluded the poor in many churches. Have made strangers feel unwelcome in many churches. Have pushed out the youth because of the length of their hair in many churches. Made people with different views feel unwelcome. I am not speaking this of my own experience, but that which I have seen and heard.
In 1st Corinthians 13 does it not speak of love that is greater than all spiritual gifts?
Who is this love for? It is for all. Is your neighbor not anyone you pass, not just your direct neighbor or someone that lives in the same place as you?
Also in James 2, does it also not talk about Judging others and not to do so?
Then as we read farther into the scripture it also tells us that faith without deeds is dead. (Verse 18) Show me your faith without deeds and I will show you my faith by what I do.
Another issues is divisions in the church. This is a touchy one. Denominations. Are these not a divisions? Does Paul not also talk about in 1st Corinthians 1: 10 "Now I beg you in the name of the lord Jesus Christ that you speak the same things and that there be no divisions amoung you"
We are one body, of one mind, and of one spirit and my prayer is that we let go of all of our infirmities that cause use to quarrel, because how strong would that power be if we all let go of these things and came together for one purpose. CHRIST CRUCIFIED and the LOVE that we have IN HIM. Then our light would truly shine brighter than any light and how could the world not be subdued.


posted by Joel Matthew Schaefer  @ Sunday, November 01, 2009


As a former United Methodist who currently is a member of a Non-Denominational service, I am excited to see Methodist coming together. When I grew up as a child, an older more established (white) United Methodist church would have services with our (black) United Methodist church and it was wonderful. At that time, we were children and all saw each other as people worshipping the same Lord. Children are so much less racist until their parents and other adults jump in to destroy their wide-eyed innocence. A Jewish congregation also worshipped with our congregation every other year and we worshipped with their's in the inteim year. Our Lord made us all and sees no color. I hope that we can one day get to that point in life. There are several churches in Nashville that yearly worship with each other. How will we explain (our racism) that to the Lord on Judgment Day. This country elected an African-American for president but are more racist than ever before. What are we teaching our children, today? I love your daily spiritual lessons. Thank you.

Joan E. Franklin


posted by 946JF  @ Thursday, October 29, 2009

Report Abuse
What's this?Click here to report abusive language or behavior.






Tamela Mann - The Master Plan


 

Streaming Faith LLC Notice for Claims of Intellectual Property Violations and Agent Notice.