White Supremacy in the American Church

by Jarrett Meek

Will the white, Evangelical church in America ever open its eyes to the devastation that racism and the endemic ideology of white supremacy inflicts upon our black brothers and sisters? The events of the last two weeks have moved more white pastors and Christians to make statements against racism. Unfortunately, however, a barely conscious belief in white superiority and dominance still permeates the white church, our mentality, and our society to a degree that is not so easily undone. The white church in America has suffered this crippling spiritual disease since before the founding of our country.

For more than two centuries, white men and women in the United States of America enslaved our black brothers and sisters. By 1860, the U.S. census counted 31 million people, almost 4 million of whom were enslaved. In other words, nearly 12% of the entire population of the United States of American lived under the brutal weight of slavery. It’s a sick and devastating irony that the Christian church in America not only accepted this horrific practice, but also developed doctrines to explicitly support and defend it. A classic pillar of the “Christian” proslavery argument states: “It is in the order of Providence that one man should be subservient to another.” Frederick Douglass, the famous abolitionist, denounced Southern Christianity, calling it “corrupt, slaveholding, women-whipping, cradle-plundering, partial and hypocritical Christianity of this land.” While White Southern Christianity was infected and corrupted through and through by these evil doctrines, the white church in the North spent 200 years accommodating their Southern brothers and absorbing a more subtle mentality of white supremacy. 1

In his famous speech, What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?, Douglass lamented about the Christian church in the North and South calling the church itself the “bulwark of American slavery”. He challenged Christian pastors throughout the nation saying they “have shamelessly given the sanction of religion and the Bible to the whole slave system.” In doing so, he charged them with preaching an abominable faith that “makes God a respecter of persons, denies His fatherhood over the race, and tramples in the dust the great truth of the brotherhood of man.”

The institution of slavery was ended violently, through our nation’s only civil war. But the mentality and the doctrines that permitted and supported it naturally did not die when Lee surrendered to Grant in 1865. The evil monster of white supremacy, which had become an active part of the daily life and even of the “Christian” faith of so many, still roamed wild, barely restrained by emancipation and madder than hell. It devised new ways to wreak havoc on people of color. It permeated the laws and the justice system and created a comprehensive code of legal and societal oppression known as Jim Crow laws.  

When I was a young boy in the 1970s, I didn’t grasp the recency of the Civil Rights Movement. I learned some things about it, but I never pondered the fact that Dr. King had been assassinated just two years before I was born. “Bloody Sunday” and King’s march from Selma occurred just 5 years before my birth. It turns out I was growing up in the immediate aftermath of the Civil Rights movement, and I didn’t even know it! My own journey underscores how oblivious most white people are to the near realities of racial injustice in our present and recent past. This lack of awareness afflicts the white Evangelical church and, coupled with a toxic allegiance to a political ideology, is part of our blindness to issues of race that continue today.  

Though I don’t know any Christians who would openly embrace the ideology of white supremacy, that doesn’t mean the mentality doesn’t continue to live in our hearts and find expression in our actions today. We didn’t mind putting a white nationalist in the White House. We adamantly deny the existence of systemic racism. We disparage black athletes who use their platform to call attention to racial injustice. According to many white Evangelicals, our first black president was a Muslim, a socialist, was going to take away our guns, hates America, and wasn’t a natural-born citizen. Many of us express a condescending view of black people as we dismiss their experiences and believe that they lack the intelligence or education to think for themselves. Some assert that our black brothers and sisters blindly follow political leaders who are just trying to make them dependent on the government. In white circles, we complain that black people would rather live on welfare than work for a living. When it’s just the good ‘ole boys, we compare one minority group to another, making judgments and generalizations about which one has a better work ethic and which group values the family more. We criticize the music, the wardrobe, the culture, the purchasing decisions, and the hairstyles of people of color. We sit in the seat of power, judgment, leadership, wealth, resources, education, and theological orthodoxy, enjoying prominence in every area of our society, and we are indignant if anyone dares to suggest that we set it up that way or that we receive any benefit from it that might be called “privilege.” At the same time, we’ll fight tooth and nail to keep from losing this position of privilege we deny we have. We refuse to affirm the value of black lives. And, we believe in our hearts that the reason black people are dying and being incarcerated in higher proportions has something to do with their inferior character. To top it off, we feel really great when we talk about “racial reconciliation” and “unity”, but we recoil at the idea of “racial justice”. White Church, I hate to break it to you- we still have a serious problem with white supremacy.

  1. Frederick Douglass: American Prophet, D.H. Dilbeck, The University of North Carolina Press, 2018, p.3

Suffocating the Imago Dei

by Jarrett Meek

Shining In George Floyd’s eyes, as he struggled beneath the suffocating knee of an officer of the law, was the image of God.  God’s eyes shined in George’s eyes, God’s heartbeat in George’s heart, God’s breath moved in George’s breath- until George’s life was extinguished. 

Amaud Arbery ran because he loved to run.  He ran on legs, with lungs, with a heart given to him by his Creator.  Two white men chased him down in their pickup truck with guns.  Confrontation, struggle, shotgun. The Imago Dei bled out in broad daylight on a Georgia street.

Breonna Taylor slept, safe in her own apartment.  Rest is built into the fabric of creation, because our Creator worked six days and then rested.  Day turns to night, summer turns to winter, and Breonna Taylor, even as she rested, displayed something of the image of God- until officers, in careless disregard, broke in and shot her to death- by mistake.

“The whole concept of the imago Dei, as it is expressed in Latin, the ‘image of God,’ is the idea that all men have something within them that God injected.  Not that they have substantial unity with God, but that every man has a capacity to have fellowship with God.  And this gives him a uniqueness, it gives him worth, it gives him dignity.  And we must never forget this as a nation: there are not gradations in the image of God…  We will know one day that God made us to live together as brothers and to respect the dignity and worth of every man.” -  Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.


“So God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them.” - Genesis 1:27

So much of Christian theology is established in the first three chapters of Genesis.  Who is God?  Who are humans?  Any serious study of the doctrine of mankind includes the concept of Imago Dei.  Like so many other core Christian doctrines, the foundation that is laid in Genesis is then expanded and applied in the rest of scripture.  When Jesus connects the two Greatest Commandments, He is saying that loving God and loving neighbor are inseparably intertwined.  If you don’t love your neighbor, who you can see, how can you possibly love God, whom you cannotYou see, our neighbor is stamped with the Imago Dei.  When Jesus says “whenever you’ve done it to the least of these, you’ve done it to me”, He is challenging us to see the Imago Dei in our brothers and sisters and act accordingly toward them.  Likewise, if we ignore or minimize our brothers’ suffering, we ignore and minimize the suffering of Jesus.  The doctrine of the Imago Dei places a unique and immense value on the life of every human being.  Racism strips a life of this value.  It is not only an affront to our neighbor, but it is an affront to the God whose image He bears.  

Weeping, gut-wrenching pain, hearts ripped into a million shreds, black hearts bearing the burden of centuries of injustice and oppression in the land of the free.  Cold, white knuckles grasping power, defending the indefensible, excusing the inexcusable, elevating ideology to justify the unjustifiable.  Heaping scorn on people protesting oppression from a comfortable place of privilege.  Smoke-screen arguments, intentionally misunderstanding issues to uphold agendas.  Ideologies of white supremacy permeating churches and institutions- insidious, clandestine, unrecognized by those who reap its reward.  Is the White, Evangelical Church really still on the wrong side of racial justice?  Latino brothers and sisters- where are you?  You receive racism, do you also inflict it on others?  Refugee friends- will you receive mercy one day and judge your neighbor without it the next?  

Let me ask you where you stand.  WHERE DO YOU STAND?  As for me and my house, we will repent of the hidden sin in our own hearts.  As for me and my house, we will choose to see and value the image of God in each person.  As for me and my house, we will plant our feet firmly in solidarity with our black brothers and sisters and join them in the cry for justice.   As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.