Episode 219: Jemar Tisby - Acknowledging Racism in the Church

In this episode of The Bible for Normal People, Jemar Tisby joins Jared and Pete to talk about the legacy of systemic racism in the white American evangelical church, and how white Christians can practice anti-racism in their personal lives and in their communities. Join Jemar, Pete, and Jared as they ask the following questions:

  • Why are white churches in America so hesitant to acknowledge systemic racism?

  • What is the “cultural toolkit” of white evangelicals?

  • Why does an interpersonal understanding of racism fall short?

  • What fears do white people have about confronting systemic racism?

  • How does the legacy of racism within certain Christian traditions affect believers today?

  • What does it mean that there’s a religious element in pushback against Critical Race Theory? Why is it important to acknowledge it?

  • How can we initiate conversations within our own relationships about systemic racism and working toward an anti-racist faith and world, without further polarizing the people we love?

  • How can white Christians practice priestly proximity?

Tweetables

Pithy, shareable, less-than-280-character statements from Jemar you can share.

  • Even among Westerners, white evangelicals tend to be even more individualistic than others. That affects how they view both theology and what they believe about God, as well as social issues such as racism. — @jemartisby 

  • For many people, racism is fundamentally an interpersonal issue. It's one person not liking another, it's individual prejudice—while that ignores all of the ways that racism manifests itself systemically and institutionally. — @jemartisby 

  • [Systemic racism is] not due to any one individual hiding behind a curtain and pulling levers, it’s due to the way the system is constructed to give advantages to some and disadvantages to others. And that's the fundamental disconnect I see with many white Christians in their understanding of racism. — @jemartisby 

  • Race is a story we tell ourselves. It's a story we tell ourselves about hierarchy, about value, about whose voices and perspectives count. — @jemartisby 

  • All of the efforts at racial justice now, and historically, are presenting a counter-narrative that, if true, would knock the pillars out from under such ideas as the United States is specially favored by God. — @jemartisby 

  • The reality is one of the most pernicious effects of segregation is creating homogenous information bubbles—such that so many people have never heard a different story, or to the extent that they have, those stories have always been dismissed and demonized. — @jemartisby 

  • We have so much more to learn from historically marginalized and oppressed people who are Christians, and the way they understand the Bible and God. — @jemartisby 

  • We think that in order to be nice to people, we have to maintain relationships with the people with whom we vehemently disagree. I don't think so. I don't think that a deep understanding of Christian kindness requires socialization in our free time necessarily. — @jemartisby 

Mentioned in This Episode


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Episode 220: Joel Baden - The Historical David

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Episode 218: Pete Enns - Pete Ruins Deuteronomy