Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Southern Baptists set to elect 1st black president

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Four months ago, two African-American pastors stood in a hallway of the Southern Baptist Convention's Nashville headquarters looking at a row of white faces.

The portraits of the 56 convention presidents since the denomination's 1845 founding are in large picture frames holding several portraits each. The final frame holds empty slots.

"They got a space for Fred, right there," one of the men said. "Got a space picked out for him."

"Fred" is the Rev. Fred Luter Jr., the man poised to become the first African American president of the nation's largest Protestant denomination when convention delegates vote next week in New Orleans.
Read the rest here.

From an historical point of view this is breathtaking. The Southern Baptist Convention was founded partly in defense of slavery and was for many decades firmly on the record in favor of race segregation. It is still an overwhelmingly white Protestant denomination. Moments like this, even with all the crap going on in the world, that make me think there is hope.

It may be a little premature but many years to Rev. Luter!

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