Weblog: How Integrated is Your Church? Plus: The power of small groups, the Bible goes back to school, and other stories from newspapers around the world. Compiled by Ted Olsen | posted 6/5/00
June 1, 2000
Still the most segregated hour of the week
The New York Times launches its special series,"How Race is Lived in America," with a look at the Decatur, Georgia, Assembly of God Tabernacle and its struggles to be a truly integrated church."The Tabernacle is the rarest of religious institutions: a truly integrated church in a nation where 90 percent of all congregations are at least 80 percent one race," writes Kevin Sack in the lengthy article."It is, to many of its 800 members, a slice of heaven on earth, a church whose spirituality is magnified by its multiracial character. What better evidence of God's presence, they reason, than the sight of whites and blacks praying side by side? And yet, the Tabernacle is not some liberal church like the one nearby that took down its white stained-glass Jesus and replaced him with a black one. It is deeply conservative, socially and theologically. What draws [families both black and white] is the intensity of their Pentecostal faith, which teaches that the Holy Spirit can move in the lives of all believers, regardless of background." The excellent, insightful article online includes a history of the Pentecostal Church and how racial tensions have played a role since Azusa Street, audio features (including a sermon by the church's pastor), and many other resources. The Times is clearly aiming for a Pulitzer with this one.
Small groups: the future of the church
"An estimated 40 percent of Americans now belong to some kind of small religious group, seeking the support they once found from family or neighborhood," writes Michael Paulson in an article that appeared on the front page of Sunday's Boston Globe. The article doesn't offer anything new: small groups provide intimacy that Sunday services ...
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