400
700
900
While We Run This Race: confronting the power of racism in a southern church
Nibs Stroupe

While We Run This Race: confronting the power of racism in a southern church

confronting the power of racism in a southern church

orbis books (1995)
9781570750007
174 pages
Dewey 261.8 STR
LC Classification BX8949.D43 .S77 1995
LC Control No. 95005183

Genre

  • Non-Fiction

Subject

  • African American Presbyterians - Biography. - Georgia
  • Decatur (Ga.) - Church History
  • Decatur (Ga.) - Race Relations
  • Georgia - Church History
  • Georgia - Race Relations
  • Race Relations - Religious Aspects

Plot

In this challenging, ultimately hopeful book, Nibs Stroupe, the white pastor of multi-cultural Oakhurst Presbyterian Church in Decatur, Georgia, grapples with this question: why, so long after the Civil Rights movement has become part of American history, does racism still pervade society?Race, writes Stroupe, represents a social and political chasm that continues to divide and entrap all Americans. He steadfastly maintains that acknowledging the power of the system of race throughout society - in our schools, courts, prisons, and housing - is the necessary first step to dismantling it. Stroupe convinces us that although racism is powerful, it is not inexorable. It can be overcome.Adding her voice is Inez Fleming, a black elder at Oakhurst, who tells the story of tears and laughter within the congregation as blacks and whites struggle together, creating an extraordinary church family.