NPR

'Jesus Was Divisive': A Black Pastor's Message To White Christians

Nationwide protests are forcing many Americans to think about race in new ways. A black pastor in one of Christianity's whitest denominations is asking his congregants to take an especially hard look.
Lenny Duncan, in May of 2019, at the Metropolitan New York Synod Assembly of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.

Over 90% of U.S. churches were closed at the height of the coronavirus pandemic. But since mid-April, mostly white faith leaders have pushed to fill their pews again, suing governors over bans on large gatherings and joining "reopen" protests at state capitols. President Trump threatened to override governors who did not allow "essential places of faith to open right now," flying in the face of black pastors urging caution; African American deaths from COVID-19 are nearly twice as high as would be expected based on their share of the population.

Rev. Lenny Duncan is a black preacher in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), one of the nation's whitest Christian denominations. As nationwide protests have forced white Americans to talk about race, Duncan's longtime advocacy within the church has become all the more relevant.

Formerly incarcerated and homeless, Duncan was attracted to the ELCA's welcoming message of grace. But he The Ku Klux Klan staged parades with banners saying Segregated Christian schools thrived )

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