
Anti-white racism permeates nearly every institution in America, and sadly, that includes the church.
“I want to say a little bit more about how this is manifesting in the church.” Allie Beth Stuckey “The problem is that the American people are not going to be able to afford to be white,” said Jeremy Karl, author of “The Unprotected Class: How Anti-White Racism Divides America,” and a senior fellow at the Claremont Institute.
“They perpetuate a narrative that white people are collectively responsible as pioneers of reconciliation because of what some black people went through at one point in history,” Stuckey continued, adding, “Even among conservative evangelicals, this has been 100 percent accepted and celebrated and applauded.”
Karl has noticed anti-white rhetoric gaining strength in Christian-led organizations across the country.
“I’m talking about Christianity Today, the Gospel Coalition, the Act 29 Network. Again, I’m not painting a broad brush both from my knowledge and because I don’t want to falsely accuse everyone involved in this of being involved in this, but we have seen these types of issues emerge in these very prominent evangelical venues,” Karl says.
Brett McCracken, one of the senior editors of the Gospel Coalition, wrote in a post on X that “white Christian leaders should listen to and follow the voices of non-white and non-Western Christian leaders.”
“We see this kind of language over and over again,” Stuckey said.
According to Karl, even the president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary admitted to being a racist and declared that he would remain a racist “until the resurrection of our glorified bodies.”
“This is a virtue signaling act, because if you are actually a racist, at least according to the common understanding, you shouldn’t be running The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary,” Karl said.
Stuckey said that to her knowledge, none of them have come forward to admit they were wrong.
“I’ve never heard an apology from any of these people saying, ‘Oh, I guess it wasn’t right to mock a white man who is an image bearer of God,'” she says.
“It’ll probably be a long time before we get that apology,” Karl laughs.
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