NAMB launches new racial reconciliation resource for churches

Dhati Lewis, vice president of the North American Mission Board’s church planting arm, Send Network, interacts with other leaders during the filming of Undvided: More than a Hashtag. The resource is a series of five video sessions with dialogue between churches leaders about racial reconciliation.
NAMB photo

NAMB launches new racial reconciliation resource for churches

The North American Mission Board (NAMB) launched a free resource Aug. 20 designed to assist church leaders and their congregations as they navigate conversations about race. The resource, “Undivided: More than a Hashtag,” is a follow-up to the initial resource titled “Undivided: Your Church and Racial Reconciliation.”

“Undivided: More than a Hashtag” provides a model, context and curriculum to help church leaders have candid conversations about race within their churches in a way that is gracious and productive. It brings Gospel-centered, biblically based answers at a time when churches and individual believers face tough questions about race, unity and how the church and society can move forward.“If we want to make disciples in North America, we must address the issues of race,” said Dhati Lewis, vice president over Send Network, NAMB’s church planting arm. “Racial divisions run deep in the history of our nation and our churches. If we are going to engage in healthy, holistic evangelism and discipleship, we must run to this tension with a heart for reconciliation.”

Five sessions based on Galatians 2

The new resource looks through the lens of Galatians 2 to help churches find what they need to see racial and ethnic unity among their people. The video series includes five sessions with input from Christian leaders such as Lewis, Derwin Gray, founding and lead pastor of Transformation Church in Indian Land, South Carolina; J.D. Greear, lead pastor of The Summit Church in Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina; and Vance Pitman, lead pastor of Hope Church in Las Vegas; and several others.

“If the Church is going to live undivided across the ethnic and racial lines that can separate us, we need more than a social movement, hashtags and formal statements,” NAMB president Kevin Ezell said. “Unity in the church is one of the greatest witnesses to a lost and dying world. So we created this resource in an effort to help churches become a living picture of the peaceful unity found through Christ.”

To learn more about Undivided and to download the resource, visit undivided.net. (NAMB)