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Are Churches Still Racially Segregated Today? (What Has Changed Since the 1960s)

Roy Kling

Well-Known Member
At Armstrong Valley Bible Baptist Church we're rural. We do have a young black lady attend Sunday service about twice a month from one of the surrounding small towns. When she comes, she rides with one of our older ladies who also lives near her, she doesn't drive, have a car, or whatever.

VBS is a different story, we get kids from several races attending, half a dozen maybe, but the only other times you see them is at Christmas and Easter. They're always welcome, they just don't come, I doubt the parents are willing to come.
 

atpollard

Well-Known Member
Most communities are racially segregated … should we start a program to bus Christians to churches in another community?

It is just human nature to be more comfortable with people like us. Race is only one factor. Churches full of “families with children” tend to attract more families with children and churches with older congregations tend to attract more older people (and are off-putting to teens and young adults). Churches also tend to self-segregate by economic status with the poor feeling more comfortable in some churches over others and the wealthy congregating together.

This is neither deliberate nor sinister in most cases, and where there is a reason for the community to be diverse, the church typically reflects the diversity of the community. Why are we on a “Baptist” forum rather than a Catholic Forum or a Presbyterian forum? Are we deliberately segregating because of prejudice, or are we just more comfortable chatting with like-minded Christians?
 

Natha

Natha - India
Site Supporter
YES, IN MY COUNTRY INDIA. So many churches are running on caste, groups, tribes.. very sad to see this. I saw practically this face in churches. Religions are also with the ranks. Big religion, small religion.. Cast system made people divisions of groups.. People and preacher are blinded with religious and caste groups ,.. I think they are not born again christians..
 

Cathode

Well-Known Member
I go to Mass on Sunday it looks like the United Nations. Every race and nationality is represented it seems. Despite the incredible diversity, there is the all encompassing and overarching Catholic culture that unites everyone. We are all on the same wavelength.

Catholics are universal Christianity, it’s been like that for a very long time.

I have visited Presbyterian, Baptist and Brethren Churches and they all were very mono cultural.

We have the Parish dinners on certain feast days and everyone brings a dish, you cannot try everything, there are so many different cultural foods it’s staggering.

On the feast of Saint Francis and the blessing of the pets, we had British ( beef spit ) and Irish foods ( seafood chowder ), 4 different Slavic foods ( every kind of sausage it seemed ) , 7 European foods ( Portuguese split chickens, unbelievable ), 8 Asian foods ( Malaysian rendang is my favourite, unbelievable, and homemade the old way ) , Indian and Sri Lankan foods which I put in different spice class, Korean cabbage, Japanese, Phillipines and PNG foods ( Taro I grew up on ), South American food ( Pupusas with bean,chicken or beef filler ). Middle eastern food ( Turkish beef bread bun )
Dinka type soup from Sudan in Africa. We have Dinka people in our Church.

There are more I haven’t mentioned, but it gives you an idea.
 
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