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A theology and culture blog with the Bible in one tab and a news feed in the other by Ed Cyzewski.

Dealing with Racial Insensitivity: Becoming Catalysts for Reconciliation

Yesterday’s post brought up a lot of great discussion in the comment section that serves God’s Kingdom and Christian unity. I’m about to wrap up a series of posts from the book of Romans, and it’s apparent in that book that in bringing salvation to all through Christ, God was also reconciling two races or people groups: Jews and Gentiles.

When we create divisions or cause offense along lines of racial or gender differences, we are in essence undoing part of Christ’s work. And if anything, this incident shows that white American male Christians are very capable of offending those of another race without it being intentional or obvious. I think the same goes for the way white American male Christians treat women sometimes.

The undetected, unintentional nature of this is enough to keep me up at night.

Let’s be honest, there will be offenses made in the future. There may be some women or ethnic minorities who are smarting right now who perhaps don’t feel comfortable bringing up their grievances because they fear they’ll be met with further insults to stop whining, criticism that they’ve chosen the wrong path to conflict resolution, or that they’re simply misrepresenting those who offended them.

We saw it in the Deadly Viper scenario, and it can and will happen again. From where I sit, I think our next step is to create dialogue channels, safe places for folks to go, and catalysts for reconciliation. We need folks in either the majority or in the minority who will commit to help others reach reconciliation with their offenders and to help offenders reach the point of repentance and forgiveness.

Catalyst is a flashy word, but I don’t believe this is flashy work. This is hard, costly work, but I think I myself and others need to commit to doing this. This means working hard toward justice in the body of Christ, while committing to listen, to hold back on judgment, and to approach others in love.

If you feel that a part of the body of Christ is offending you, I’ll do what I can to hear you out, to help you take steps forward, and to even confront someone in love with you or on your behalf. Even if our reaching out crashes and burns, at least we’re not failing alone. I have no idea where this will take us, but I encourage you today to think of how you can become a catalyst for reconciliation, how you can right your wrongs, or how you can approach those who have wronged you.

We can do this because Christ is working for this within us. We are moving in step with his Spirit in his Kingdom purpose.

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Category: practical theology

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2 Responses

  1. Justin Boggs says:

    While it is important for us as Christians to be sensitive to others, and seek not to offend, it is equally important for us to deal with others in grace and not be easily offended. I appreciate being approached by people that I have unintentionally offended and being confronted, it’s a path to real growth, but it sure is nice when they assume that I didn’t intend to be offensive.

    Thanks for having the guts to write about this. Race is a sticky issue.

  2. Social comments and analytics for this post…

    This post was mentioned on Twitter by edcyzewski: New blog post: Dealing with Racial Insensitivity: Becoming Catalysts for Reconciliation – http://tinyurl.com/ybjprdk…

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About Ed Cyzewski

Ed Cyzewski is a writer, theologian, and a speaker in New England. He's the author of Coffeehouse Theology and can be found at:


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