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Pursuing justice issues: Progressive National Baptists gain partners to address voting rights, gun violence

The annual session of the Progressive National Baptist Convention in St Louis, Missouri, on 9th August, 2023.

ADELLE M BANKS, of Religion News Service, reports…

United States
RNS

Leaders of the Progressive National Baptist Convention announced plans at their annual session this week in St Louis to work on enhancing voting rights and criminal justice reform through partnerships with like-minded organisations.

Members of the social justice team of the historically Black Protestant denomination also travelled to nearby Ferguson on Wednesday, 9th August, the last day of their meeting, to mark the ninth anniversary of the death of Michael Brown, an unarmed Black teenager whose fatal shooting by a white officer prompted protests that energised the Black Lives Matter movement.

The annual session of the Progressive National Baptist Convention in St Louis, Missouri, on 9th August, 2023.
The annual session of the Progressive National Baptist Convention in St Louis on 9th August, 2023. PICTURE: Brian Kaylor/Word&Way

Rev David R Peoples, president of the PNBC, said in an interview on Thursday that supporting the Brown family and the Ferguson community is one example of how the denomination is pursuing justice issues.

“We want to make sure that wherever injustice takes place, wherever our people are oppressed and don’t have a fair shake, we’re going to speak out, we’re going to speak truth to power,” he said. “We’re not going anywhere until those things happen and positive change occurs.”

“We want to make sure that wherever injustice takes place, wherever our people are oppressed and don’t have a fair shake, we’re going to speak out, we’re going to speak truth to power.”

– Rev David R Peoples, president of the PNBC

He said a couple of thousand Baptists attended the meeting of the denomination of more than 1,200 churches and more than 1.5 million members.

In his remarks the previous day at a news conference, Peoples said the organisation would continue to follow in the footsteps of the Rev Martin Luther King, Jr, who considered the PNBC his denominational home.

“We won’t stop until what Dr King said, until justice runs down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream,” he said on Wednesday. “We won’t stop until Florida Governor DeSantis understands that slavery never benefitted any African American.”

He continued: “We won’t stop until the real thugs like Donald Trump, who are the real threat to democracy, get justice they deserve.”



PNBC leaders also differentiated members of their denomination from Christian nationalists.

“What a tragedy it is that so much of what it means to be a Christian has been co-opted by white nationalists,” said Rev Willie D Francois III, the co-chair of the PNBC’s social justice arm.

“But there’s something about the rebellious imagination of folk like us, the Progressive National Baptist Convention, that says we have political priorities that aren’t limited to policing who people sleep with and policing what women do with their bodies. The Progressive National Baptist Convention is actually pro-life because we care about bodies before they are born all the way through the tomb.”

Answering the question “Why is the white Christian church aligning with Trump?” Rev Frederick D Haynes III, the new Rainbow PUSH Coalition president, responded: “They’re more white than Christian.”

Members of the social justice team of the Progressive National Baptist Convention joined other in marking the ninth anniversary of the death of Michael Brown by visiting where Brown died in Ferguson, Missouri, on Wednesday, 9th August, 2023
Progressive National Baptist Convention members join others in marking the ninth anniversary of the death of Michael Brown by visiting where Brown died in Ferguson, Missouri, on Wednesday, 9th August, 2023. PICTURE: Courtesy PNBC

During the meeting, PNBC delegates also adopted a resolution saying the denomination “strongly denounces any…who refuse to support the results of the 2020 presidential election” and anyone who supports the 6th January attack on the Capitol.

Rev Darryl Gray, the PNBC’s director general of social justice, said the denomination will be working with Amnesty International USA to provide training and other resources on gun violence intervention to the denomination’s churches.

The Baptists gathered for the meeting approved a resolution that said the two groups will “work to reduce gun violence in communities across the country while advocating for the passage of federal legislation titled the Break the Cycle of Violence Act, which will provide federal funding for community organisations conducting gun violence prevention work.”

Francois said the broader gun violence concerns of the denomination include greater accountability by police departments.

“We went today to Ferguson to stand in solidarity with this family to practice the presence of God to practice the ministry of presence because we are tired of blue privilege, blue terror and blue violence,” he said. “It is not enough for us to talk about gun violence in our communities without also talking about gun violence that we’ve normalised, and that’s police gun violence.”


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Francois added that gun violence in general should be viewed as an American issue, not a Black issue, and one that needs to be solved with improved access to jobs and better schools rather than larger police forces.

The denomination also plans to partner with the Faith Leaders of Color Coalition, which is seeking state and federal action to end the death penalty. PNBC members passed a resolution with the same aim.

“I stand here arm-in-arm with the Brown family, clergy and people of faith who are intentional about being participatory in our policy efforts,” said Joia Erin Thornton, national director of the coalition. “We want to bring forth results that promote equity and opportunity for those who are historically disenfranchised in their communities and who are over-policed and often selectively policed.”

Rev David R Peoples, president of the PNBC, speaks at the annual session of the Progressive National Baptist Convention in St Louis, Missouri, on 9th August, 2023.
Rev David R Peoples, president of the PNBC, speaks at the annual session of the Progressive National Baptist Convention in St Louis on 9th August, 2023. PICTURE: Video screen grab

Voting rights, a longtime agenda item of the denomination, continued to be addressed, including with a resolution calling for passage of a 28th amendment to the US Constitution that would make voting “a permanent right for adult US citizens and residents.”

In the interview, Peoples condemned “strange tactics that are used to make sure that people are denied or deterred from voting,” including people of colour.

“We need to find a way to make sure that voting is easier and not harder,” he said. At the news conference, several PNBC leaders agreed on the need to further address voting rights.

“We’ve come here 58 years after the voting rights bill was passed to say we’re going to revive it,” said Haynes, a clergyman affiliated with the PNBC.

Voting rights, a longtime agenda item of the denomination, continued to be addressed, including with a resolution calling for passage of a 28th amendment to the US Constitution that would make voting “a permanent right for adult US citizens and residents.”

In the interview, Peoples condemned “strange tactics that are used to make sure that people are denied or deterred from voting,” including people of colour.

“We need to find a way to make sure that voting is easier and not harder,” he said.

At the news conference, several PNBC leaders agreed on the need to further address voting rights.

“We’ve come here 58 years after the voting rights bill was passed to say we’re going to revive it,” said Haynes, a clergyman affiliated with the PNBC.

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