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In the US, Baptist Joint Committee gains faith and justice centre, grows religious liberty work

United States
RNS

The Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty is acquiring the Center for Faith, Justice, and Reconciliation in a move its leaders say will help them broaden efforts to support a more universal range of religious freedoms in the country.

The 87-year-old coalition of 15 Baptist denominations, including both predominantly Black and white Baptist organisations, is adding the fledgling centre as part of its Project for Race and Religious Freedom that it began in 2021.

The new logo for the  Baptist Joint Committee Center for Faith, Justice, and Reconciliation. Courtesy image

The new logo for the Baptist Joint Committee Center for Faith, Justice, and Reconciliation. PICTURE: Courtesy image

“This opportunity for BJC to acquire the centre and to continue this incredible work of reimagining religious freedom within the organisational home of BJC is a way for us to formalise this commitment to race and religious freedom and continue the work for many years to come,” said Amanda Tyler, executive director of the BJC, in an interview with Religion News Service in advance of the Monday, 6th March, announcement of the acquisition of the centre.

Sabrina E. Dent. Courtesy photo

Sabrina E Dent. PICTURE: Courtesy photo

Sabrina E Dent, who became president of the centre in January, 2022, has joined the BJC staff after previously serving there as a fellow, followed by roles as a program director at the Freedom Forum Institute’s Religious Freedom Center and as a senior faith adviser at Americans United for Separation of Church and State.

The centre began in 2019 when the 28-year-old Baptist Theological Seminary at Richmond – the first free-standing seminary developed as an alternative to the Southern Baptist Convention’s six seminaries – closed. Its trustees viewed the centre as a way to continue the seminary’s commitment to ecumenism and racial diversity.

“One of the things that we prioritised in our work was really reimagining religious freedom through the experiences of marginalised communities, whether it was racial or religious minorities,” said Dent in an interview, citing how the thinktank has hosted multiday virtual conferences bringing together scholars and policymakers to discuss issues such as housing, voting rights and women’s rights as well as hourlong programs for the general public.

Last year the centre also posted on its website a letter from a transgender youth to show its opposition to proposed Virginia policies that would limit the rights and safety of some children, noting the policies set a precedent for “imbuing a specific ideal of religious belief – Christian Nationalism – in the homes of non-Christians and minority Christians”.



Dent and Tyler said a key facet of the centre’s work will be to continue to address Christian nationalism, a topic Tyler and the BJC have been working on since 2019 when they started the grass-roots campaign called Christians Against Christian Nationalism.

“We believe the best antidote to the poison of Christian nationalism is a commitment to the foundational values of religious freedom for all,” said Tyler. “And so, in order to confront Christian nationalism, we need the most robust understanding of religious freedom for all we can possibly have, and the work of the centre directly addresses that.”

Amanda Tyler in 2022. Photo courtesy of Baptist Joint Committee

Amanda Tyler. PICTURE: Courtesy of BJC

Tyler said the BJC leaders felt challenged to diversify the committee’s work after the 2015 mass shooting at Charleston’s Mother Emanuel African Methodist Church. She also said her organisation learned that in the 1940s, a Black Baptist board member’s request that the BJC take a stand addressing racial injustice went unheeded, causing some Black denominational leaders to halt their attendance at board meetings.

“We as an organisation have been on a journey of understanding that truth, and confronting that truth, that religious freedom has been white too long and that we, even at BJC, have had too limited of a view of our mission and how that has inhibited fulfillment of our mission,” said Tyler.

“And we are in a season now of change and repair, as we build a more inclusive organisation and a more inclusive vision of religious freedom for all.”

Effective Monday, Tyler said, the centre’s activities will be part of BJC’s programming. The centre will formally end its corporate status later this year. The operations of the centre, which previously were housed at a library at Union Presbyterian Seminary in Richmond, have already moved to the BJC, with Dent being hired on 1st February.

Dent said board members, many of whom are former or current leaders at theological schools, will become advisers to the centre when the transition is complete.

Interim Dean Corey DB Walker of Wake Forest University School of Divinity, one of those board members, said he expects the new arrangement will lead to expanding work by the centre that will include religious and secular people and Jewish and Muslim groups as well as other Christian organisations.

“Theologically it is recognising that the Imago Dei, the image of God, is found in all people, it is found in all cultures, and religious freedom and this acquisition enables BJC to then extend that in new and significant ways,” he said, “and to ensure that understanding is not something that’s ancillary. It is constitutive of how we continue to create a more just and humane world consistent with the vision of the Gospel.”

 

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