
If you don’t know of Dr. Arloa Sutter, you should! She is worth following on Twitter, her book The Invisible is well worth the read, and the ministry she leads is one of the most highly respected in the city of Chicago (and as an aside, if you are in Chicago, you should really come to their benefit dinner. I’m hosting a table and would love to have you there!)
There was a city-wide prayer event last week at the Daley Center, and pastors and faith leaders from across Chicago were invited to lead the city in prayer. Arloa did a powerful prayer on repentance, and it roused everyone who heard it:
We start with repentance.
We who are called to be beacons of hope and life and redemption have abandoned the poor.
Lord have mercy. Forgive us.
We have disregarded and discarded them, judged them, ignored them.
Lord have mercy. Forgive us.
We have become fat, arrogant and unconcerned.
Lord have mercy. Forgive us.
We have stood by, co-opted by systems that have trapped people in dilapidated housing, in communities devoid of opportunities.
Lord have mercy. Forgive us.
We have sent young men to prison without adequate representation. We haven’t provided for their development or for their welfare upon release.
Lord have mercy. Forgive us.
We have stood by complacently allowing young men to despair of finding meaningful employment, leaving them without hope, scraping out a meager existence and we wonder why their anger erupts.
Lord have mercy. Forgive us.
We have incarcerated the innocent mentally ill alongside hardened criminals, abandoning them to lives of misery.
Lord have mercy. Forgive us.
We have abandoned families with young children, adolescents raising babies without support while they struggle with their own teenage problems.
Lord have mercy. Forgive us.
We have stood by while young children full of hope and promise have had their hopes dashed again and again until they give up their aspirations and take to the streets.
Lord have mercy. Forgive us.
We have prayed but we have not obeyed.
Lord have mercy. Forgive us.
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I am a lifelong Chicagoan, a pastor at River City Community Church, and an author who writes a lot about resisting and confronting white supremacy from a faith lens.
Our church was founded in January of 2003 in the west Humboldt Park neighborhood of Chicago, and is centered on the core values of worship, reconciliation, and neighborhood development. We long to see increased spiritual renewal as well as social and economic justice in the Humboldt Park neighborhood and entire city, demonstrating compassion and alleviating poverty as tangible expressions of the Kingdom of God. It is also through the gift of this faith community that I have learned to see the profound historical and spiritual impact of the stronghold of white supremacy, and where I have been challenged to broaden and deepen my understanding of discipleship in the hopes of becoming a serious enough Christ follower who is able to meaningfully participate with those who have risen up in defiance of this evil principality.
The lessons learned in this journey have been captured in a pair of books on race. The first, White Awake, explores the barriers that white people tend to face – white Christians specifically – when we attempt to awaken to and understand white supremacy through a faith lens. I spend a lot of time here addressing the internal defenses that are bound to go off when this journey is taken seriously, and I chart out a path for developing a resilient spirit that steadfastly moves towards truth, justice, and equity. The second, White Lies, further builds out the path for the white Christian who longs to actively participate in the resistance and confrontation of white supremacy. I spend a lot of time here exploring why it is so hard to tell the truth about race, as well as expose the lies that sustain it, within white, Christian, Bible-believing environments. I then propose nine practices that position us for engaging in this task.
On the personal front, my career started in the marketplace, as I was part of three dot.com startups in the 90’s. My vocational path shifted when I joined the staff of Willow Creek Community Church in 1998, and I spent five years working there. I started River City Community Church in January 2003 and have been happily serving here ever since. On the education front, my undergrad was in Business (Purdue University), my graduate degree in theology (Moody Bible Institute), and my doctoral degree in community development (Northern Seminary). On the family front, my wife is a Professor of Psychology, and we have two amazing children (Xander and Gabriella).
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