Jesus is black. 


Here, especially in the bolded, there is a clear indication that MLK believed that even in the most sincere moments of empathy that the average white citizen had for blacks, at the end of the day, their inability to actually do more than just stop the violent forms of racism, they cowardly or ignorantly stayed out of sight and out of mind when it came to treating black people with dignity.For the vast majority of white Americans, the past decade_the first phase- had been a struggle to treat the Negro with a degree of decency, no of equality. White America was ready to demand that the Negro should be spared the lash of brutality and coarse degradation, but it had never been truly committed to helping him out of poverty, exploitation or all forms of discrimination. The outraged white citizen had been sincere when he snatched the whips from the Southern sheriffs and forbade them more cruelties. But when this was to a degree accomplished, the emotions that had momentarily inflamed him melted away. White Americans left the Negro on the ground an in devastating numbers walked off with the aggressor. It appeared that the white segregationist and the ordinary white citizen had more in common with one another than either had with the Negro.
The majority of white Americans consider themselves sincerely committed to justice for the Negro. They believe that American society is essentially hospitable to fair play and to steady growth toward a middle-class Utopia embodying racial harmony. But unfortunately this is a fantasy of self deception and comfortable vanity. Overwhelmingly America is still struggling with irresolution and contradictions. ...This limited degree of concern is a reflection of an inner conflict which measures cautiously the impact of any change on the status quo. As the nation passes from opposing extremist behavior to the deeper and more pervasive elements of equality, white American reaffirms its bonds to the status quo.
For more than a century of slavery and another century of segregation Negroes did not find mass unity nor could they mount mass actions. The American brand of servitude tore them apart and held them in paralyzed solitude. But in the last decade Negroes united and marched. And out of the new unity and action vast monuments of dignity were shaped, courage was forged and hope took concrete form.
For hundreds of years Negroes had fought to stay alive by developing an endurance to hardship and heartbreak. In this decade the the Negro stepped into a new role. He no longer would endure and want, but now he banished these as his lifelong companions. He could tolerate humiliation and scorn, but now he armed himself with dignity and resistance and his adversary tasted the gall of defeat.
For the the first time in his history the negro did not have to use subterfuge as a defense, or solicit pity. His endurance was not employed for compromise with evil but to supply the strength to crush it.
I've met 2 highly religious black people in my life who both have said that slavery was basicly needed and a "gift" from GOD in order to get us on the right path.
There are black people out there with this mindset![]()
yall think he trolling but you got some black people so far gone out there that actually believe that shyt and that's just the ones that are honest about it
West African/Ethiopian Christianity (totally different from the CAC one didn't exist)Just what it says on the box.
Our people weren't Christians before being physically and psychologically invaded by Europeans. Given that people don't willingly just convert to different religions en masse, it's a safe bet that we wouldn't be Christian today.
Given that a core Christian tenet is that believers go to heaven and non-believers to hell, would it not rationally follow that they would prefer slavery->heaven over freedom->hell? Would they view it akin to a surgical procedure, a painful but necessary process?
Educate me my pious brehs and brehettes.
I have my issues with Christianity, but this one here is not the reason. Also, in Eastern Orthodox there's been different views that non believers, Jews, Muslims, and Pagans can get in if the keep certain laws. 
Are you implying that because something happened to whites, we should be ok with it happening to us?
I'm not trolling. Nor do I care to challenge people's religious beliefs. I understand such beliefs are deeply held and personal and as I mentioned I'm agnostic and I won't pretend to know the unknowable. I just think it's a healthy exercise to reflect on why we do the things that we do. Believers tell non-believers all the time not to conflate being religious with being ignorant and I completely agree. If you are Christian just because Mom and/or Dad went to X church over Y church, I can understand how thinking about these things may cause discomfort. But if you are a thinking Christian (and I know many that are) you likely have already chewed over questions such as these. I'm just curious as to what people came up with.
They have self-hate and I hope you told them that.I've met 2 highly religious black people in my life who both have said that slavery was basicly needed and a "gift" from GOD in order to get us on the right path.
There are black people out there with this mindset![]()
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Respectfully, these two groups overlap many times.Black Christians >>>>>>>>>>>> Pro blacks
Shieiitt! Bof Knees Ray is one of those people. Slavery was about togetherness. LMAOyall think he trolling but you got some black people so far gone out there that actually believe that shyt and that's just the ones that are honest about it
I know... as if Christian nikkas have are walking around with ancient Ethiopian texts and teachings and not b*stardized corrupted king james bibles. Hell most nikkas on this site don't even have Ethiopian ancestry, but let them tell it, Christianity is tha true religion for black ppl 2 followIm waiting on all the but Christianity started in Ethiopia shyt like that matters any. Bbbut black people were Christians first...as if that shyt matters


