Most? Can that really be the case?
I suspect it's more a matter of little things that Black people expect to hear and little things that White people expect to hear than about "race hustling" on a massive scale -- more to do with differences of style and focus than of anything pernicious.
If you went to a church where every week you heard about the problems of "our Black youth" it might not appeal to you and you might get tired of it after a while. Imagine that you were concerned about that and heard nothing about it every week ...
__But most black Christians who I have known are just doing race hustling in a different way.___
“Most? Can that really be the case?”
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My reaction as well - quite a blanket condemnation, based on what sort of sample?
New York Times would love this clear case guy for furthering the agenda of dividing people, especially Christians.
But that happens to white people, too. I just left a church where no one was at all concerned with any issue whatsoever outside of their own family members, while all this persecution of Christians is going on in the Middle East and China, and our nation is being rocked by scandals from the left and the right. I actually tried to start an intercessory prayer group and was tartly informed that the women's group didn't want to pray.
Churches should be about equipping the people of God for the work of the ministry, not tickling itching ears by hearing about their favorite social justice peeve.