Why Color-Blindness Is Not a Theological Virtue
Color-blindness sounds virtuous but it is actually a way of denying the reality of racism and its ongoing effects. Justice requires seeing and naming racial injustice.
Color-blindness sounds virtuous but it is actually a way of denying the reality of racism and its ongoing effects. Justice requires seeing and naming racial injustice. The church that claims to be color-blind is blind to the suffering of people of color.
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James Bell
Lead Teaching Pastor at First Baptist Church in Fenton, Michigan, and founder of the Pastors Connection Network. For over 15 years, James has served in full-time ministry—planting churches, leading revitalization efforts, and consulting with pastors and ministry leaders across the country. Out of his own seasons of burnout and isolation, he founded the Pastors Connection Network, a growing community of leaders committed to gospel-centered relationships and long-term faithfulness in ministry.