In a conversation with former NFL player Emmanuel Acho, megachurch pastor Carl Lentz asserted that the church "might be one of biggest propagators of racist ideology."
In a conversation with former NFL player Emmanuel Acho, megachurch pastor Carl Lentz asserted that the church "might be one of biggest propagators of racist ideology."
After attending and participating in a birthday celebration for a late-member of KKK, a Republican state representative from Alabama has resigned from his position as a pastor at his church.
Removing Margaret Sanger’s name from a building in New York only actually means something in a time like ours, of low-stakes, symbolic gestures like erasing a name or disinviting a controversial speaker to a university. It’s the very definition of virtue signaling, a word I hate but which aptly describes what Planned Parenthood is doing here: “canceling” Margaret Sanger while still perpetuating the exact racist population control for which she is being canceled.
Christian author and pastor Ashlee Eiland is highlighting the importance of kindness amid the coronavirus pandemic and racial tension.
Planned Parenthood of Greater New York recently acknowledged its founder, Margaret Sanger's racist past, and has decided to remove her name from one of its facilities.
The former ESPN host Jemele Hill, sparked an online debate after she said anyone who votes for President Trump is a racist.
A writer for Rolling Stone is arguing that the term "pro-life" should be "canceled." According to the writer, the term is both racist and misogynistic.
A Black man whose family members were slaves and a White man whose family owned slaves are inviting people to discuss racial healing and to "rise above racism" in America.
Bethel Church is under fire once again after church leaders used a Lord of the Rings-like staff and a line from the film to demand an end to racism.
According to a recent survey, when asked if the United States has historically been oppressive for racial minorities, 82 percent of white evangelicals and 60 percent of white practicing Christians did not believe this statement to be true. Seventy-five percent of African American practicing Christians and more than 60 percent of Hispanic practicing Christians, however, did agree that racial minorities have historically been oppressed in the U.S.