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BY
REBECCA GRACE | AFA Journal Staff Writer
From a college basketball standout to a racial reconciliation activist,
Dr. Dolphus Weary is a veteran among African American pro-family
leaders.
He serves as executive director of Mission Mississippi a
statewide unity initiative designed "to build relationships
and to call persons of all races and denominational backgrounds
to reconciliation."
A renowned speaker and writer, Weary knows from personal experience
just how harmful racial divisions can be to a persons well-being.
After being deserted by his father and left to live a life of poverty,
Weary longed to attend a Christian liberal arts college. Unfortunately,
he could not find one that accepted African-American students.
Then in 1967, he became the first African-American to earn a scholarship
to Los Angeles Baptist College where he played basketball. He soon
left Mississippi for California to pursue his dreams, while escaping
the racism that plagued both his past and present.
"But you know something?" Weary asked his audience during
a 2001 theology and race workshop held in Oxford, Mississippi. "I
got to California and I discovered that the racism beat me out there."
In other words, Weary realized that racism is a global problem and
it is up to Christians, like himself, to reach a global solution.
What better place to start than on a local level with an organization
such as Mission Mississippi?
Mission Mississippi began about 10 years ago as a prayer movement
in Jackson, Mississippi. The initial efforts involved a core group
of 12 to 15 individuals who gathered to pray in a police precinct
located in a rough area of town. Over the years, it has developed
into a multi-faceted ministry that encompasses weekly prayer breakfast
meetings, youth rallies and retreats, church partnership picnics,
government-focused prayer initiatives and related activities.
Through it all, prayer remains a backbone of the ministry as its
leaders seek to develop Mission Mississippi into "the leading
resource and catalyst for Christian reconciliation and racial healing
for Mississippi and the world."
"We try to act like theres not [a] difference [in races],"
Weary said. "
Some people say I dont see you
as a black man. I tell them, youre lying.
"Loving me is not about blocking me out. Loving me is about
loving me, and I want you to see me [for who I am]," Weary
explained.
As a Scriptural basis for his claims, Weary cites the account of
a slave named Onesimus in the book of Philemon. The apostle Paul
introduces Onesimus to Jesus, and Onesimus is converted.
"No matter where you are, you have the opportunity to be introducing
people to Jesus," Weary said.
Although Onesimus heart was changed, Philemon, a slaveholder
in the Colossian church, struggled to accept him because of his
past a parallel of present-day society.
"In our culture, we have learned to love the saints, but we
have predestined who we want the saints to look like," Weary
said.
He said it is disheartening to see people who are active in sharing
their faith, yet those same people wont establish a relationship
with someone of a different race. Those same people wont invite
someone of a different race into their homes.
"Open your eyes. Its not something of the past,"
Weary admonished. "Theres a problem, and I should be
thinking how I can be part of the solution instead of standing back
and judging.
"We have to cross those gulfs in growing together. [But] reconciliation
doesnt mean we have to agree. It means we can disagree and
still be in the same room."
Just like God used Paul to help Philemon see Onesimus as a brother
and not a slave, Weary encourages other Christians to live out the
love of Christ and love their neighbor as themselves.
"We are no longer white people, no longer black people
but were better than that," he said. "We cannot
go forward until we leave the past behind.
"The bottom line is Im a Christian. I just happen to
be black."
To learn more:
www.missionmississippi.org.
A I Aint Comin Back The story of one mans
journey out of Mississippis racially turbulent past and
how the discovery of Gods love and mercy leads him back
to Mississippi and toward a more enlightened path.
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