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COMMENTARY: The Black Church Faces an Atypical Crisis

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During a recent meeting organized by Anchor of Hope Ministries, a local, faith-based nonprofit assisting the formerly incarcerated, Holmes stated that the Black church has historically been centered to meet the community’s needs in a variety of ways.

“Black churches were ‘one-stop shops’ because other means of access to community services were off limits,” Holmes said.

Holmes pointed to a recent Pew Research Center study that concluded that Blacks still have close ties to churches, as 47 percent of Black adults surveyed said that they attended religious services, compared to 39 percent of Latinx and 34 percent of Whites.

Holmes explained that even though church leaders are not face-to-face with members, they should still be on the watch — via phone calls or internet services — for any signs of abuse that may be triggered by the current stay-at-home order.

“Faith leaders clearly have a key role to play in offering comfort and care to Los Angeles County at a time when illness, isolation and economic hardship come together to burden so many residents and communities,” the department writes in its “Guidance for Faith-Based Organizations” piece.

Source: The New Journal and Guide

Martin Luther King Jr. Facts

  • Johnson, Charles (1948-- )
  • Pulitzer Prize Awarded
  • Fauntroy, Walter E. (1933- )
  • Ross, Michael K. (1941-2007)
  • Adams, Jr., Oscar (1925–1997)
  • Historically black colleges and universities
  • Black Power movement
  • Spingarn Medal
  • Voter registration drive, led by Martin Luther
  • Congress of Racial Equality

Black People Facts

  • Structured Academic Debate: Booker T. Washington and W.E.B Dubois
  • Voices of the Civil War Episode 10: "Slave Rebellion and Conspiracy"
  • America’s Black Ambassadors: A Historical Snapshot
  • Charles Mahoney, first Black Americandelegate to the UN, dies
  • Interracial Marriage Laws History Timeline
  • (1963) Malcolm X, “Message to the Grassroots”
  • (1909) Ida B. Wells, “Lynching Our National Crime”
  • (1851) Sojourner Truth “Ar'nt I a Woman?”
  • Harriet Tubman born
  • White, V. Ethel Willis (1920-2003)
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