Close Menu
Faith On MotionFaith On Motion
    What's Hot

    Listening to the Father’s Heart

    February 6, 2026

    Jesus Could Not Heal the Sick

    February 6, 2026

    What Is Tithing?

    February 6, 2026
    Facebook Instagram YouTube LinkedIn TikTok RSS
    Facebook Instagram YouTube LinkedIn TikTok RSS
    Faith On MotionFaith On Motion
    SUBSCRIBE
    • Leadership & Operations
      • Leadership & Ministry
        • Servant Leadership
        • Pastoral Care
        • Preaching Excellence
        • Team Development
        • Discipleship Strategies
        • Ministry Finance
      • Spiritual Growth
        • Prayer & Intercession
        • Bible Study Methods
        • Personal Holiness
        • Spiritual Disciplines
        • Christian Living
        • Theological Foundations
      • Family & Relationships
        • Marriage & Partnership
        • Parenting
        • Singles Ministry
        • Intergenerational Church
        • Conflict Resolution
        • Christian Counseling
    • Ministry & Media
      • Music & Worship
        • Worship Techniques
        • Artist Spotlights
        • Worship Devotionals
        • Gospel Music Trends
        • Worship Technology
        • Songwriting & Arranging
      • Film & Drama
        • Faith Films
        • Drama Ministry
        • Film Production
        • Documentary Storytelling
        • Youth Drama
        • Theatre & Stage
      • Media & Communications
        • Digital Strategy
        • Livestreaming & Production
        • Church Websites
        • Social Media Ministry
        • Visual Storytelling
        • Communications Teams
    • Kingdom & Enterprise
      • Business & Kingdom Entrepreneurship
        • Ethical Finance
        • Mission-Driven Startups
        • Marketplace Ministry
        • Social Enterprise
        • Leadership in Business
        • Business Ethics
      • Social Impact
        • Community Development
        • Humanitarian Response
        • Advocacy & Justice
        • Volunteer Mobilization
        • Impact Measurement
        • Environmental Stewardship
    • Global Vision
      • Youth & Innovation
        • Youth Ministry Models
        • Creative Technology
        • Student Leadership
        • Digital Evangelism
        • Mentorship Programs
        • Next Gen Trends
      • Global Missions
        • Cross-Cultural Ministry
        • Mission Strategy
        • Tentmaking & Vocation
        • Missions Funding
        • Church Planting
        • Global Partnerships
    Faith On MotionFaith On Motion
    Home » We Are Risking the Legacy of the Civil Rights Generation
    Leadership & Ministry

    We Are Risking the Legacy of the Civil Rights Generation

    FaithOnMotionBy FaithOnMotionJanuary 16, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram Copy Link
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

    Trials dark on ev’ry hand and we cannot understandAll the ways that God would lead us to that blessèd Promised Land,But he guides us with his eye, and we’ll follow till we die,For we’ll understand it better by and by. —Charles Tindley

    In the song “We’ll Understand It Better By and By,” the eminent pen of the Black Methodist minister and composer Charles Tindley tells how to reconcile the reality of the Christian life to divine mystery. Find peace in the face of unanswered questions, Tindley wisely advises, and contentment even when stricken by struggles without clear meaning. 

    As a recent conversation between atheist author Sam Harris and Catholic New York Times columnist Ross Douthat reminded me, atheism often has no place for such mystery. It skeptically denies the existence of God instead of coming to terms with the Creator’s prerogatives and our human limitations. And while the believer ought not give up the search for understanding, we can and sometimes must fill the gaps with faith, trusting that God’s timing is more fruitful than our immediate gratification.

    related

    Racial Unity Is Out of Style

    Justin Giboney

    But thankfully, the Christian life isn’t all mystery. God has revealed the truths necessary for a meaningful, just, and moral life (Eph. 3:3–5). Moreover, there are moments in time when God reveals his beauty and character through humanity with striking clarity. There are moments when he blesses us with an unmistakable expression of his ways and his response to human brokenness. On occasion, like Saul’s spellbinding encounter with Christ on the road to Damascus, God melts the fog and shakes us out of our slumber with an inescapably vivid representation of his form in the public square. 

    I believe the Civil Rights era was one of those rare moments. Reading about love, humility, courage, and fortitude is one thing, but here, through the Civil Rights generation, God offered the world a living proof of concept. 

    For anyone who earnestly wanted to know how to face wickedness, here was God roaring what love of neighbor, love of enemy, and soldiering for the Lord and for liberation look like today. God used imperfect believers as a beacon of moral clarity. We might debate the efficacy of integration and other activism strategies or policy goals, but the Christlike spirit of the movement—and the gospel message in its oratory, demeanor, and tactics—were crystal clear. 

    America is still very much in need of that kind of conscience and moral anchor today, not least as this administration makes a spectacle out of the pain of immigrants. However, I can’t help but fear that those who’ve claimed the Civil Rights mantle are squandering that extraordinary legacy. I fear that much of Christian social engagement has taken an ill-advised turn. Our moral clarity has become murky and double-minded. 

    One challenge is a loss of Christian distinctiveness. The Civil Rights generation always worked with people who were not Christians—which is good—yet led with confidence and an unapologetically gospel-centered value system. The redemptive nature of their Christian ethic was clearly different from the ethic of contemporaries like Barry Goldwater or Harvey Milk. But much of today’s engagement has become so entangled with secular progressivism that it’s difficult to tell the two apart. 

    While justice-oriented Christians tend to be a step or two behind secular activists in their agendas, they’ve adopted their allies’ rhetoric and worldview. I’ve personally had to debate other Christians about why the nuclear family is a good thing and why it’s the center of the extended family, which is also important. If the secular left despises all traditional viewpoints, some Christians are all too inclined to follow suit. If other political progressives treat their political opposition with contempt, some Christians thoughtlessly join them. 

    related

    The Truth of a Love Supreme

    Justin Giboney

    Christianity Is Not a Colonizer’s Religion

    Joshua Bocanegra

    A core part of the problem was captured by theologian David F. Wells in his 1994 book, No Place for Truth: Or Whatever Happened to Evangelical Theology?. In too many Western churches, he said, there’s been a “shift from God to the self as the central focus.” 

    Accordingly, some Christians’ public engagement has abandoned a sound theological foundation for a more religiously ambiguous approach focused on self-expression. The freedom to enjoy our God-given, inalienable rights through racial and economic justice has been mashed together with the freedom to indulge the flesh without cultural opposition or critique. The rightful freedom that the Southern Christian Leadership Conference fought to secure has been conflated with the sinful license of the sexual revolution.

    This is not the moral clarity of the Civil Rights generation—nor is it an orthodox embrace of divine mystery. When the Christian left authorizes liberties that the Bible clearly prohibits, often sins of the flesh (Gal. 5:19–21), it is not understanding God’s will better by and by. It is jettisoning the authority of Scripture to embrace an ideological agenda.

    And once a Christian movement isn’t fully aligned with the Bible, what’s the authority for its work? What dictates its principles? Is it the spirit of the day? Algorithms? Tindley’s song rightly recognized that humanity’s knowledge is incomplete, and, therefore, we’re mistaken in following our own ways (Prov. 3:5–6). Like the Civil Rights generation that followed him, Tindley was committed to following God through his Word and Spirit. Are we?

    In No Place for Truth, Wells also called out the inability of some Christians to “think incisively about the culture.” This too remains a timely warning. I’ve found many of my peers are more comfortable being apologists for popular American culture than thoughtfully critiquing its excesses. We’ll defend our favorite influencer from Christian critique but won’t defend everyone else from that influencer’s lewd messages. We’ll call out rappers for aligning with the wrong political group quicker than we’ll call them out for encouraging debauchery. 

    related

    The Insufficient Secular Case Against Porn

    Kate Lucky

    Pastor, Don’t Skip the Sex Talk

    Seth Troutt

    Nannie Helen Burroughs, a Black Christian who advocated for women’s rights in the early 20th century, once askedwhat “our brand of Christianity and … the Church [is] for” if we can’t be moved to tackle human degeneracy. Christians cannot refuse to expose the darkness in the culture with love and truth (Eph. 5:8–14). We do not have to neglect biblical standards of personal morality—including chastity, modesty, and self-control—to fight for racial and economic justice.

    There is a legacy of faithfulness to preserve here, and it is incumbent on us to preserve it. How could we fail to imitate and honor as excellent a display of God’s character as the Civil Rights Movement? How can we stand to lose the plot of a story told in such bright and definite terms? This kind of fumble is disheartening—but not new. After all, Israel lost the Book of the Law, and disciples denied Jesus while he was still alive (2 Kings 22–23; Luke 22:54–62).

    Now as then, all is not lost. But Christians must regain our distinctiveness and reclaim our moral clarity. What we don’t understand should humble us, but when God shines his light clearly in a historical moment, we must seize that understanding, hold on to it, and build upon it. And when we do, God might just use us to shock the conscience of the world by and by.

    Justin Giboney is an ordained minister, an attorney, and the president of And Campaign, a Christian civic organization. He’s the author of Don’t Let Nobody Turn You Around: How the Black Church’s Public Witness Leads Us out of the Culture War.
    The post We Are Risking the Legacy of the Civil Rights Generation appeared first on Christianity Today.

    Follow on Google News Follow on Flipboard
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleThrough a Storm of Violence
    Next Article Authority Is Good. But Whose Authority?
    FaithOnMotion

    Related Posts

    Where The Church Gathers, Listens, and Grows Together

    February 5, 2026

    The Jewish Archaeologist Who Inspired a Generation of American Christians

    February 5, 2026

    We Are Not Workhorses

    February 5, 2026

    Families of Venezuelan Political Prisoners Pray for Their Release

    February 5, 2026

    When Christians Contemplate Assisted Suicide

    February 4, 2026

    We Are Obsessed with Gender

    February 4, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Economy News

    Listening to the Father’s Heart

    By FaithOnMotionFebruary 6, 2026

    Remember this my son. Just because you may have begun well does not assure you of finishing well. Asa was one of my dear sons. So was Solomon. They began well. But, they lost their focus and allowed other things to get in the way of our relationship. This should be a sobering thought. However,

    Jesus Could Not Heal the Sick

    February 6, 2026

    What Is Tithing?

    February 6, 2026
    Top Trending

    Listening to the Father’s Heart

    By FaithOnMotionFebruary 6, 2026

    Remember this my son. Just because you may have begun well does not assure you of finishing well. Asa was one of my dear sons. So was Solomon. They began well. But, they lost their focus and allowed other things to get in the way of our relationship. This should be a sobering thought. However,

    Jesus Could Not Heal the Sick

    By FaithOnMotionFebruary 6, 2026

    “Men of Israel, listen to this: Jesus of Nazareth was a man accredited by God to you by miracles, wonders and signs, which God did among you through him, as you yourselves know” (Acts 2:22). In his book, When Heaven Invades Earth, Pastor Bill Johnson makes an insightful observation about Jesus. “He could not heal

    What Is Tithing?

    By FaithOnMotionFebruary 6, 2026

    “Then Melchizedek king of Salem brought out bread and wine. He was priest of God Most High, and he blessed Abram, saying, ‘Blessed be Abram by God Most High, Creator of heaven and earth. And praise be to God Most High, who delivered your enemies into your hand.’ Then Abram gave him a tenth of

    Subscribe to News

    Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

    Advertisement
    Demo
    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest Vimeo WhatsApp TikTok Instagram

    News

    • World
    • US Politics
    • EU Politics
    • Business
    • Opinions
    • Connections
    • Science

    Company

    • Information
    • Advertising
    • Classified Ads
    • Contact Info
    • Do Not Sell Data
    • GDPR Policy
    • Media Kits

    Services

    • Subscriptions
    • Customer Support
    • Bulk Packages
    • Newsletters
    • Sponsored News
    • Work With Us

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    © 2026 Faith On Motion. Designed by Dolapo Ariyo.
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • Accessibility

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.