Back then, Black churches were a small piece of peace. Church was a world where, even with its imperfections, the offer of equality and common humanity was the sustenance needed to make it through the rest of the week in a society that deemed them less than human.

Janelle Gray
About This Quote

Back then, Black churches were a small piece of peace. Church was a world where, even with its imperfections, the offer of equality and common humanity was the sustenance needed to make it through the rest of the week in a society that deemed them less than human. The Black Church was a place where you came to be loved, accepted for who you are, and to be lifted up out of your circumstances, whatever they might be. Back then, it wasn’t about the personal salvation or financial security or social status.

It was about being loved by God, no matter who you were, who you’d done wrong, who you’d hurt. Back then, people didn’t have to be perfect to enter into the sanctuary of the church. They could come for their sins or their grief or even their anger.

You didn’t have to be an angel if you came to church to worship.

Source: Echoes Of The Struggle

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