UMC Bishops call for justice in wake of Ahmaud Arbery's death

A sign outside Glendale United Methodist Church in Nashville highlights the case of Ahmaud Arbery. (Photo courtesy of Glendale United Methodist Church.)
A sign outside Glendale United Methodist Church in Nashville highlights the case of Ahmaud Arbery. (Photo courtesy of Glendale United Methodist Church.)

For Immediate Release
May 14, 2020 

WASHINGTON, D. C. -  The Bishops of The United Methodist Church are calling for justice and the eradication of racism and white supremacy in the aftermath of the killing of an unarmed Black man, Ahmaud Arbery, in Brunswick, Georgia.

In a statement released today and signed by Council of Bishops President Cynthia Fierro Harvey, the leaders of the church joined the General Commission on Religion and Race and the General Board of Church and Society in condemning this senseless killing and racism and white supremacy in every form.

“Racism is real and it must no longer exist in our communities. The recent outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the disparities in our system that have been fed by racism in cities across America,” the statement reads.  

Noting that the list of innocent Black lives who have been killed grows each day, the bishops said it was time for “The United Methodist Church to take a stand and to join our prayers and our actions and denounce our complicity. It is time for us to reclaim The United Methodist Social Principles that name racism as sin and states that it is antithetical to the gospel itself.” 

Click here to read the full statement from the Council of Bishops.

 

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Media Contact: Rev. Dr. Maidstone Mulenga
Director of Communications – Council of Bishops
The United Methodist Church
[email protected]
202-748-5172
www.unitedmethodistbishops.org

 

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