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thechristianrecorder.com
VOLUME 172, NO. 11
AUGUST 2023
The Triumphant 20th Episcopal District Flourishes With Bishop Frederick A. Wright, Sr. The 20th Episcopal District of the African Methodist Episcopal Church continues to be overwhelmingly blessed as the hands of God and the godly leadership of Bishop Frederick A. Wright, Sr. reached out and touched the five nations he serves, Malawi, Zimbabwe, the northern portion of Mozambique, Tanzania, and Uganda, at a time when COVID-19 was still impacting the world. Bishop Frederick Alan Wright, Sr, was elected 142nd elected and consecrated bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Church in July 2021. Bishop Wright arrived in the Republic of Malawi, affectionately known as the Warm Heart of Africa, and was welcomely warmly by members from all regions of the country at the Lilongwe International Airport. The presiding elders, pastors, lay, Women’s Missionary Society (WMS), Sons of Allen (SOA), and Young People’s Division members welcomed Bishop Wright with open arms.
Divine Appointment Since 2017 Reverend Dr. Frederick A. Wright, Sr., has been on the path to becoming the Episcopal father of the 20th Episcopal District since 2017 when he initiated the “Seed Time and Harvest Project” designed to impact food insecurity for pastors in the Malawi South Annual Conference in the Republic of Malawi. The project involved funds provided by then-pastor Wright of Quinn Chapel AME Church in Forest Park, Ohio. Funds Pastor Wright provided allowed 20 pastors to receive a bag of corn seed and one 50 kg bag of fertilizer to assist them in planting and harvesting food for their families. Four years later, Pastor Wright became the spiritual father of the 20th Episcopal District. Presiding Elder Eustice B. Ginya, president of the 20th District Presiding ...continued on p3
Proud Boys Ordered to Pay More Than $1 Million for RaciallyMotivated Attack on Historically Black Church WASHINGTON– Today, a judge ordered the Proud Boys and several of its leaders to pay more than $1 million for a racially-motivated attack on the Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church in December 2020. The Superior Court for the District of Columbia held that the defendants engaged in an unlawful conspiracy and violated federal and state civil rights laws, including the Ku Klux Klan Act and the D.C. hate crimes statute. During the attack, members of the Proud Boys trespassed onto the 185-year-old black Photo by Joshua Lott from The Washington Post church and destroyed a large Black Lives Proud Boys chairman Henry Enrique Tarrio during Matter sign. rally on September 26, 2022 in Portland, Oregon.
Can God Save America? A Facebook post from an African American and Methodist pastor read, “I really mean this. May God Bless America! We need God, BAD!” I paused at the declaration of God extending benevolence to America and the profession of the country in desperate need of God. With suspicion, I questioned if a just God would intervene in human affairs on behalf of America. Would a God of love, equity, and inclusion pour bounty into the “land of the free” or allow the “home of the brave” to implode? When considering the present historical moment characterized by the conflict of culture wars steeped in othering embodied by forms of anti-blackness, misogyny, queerphobia, and economic oppression relative to the nation’s past, an answer to my line of inquiry became ...continued on p5
The History of St. James AME Church, Texarkana, Arkansas… p11
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U.S. Embassy Official Visits AME University in Monrovia, Liberia
George Anthony Pratt, Contributing Writer
God Keeps on Blessing You… p8
“The attack against Metropolitan AME was an attempt to silence the congregation’s voice and its support for black life, dignity, and safety. It represents just the latest chapter in a long history of white supremacist violence targeting black houses of worship,” said Damon Hewitt, president and executive director of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. “These attacks are meant to intimidate and create fear, and this lawsuit’s aim was to hold those who engage in such action accountable. We also sought to amplify the voices of the church’s leadership and congregation–the very voices the perpetrators sought to silence– and to ensure that others give no
The charge d‘affaires at the United States Embassy in Monrovia, His Excellency Joel F. Maybury, has paid a one-day working visit to the campus of the AME University and a tour of the Eliza Turner Memorial AME Church in Monrovia, Liberia. The visit was primarily aimed at strengthening the ongoing relationship with AME University and reconnecting with the African Methodist Episcopal Church. The
Vexed by Quailing Attendance, Sex Abuse, and Internal Feuds, SBC Takes on Women Pastors… p14
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Justice Thomas: An Insult to Uncle Tom … p18
We Hoped for a Miracle for OceanGate’s Titan Crew; We Ignore the Ones Waiting for Us Every Day… p26