The Color of Compromise

The Color of Compromise

Season 1
The Color of Compromise Video Study reveals chilling connections between the church and racism throughout American history. Jemar Tisby explores ways Christians have reinforced theories of racial superiority and inferiority, and outlines the kind of bold action needed to forge a future of equality and justice. Please note some sessions contain graphic content that viewers may find disturbing.
202012 episodes18+
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Episodes

  1. S1 E1 - The Color of Compromise

    January 14, 2020
    17min
    18+
    A survey of the history of racism and the church shows that the story is worse than most imagine. European colonists brought with them ideas of white superiority and paternalism. Minor repairs by the weekend-warrior racial reconcilers won't fix a flawed foundation. The church needs the Carpenter from Nazareth to deconstruct the house that racism built and remake it into a house for all nations.
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  2. S1 E2 - Making Race in the Colonial Era

    January 14, 2020
    23min
    18+
    Christianity served as a force to help construct racial categories in the colonial period. European missionaries told Africans that Christianity should make them more obedient and loyal to their earthly masters. But if racism can be made, it can be unmade. Christians must turn their efforts toward propagating a more authentically biblical message of human equality, regardless of skin color.
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  3. S1 E3 - Understanding Liberty in the Age of Revolution and Revival

    January 14, 2020
    20min
    18+
    The American church compromised with racism in the eighteenth century by permitting slavery to continue. Clergymen like George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards typify the contradiction of American Christianity: they attempted to treat the people they enslaved humanely, yet they still acquiesced to slavery, even practicing it themselves.
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  4. S1 E4 - Institutionalizing Race in the Antebellum Era

    January 14, 2020
    24min
    18+
    The antebellum period was a time of compromise and complicity. During this time, many Christians engaged in evangelism to enslaved and freed blacks. The black church grew, laying the foundation for a distinctive tradition that would stand at the center of the black freedom struggle for the next century. Competing understandings of freedom, equality, and belonging into Civil War.
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  5. S1 E5 - Defending Slavery at the Onset of the Civil War

    January 14, 2020
    19min
    18+
    During the Civil War, pastors and theologians supported the Confederacy by providing theological ballast and biblical backing for the continuation of slavery. They prayed over the troops, penned treatises on the inferiority of black people, and divided denominations such as the Methodists, the Baptists and the Presbyterians over the issue of enslavement.
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  6. S1 E6 - Reconstructing White Supremacy in the Jim Crow Era

    January 14, 2020
    16min
    18+
    In the South after the Civil War, the Christian-Confederate connection was visible in public spaces and in houses of worship. The Ku Klux Klan emerged, fusing Christianity, nationalism and white supremacy into a toxic ideology of hate. Jim Crow laws, enforced with lynchings, served to poison the American legal system, with Christian churches remaining relatively silent.
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  7. S1 E7 - Remembering the Complicity in the North

    January 14, 2020
    19min
    18+
    Christians of the North have often been characterized as abolitionists, integrationists, and open-minded citizens who want all people to have a chance at equality. Christians of the South, on the other hand, have been portrayed as uniformly racist, segregationist, and antidemocratic. The truth is far more complicated.
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  8. S1 E8 - Compromising with Racism during the Civil Rights Movement

    January 14, 2020
    26min
    18+
    As with other periods in America's racial history, the Christian church of the mid-twentieth century served to reinforce racism rather than oppose it. In response to government efforts to desegregate, moderate Christians opposed racial integration of neighborhoods and continued to approve of church leaders who espoused prejudiced remarks and actions.
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  9. S1 E9 - Organizing the Religious Right at the End of the Twentieth Century

    January 14, 2020
    20min
    18+
    With the rise of the "Religious Right," conservative Christians coalesced into a political force, and American evangelicalism became virtually synonymous with the GOP and whiteness. While neither Democrats nor Republicans adequately addressed the issues that continued to plague black communities, people of color increasingly felt disregarded. Politics became a proxy for racial conflict.
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  10. S1 E10 - Reconsidering Racial Reconciliation in the Age of Black Lives Matter

    January 14, 2020
    24min
    18+
    Christian complicity with racism in the 21st century looks different than complicity with racism in the past. It looks like Christians responding to black lives matter with "all lives matter." It looks like Christians supporting a president whose racism is on display. It looks like Christians telling black people and their allies that their attempts to bring up racial concerns are "divisive."
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  11. S1 E11 - The Fierce Urgency of Now

    January 14, 2020
    20min
    18+
    This session presents ways to address the current state of racial injustice in America, including ecclesiastical reparations, taking down confederate monuments, learning from the black church how to lament and rejoice, starting a diverse seminary, hosting freedom schools and pilgrimages, making Juneteenth a national holiday, denouncing racism, and starting a civil rights movement toward the church
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  12. S1 E12 - Be Strong and Courageous

    January 14, 2020
    5min
    18+
    When it comes to racism, the American church does not have a "how to" problem but a "want to" problem. The primary reason more of us do not exhibit the strength and courage required to root out racism is fear. The time for the American church's complicity in racism has long passed. It is time to cancel compromise. It is time to practice courageous Christianity.
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