Preview
  • Dear White Christians: Second Edition

  • For Those Still Longing for Racial Reconciliation: Prophetic Christianity Series (PC)
  • By: Jennifer Harvey
  • Narrated by: Jessica Schell
  • Length: 13 hrs and 1 min
  • 3.9 out of 5 stars (9 ratings)

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Dear White Christians: Second Edition

By: Jennifer Harvey
Narrated by: Jessica Schell
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Publisher's summary

"If reconciliation is the takeaway point for the civil rights story we usually tell, then the takeaway point for the more complex, more truthful civil rights story contained in Dear White Christians is reparations.” - from the preface to the second edition

With the troubling and painful events of the last several years - from the shooting of numerous unarmed black men at the hands of police to the rallying of white supremacists in Charlottesville - it is clearer than ever that the reconciliation paradigm, long favored by white Christians, has failed to heal the deep racial wounds in the church and American society. In this provocative audiobook, originally published in 2014, Jennifer Harvey argues for a radical shift away from the well-meaning but feeble longing for reconciliation toward a robustly biblical call for reparations.

Now in its second edition - with a preface addressing the explosive changes in American culture and politics since 2014 as well as an appendix that explores what a reparations paradigm can actually look like - Dear White Christians is for justice-committed Christians who are ready to do the gospel-inspired work of opposing racist social structures around them. Harvey’s message is historically and scripturally rooted, making it ideal for facilitating the difficult but important discussions about race that are so desperately needed in churches and faith-centered classrooms across the country.

©2020 Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. (P)2020 Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co.
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Repair and restoration should be the orientation

Summary: A critique of the primary orientation of approaching racial issues within the church through relational unity, and an assertion that an approach of repair and restoration is more adequate. 

Anyone reading my reviews regularly knows I have been reading widely about racial issues within the church for years. I first became aware of Jennifer Harvey with her book on parenting white children. At some point in time after that, I picked up the first edition of Dear White Christians but did not read it until the audiobook for the second edition came out.

Dear White Christians, like I Bring the Voice of My People: A Womanist Vision for Racial Reconciliation, has a clear critique of the friendship-oriented racial reconciliation that was popularized by Promise Keepers and the many books on cross-racial friendship that came out in the mid-1990s until now. Like Chanequa Walker-Barnes, Harvey's complaint is not that friendship is not important, but that if the orientation is to friendship as the goal, then restoration will not be accomplished. Instead, there has to be an orientation toward restoration, and in the process, relational unity across racial and cultural, and class lines will be a byproduct.

I think Walker-Barnes and Jennifer Harvey's books are a good pairing because they have a similar purpose, but are written to different audiences and from different backgrounds. Harvey is a white ethicist and clergy in the American Baptist denomination. Walker-Barnes is Black, a Womanist theologian and a professor of practical theology at Mercer, but her doctoral work is in clinical psychology. The orientation toward ethics and psychology comes out in their writing. But these books are also written to different audiences. Walker-Barnes is pitched to the evangelical and non-denominational Christians who looked favorably on Promise Keepers. Harvey's book is written to the mainline Protestant world of American Baptists, United Methodists, Presbyterians, and Episcopal churches, which are more theologically, socially, and politically liberal, but still very racially white. Womanist critique is the heart of both books, although Harvey does not claim to be a womanist theologian, but only influenced by womanist theology and ethics.

The first edition came out in 2014 and did not have reference to Michael Brown's shooting which occurred weeks before the release, or the subsequent attention to the shootings of Tamar Rice, John Crawford, Philando Castile, and many others. Contextually, the research with the Episcopal Church and the Presbyterian Church's (USA) work on reparations was primarily pre-2008. In many ways, the mainline work around racial justice and reparations is about 10-15 years earlier than the more recent work around reparations in the Evangelical world exemplified by Kwon and Thompson's book. But as the appendix in the 2020 second edition, shows there is little concrete work beyond study committees and educational work.

The central problem that both Harvey and Walker-Barnes identify is that most white Christians do not understand the true history of slavery and the long-term social and cultural implications of subsequent discrimination. The historical work of Jemar Tisby, Randal Balmer, and others is important to create a shared understanding of history and to address the intentional forgetting that has been the central response of white Christians in the post-Civil War era. Without historical memory, white Christians primarily view reparations and repair as unnecessary and a political act instead of a theological one.

This is a challenging book because questions assumptions of the individualism of many white Christians. While mainline Protestant churches are as a whole more politically liberal than evangelical Protestant churches, but in 2020, a slight majority of white mainline Protestants voted for Trump. That slight majority is far less than the estimated 76 percent of white evangelicals, but it does give an explanation about why there has been little significant movement past study commission stages. As the appendix discussed, at this point, white education about racial history is necessary to build enough support for Christian institutions to really address repair. I think these books paired together would be a fascinating follow-up for a church small group that may have previously read Color of Compromise or gone through Be the Bridge curriculum. Both of these books have an academic bent to them but are accessible.

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Outstanding!

Dr. Harvey asks white Christian’s to look in the mirror about their faith practices. Deeply researched topic. Listen to it!

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Good book!

Really interesting concepts that were liberating in hopefulness, while being sobering simultaneously. Her critique of white Christianity and (in my case, our) attempts to live with non-white Christians and others and become reconciled with them seemed honest, while she called us in a direction that would hopefully lead us higher.

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Super boring

Not a good book whatsoever. Not sure if the speaker just doesn’t click with me or I can’t relate too much with the material. But, this book doesn’t do much for me.

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