Marriage Equality: Distinguish Rights From Rites

In a piece for The Root DC, ordained minister Barbara Reynolds argues that African-American Christians can reconcile support for the president with their faith. Suggested Reading Who Are The People Closest to Diddy? A Look at All The Rapperโ€™s Former Assistants Chicago’s Mayor Claps Back at Trump Deeming the City the Next ICE Target Black…

In a piece for The Root DC, ordained minister Barbara Reynolds argues that African-American Christians can reconcile support for the president with their faith.

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If there is a way to miraculously part the Red Sea without black Christians drowning over the same-sex marriage debate, I think civil rights icon and theologian Dr. Otis Moss, Jr. and his son Otis Moss III, pastor of Chicagoโ€™s Trinity United Church of Christ, may have found it.

Recently, father and son laid out a two-pronged scenario that offers a way for concerned African American Christians to oppose President Obamaโ€™s embrace of gay marriage without abandoning him in the upcoming election.

In a statement to African American clergy, Moss III urged fellow pastors and skeptical African American Christians to not only make a distinction between Obama as president and as pastor but also between rights and rites.

Read Barbara Reynolds' entire piece at The Root DC.

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