Lincoln Rice

Healing the Racial Divide


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to itself as the oldest African American Catholic parish in the United States and the protestors felt the archbishop had not properly consulted with the parishioners. Hughes reconsidered his decision, especially in light of the black population of the parish, and the parish remained open.52

      Vatican Documents

      Summary of the First Section

      If “What We Have Seen and Heard” is removed from the first section, the result is a rather monolithic response to racism. The authors in this section ground their theology of racial justice not only in traditional European Catholic doctrines, but also a traditional European understanding of these doctrines, and thus all state that the most important action that one can perform in the cause of racial justice is moral suasion. With the publication of The National Race Crisis in 1968, there was room for structural responses to racism, but these always took on a secondary role—particularly in practice. Although The National Race Crisis mentioned Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., it was not informed by his thought. The inclusion of African American Catholic sources began with Brothers and Sisters to Us, but the document lacks any substantial role for African Americans and implicitly assumes white Catholics to be its primary audience. These deficiencies could be attributed to an almost exclusive use of hierarchical sources as well as Catholic social teaching’s almost exclusive reliance on moral suasion for the resolution of injustices and emphasis on substantial change proceeding from those in power instead of from those being oppressed. The limiting of sources to hierarchical statements prevents innovation when searching for a solution to an injustice that Catholic social teaching has not been able to adequately address.

      On the other hand, “What We Have Seen and Heard” was informed by African American Catholic sources, with final editorial control in the hands of the African American Catholic bishops. Black Catholics were its target audience, for whom the bishops saw a meaningful role in the field of racial justice and evangelization. Additionally, it asserted that African American spirituality had significant value that could augment traditional European Catholic thought. As the letter’s primary purpose was evangelization, its analysis of racism itself was not in-depth. Nevertheless, “What We Have Seen and Heard” displayed a pronounced break with the traditional paradigm found in Catholic racial justice and is more representative of what will be found in the second section.

      The Sustained Use of Black Agency and Experience

      James H. Cone