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Tuesday April 15, 2008

T4G - Thabiti Anyabwile

After dinner we gathered for the second session and the second panel. Prior to the session we sang “O For a Thousand Tongues” and a new adaptation of “Oh the Deep, Deep Love of Jesus” drawn from “Come Weary Saints,” the most recent project from Sovereign Grace Music. Bob Kauflin has added a chorus which says, “Oh the deep, deep love / All I need and trust / Is the deep, deep love of Jesus.” The session was followed with “All the Hail the Power of Jesus’ Name.”

This session was led by Thabiti Anyabwile, the only speaker added to this year’s roster. He began by saying that “Thabiti” is a Swahili name that, loosely translated, means “Sure, invite the black guy to talk about race.” That invoked a few laughs, needless to say. From there he began with something that he was sure would prove quite offensive. Our entire outlook on life, he said, is so misplaced, so wrong-headed, so inadequate that we either need to change it now or commit ourselves to the closest mental health institution. Most of us operate with some working idea of race and racism that is foundational to our worldview. But believing in race is a bit like believing in unicorns, because race does not exist. His task this evening was to convince us that we’ve all been looking at the world with an unbiblical set of assumptions. We’ve ordered our lives on these assumptions and we’re in urgent need of acquiring a biblical set of assumptions that will change how we do pastoral ministry.

His talk was structured, like baseball, around “three bases and home plate.” First base is our unity in Adam. Like in baseball this is the most difficult base to reach. Second base is our unity in Christ, third base is our unity in the church and home plate is our unity in glory.

The primary purpose of the talk was to say this: what we call race does not in reality exist.

He began by showing how Genesis does not support race. Solidarity in Adam is usually meant to refer to our sin. But there is more to it. We are all genealogical descendants of Adam. We are also all equally made in the image and likeness of God. The Christian adoption of race as a category was at least in part a response to a crisis in biblical authority. This category was adopted as a response to Europeans encountering Native Americans and eventually attempting to justify slavery. Genesis 10, the ordering of the nations, became a way of explaining race. The table of nations came to be understood as a table of discontinuity—of differences and otherness. But the emphasis of Genesis 10 is sameness—our oneness in Adam. “From one man came every nation of men.”

Genesis 10 actually speaks to the rise of ethnicities, not the rise of races. Race, commonly speaking, posits that there is an essential biological difference between people groups. The difference is rooted in biology. But ethnicity is a fluid construct that includes language, nationality, citizenship, cultural patterns and perhaps religion. Race and ethnicity are different in that ethnicity is not rooted in biology. We can artificially impose categorization on people based on their color. The most fundamental recognition in Scripture is not our difference, labeled as race, but rather our similarity in Adam. Race in the way we use it, as a proxy for explaining differences in appearance, as biology, does not exist. We have accepted the idea of race and are now trying to make it work. But we need to dislodge from this false idea.

Thabiti outlined six problems that may not be immediately apparent that prove that we need to abandon race as a category:

  1. The abuse of people and Scripture that have come from the whole idea of race.
  2. It is a short walk from admitting the category of race to actual racism. The trajectory of the category is not toward unity but disunity. Distinction becomes a matter of degree, not kind, so that the difference between Thabiti Anyabwile and Louis Farrakhan is not a difference of kind but of degree.
  3. It hinders meaningful engagement with others. If we believe in race we’ll never be able to get to the more fluid and useful foundation of ethnicity. The idea of race is inherently ad hominem.
  4. It undermines the authority and sufficiency of Scripture. If we agree that the Bible teaches there is only one race—the race of Adam—but continue to hold on to the idea that race is biology, we undermine Scripture’s authority and sufficiency to define and shape us.
  5. We resist the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is at work to work within us and to teach us the truths of Scripture. If we cast off His work when it comes to race, we resist His work in our hearts.
  6. It undermines the gospel itself. If we deny our common ancestry in Adam we may be pulling apart the fabric of the gospel itself. And in so doing we may negatively affect missions.

As Christians we need to emphasize common ancestry in Adam and deny anything that sounds like race as biology. This has been an automatic assessment for most of us, but one we need to remove. We need to jettison the idea of biological otherness, the idea of race.

With time running out, Thabiti turned to the second base, third base and home plate of his talk.

Second base represents our union with Christ. It is this union that gives us the basis for a great commonality with other Christians. How does your union with Christ shape you and shape how you see others? Christ’s blood creates a deeper lineage than our genes. Our doctrine of man must be informed by our union in Christ.

Third base represents unity in the church. Where is this newness of unity and of thinking to be displayed and observed? The unity in Christ is to be displayed penultimately in the church. This is the display before the ultimate display. Jesus is not impressed by our unwillingness to love others unlike ourselves. In the church we are to display the unity in the new humanity created in Jesus Christ. Christ calls us to a breadth of love that is to be displayed in the church.

Home plate represents our unity in glory. We are headed to perfect unity in Christ in glory. This is the promise and the dream. Why not live like this now?

In the panel discussion, Thabiti recommended a couple of books that deal with issues similar to this:

Colin Kidd - The Forging of Races David Rhoades - From Every Tribe and Nation

Comments (27) »


1. Dave @ Banannery Public
April 15, 2008
10:55 PM

I was thoroughly edified by this talk. It was honestly the best thing I have ever heard or read on the subject of race and racism. (Outside of the Bible, of course.)


2. carissa
April 15, 2008
10:55 PM

this is helpful for my project on power, race, and reconciliation. the clarification of the terms “race” and “ethnicity” especially. i’ve been using the terms interchangeably to mean the construct, not a biological fact, but i like this distinction as a way to separate the one from the other. thanks!


3. carissa
April 15, 2008
10:56 PM

p.s. is this going to be available in audio format soon?


4. Stephanie
April 15, 2008
11:07 PM

Thanks for the commentary! My husband is there while I’m home with the kids. You are giving me a good idea of what he’s hearing, and without any extra expense!


5. Mike D
April 15, 2008
11:07 PM

Same thing Ken Ham has been preaching for years. Anyone who is a YEC and believes in Adam and Eve knows that the Human Race is one blood.

Finally, I am defininitely a racist. I do not believe we should marry outside of our race. Of course I believe all humans are the same race…ironic, huh :)


6. Ron Harvey
April 15, 2008
11:11 PM

Tim,
Thanks for this post in particular. I was sitting stage left and way to the back. The sound in the hall is just that, it sounds like a hall. Therefore, I felt very much detached from his entire message. What you posted is what I thought I heard at times. It certainly puts things in perspective.


7. wfseube
April 15, 2008
11:14 PM

Tim, THANKS for posting these! I am the world’s worst note-taker, and you are allowing me to re-live the talks and recall the important points. Your skill in doing these liveblogs is amazing.

By the way, your book is flying off the shelf (table). I got my copy tonight…am looking for you so I can get an in-person autograph… :-)

bill


8. Brother Hank
April 15, 2008
11:23 PM

It was great (kind of) meeting you at Band of Bloggers this morning Tim! I met Paul Martin while you were standing there. He said I wasn’t the only American who thought Canada’s national anthem was sung to the tune of “O’ Christmas Tree”….lol. But yeah, that’s as close as I got to you. But there’s still time!

Anyways, thanks for live blogging this year’s T4G. This was a powerful talk by Thabiti. I pray this will be a night that marks a shift in a great many of our church’s thinking on the race imaginations.


9. Phil B.
April 16, 2008
12:17 AM

You might have linked to the wrong book — the second one. I think that he recommended the IVP book by a similar title, but I might be wrong.


10. Darryl
April 16, 2008
12:44 AM

Yes, I think it’s From Every People and Nation: A Biblical Theology of Race (ISBN 978-0-8308-2616-2). Excellent job with the live blogging, Tim.


11. Jeri
April 16, 2008
12:46 AM

Wow! I love this…how extremely helpful and eye-opening! Blessings to Pastor Anyabwile for his faithful and wise teaching on this. Thanks, Tim.


12. Karen
April 16, 2008
7:07 AM

First off thank Thabiti Anyabwile for such a brave teaching. Secondly thank you for posting it so that more of us were able to be taught and inspired by this message. This idea of race never really jived with my thinking. It is nice to see the Biblical foundation to back me up. Hey, If God himself is backing me up … :)


13. Don Gale
April 16, 2008
8:13 AM

TIM! Riddle me this…

A group of elders/pastors/deacons from my church went and my best bud was saying how mind-blowing Thabiti’s message was and that I should listen to it as soon as possible. So…

When will the audio be available?


14. Evan
April 16, 2008
9:45 AM

I can’t say I disagree with the general idea he is trying to get across here, but I question the one premise that the talk is based on. That of “race” always denoting biological differences. Maybe in the full message he spends time proving this but, I personally always used race and ethnicity pretty much interchangeably. I also just looked the word up on dictionary.com and some definitions certainly fit into the meaning of ethnicity as well.


15. Evan
April 16, 2008
9:50 AM

one more quick comment, does anybody else find it funny that he starts his talk with a racial joke then goes on to say that race does not exist. Isn’t his joke an example of something he seems to be encouraging us to avoid?


16. Seth @ Genesistoricity
April 16, 2008
10:43 AM

A wonderful summation of this talk, I wish I had been there! As a further point, the Tower of Genesis 11 fully and completely explains both the dispersion of peoples, but the formation of ethnicities as groups separated from one another and limited their own gene pools. As they migrated away from the plain of Shinar, and over the following generations, this forced limitation of genetic information would express itself in the differentiation of people groups.

Our God is an awesome God! With the Bible as the foundation of our worldview, particularly Genesis, we can be “… prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks [us] for a reason for the hope that is in [us]…” 1 Peter 3:15


17. Aaron
April 16, 2008
11:06 AM

The audio is up! Check out sovgracemin.org, they have the first two messages online as free downloads.

Blessings,

Aaron


18. Danny Lee
April 16, 2008
11:59 AM

I remember the watershed moment for me when I was reading a Randy Alcorn book and he mentioned in passing that Adam and Eve were probably dark skinned….I thought to myself I wonder how that truth could have changed so much of our history as a nation…not to mention flannel graphs!!!


19. GUNNY HARTMAN
April 16, 2008
12:42 PM

“The primary purpose of the talk was to say this: what we call race does not in reality exist.”

Amen. We’re all part of the human race and what we’re really needing to talk about it color or ethnicity or culture.

Thanks for posting what seems like a great talk.


20. Seth
April 16, 2008
1:10 PM

It is really, REALLY great to hear the authority of Genesis preached! I’m thinking that Thabiti Anyabwile may be a new hero of mine…


21. caroljean
April 16, 2008
1:42 PM

Ken Ham’s book “Darwin’s Plantation” talks about how the undermining of the authority of the word of God (belief in goo-to-you-by-way-of-the-zoo) has had its role in perpetuating racism. If you believe that some races are less evolved, then it’s not a huge leap to devalue and dehumanize that race.

I heard Carl Kerby speak on this subject at the Creation Museum recently and he said that he was recently invited to speak at a Southern Baptist church, however, they said that they did not want him to give his talk about race. He said, OK, but asked if they knew his wife was Japanese. They canceled his speaking engagement.

When I heard Ken Ham speak about this last year he said we should teach our kids that there are two race and that they should never marry outside their race. The two races? Christian and non-Christian. Amen?


22. Rick
April 16, 2008
3:13 PM

caroljean you said:
“When I heard Ken Ham speak about this last year he said we should teach our kids that there are two race and that they should never marry outside their race. The two races? Christian and non-Christian. Amen?”

Surely not. While I agree that christians should marry christians, defining unbelievers as another race is out of the question. In the context of Thabiti’s talk, that would only encourage superiority over and disdain for them. His talk was based on human unity within adam and the gospel’s ability to reclaim unity among diversity. Just re-read the six points summarized above and there will be no room to view unbelievers as a different race.
peace.


23. Q
April 16, 2008
9:06 PM

praise the Lord! If we can only think and apply carefully all of the implications of this in our churches and denominations.

One word for Evan… Brother, I believe Thabiti was trying to move us away from a Dictionary.com definition of “race” and redefine “race” biblically. Race and ethnicity are two different things from a biblical standpoint…but, you’ll have to listen to it (I would suggest more than once) to get the rest. …And the Obama joke in the beginning was a bit of irony in regards to the heighten issues of “race” in our country and to set folks up to see how wrongly we think of “race.” Basically, it was a rhetorical device.

hope that helps your evalutation of his talk.

Jude 2,

Q


24. Evan
April 17, 2008
12:01 AM

Thanks Q, that does help to know that the joke was intentionally ironic, in that case it is funny. I guess it is hard to really evaluate this message without actually hearing it, but I still don’t understand the point in saying that race is only biological and that ethnicity is cultural, geographical, etc… I will have to listen to it to better understand his argument.


25. Carole
April 17, 2008
10:45 AM

Thank you for the live blog from T4G. It is a blessing to us stay-at-home-moms.

Can you give us the pronunciation of Thabiti’s first and last names? Thanks.


26. Mike V
April 18, 2008
6:57 PM

Rick,
Having heard TA’s talk, is it possible your respone to caroljean’s quote of Ken Ham is too aggressive? Neither caroljean (who I do know know) nor Ken Ham (who I do not know) espouse a superiority complex as it relates to believers v. non-believers. In the quote attributed to Ham, it seems he once again elevates the idea of one human race. His point has to do with a biblical marriage, not superiority.

As Mike D pointed out above, Ken Ham taught this 10-15 years ago in his book, One Blood. See here - www.answersingenesis.org/Home/Area/faq/racism.asp

When one of the panel members asked for a reference on this, I wanted to shout out “Ken Ham, One Blood.”


27. Paul
April 21, 2008
9:39 AM

I had the blessing of attending T4G this year so I heard Thabiti’s presentation. I agree with much of what he said, that we are all descendants of Adam, and all made in the image and likeness of God. However, I have to take exception to his basic argument that race has nothing to do with biological differences. There ARE clear genetic differences, and that’s why only black people get a disease such as sickle cell anemia. And just because there are biological genetic differences doesn’t make black people any better or worse than any other race of people. In God’s eyes, there are only two kinds of people: those who have accepted salvation through the shed blood of Jesus Christ, and those who have not.

In my opinion, Thabiti’s presentation would have been much stronger if he had omitted any mention of race or ethnicity, and just pointed out our common Adamic heritage, and our union in Christ, in the church, and in glory. When man views someone differently and negatively because of skin color, they are committing an offense against our creator and holy God who does not take sin lightly.