The profound and simple words of “Jesus Loves the Little Children” cut through the pain and disappointment John M. Perkins experienced growing up in the Jim Crow South. Perkins never considered the fact that the God of the universe loved him until his son came home from the “Good News” club singing that song.
“When he came home from church, I saw joy in him and he would sing this song, ‘Good News, Good News; Christ died for me,’” Perkins recounted. “Then he came home singing, ‘Jesus loves the little children, all the children of the world; red, brown, yellow, black, and white; they’re all precious in his sight.’”
Perkins said that he came know Christ as Savior as an adult because someone invited his son to church and taught him about the love of Jesus. In Mississippi where he grew up, members of the Perkins family were known as “bootleggers and gamblers.” No one in his family was religious, much less Christian. After his brother was killed in a racially motivated incident, Perkins moved to California.
Because of his experiences as a young man, Perkins always assumed that Jesus did not die for people like him. But the songs his son brought home ultimately led Perkins to church where he heard the Gospel and sought the love and forgiveness of God through Jesus.
“The rest of it was God -- saved by grace, through faith,” Perkins said.
Perkins, a Christian minister and leader in the racial reconciliation movement among evangelicals, directs the John M. Perkins Foundation for Reconciliation and Development in Jackson, Miss. In 1976, Perkins authored “Let Justice Roll Down,” a classic volume which charts his conversion to Christianity and how the power of the Gospel positions the church for racial reconciliation. Now 88, Perkins shared his testimony and his hopes for the future during a recent visit to New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary.
According to Perkins, any hope for achieve true racial reconciliation in the church is contingent on Gospel proclamation. As Christians band together around the Gospel’s reconciliation between God and man, Perkins said racial reconciliation should come naturally, and he is hopeful that the current generation will make great strides in bringing it about.
NOBTS President Chuck Kelley and NOBTS professor Page Brooks interacted with Perkins on a wide range of topics during chapel Oct. 25. Later that day Brooks led a question-and-answer session with Perkins on the changes needed for lasting reconciliation in the church. Perkins also met with members of the Reconcile organization, a group of students from different ethnic backgrounds seeking to encourage racial reconciliation efforts at the seminary and in local churches.
Perkins made it clear during his visit at NOBTS that the primary task of the church is to proclaim the Good News that Jesus came to forgive sins and save the lost. But, he noted, racial reconciliation is closely related to Gospel proclamation. A watching world looks at the church to see how Christians love one another.
“Our problem is a lack of passion. Our problem is a lack of gratitude for that Good News,” he said.
Perkins called attention to an African American family with four young children near the front of the chapel, saying he wanted to set a good example of racial reconciliation for those children and ultimately to a watching world.
“We have got to be exemplary,” Perkins said. He turned to Kelley and said, “You and I have got something to prove to them. They will know that we are Christians by our love, by our behavior.”
Perkins warned against spending too much time diagnosing the problem but failing to find solutions. Throughout the day, he focused on positive steps for reconciliation, rather than critiquing failures.
“God forgives the past. He justifies the past,” Perkins said. “We have got to begin to begin. I’m saying this morning that we are beginning to begin.
“It is time for some of us to come together and take the initiative,” he said.
Those words are not hollow coming from Perkins. The love of God overpowered his ability to hold a grudge despite the way he has been treated in the past. Ten years after Perkins came to faith in Christ and had moved back to Mississippi, he endured an experience that could have left him bitter and broken. Jailed in 1970 for his civil rights protests in Mendenhall, Miss., Perkins endured beatings and torture by white law enforcement officials. He was tempted with despair and hate but prayed to God.
“I said, ‘Lord, Lord, if You will let me out of this jail tonight, I want to preach a Gospel that is stronger than my blackness, stronger than my economic drive. I want to preach a Gospel that will reconcile us together,’” Perkins said. But, “I got out of that jail and I wanted to reject it all. I wanted to keep the hatred. I wanted to become a victim.”
Hospitalized for the injuries, it was the love and care by white doctors that helped Perkins forgive those who beat him and keep his commitment to God.
“We need each other,” Perkins said. “Salvation is by the grace of God. It’s God’s initiative. And reconciliation is the very presence of Him. It’s not a side issue, it’s the mission. God is in Christ reconciling the world unto Himself and in us, so we can be a reconciling force.”
Despite his age, Perkins said he plans to be part of the solution. According to NOBTS leaders and Perkins, the chapel and Q&A session were the first of what they hope to be an ongoing collaboration.
MORE ON RACIAL RECONCILIATION
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