Samford’s Beeson Divinity School to host conference on racial reconciliation

A conference scheduled for Samford University Feb. 12-13 will examine the subject of race within the context of Judeo-Christian spirituality. (Getty Images)
Samford University’s Beeson Divinity School and its Institute of Anglican Studies will host the Racial Reconciliation and the National Covenant conference at Samford Feb. 12-13. The conference will be jointly sponsored with the Institute on Religion and Democracy (IRD), based in Washington, D.C.

Samford’s Beeson Divinity School is hosting the Racial Reconciliation and the National Covenant conference next month. (Samford University)
This event will bring Protestants, Catholics and Jews together to answer the question: How does thinking about God change the way we think about race?
Talks at the conference will address covenant and race in the Hebrew Scriptures, exile and return from slavery, white supremacy, Martin Luther King Jr.’s appeal to the national covenant and many other subjects.
Speakers include former gang member and Pentecostal minister Eugene Rivers; Jacqueline Rivers, Seymour Institute executive director on Black Church and Policy Studies; economist Glenn Loury; former civil rights leader Robert Woodson; and activist Alveda King.
Beeson’s renowned professor of homiletics Robert Smith Jr. will preach “I Don’t Want No Trouble at the River,” based on Joshua 22:9-34. Beeson Founding Dean Timothy George will offer concluding remarks.
“This country suffers from continuing racial tension. We are convinced that the tension cannot be resolved by politics alone because our racial divides have vital spiritual, moral and cultural dimensions,” said Gerald McDermott, director of Beeson’s Institute of Anglican Studies and organizer of the event. “Our hope is that this new approach will help bring repentance, forgiveness and healing.”
For more information and registration, visit, https://www.beesondivinity.com/events/Racial-Reconciliation-National-Covenant.
This story originally appeared on Samford University’s website.