Last night some friends and I walked from my house to a peaceful protest in our city on behalf of our black brothers and sisters. A police officer (great guy I’ve worked with in events in the past) came to take questions from the crowd. A local black pastor shared an encouraging word and led the parade. Other speakers called out for justice. It stayed peaceful and called out for justice not only in honor of George Floyd, but the countless other stories we’ve heard around the world and in our city.

It was great to see several congregants from our church, other pastors, the mayor, city council members, activists, college professors, theologians, and more. As a Jesus-pacifist I was there for as long as it stayed peaceful—and since it did the whole time, I was able to stay for the whole thing.

One response to “Peaceful Protest in Jackson, MI”

  1. […] My friends love to make loving jabs at me for being a pacifist. Nonviolence is a core theological belief of mine, grounded in the self-sacrificial love of Jesus that cares for both friend and enemy. When a protest turns to violence and hate, it has lost the potential to be grounded in Christ. I used to walk to local marches so I could walk out of them if they went south. […]

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