Christian Church Analysis

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According to Dr. King the proper role of the Christian Church should be seen as a force for social change and human betterment. He makes specific points about how the Christian Church should still follow the same organized religion as they once did in the early Christian times. In the early Christian times we saw people risk their lives and even persecution to help build the world into a better place and create justice within. King argues that the Christian Churches are becoming irrelevant as they seek to maintain their status quo rather than to help encourage their church members to transcend their weaknesses. King being a minister, sees how the Christian Churches are choosing to support a group mentality of injustice rather than justice. According to King, justice is something that upholds the dignity of the human spirit while injustice is working against it. By the Christian Churches choosing to support injustice they are no longer forcing individuals to confront their failures and change. …show more content…

Christianity has come to operate in tandem with social order (Cedar). This is what scared King the most, “American Christianity had come to baptize, indeed, sanctify, the social order of things, the white-over-nonwhite social relations” (Cedar). In King’s eyes the crisis of American life is due to the crisis of Christian life. In these Christian Churches, being a true authentic American, a true authentic citizen, and being a white Christian, were all being taken as the same thing. (Cedar). The way in which these churches are functioning is the same as the functioning of American society. The more Americans came to practice Christianity the more King saw how deeper they performed their

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