Kentucky church bans interracial marriage
Published: 02 December, 2011, 02:58
Church bans interracial marriages
TAGS: Religion, Scandal, Law, USA, Culture
Stella Harville, 24, has been attending the Gulnare Freewill Baptist Church in eastern Kentucky her entire life. A vote within the congregation last week, however, will keep her from entering its doors ever again.
As long as she stays married to a black man.
Harville, a long time parishioner at the Pike County, KY church, is white. That’s fine and dandy for the shot callers at the place of worship, but after she brought her husband, Zimbabwe-born Ticha Chikuni into Gulnare, they decided to rethink things. After a vote of 9-to-6 last week, interracial couples have been ordered to keep out of the church.
The vote was brought to order after former pastor Melvin Thompson proposed someone take a stand earlier this year after the couple came to the church to pray a few times , but the priest says he isn’t racist at all.
"I am not racist,” Thompson tells the Associated Press. “I will tell you that. I am not prejudiced against any race of people, have never in my lifetime spoke evil.”
Believe it or not, some find that hard to believe.
“If he’s not racist, what is this?” asks the church’s secretary, Dean Harville; he’s also Stella’s dad.
The elder Harville calls the move "a black eye to the church, a black eye to our community and a black eye to God.”
“The way I look at it, it's a slap in God's face to say something like this."
Thompson begs to differ.
“I do not believe this will give our church a black eye at all,” he responds to The Guardian.
About 25 parishioners left the church in lieu of voting for or against Thompson’s measure, but he still insists it isn’t a matter of race.
“That’s what this is being portrayed as, but it is not,” he swears. Instead, he says, the move "was not intended to judge the salvation of anyone, but is intended to promote greater unity among the church body and the community we serve."
"It's embedded in our culture, especially in certain areas, that interracial marriage is wrong,” responds Stella Harville to The Guardian. “Some of them have tried to invoke the Bible to support their argument, but anyone who reads the Bible knows there is no scripture saying this.”
Thompson says that the matter is “an internal affair,” but as far as he is concerned himself, he says he personally doesn’t believe in interracial marriages.
Keep in mind, however, that he’s not racist. No, no, no. Stella’s mother, Cathy, however, thinks that Thompson might be a bit confused. When she confronted the pastor over his gripe, she says he responded that "The best thing that Stella can do is take her boyfriend back to where he came from."
Chikuni came to America over a decade ago and is currently employed as a student advisor at Georgetown College.
“I think part of me is still in shock and trying to process what’s been going on the past few days,” Stella tells the AP from Indiana, where she is currently pursuing a master’s degree. "I really hope they overturn this,” she adds.
02.12.2011, 00:08
8 comments
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@george (unregistered)
what u are talking about has to do with the people of Israel in the bible. it was forbidden for them to mix with other nations, not because of their 'race' but due to their believes. the ppl from other nations had false gods and false believes. God did not want his ppl to mix with such impure believes. but He did not discriminate. in fact, ppl from the other nations that wanted to turn from their false believes and follow the real true God was accepted by God himself to become part of His ppl. that was Pre-Christ so Pre-Christianism
after that, when Jesus came to earth, he did not discriminate any race, he preached to all and helped all. he even told a parable about "the good Samaritan" to illustrate the fact that we should love and help everybody, regardless of their race. the only ppl he was clearly against was the hypocrites that claimed to be God's followers but whom misled and mistreated the ppl.
so Christians should NOT approve discrimination. i already made that clear in my previous comment.
@bat fasturd
there are tons of interracial couples in my religion all over the world, in the US too.. and they are not discriminated. I'm black, and i can go to any country I want and I will not get discriminated by fellow brothers or sisters from my religion. We give/receive a warm welcome to/from fellow brothers and sisters everywhere we go. I love that!
Normankay, you write the throw-away line, "Kentucky is the Estonia of America." I'm curious to know, what do you actually know about Estonia?
Have you ever been there? Do you speak Estonian? Do you read or watch Estonian media? Have you ever read an Estonian book even in English translation? Have you ever read a single line of Estonian history? Have you ever looked at a single international survey that ranks Estonia with other nations, including with Russia, in areas such as standard of living, quality of life, press freedom, corruption, credit rating, health, computer literacy or even just in ordinary literacy? Have you ever even met an Estonian? Or is the sum-total of your "knowledge" of Estonia based on what you read in RT?
If so, then you actually know next to nothing about that country. All you know is the Kremlin's distorted, Soviet-oriented and self serving propaganda. As you will discover for yourself about 10 minutes after you first set foot in the place. Any comparison that you may make about Estonia and any other place on earth, even with Kentucky, based on zero knowledge would be meaningless.









*@george (unregistered)what u are talking about has to do with the people of Israel in the bible. it was forbidden for them to mix with other nations, not because of their 'race' but due to their believes*Nation means ethnos or race in the ancient meaning. The Bible says over and over that whites (Israelites) are forbidden to take "strange wives."He also said this message is meant for my sheep and not for people of other nations. He called a cannanite woman a dog as a matter of fact.Jesus flat out said this message is not meant for other peoples justmy people. Other races are in fact referred to as beasts in the Bible.