Asian American Christians in the United States are calling churches to call out “the sin of racism” after a young man who was a member of a Baptist church killed eight people in Atlanta earlier this week.

Pastor and anti-poverty activist Eugene Cho said: “We mourn the lives of these eight - many of them Asian women. We pray for their families. As we grieve, we must continue to stand up and speak out against skyrocketing anti-Asian racism and violence.”

Raymond Chang, President of the Asian American Christian Collaborative (AACC), published an article in Religion News, specifically addressing Christian leaders: “Call out racism whenever it rears its ugly head. Support churches and organizations doing holistic, race-conscious discipleship. Offer classes to help people learn about how the sin of racism uniquely manifests across different racial lines. Stand with us whenever you see injustice.”

He added: “As long as the racial hierarchy of the world is unchecked in the church, we will see the same issues of the world in the church and lose our moral credibility as ambassadors for the eternal king, Jesus.”

Helen Lee, speaker and member of InterVarsity Press, told Christianity Today: “What Asian Americans need to see is an honest and holy reckoning happening in the church, to understand and acknowledge that the roots of evil undergirding racial hatred go deep within our nation and in our congregations.”

Baptists and Evangelical Alliance

The President of the Southern Baptist Convention, J.D. Greer, said he prayed “that the Prince of Peace might bring healing and peace.”

The National Association of Evangelicals (NAE), which is a member of the World Evangelical Alliance, also condemned the attack: “We mourn the senseless loss of lives — all of whom are made in God’s image — and the rise in violence against Asian Americans.”

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This story originally appeared at Evangelical Focus and is republished here with permission.