Greatest Grassroots Protest in Adventist History (2021)

Douglas Morgan, Change Agents: The Lay Movement that Challenged the System and Turned Adventism Towards Racial Justice. Westlake Village, California: Oak and Acorn, 2021.

How and when did racial discrimination become embedded in Adventist institutions? Is it possible to change patterns of injustice when they become deeply ingrained in the corporate life of the church? Is it appropriate to organize in opposition to the voted policies of duly elected church leaders? May Christians use protest and pressure to bring about change in the church? Were Black conferences a step forward or backward?

In Change Agents, Douglas Morgan sheds light on such questions by telling the story of a movement of Black Adventist lay members who, with women at the forefront, brought the denomination to a racial reckoning in the 1940s. Their story, told in the context of the church’s racial history in America as it unfolded during the first half of the 20th century, illumines the often difficult but necessary conversations about race that challenge the church today. And, it offers inspiration and insight to Adventists today whose love for their church drives a dedication to changing it.”

Description from Amazon.

Previous
Previous

African-American Adventism in Harlem (2018)

Next
Next

Adventist Mission in China in Historical Perspective (2022)