35.6 F
Indianapolis
Wednesday, December 24, 2025

Congregations Join Forces to Bridge Cultural Gaps

More by this author

On Feb. 16, a group of diverse congregants from various cultural and social backgrounds will gather together in a unified church service in honor of Black History Month.

The service, led by Pastor KevinĀ Bausman of Immanuel Presbyterian Church, Pastor Michael Drane of The House of Joy, and Pastor Charles Mugisha, a missionary with Sayuni International Ministries, will feature elements of traditional Baptist, Presbyterian, and ethnic African styles of worship.

ā€œThe House of Joy recently partnered with Immanuel Presbyterian to nest there as an emerging congregation,ā€ said Pastor Drane ā€œPastor Bausman has been so gracious and we didn’t want our partnership to be a mere landlord/tenant relationship.ā€Ā  Bausman, who is a white pastor of a Black congregation, and Drane saw Black History Month as a great opportunity to ā€œadvance the Kingdom together.ā€

ā€œIt’s a great opportunity to show Christian witness,ā€ said Pastor Bausman. ā€œOur unity in Jesus supersedes denomination, race, theology, the whole nine yards. We’re united in him, we’re one in him.ā€

In a time where many believe that living in a post-racial society negates the need for such celebrations, the leaders of these congregations thought it appropriate to join together in the name of faith and heritage.

ā€œIf it was ever important, then it’s always important.ā€ said Drane. ā€œCarter G. Woodson thought it was important to create Negro History Week. In 1976 President Gerald Ford thought it was important to expand that week into a full month, so I think now in 2014 if anything, we should be doing more than ever. Apart from an awareness of the past we can never appreciate the blessings of the present.ā€

Pastor Mugisha sees the event as an active example of compassion. ā€œIt’s important for us (Africans) and our children to be a part of programs like this to better understand the history here,ā€ said Mugisha. ā€œIt’s important for us to understand what has happened in America and for the African-American church to be aware of what’s happening in Africa – the more we know, the more we can have empathy for what has happened.ā€

What:Ā Black History Month Unity Service

Where:Ā Immanuel Presbyterian Church, 3620 E. 38th St., Indianapolis, IN 46218

When:Ā Feb. 16, 11:30 a.m.

+ posts
- Advertisement -

Upcoming Online Townhalls

- Advertisement -

Subscribe to our newsletter

To be updated with all the latest local news.

Stay connected

1FansLike
1FollowersFollow
1FollowersFollow
1SubscribersSubscribe

Related articles

Popular articles

Español + Translate »
Skip to content