Benjamin R. Cremer is pastor at the United Methodist Church in Boise, Idaho. I read his essays regularly. He is truly a Christian. He preaches love, not hate. He knows and tries to exemplify the Beatitudes.
He wrote about the meaning of this day:
On June 19, 1865—two and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation was signed—enslaved Black Americans in Galveston, Texas were finally informed of their freedom. This day, now known as Juneteenth, marks not just the delayed enforcement of a national promise, but the resilient hope and courage of a people who endured unspeakable injustice while still holding onto the belief that liberation would come.
As Christians, we must understand that Juneteenth is not just a historical footnote—it is a call to theological clarity and moral responsibility. Scripture consistently reveals a God who hears the cries of the oppressed (Exodus 3:7), who calls for justice to “roll on like a river” (Amos 5:24), and who sets the captives free (Luke 4:18). The story of God is a story of liberation—not just personal salvation, but also the dismantling of systems that crush the image of God in others.
Juneteenth challenges us to confront a difficult truth: that much of American Christianity was complicit in slavery, and that the legacy of that sin continues in our institutions, our policies, and yes—even in some of our pulpits. But the gospel does not shy away from hard truths. It invites us to repentance. To truth-telling. And to the costly work of reconciliation and repair.
In our time when people are heard saying “Illegal is illegal,” Juneteenth invites us to remember that slavery was once legal. Harboring a fugitive enslaved person was illegal. Black freedom illegal. “Illegal is illegal” has always been used to defend injustice. Legality ≠ morality. Justice calls us higher.This is not about shame. It’s about grace. Grace that tells the truth. Grace that restores what has been broken. Grace that refuses to be silent in the face of injustice.
Observing Juneteenth as Christians means celebrating the faith and dignity of Black Americans who have carried the gospel with courage even when the church failed to. It means honoring the day freedom was announced, and lamenting that it was so long withheld.
May we not be a people who forget. May we be a people who remember rightly, act justly, and walk humbly with our God (Micah 6:8).
If you are looking for a tangible way to get involved in communal justice work, I want to let you know about Be Love day, put on by the King Center. Be Love is a growing movement of courageous acts to achieve justice, which is based on these words from Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.: “Justice at its best is love correcting everything that stands against love.” Be Love seeks to strategically define and unleash the true power of love to unite humanity, cultivate true peace, and create the Beloved Community. The movement is holding “Be Love Day” on July 9th. Click the link above to learn more.
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I just returned from a Juneteenth celebration in our county. A lady I taught with back in 1987-88 was delivering an address, and I hoped to get some help with a local history project I hope to start.
At the meeting I ran into a guy whose great grandfather fought for the union in one of those “Colored Infantry” units. His former owner (the Emancipation of slaves held in areas officially under rebellion were free as of January 1, 1863, the day the Battle of Stones River or Murfreesboro was becoming a bloody stalemate) was injured at Stones River serving in the Confederate Army. This former slave, named Singleton, was given leave to go home to take care of his injured former owner. When he got well, Singleton returned to his Union Army unit. After the war, the two farmed together on the old place.
It is remarkable that as much reconciliation exists in our stories, given the history of violence required to prosecute a society based on inequality. This reconciliation emanates from people like the ones in this remarkable story. But, as my former colleague reminded us all in her address, we have to fight for it by knowing the truth, what really happened, and how it happened.
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What a beautiful post!!!
Remember, today, that almost 3 of every hundred adult Americans is in jail, in prison, or on parole, and that most of these are poor Americans. Many of them in jail cannot afford even moderate bail. And so they rot in a system that treats them like animals.
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