Home Christian News As Congress Debates, Black Baptist Leader Calls Denial of Voting Rights ‘Evil’

As Congress Debates, Black Baptist Leader Calls Denial of Voting Rights ‘Evil’

Rev. Darryl Gray of St. Louis speaks beside a number of other leaders from the Progressive National Baptist Convention about voting rights. Photo by Roy Lewis, courtesy of PNBC

The Rev. Darryl Gray of St. Louis speaks beside a number of other leaders from the Progressive National Baptist Convention about voting rights at news conference in Atlanta on Jan. 18, 2022. Photo by Roy Lewis, courtesy of PNBC

The denomination’s voter registration initiative will be aimed particularly at millennials and members of Gen Z.

But it will also focus on states with key races expected to have close margins, said the Rev. Darryl Gray of St. Louis.

“We don’t want to just register a half a million people,” said Gray, a PNBC pastor who served in the Kansas Senate in the 1980s and ran an unsuccessful 2020 campaign for Missouri state representative. “We want to register a half a million people in United States senatorial campaigns that are going to be consequential.”

PNBC leaders noted they belong to the denominational home of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., in a state at the center of voting rights debates. King co-pastored Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta and his Southern Christian Leadership Conference, which was influential in the civil rights movement, also is based in the city.

“We believe it is no coincidence that this convention, born out of the need to fight for justice, is in this state and city at such a time as this when our voting rights are under fierce attack,” said the Rev. David R. Peoples, president of the PNBC.

“This is a call to action from the Progressive National Baptist Convention. We come to not just pray. We come to not just push. We come to not just preserve. We’ve come to protect the right to vote.”

This article originally appeared here.