This year is an important one for racial justice on these shores as it marks the 30th anniversary of Racial Justice Sunday (RJS). RJS was established by the Methodist Church in 1995 following the tragic racist murder of Black teenager Stephen Lawrence in southeast London in April 1993. The Lawrence family attended a local Methodist Church in that part of the capital, and the Methodist Church agreed to support the family’s justice campaign to find young Stephen’s killers. A few years later, the Churches’ Commission for Racial Justice (CCRJ), a Churches Together in Britain and Ireland programme, agreed to mainstream the special Sunday so that all the churches could engage with it.
Our theme this year is ‘Coat of Many Colours’, reflecting the increasing diversity that exists in the churches in Britain and Ireland. Both the Old Testament, or the Hebrew Bible, and the New Testament are replete with references to diversity, in this world and the Kingdom to come. One only has to reflect on verses that speak of a ‘house of prayer for all nations’ (Isaiah 56:7), the events of Pentecost (Acts 2) or the ‘multitude … from every nation’ (Revelation 7:9-17), which all include words meaning ‘every tribe and nation’, to see that ethnic diversity is part of God’s divine plan. There is little doubt that British churches, especially in the larger cities, are a microcosm of the world in a congregation, which is indeed a blessing that must be celebrated. Equally, the fact that the diversity of believers has breathed some much-needed spiritual life into our churches reveals that this is a movement of God for which He must be praised. In our reflections and sermons, members of the Racial Justice Sunday Writing Group and others, who hail from many parts of the globe, describe their experiences of being part of the Coat of Many Colours.
Yet, despite this amazing reality, inequality still exists in the church and is still a factor that blights the experiences of too many people of Global Majority heritage or Black and Brown backgrounds. This leaves people not feeling as if they belong in the house of the Lord, or not being given the opportunity to use their God-given talents to further the Lord’s Kingdom. Given the unwelcome decline in church attendance over the last several decades, British and Irish churches must wake up to the reality that God is doing a ‘new thing’ (Isaiah 43:19) among those Christians who now call these shores home. Again, our sermons and reflections in this resource address the importance of inclusion and the need for all Christians to engage in the righteous work for racial justice.
Contributors to the RJS 2025 resources
The writers come from across the traditions and feature CTE President for the Fourth Presidency Group and Head of the Lutheran Church in Great Britain, Bishop Paulina Hławiczka-Trotman and CTE’s Principal Officer for Pentecostal, Charismatic and Multi-cultural Relations Min Shermara Fletcher-Hoyte who writes: “As this Racial Justice Sunday dawns, we stand at a crossroads. We can continue to treat this day as a mere notation on our liturgical calendar, or we can embrace it as God’s call to transformation. The choice is ours, but the consequences of that choice will echo through generations.”
Download the RJS resources 2025 from Churches Together in Britain and Ireland.