The last two Sundays I've attended there. First was Easter. The pastor is a 70 something white male. His right hand man is a nigger that can best be characterized as a black Foghorn Leghorn from Mississippi. On Easter there was an interracial couple there consisting of a nigger, a white woman, and their spawn. The place also had a notable number of Hispanics. Whites were definitely the minority.
This last Sunday I go again. I arrive early in the midst of Sunday school. Out of maybe 10 people there the pastor and I are the only whites. I find out during the main service that the pastor is married to one of the Hispanic women there, who has a heavy accent. Once again whites are a minority at the service.
I've seen much whiter scenes at liberal religious gatherings. But unlike Nigger Leghorn they won't tell you you're going to hell. They'll just talk about trannies.
The Southern Baptist Convention is the largest Protestant denomination in the country.
This is what passes for a 'conservative' church nowadays. Mostly the conservatives just avoid politics in their sermons. The liberals politicize religion heavily.
Attended the United Church of Christ service today. It lived down to expectations.
Female minister (seems almost required). She spent the sermon bitching about Trumpers and their 'hate', ended up saying essentially that you don't get into heaven if you don't agree with her shitlib politics, and referred to Jesus Christ as Joseph's son. The predictable pro-trannie and pro-fag stuff - and the bulk of the sermon was using Old Testament passages to argue for her open borders, pro-refugee stance, which she apparently got from her seminary training.
I'd estimate at least 1/3 of the around 50 people in attendance were fags. The female minister is in an interracial marriage with a dothead or some such and the two fairly attractive white females there under 20 appear to be involved with spics.
About the only thing remotely conservative about that place was the recital of the Lord's prayer and maybe some of the music. Adds new meaning to low church. I'd say liberal even for the United Church of Christ (an Africanized version of it was the church Obama used to attend by the way. Jeremiah Wright).
Said church:
"Trinity United Church of Christ is a predominantly African-American megachurch with more than 8,500 members. It is located in the Washington Heights community on the South Side of Chicago.[1] It is the largest church affiliated with the United Church of Christ, a predominantly white Christian denomination with roots in Congregationalism, which historically branched from early American Puritanism."
Joe_McCarthy 0 points 5 hours ago
Attended the United Church of Christ service today. It lived down to expectations.
Female minister (seems almost required). She spent the sermon bitching about Trumpers and their 'hate', ended up saying essentially that you don't get into heaven if you don't agree with her shitlib politics, and referred to Jesus Christ as Joseph's son. The predictable pro-trannie and pro-fag stuff - and the bulk of the sermon was using Old Testament passages to argue for her open borders, pro-refugee stance, which she apparently got from her seminary training.
I'd estimate at least 1/3 of the around 50 people in attendance were fags. The female minister is in an interracial marriage with a dothead or some such and the two fairly attractive white females there under 20 appear to be involved with spics.
About the only thing remotely conservative about that place was the recital of the Lord's prayer and maybe some of the music. Adds new meaning to low church. I'd say liberal even for the United Church of Christ (an Africanized version of it was the church Obama used to attend by the way. Jeremiah Wright).
Said church:
"Trinity United Church of Christ is a predominantly African-American megachurch with more than 8,500 members. It is located in the Washington Heights community on the South Side of Chicago.[1] It is the largest church affiliated with the United Church of Christ, a predominantly white Christian denomination with roots in Congregationalism, which historically branched from early American Puritanism."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinity_United_Church_of_Christ
All that said I might return.