Political activist James Foreman asked Pastor Ernest T. Campbell (1923-2010) for permission to read the Black Manifesto in worship the next morning at Riverside Church in Upper Manhattan. The manifesto called for five hundred million dollars in reparation from white churches and synagogues for participation in the injustices of slavery and segregation against African Americans. Ernest told James he was free to distribute literature on public property before the service but denied him permission to speak. On Sunday morning, May 4, 1969, James Foreman walked down the center aisle at the opening hymn, stood in the chancel, and began to read the manifesto. Ernest signaled for the organist to play as he and most of the congregation walked out. The event placed Riverside Church and Ernest Campbell in the national spotlight.
When Ernest came to Riverside in 1968, he vowed to reconcile those who emphasized a personal relationship with Jesus with those who advocated for social justice. As the graduate of conservative Bob Jones University and mainline Princeton Theological Seminary, Ernest was well-suited to bridge the great divide. Two months after the manifesto Sunday, Ernest surprised his congregation by preaching on “The Case for Reparations.” He based his July 13th sermon on the story of Zacchaeus who, after coming to saving faith in Jesus, pledged to make fourfold reparations to all he had defrauded (Luke 19.8).”Why should we help the black man?” Ernest asked. “My parents were foreign-born (they emigrated from Ireland, and his father was a streetcar operator in New York). They came here and made good without any outside help. The answer is that the cases are not similar. Your parents came voluntarily. These people were brought over by our compulsion. They were denied assimilation into normal American life—a deprivation European immigrants did not face.” It was a bold, controversial sermon and timely still. While the way forward on reparations remains unclear, surely, we have more work to do on making things right with those we have wronged. In the end, Riverside collected $350,000 (three million in today’s dollars) for social ministry in the city. He ended his sermon with the prayer that follows here: